Bell, John, 1796-1869

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John Bell was one of antebellum Tennessee's most prominent politicians and an acknowledged leader of the state's Whig Party. The son of a farmer and blacksmith, Bell was born in Davidson County and graduated from Cumberland College in 1814. After his admission to the bar in 1816, he opened a law practice in Franklin in Williamson County. A year later, his political career began with his election to the state Senate, but he declined to seek reelection after one term. Perhaps because he recognized the limitations of a provincial town for an ambitious youth, he moved to Murfreesboro, then Tennessee's capital, before finally settling in Nashville, the state's commercial center. By the time Nashville became the capital in 1826, Bell had established himself as one of the city's most prominent attorneys.

In 1827 Bell returned to politics and won the first of seven congressional terms in a bitter contest against former congressman Felix Grundy. He entered the House of Representatives as a supporter of Andrew Jackson, despite Jackson's endorsement of Grundy. Toward the end of Jackson's presidency, however, Bell worked with the administration's opposition. Never a member of the president's inner circle, Bell cultivated close connections with Nashville's mercantile community–solidified by his 1835 marriage to Jane (Erwin) Yeatman, the widow of one of the city's wealthiest merchants–and began to sympathize with the developing Whig Party's advocacy of federal government promotion of national economic development. At the same time, he apparently recognized that Jackson's preference for rival politicians would hinder his own aspirations. In 1835, although he still proclaimed loyalty to the administration, Bell accepted opposition support to win election over James K. Polk, Jackson's choice as Speaker of the House. Later that year he openly broke with the president when he became one of the leaders of the movement to elect Tennessee Senator Hugh Lawson White, rather than Democratic Party nominee Martin Van Buren, as Jackson's successor.

After White's loss in the 1836 presidential election, Bell successfully worked to move White's support into the national Whig Party, and the party ultimately rewarded him for his service with an 1841 appointment as secretary of war for the first Whig president, William Henry Harrison. Bell served only six months in the War Department before he and other cabinet members resigned after the party repudiated John Tyler, who had become president following Harrison's death. Returning to his law practice in Nashville, Bell spent the next six years watching political developments and waiting for the chance to return to public office. His opportunity finally came in 1847, when he agreed to serve a term in the state House of Representatives, where he gathered sufficient support to win election to the United States Senate.

Reelected to a second term in 1853, Bell served in the Senate during the national debate over the expansion of slavery into new territories. Although a slave owner, Bell quickly distinguished himself as an advocate of compromise. The only senator from a southern state to vote against passage of the Kansas-Nebraska Act in 1854, in 1858 he defied instructions from the Democratic-controlled Tennessee General Assembly and voted against Kansas's admission to the Union as a slave state. By the latter date, the legislature had already elected a Democrat to succeed him in the Senate, but his reputation as a defender of the Union made him an ideal presidential candidate in 1860 for the hastily formed Constitutional Union Party. In a contest characterized by sectional division, Bell finished last among four candidates, but he won the second largest number of popular votes in the southern states and carried the electoral votes of Tennessee, Kentucky, and Virginia.

When the lower South seceded after Abraham Lincoln's presidential victory, Bell at first urged Tennesseans to remain in the Union, and he met with the new president to encourage him to pursue a peaceful policy toward the South. After Fort Sumter and Lincoln's call for volunteers to put down the rebellion, Bell became convinced that the Republicans intended to impose a military dictatorship upon the South. He then reluctantly endorsed Tennessee's withdrawal from the Union. As the champion of a broken Union, Bell witnessed his political career come to an abrupt end. He avoided the Union army's occupation of Tennessee by moving to Alabama and later Georgia. After the war he spent his remaining years near the family's iron foundry in Stewart County.

Despite the oblivion of his later years, Bell had been among the most prominent southern politicians in the antebellum era. His career presents a reminder that Tennesseans were united neither behind Andrew Jackson's Democratic Party nor behind the extreme advocates of the defense of southern rights.

