INTRODUCTIONS

TOBACCO-STAINED RUGS AND BENJAMIN BROWN FRENCH

Charles Dickens was intrigued by many things during his 1842 visit to America, but in Washington one thing stood out: tobacco chewing. The practice repulsed him wherever he found it, but it was “in its full bloom and glory” in the nation’s capital, “the head-quarters of tobacco-tinctured saliva.”1 Looking on from a seat of honor on the House floor, he found it “remarkable … to say the least, to see so many honorable members with swelled faces,” their chairs tilted back and their feet on their desks, shaping a “plug” with their penknives, “shooting” the old plugs from their mouths “as from a popgun” and “clapping the new one in its place.” And heaven help anyone who dropped something on the spit-spattered floor. “I strongly recommend all strangers not to look at the floor,” he advised, “and if they happen to drop anything … not to pick it up, with an ungloved hand on any account.”2

It’s a striking image that’s all the more striking because it was true.3 Congressmen habitually tilted back their chairs and put up their feet—at least in the House. When Representative John Farnsworth (R-IL) did so during a visit to the Senate in the 1850s, a page reprimanded him. “You’re more dignified over here,” Farnsworth joked. (He “was certainly right about that,” the page later huffed.)4 And the floors were revolting. Although there were well over a hundred spittoons scattered around the House and roughly half that number in the Senate, congressional chewers often missed their mark—in part, because they could.5 Covering the carpets only made matters worse because congressmen didn’t think twice about dirtying the mats.6 Dickens was describing just what he saw.

The tobacco-juiced rugs of the House and Senate are an apt metaphor for Congress in the decades before the Civil War. Yes, there was soaring oratory on occasion. Yes, there were Union-shaking decisions being made. But underneath the speechifying, pontificating, and politicking was a spit-spattered rug. The antebellum Congress had its admirable moments, but it wasn’t an assembly of demigods. It was a human institution with very human failings.

This is a far cry from its conventional image as a lofty pantheon of Great Men like Henry Clay and Daniel Webster. The names alone call forth images of staid men in black frock coats striking classical debating poses, one finger thrust in the air in emphasis. Even their contemporaries arrived in Washington expecting a string of bravura performances, particularly in the Senate. Writing home to his wife, the freshman representative David Outlaw (W-NC) declared himself disappointed; most speeches didn’t even stand up to stump speeches back home.7 The average member of Congress was just that: average. We forget that when we highlight the standouts.

Even if Congress had been filled with Clays and Websters, the times were demanding in ways that weren’t always awe-inspiring. Nations don’t tear themselves in two accompanied by poetic strains of eloquence alone. Congressional proceedings in the 1830s, 1840s, and 1850s weren’t pretty. The high-stakes political struggles of those decades were accompanied by insults and brawls as often as they were quieted—temporarily—by strategic compromises. Even the worthiest of congressional worthies had their ugly moments; swearing, blustering, threats, and personal insults (known as “personalities”) were coin of the congressional realm, and fisticuffs were common enough to seem routine. (“This session is like all other sessions that I have seen—except there has, as yet, been no fighting,” noted one onlooker, the “as yet” showing that he fully expected it.)8

To some degree, violent outbursts in the antebellum Congress are no surprise. These were violent times. There was the expulsion of Native Americans from their native lands and sweeping massacres of their people. There was rampant mobbing for a whole host of reasons: anti-abolitionism, racism, nativism. Between July and October 1835 alone, there were 109 riots nationwide.9 There was the war with Mexico between 1846 and 1848, a battle that enflamed the nation’s slavery problem and stoked sectional passions, laying the groundwork for violence to come. In the 1850s there was the murderously brutal fight over slavery and statehood in “Bleeding Kansas”; western expansion forced a national reckoning with slavery’s future that was bloody and fiercely fought. And of course, there was the institution of slavery itself and the violence and cruelty at its core.

