After recovering from an illness
believed to be pneumonia, US President William Henry Harrison announced a new
policy on the issue of slavery in the federal territories. No new slaves
could be born in the territories, but slaves could be brought in from existing
slave states. The compromise alleviated the fears of abolitionists,
primarily Northerners, about the direct expansion of slavery and brought great
excitement to slave-holders, primarily Southerners, who gained a valuable new
export. Harrison hoped it would be a
transition into legalizing slavery overall in the territories, but it actually
contributed to the end of slavery in America.
Harrison was born in Virginia on
February 9, 1773, the last president born before the Declaration of
Independence. He was well educated at the Presbyterian Hampden-Sydney
College, where he began to take part in the Great Revival sweeping the young
nation. When word came that young William was beginning to participate in
abolitionist meetings, his father put him into medical school in
Philadelphia. Harrison disliked medicine and, upon his father's death,
took Virginia Governor "Lighthorse Harry" Lee's advice to join Army.
Because of his rugged discipline
and skill in command, Harrison quickly rose through the ranks. In 1795, while
stationed in Ohio (then America’s western frontier), Harrison eloped with Anna
Symmes, and the two would have ten children together. According to
historical study, Harrison also had six children through his slave Dilsia, all
of whom were sold to avoid scandal as his career changed from the military to
politics.
Harrison resigned as a lieutenant
in 1797 and became the Secretary of the Northwest Territory, often acting as
governor during the appointed official's long absences. Using his
business of horse-breeding and the platform of cheaper land prices as
encouragement for expansion in the territory, Harrison was elected to Congress
in 1799. After Harrion's display of leadership in passing the Harrison
Land Grant, President John Adams appointed him as Governor of the Indiana
Territory. He worked to prove up the territory quickly and was granted
the authority to make treaties with the local Indians. Many of Harrison's
plans involved indentured servitude and the legalization of slavery in the territory,
which would supply the manpower to improve the land all the sooner. As
Indiana became increasingly abolitionist, Harrison's proposals for slavery were
ended.
When the Shawnee under Tecumseh and
his brother The Prophet began to create a confederation of tribes in 1810,
Harrison came to national attention. Tecumseh argued that Harrison's
treaties with the Miami people did not apply to the other tribes, meaning that
Harrison had purchased substantially less land than the Treaty of Fort Wayne
stated. Harrison disagreed, and Tecumseh threatened to kill anyone who
settled the new land. War broke out, and, in 1811, Harrison defeated
Tecumseh at Prophetstown near the Tippecanoe River, earning his nickname
"Old Tippecanoe." The War of 1812 swiftly followed, and Harrison
again defeated Tecumseh at the Battle of the Thames alongside his British
allies, defending the Ohio region from incursion.
After the war, Harrison's political
career continued, including a stint as envoy to Gran Colombia, where he came
into a feud with Simon Bolivar over freedom. He felt Bolivar would become
a dictator over an anarchical people while Bolivar wrote, "The United
States [seems] destined by Providence to plague America with torments in the
name of freedom." In 1840, Harrison successfully campaigned to
become president on the Whig ticket, creating many of the public relations
activities used in politics today, include a jingle,
"Old Tip he wore a homespun coat, he
had no ruffled shirt: wirt-wirt,
But Matt he has the golden plate, and he's
a little squirt: wirt-wirt!"
He portrayed himself as a poor
frontiersman and his opponent Martin van Buren as a stodgy rich man, though
Harrison himself had been born wealthy and continued to be so. Harrison also
mastered reversing attempted attacks on his campaign. When the smear
rumor spread that Harrison was an old coot who would "sit in his log cabin
drinking hard cider" all day, he spread the image of himself as a man of
the people, which became popular. Democrats also played on his age,
nicknaming him "Granny Harrison." To show that he was still a
fit man despite being 68, Harrison gave a two-hour inaugural address standing
in the rain without a hat. He became ill afterward but proved himself in
recovering and contributing to the Whig cause.
With Harrison as president, Henry
Clay hoped to promote many of his ideals in the American System. Clay
initially was overly forward, to which Harrison responded, "Mr. Clay, you
forget that I am the President." Instead, Harrison and Daniel
Webster controlled the Whigs and encouraged development of the West. Many
of Clay's ideals did come into play such as the renewal of the National Bank
and the funding of internal improvements such as roads and canals, but tariffs
proved too divisive. Harrison championed Western settlement, including
the expansion of slavery for rapid economic improvement.
His plan of importing slaves and
freeing newborns as they came of age brought about the custom of transporting
pregnant female slaves back to the South. The action was deemed barbaric
(especially by Southern slave-owners whose own property would be more valuable
if only they could produce slaves), and it became illegal to transport a slave
"with child." Outcry arose over Congress legislating on
"property", but political precedent was established as the
Constitution regulated interstate commerce. As anti-slavery factions
began to gain power in Washington, further control over the transport of slaves
under interstate law was enacted such as health screenings. The acts
culminated in the liberation of Dred Scott when his case was brought forth by
another citizen in 1857.
With slavery increasingly
restricted to local markets, a balloon in the slave economy began with the
price of slaves skyrocketing to four and even six times the 1850s value. Investors eventually looked elsewhere, such
as tenant farming, and the price collapsed.
Slave-holders cried for government assistance, demanding that a public fund
be created to liberate slaves by purchasing them, often for slightly more than
market value. Democratic President Stephen
Douglas did so with his Emancipation Proclamation of 1863, and, by 1866,
slavery itself was put to an end.
--
we reverse this scenario on the Today in Alternate History blog with our variant April 4, 1841 - Old Tippecanoe recovers from pneumonia.
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