Archival Resources
Role Title Holding Repository
referencedIn Jacobs, John Williams, Collector. Isaac Shelby : papers, 1792-1893. The Filson Historical Society
referencedIn Confidential and unofficial letters sent [microform]., 1814-1847 Minnesota Historical Society
referencedIn Marshall family. Marshall family papers, 1815-1897. The Filson Historical Society
referencedIn Bell, J. E. Letters / J.E. Bell. Dartmouth College Library
referencedIn Henry, Gustavus A. (Gustavus Adolphus), 1804-1880. Gustavus A. Henry papers, 1804-1895. University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
creatorOf Bell, John, 1797-1869. John Bell collection, 1815-61. University of South Carolina, System Library Service, University Libraries
referencedIn Anderson, B. B. Speech, 1860. Tennessee State Library & Archives, TSLA
referencedIn Ethan Allen Hitchcock Papers, 1793-1888, (bulk 1830-1865) Library of Congress. Manuscript Division
referencedIn Saint James School collection, 1777-1847. Library of Congress
creatorOf Bell, John, 1797-1869,. Letters of R.M.T. Hunter, F. Mallory and Alfred, Lord Tennyson, 1841-1883. University of Virginia. Library
referencedIn Beall-Booth family. Beall-Booth family papers, 1778-1956. The Filson Historical Society
referencedIn U.S. History mss., 1612-1977 Lilly Library (Indiana University, Bloomington)
referencedIn Polk, James K. (James Knox), 1795-1849. James K. Polk : miscellaneous papers, 1835-1848. The Filson Historical Society
referencedIn Grundy, Felix, 1777-1840. Grundy, Felix 1777-1840 1832 June 9 letter. The Filson Historical Society
creatorOf Records of the Office of the Secretary of War. 1791 - 1948. Letters Received by Secretary of War John Bell National Archives at Washington, D.C
creatorOf Goodrich, Aaron, 1807-1887. Aaron Goodrich papers, 1828-1887. Minnesota Historical Society Library
creatorOf United States. War Dept. Confidential and unofficial letters sent, 1814-1847 [microform]. Minnesota Historical Society Library
referencedIn Scott, Joseph F. Letters, 1860. The Filson Historical Society
referencedIn Moselely, Alexander. Papers of the editors of the Richmond Whig, 1828-1885 (bulk 1849-1883). Huntington Library, Art Collections & Botanical Gardens
referencedIn Mobile and Ohio Railroad Company. Mobile and Ohio Railroad Company receipt book, 1855-1856, 1859-1864. Louisiana State University, LSU Libraries
referencedIn McAllister, John A. (John Allister), 1822-1896. American Political Ephemera, 1835-1884 (inclusive). Porterville Public Library
referencedIn Lincoln, Abraham, 1809-1865. Abraham Lincoln letter, 1860.
creatorOf Records of the Office of the Secretary of War. 1791 - 1948. Confidential and Unofficial Letters Sent National Archives at Washington, D.C
referencedIn [Tennessee broadside collection 1806-1860]. Duke University Libraries, Duke University Library; Perkins Library
referencedIn Polk and Yeatman family papers, 1773-1915. University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
referencedIn Friends of Bell and Everett Association. Minute book, 1860-1862. Historical Society of Pennsylvania
referencedIn Jeremiah Clemens letters, 1842-1860. Alabama Department of Archives and History
creatorOf Barbour, B. Johnson (Benjamin Johnson), 1821-1894. Papers of the Barbour family [manuscript], 1672-1930. University of Virginia. Library
referencedIn Hickman, Edwin Litton, 1875-1956. Collection of Hickman and Weakley family papers, 1801-1885. Tennessee State Library & Archives, TSLA
creatorOf John Bell letters and miscellany, 1821, 1841, undated New York Public Library. Manuscripts and Archives Division