Politics was also violent.10 There was hand-to-hand combat and rioting at polling places. On one memorable occasion in Washington in 1857, three nativist gangs—the Plug Uglies, the Chunkers, and the Rip-Raps—joined forces to terrorize immigrants casting votes, causing a riot. When the panicked mayor called in the Marines, the three gangs hauled a cannon into play, though they never fired it. By the time the brawl subsided, several people had been killed.11 State legislatures also erupted into uproars from time to time. In 1857, there was an all-out row in the Illinois legislature featuring “considerable wrestling, knocking over chairs, desks, inkstands, men, and things generally.”12 In 1858, state assemblies in both New York and Massachusetts dissolved into fisticuffs. “[T]here was a most heavenly time in the House for an hour or two,” gushed a New York Times reporter about the Boston outbreak. It “would have made a sensation even in Congress.”13 The Arkansas House deserves special mention. In 1837, when a representative insulted the Speaker during debate, the Speaker stepped down from his platform, bowie knife in hand, and killed him. Expelled and tried for murder, he was acquitted for excusable homicide and reelected, only to pull his knife on another legislator during debate, though this time the sound of colleagues cocking pistols stopped him cold.14

Congressional violence was of a piece with this world. As I researched this book, I discovered that between 1830 and 1860, there were more than seventy violent incidents between congressmen in the House and Senate chambers or on nearby streets and dueling grounds, most of them long forgotten.15 This isn’t to say that all such fighting has vanished from view. Many studies of the coming of the Civil War note a surge of fighting in Congress in the 1850s. Most such books—and many more besides—offer a vivid account of the most famous violent incident: the caning of the abolitionist senator Charles Sumner (R-MA) in 1856.

My archival digging revealed much more. (See Appendix B for details on the digging.) I found canings, duel negotiations, and duels; shoving and fistfights; brandished pistols and bowie knives; wild melees in the House; and street fights with fists and the occasional brick.16 Not included in that number is bullying that never went beyond words. Therein lies a problem, because the threat of violence had an enormous impact on congressional debate, but proving that someone has been bullied into silence is no easy matter. Some such episodes appear throughout the book, but only when substantiated by concrete evidence. There was far more bullying than appears on these pages. There was also more violence. The words that people used to describe these fights and showdowns—thrashing, bullying, pistoleering, stampeding—offer a revealing ground-level glimpse of the antebellum Congress. They expose the tobacco-stained rugs.

Detecting those rugs can be difficult; politics is often Janus-faced, presenting a composed public face to the world while masking a less savory private one. This was especially true in the first half of the nineteenth century. Washington newspapers had a tangled relationship with Congress; many of them survived on government printing contracts, and Congress did the granting, so local newsmen were well advised to make Congress look good by not recording the gritty details of congressional threats and violence. Describing congressional rumbles was also dangerous for reporters; record an insult the wrong way—or the right way—and you might become entangled in an honor dispute and get pounded by a congressman. As a result, when it came to fighting, the Washington press offered bare-bones details when it mentioned it at all, showing plenty of bravado but few fists and weapons. For a time, these partially censored newspaper accounts were the nation’s main news source for congressional proceedings, and the basis of the Congressional Globe, the period’s equivalent of the Congressional Record. Not until the rise of a commercially independent national press brought out-of-town reporters to Washington in large numbers was congressional violence reported in some detail, gaining its maximum impact through new technologies such as the telegraph in the 1850s—just as the nation’s slavery crisis began to peak.

Given such subterfuge, uncovering Congress’s rough realities isn’t easy. It requires an on-site witness. Yet not just any witness will do. To be of value, he must be a congressional insider, but not too far inside because he needs some perspective. He needs to be observant, with an eye for detail, an ear to the ground, and a flair for saying the unsaid. He needs to focus his attention on Congress and congressmen, routinely and religiously. And he needs a sense of humor and some self-awareness, two necessary gifts in the art of gaining insight into human nature. Benjamin Brown French was all of these things.

A House clerk from New Hampshire, French arrived in Washington in 1833 at the age of thirty-three to take up his job, and though he initially expected to stay only for a year or two, he ultimately made the nation’s capital his home. French wasn’t new to politics or to clerking; a loyal Democrat, he had been a clerk in his state senate and a member of his state house. Nor was he unschooled in the ways of the world; remarkably good-natured (“the king of pure drawling good nature,” according to one acquaintance), he made friends easily.17 French had a sense of humor and some self-awareness, and his job required them; first as a House clerk and then as the House Clerk, he spent his time serving congressmen, not all of them hail fellows well met.

In his new post, French was a professional Congress-watcher. He spent most of his working hours recording the House’s proceedings along with roughly ten other clerks. At first, his main job was copying documents.18 Promoted to assistant clerk in 1840, then elected Clerk of the House in 1845, French did less copying and more organizing, monitoring, record-keeping, and vote-tabulating, becoming a renowned expert on parliamentary points of order. He also spent lots of time in the House chamber, often at the Speaker’s table, reading reports or documents aloud, taking notes, and watching. Always watching.

In all of these ways, French is an ideal witness: a likeable insider with a sense of perspective, a deep and abiding interest in politics, and a job that forced him to focus on Congress. But there’s more. French was a writer. In New Hampshire, he edited a newspaper; in Washington, he published poetry, songs, and newspaper articles, and—most significant of all for our purposes—he kept a diary for much of his adult life. And not the kind of diary containing personal reflections and little else. French recorded what he did and described what he saw: the goings-on in the Capitol, the mood on the House floor, the stories that he heard, the tics and quirks of congressmen, and the choreography of their brawls, sometimes offering blow-by-blow narratives complete with sound effects (the pounding of the mallet, the Speaker’s cries of “order—order,” the countercries of “Damn him … Where are your Bowie knives?… Knock him down,” and the Clerk of the House screaming, “Order gentlemen, for God’s sake come to order”).19

The eleven volumes of French’s diary (Courtesy of the Library of Congress)

Although he missed stretches of time, French was a dedicated diarist. Between 1828 and 1870, he filled eleven volumes—more than 3,700 pages. At first, in New Hampshire, he kept a diary to remember things, but like most people who vow to keep a diary, he had his doubts. (“God only knows how long this fit will last. I may journalize this once & never more.”20) Alone in Washington without his wife, he wanted his diary to enable them to “live over again together the time that was passed in separation.”21 After his wife joined him, he used his diary to organize his thoughts and—he hoped—his life.22 Eventually, he realized that a “faithful journal” would be “a transcript of his life,” and from that point on, he was committed to it.23 (French’s twelve-year-old son Francis tried to live up to his father’s example with mixed results: “Thursday, February 7. I’ll be gaul darned if I know what I did today.”)24

For thirty-seven years, this self-described “journalizer” was surrounded by congressmen. During his first five years in Washington, he shared a boardinghouse with more than a dozen of them, first on his own and then with his wife. Later, as a house-renter and then a home-owner, he wined and dined them.25 (In a strange twist of historical fate, French’s house was torn down in 1895 to make way for the Library of Congress, which now houses his papers.) Always up for a friendly chat, he dropped in on congressional friends after hours. He even had a few short-term congressional boarders.26 And of course, during his fourteen years clerking in the House, French’s workday revolved around congressmen. Even after he lost the clerkship in 1847, he remained in Congress’s orbit, clerking for committees, filling in as a House clerk when needed, and, for a short time, struggling to earn a living as a lobbyist.27

It’s hard to imagine a better guide. French shows us a Congress of friendships and fighting; of drinking and dallying; of the passions of party and the prejudices of section and how they played out on the floor. He reveals the human dynamic of debate and the interaction of personality, partisanship, and policy. He shows how life in Washington affected politicking in Washington, and personally demonstrates how that politicking was advertised throughout the nation through the vehicle of the press.

He also shows how Congress and the nation changed over time, because he embodied those changes, most dramatically in his gradual conversion from a loyal Democrat eager to appease Southern allies to a devoted Republican with a deep-seated hatred of the Southern “slaveocracy.” By 1860, this most genial of men was armed and ready to shoot Southerners, a change of mind and heart experienced throughout the North.