referencedIn Overton, John, 1766-1833. John Overton papers, 1790-1840 [microfilm manuscript]. University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
referencedIn Heiskell, Frederick Steidinger, 1786-1882. Frederick S. Heiskell Papers, 1789-1882 1832-1882. East Tennessee State University, TET
referencedIn Brown-Ewell family papers, 1781-1984. The Filson Historical Society
referencedIn White, Robert H. (Robert Hiram), 1883-1970. Papers, 1832-1970. Tennessee State Library & Archives, TSLA
referencedIn Frederick M. Dearborn collection of military and political Americana, Part I: The Revolution and the Administration, 1669-1958. Houghton Library
creatorOf Brownlow family. Family papers, 1848-1902. University of Tennessee, John C. Hodges Library
referencedIn Breckinridge, James, 1763-1833. Papers of James Breckinridge, of Grove Hill, Fincastle, Botetourt Co., Va. [manuscript], 1783-1830. University of Virginia. Library
referencedIn Herndon-Weik Collection of Lincolniana, circa 1824-1933 Library of Congress. Manuscript Division
referencedIn Noyes, Joseph Cobham, 1798-1868. Joseph Cobham Noyes autograph letter signed to John Bell, 1841 Apr. 15. Maine Historical Society Library
referencedIn Griffin, Len M. Letter : Bainbridge, Ga., to Abraham Lincoln, Springfield, Ill., 1860 Nov. 13. Texas Christian University
referencedIn Botts, John Minor, 1802-1869. Letter to an unidentified recipient [manuscript] 1860 Oct. 27. University of Virginia. Library
referencedIn Overton, John Franklin. Papers, 1848-1879. Tennessee State Library & Archives, TSLA
Role Title Holding Repository
Relation Name
associatedWith Anderson, B. B. person
correspondedWith Beall-Booth family. person
associatedWith Bell, J. E. person
associatedWith Botts, John Minor, 1802-1869. person
associatedWith Breckinridge, James, 1763-1833. person
associatedWith Brownlow family. family
associatedWith Clemens, Jeremiah, 1814-1865. person
associatedWith Dearborn, Frederick M. (Frederick Myers), b. 1876 person
associatedWith Friends of Bell and Everett Association. corporateBody
associatedWith Goodrich, Aaron, 1807-1887. person
associatedWith Griffin, Len M. person
associatedWith Grundy, Felix, 1777-1840. person
associatedWith Heiskell, Frederick Steidinger, 1786-1882. person
associatedWith Henry, Gustavus A. (Gustavus Adolphus), 1804-1880. person
correspondedWith Herndon, William Henry, 1818-1891 person
associatedWith Hickman, Edwin Litton, 1875-1956. person
associatedWith Hitchcock, Ethan Allen, 1798-1870. person
associatedWith Jacobs, John Williams, Collector. person
correspondedWith Lincoln, Abraham, 1809-1865 person
associatedWith Lincoln, Abraham, 1809-1865. person
associatedWith Marshall family. family
associatedWith McAllister, John A. (John Allister), 1822-1896. person
associatedWith Mobile and Ohio Railroad Company. corporateBody
correspondedWith Noyes, Joseph Cobham, 1798-1868. person
associatedWith Overton, John, 1766-1833. person
associatedWith Overton, John Franklin. person
associatedWith Polk, James K. (James Knox), 1795-1849. person
associatedWith Scott, Joseph F. person
associatedWith United States. War Dept. corporateBody
correspondedWith Weik, Jesse William, 1857-1930 person
associatedWith White, Robert H. (Robert Hiram), 1883-1970. person
Place Name Admin Code Country
Mill Creek TN US
Murfreesboro TN US
Huntsville AL US
Franklin TN US
Stewart County TN US
Subject
Occupation
Cabinet officers
Lawyers
Representatives, U.S. Congress
Senators, U.S. Congress
Speakers of the House, U.S. Congress
State politicians
State Representative
Activity

Person

Birth 1796-02-18

Death 1869-09-10

Male

Americans

English

Information

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