French’s diary shows what fueled that transformation. It shows him kowtowing to Southerners to save the Union and serve himself; the gains of party dominance could be sweet. It shows him learning—gradually and with difficulty—how Southerners were all too willing to abandon Northern allies for the sake of slavery. It shows the grating impact of the threats and violence that Southerners deployed to get their way.

It was a hard lesson for Northerners, but a lesson well learned. Particularly concerning the charged issue of slavery, you needed to think twice before messing with a slaveholder. Not only did slaveholders have an advantage of numbers through the U.S. Constitution’s Three-fifths Compromise, but they had a cultural advantage that extended their influence. Northerners who ranted about a despotic Slave Power dominating the national government were not delusional. There was a domineering block of slaveholders at the heart of the national government who strategically deployed violence to get their way.28 The tobacco-stained rugs are even more apt as a metaphor; the floors of the Capitol were fouled with the yield of a Southern cash crop cultivated by the enslaved. Slavery tainted everything.

As we will see, French doesn’t merely describe these rough realities; he explains how they felt, and in so doing, bears witness to the human reality of the antebellum Congress and the emotional logic of disunion.29 French’s evolving fears and growing sense of betrayal show that the breaking of national bonds wasn’t a detached argument about sovereignty and rights. Disunion wasn’t born of cool appraisal. Nor was it a product of events in the 1850s alone. The rending of the Union was a long and painful process that spawned jarring instabilities and vast unknowns. It was a wrenching experience for those who lived through it, shaped by habits, resentments, and assumptions that built up over decades. Sectional fighting had a history, and that history mattered.30

At the core of French’s experience was the emotional power of the Union and all that it represented; French’s love of the Union was profound. He fretted about it in his diary, sang about it in campaign songs, and praised it in poetry. His heartfelt concern for the Union colored the fabric of his life. Born of a compromise and sustained by bonds of brotherhood, the Union wasn’t an abstract political entity in antebellum America. It was a state of being, and all the more fragile because of it. Today, we take the Union for granted as a structure of government. In antebellum America, it was more of a pact, grounded on conceptions of rights, fairness, and equal membership. Pacts are inherently vulnerable and unstable, open to reinterpretation by different peoples at different times; western expansion and the spread of slavery exposed and intensified those tensions. Thus the shared sense of political crisis throughout this period as the nation’s founding compact was questioned and renegotiated time and again.31

The Democratic Party had an equally powerful hold on French’s emotions, embracing his entire worldview. Structured national parties first rose to power in this period, inspiring the intense devotion of a cause.32 Party membership was more than a label; it was a kind of pledge, a statement of loyalty to a political worldview that bound men together in reputation and purpose. Manhood and honor were fundamental to this band-of-brothers form of politics, particularly in the public forum of Congress. And abuse of one party member potentially abused them all. Fighting was more complex than throwing a punch.

It was also inspired by more than outrage. For the most part, political principles fueled congressional combat. In the 1830s, most fighting centered on party differences. In the 1840s and 1850s it became slavery-centric, sparked by western expansion; Congress was the nation’s proving ground on the issue of slavery, the only institution capable of outlawing the interstate slave trade and abolishing slaveholding in the District of Columbia and western territories. Trace patterns of congressional violence and you expose the nation’s shifting fault lines. Congress was a representative institution in more ways than one.

But French wasn’t thinking of fault lines when he lost faith in Southerners. He was thinking of rights. For Northerners, Southerners, and Westerners alike, having one’s rights within the Union challenged was a form of degradation that required resistance; fighting for those rights was a test of manhood. This was as true for congressmen as it was for their constituents. As tempting as it is to blame disunion on blundering politicians—as some historians did a generation ago—congressmen were bound to the folks back home in purpose and feeling.33 Nothing shows this link more dramatically than people who sent guns to their representatives in the late 1850s.34 They wanted their representatives to fight for their rights. And fight their representatives did. Reporters who branded some of these fights “battles” were more accurate than they knew; in a sense, the first battles of the Civil War were waged in Congress itself.35

It was French’s fate to rise to national politics during this crisis-ridden period. A time of unsettled, unbalanced, and unpredictable politics, the 1830s, 1840s, and 1850s were uneasy decades of national unknowing. To fully grasp the meaning of that moment, we need to understand the process of discovery of those who lived through it. We need to view events “in forward motion, as they were lived,” with their contingency intact.36 Looking through French’s eyes reveals these eventful decades as they unfolded, removing them from the shadow of a war yet to come.

For all of these reasons, in the ensuing chapters, French will be our guide to the sometimes familiar, often alien world of the antebellum Congress; his emotional arc forms the core of this book and his lived experience structures it. There are risks to this book’s approach. More important men might have broader perspectives. But precisely because French wasn’t exceptional, his vantage point has value. However likeable he was and however useful he proved to be, French was an ordinary man who found his way into national politics like thousands of people before and after him, experiencing these turbulent decades from a front-row seat. His feelings and reactions are larger than the limits of his life.

THE RISE OF BENJAMIN BROWN FRENCH

If you met French, you may well have liked him. Most people did. Stocky in build, with an easy laugh, he enjoyed people, had a good sense of fun, and loved a zesty round of cribbage. His diary is filled with dinners and picnics, whiskey punch and good cigars. It’s also filled with his family. Widowed once and married twice, he was miserable without his wife and sons, Frank and Benjamin. Home alone for a few weeks in 1838, he hid their things—his wife’s pincushion, Frank’s pillow with “the exact print of his little head in it”—because they made him weepy.37 He chided himself for being sentimental, but so he was.38

Before coming to Washington, French had been living an exceedingly local life—like most Americans—eking out a living in small New Hampshire towns with friends and family close by.39 His travels were bumpy jogs on rickety stagecoaches (in one case led by a blind horse, a broken-down nag, and two colts who had never before been harnessed to a carriage; after jumping out of the coach in a panic more than once, French ended up walking most of the way).40 He had never been south of Boston. Antebellum America was a large-scale nation of small-scale horizons.41 Other regions were faraway places filled with strange people with strange habits.

Benjamin Brown French at the age of thirty-eight. Friends and family called him “the Major” due to a stint in the state militia. (Courtesy of the Library of Congress)

Chester, French’s birthplace, was a small farming town of 2,000 people in 1800, the year that French was born.42 His father, Daniel, was a big fish in that small pond: a wealthy lawyer (he bought the town’s first “cooking stove”), the state’s attorney general during the War of 1812, and “quite a farmer,” as a town history described him.43 French’s mother, Mercy, was the daughter of the town’s leading merchant, Benjamin Brown; she died eighteen months after her son was born, at the age of twenty-three.44 Daniel married twice more in coming years, expanding his brood exponentially. All told, Benjamin had four half brothers and seven half sisters; he was close to most of them for most of his life.

Daniel French was a difficult man; a contemporary described him as fair and faithful to his legal clients, but “rather sharp in his practice.”45 Benjamin thought him harsh. But raising the younger French was a challenge. The good-natured sense of fun that earned him countless friends as an adult was more of a rebellious streak when he was young. (Offered gin for the first time at the age of fourteen, Benjamin didn’t just take a sip; he guzzled mouthfuls, got “gloriously drunk,” and pitched “head foremost into a snowbank, as I then thought ‘just for fun.’”)46 Sent to Maine for much of his schooling (he had an uncle and a grandfather in North Yarmouth), by his own account he studied “deviltry” more than anything else, until he clashed with a “drunken tyrant” of a teacher. As French later recalled it, he told the man “exactly what I thought of him” and then “marched out of the Academy, never again to enter it, or any other school.” Back in Chester, his father pushed him to study law, but after two years, at the age of nineteen, French ran away to go to sea; unable to find a berth on a ship, he enlisted in the U.S. Army. It took his family months to track him down and bring him home.47 However harsh his father was, French mused in later years, “I do not doubt I deserved it.”48

Although he went back to studying law after his military adventures, French hadn’t yet started to practice when—at the age of twenty-four—he married Elizabeth Richardson, five years his junior. Her father, William Richardson, chief justice of the New Hampshire Supreme Court, was a formidable no-nonsense man with a chilly disposition, literally as well as figuratively; during brutally cold New England winters, he was miserly with firewood and never wore gloves. One of his law clerks, noting how the ink froze in the inkwells in Richardson’s law office, described him as “somewhat puritanic.” The more charitable French said that he had “stern integrity,” though once French got to know him, he thought him kind.49

Richardson disapproved of French’s courtship, which wasn’t surprising given that French had no job or income. So the ever-impulsive French eloped with the no-less-impulsive “Bess”—a thickset brown-haired groom and his wisp-thin brown-haired bride—and they kept the marriage secret for six months. (Family legend has it that the frightened newlyweds revealed the truth to Bess’s father by placing their marriage certificate on a windowsill and waiting for him to find it.)50 Once the secret was out, the couple set up house in the rustic little town of Sutton, forty miles northwest of Chester, with the idea that Benjamin would practice law—the first lawyer in town.51

But Benjamin had no liking for lawyering. Within two years, the Frenches had moved to Newport, New Hampshire, where he had been appointed Clerk of the Courts in newly created Sullivan County. Two years later, in 1829, he became one of three owners of the Jacksonian New Hampshire Spectator as well as its editor, a position that he held during his tenure as clerk until he left for Washington.52

The Spectator was a launching point for French. Not only did it capitalize on his scribbling impulse, but it plunged him into New Hampshire politics at a key moment of change. French joined the paper just as one of the state’s foremost politicos, Isaac Hill, was becoming a powerhouse organizer for what would eventually become the Democratic Party. Editor of the Concord New Hampshire Patriot, Hill was at the center of the drive to promote the presidential candidate Andrew Jackson and his supporters in New Hampshire.

In many ways, Hill was a perfect spokesman for Jackson’s common-man message.53 Born in poverty, largely self-taught, lamed by a childhood injury, and afflicted with what French called a “splutter” (Hill’s thoughts seemed to outpace his mouth), Hill was a lifelong scrapper.54 He was “emphatically a political man” whose “whole soul” was devoted to politics, French thought.55

Hill wasn’t new to politics in the 1820s. But his organizing efforts gained steam and power with the rise of Jackson. In New Hampshire, Hill coordinated the efforts of the state’s Democratic newspapers, helped establish new papers where needed, and allied himself with editors in other states. He created committees of correspondence to organize local efforts before elections.56 He helped stage elaborate celebrations of Jackson’s War of 1812 victory at the Battle of New Orleans on January 8, which grew to become a local holiday second only to the Fourth of July—and not by much. He stumped all over the state giving speeches (always reading them; he didn’t splutter when he read aloud), preaching Jackson’s common-man message in his all-too-appropriate black printer’s coat.57 In the process, Hill revolutionized New Hampshire politics, helping to set the stage for what would eventually become structured national political parties.58

Newspapers were central to that change.59 As Thomas Jefferson had put it during his own campaign for president, they were the “engine” of a democratic politics.60 Editors were the engineers. They were also politicians, in fact if not in name. Smack in the middle of the political fray, tied in with politicos and the man on the street, their energies aimed at scoring points and winning elections, editors gained political office by the score during the so-called Age of Jackson.61

French’s rise was typical of many. His pro-Jackson Spectator electioneering made him a local politico in his own right. His clerking duties gained him further influence, as did his membership in the Masons, which placed him amid powerful public men—though he was drawn to the order not by its clout but by its spirit of brotherhood as witnessed at a Masonic funeral.62 By 1831, two years after joining the Spectator, French had won a seat representing Newport in the New Hampshire House of Representatives.

There, in Concord, the state capital, French got his first taste of legislative politics. Some of it he relished, particularly the camaraderie—the Madeira-drinking, cigar-smoking, storytelling evenings spent with fellow legislators. Five or six of them, he felt sure, would be friends for life.63 One such “good fellow” was Franklin Pierce. Elected to the New Hampshire House in 1829, Pierce became Speaker two years later at the age of twenty-six. The governor’s son, Pierce had something of the “golden boy” about him. French saw it the first time he spotted Pierce in a crowd. Pierce was “full of fun and frolic,” French thought, and he exuded charm.64 Strikingly handsome—athletic and slender in an age of stocky, stodgy men—he had an appealing speaking voice that he used to full effect, and a warm, graceful manner; he was famed for swaying juries as well as partisans. A college friend perhaps best summed him up: Pierce had “no very remarkable talents” but a lot of personal appeal.65

The two men got to know each other when French joined the New Hampshire House, and they became fast friends. Renting rooms across the hall from each other at Gass’s Eagle Hotel, they spent many an evening talking politics and occasionally arm wrestling; French lost every time.66 Judging from French’s diary, he and Pierce spent a lot of time together. Pierce appears all over its pages, singing at the piano at parties with French, sitting by his side at dinners, riding around the countryside for pleasure, even visiting Chester with French—meeting French’s old friends and walking out to the town’s “great rock.” In decades to come, in ways that French could not even begin to fathom, Pierce would dramatically shape French’s life.

French generally liked the business of politics; he was one of the most frequent speakers in the House. The New Hampshire Sentinel dubbed him the House’s “leading man” based on the sheer number of times that he rose to his feet.67 But his job didn’t suit him and he knew it.68 He was too impulsive, a realization that hit home when Speaker Pierce called him to order; “a desire to do everything that I happen to think should be done at the moment the thought occurs” had led him into many “embarrassing situations,” he admitted in his diary that night.69 And as ardent a Jacksonian as French was, as fervent an organizer, coordinator, and party drum-banger as he would become, he couldn’t stomach partisan dirty business. He didn’t have the temperament for it. He had a hard time holding grudges (“I do really believe I could not retain malice against the worst scoundrel that ever existed over half an hour,” he thought), and he agonized when asked to fire Whigs as a party hatchet man.70 The mere idea of such “indiscriminate political slaughter” kept him up nights, so what would “the performance of the odious duty cost me in wear & tear of heart & feelings?”71 French simply wasn’t in his element as a party combatant.

But he was a superb party operative, an organizer and coordinator par excellence. He was perfectly suited to it: responsible, thorough, diligent, detail-minded, and almost preternaturally good with people in a sincere, straightforward kind of way. His genial personality made him an ideal person for drumming up enthusiasm; joined with his other skills, it virtually guaranteed that he was made an officer (often the secretary) of almost every organization that he joined, and he joined dozens over the course of his life. This was the great age of associations and organizations; charities, reform movements, and social clubs as well as political parties were multiplying, expanding, and trying for national or even international reach. With skilled secretaries in constant demand, French’s skill set was perfectly attuned to the times.72

French found politics exciting, even fun. But its intensity sometimes scared him. It seemed as though the nation was involved in an “all-engrossing” war that could tear it in two; his fears about the state of the Union run through his diary like a whisper of doom.73 Past political excitement had seemed grounded on an “honest difference of opinion,” French thought. Current politics seemed fueled by “aspiring office seekers & political demagogues.”74 Upset by men who seemed intent on winning power with orchestrated public appeals, French was unsettled by the rise of structured party politics.

But he was also swept up in it, entertained and even amused by it, and nowhere was it more amusing than in Washington. There was something undeniably funny in watching the leaders of the land throw punches. “Don’t you think the members of Congress are carrying on quite a little business in the way of pounding & shooting & being pounded & shot?” French asked his half brother Henry in 1832. “I expect some of them will get a hole made in their bread baskets yet.”75 French was referring to a series of violent clashes involving former (and future) congressman Sam Houston, who had assaulted a congressman for slandering his name, battering him with a cane on Pennsylvania Avenue; not long after, there was an assassination attempt on the steps of the Capitol against another congressman who had insulted Houston, followed by a near-duel involving yet another congressional Houston detractor.76

In future years, when the implications of congressional violence became clear, French wouldn’t be laughing. But for the present, like thousands of other men with ambitions and a sense of adventure, French tied his life and livelihood to a leader whose violent outbursts were legend. Andrew Jackson swept French into the national political world.77

In June 1833, Jackson was on a New England victory lap at the start of his second presidential term. Hoping that he would stop in Concord, the New Hampshire House sent French and two colleagues to Boston to invite him in person. Recalling the events of that June a few weeks later, French thought that more had been “crowded into one little month than has often passed before me in a year.”78

Arriving in Boston on a Friday morning, the three legislators did first things first: they conferred with the editor of the Jacksonian Boston Statesman & Morning Post. Then they took in some sights, two of the men visiting Bunker Hill while French went art-gazing at the Athenaeum.

Then came Jackson.

French was watching from his hotel window when a flag raised on the statehouse signaled Jackson’s arrival and the city went wild. Cannon fired. Bells were ringing. Fire engines paraded. Harvard students in full regalia stood in formation. And the crowd! It was unlike anything that French had ever seen. It was immense, a “solid mass of heads” as far as he could see, with soldiers, coaches, horsemen, children and adults, white and black so densely packed that “a person could have walked upon the heads and shoulders of the multitude.” When the president’s open carriage entered the heart of the city and his shock of white hair came into view, the crowd burst into the heartiest cheering that French had ever heard.

Later that day, French and his cohort met the president, who accepted their invitation. Then the next day, more festivities: a formal address by the governor at the statehouse, followed by a never-ending crowd of people surging toward Jackson, who bowed to each and every one until the doors were closed so he could catch his breath. “Heaven only knows how long they would have kept him there bowing,” French thought. A lavish feast in the Senate chamber followed, and then a formal review of Massachusetts infantry on Boston Common, attended—French guessed—by a hundred thousand people. “How small one man was among all that multitude,” he marveled, and yet “one man had caused its assemblage and on one alone every eye rested.” A few days later, Concord feted Jackson on a somewhat smaller scale, with yet another endless bout of bowing; Bess came to town to join in the fun. Moved by the power of it all, French became teary; thrilled with the implications of such power, Isaac Hill, now a U.S. senator and a member of Jackson’s Kitchen Cabinet, took a pinch of snuff and laughed.79

Andrew Jackson. The man was a phenomenon. A war hero. A tough-guy fighter; a duelist who killed his man. A self-made symbol of the American frontier. For French, Jackson’s coolness under fire during an 1835 assassination attempt would only add to his legend; as French wrote admiringly to his father after the would-be assassin fired off two pistols—which miraculously both misfired—the sixty-eight-year-old president had shoved people aside so he could “get at” the man himself.80 Jackson’s passions got the better of him time and again, and in this violent and passionate age, many Americans loved him the better for it.81

Friend and champion of the common man, Jackson could be trusted with power—or so the party line went, a one-two political punch that won him a lot of political muscle. The fact that Jackson championed the white common man often went unvoiced but was no less central to his broad appeal. French couldn’t praise him enough. “Only second in our annals to the Father of His Country … the bravest of her brave,” Jackson was “the venerated[,] the admired, the beloved Chieftain, whom any true democrat delights to honor.”82

To French, Jackson’s party was no less remarkable. Grounded on the seductive combination of Jackson’s war-hero popularity, an ambiguous common-man message, and the assurance that a national party would combat sectionalism and strengthen the Union, the Jacksonian Democrats electrified popular politics; in the presidential election of 1828, there was a massive increase in voter turnout wherever the party took hold, and it took hold with a vengeance in New Hampshire, with “Dictator” Isaac Hill, leader of the so-called Concord Regency, at its head.83 It was the first organized national political party of its kind.

French came of age when this political machine was first gunning its engines. A small-town boy with no sense of direction, he lurched from one vocation to another—a soldier, a lawyer, a ne’er-do-well knockabout, a clerk—until he stumbled, or rather plunged into the world of party politics, gaining a network of allies and influence in the process; for French and countless others, their life paths and the rise of the “Second Party System” were intertwined. A little over five months after feting Jackson, French was offered a House clerkship, and a week later he was headed for Washington.