James Buchanan was one of the most qualified and accomplished men
elected to the presidency, and yet he turned out to be one of the worst.
As sectional conflict veered toward civil war, Buchanan and all his
preparation proved unequal to the challenges of his times. In this new
cradle-to-grave, life-and-times biography, Paul Kahan reconstructs (but
does not rehabilitate) the life of James Buchanan and emphasizes why and
how such an accomplished individual proved unable to manage the defining
crisis of the nation. Drawing on a diverse range of primary sources,
Kahan reconstructs the life of James Buchanan: his early legal career in
Pennsylvania and his stint in the Pennsylvania House of Representatives;
his service in the U.S House, during which time he helped consolidate
the Pennsylvania Democratic Party around Andrew Jackson; his time as
minister to Russia (which helped him avoid the Bank War); his years in
the U.S. Senate; his term as Polk's Secretary of State (during the
Mexican War); and his service as Pierce's minister to Great Britain
(which, important for Buchanan's career, kept him out of the country,
and from taking a position, during the Kansas-Nebraska crisis). By the
time he was elected president in 1856, Buchanan had assembled one of the
most impressive resumes in American public life. Approximately half the
book covers Buchanan's presidency, a tumultuous four years that left the
nation teetering on the precipice of Civil War--and much of the blame
can be laid at the feet of James Buchanan, whose southern sympathies led
him to make a series of bad decisions that inflamed the North
(Republicans in particular) and contributed to splitting the Democratic
Party: support for the Dred Scott Supreme Court decision, the
strong-arming of Kansas into the United States as a slave state, and an
expansionist foreign policy that appeared to match up with southern
dreams of expanding slavery beyond the borders of the United States.
When southern states started to leave the Union after Lincoln's
election, lame-duck Buchanan--who opposed secession--was too weak, and
weakened, to act firmly and in any event not inclined to inflame his
friends in the South. It would fall to Lincoln, in many ways Buchanan's
opposite (a Republican, a prairie lawyer with but two years' experience
in the U.S. House), to save the Union, and Buchanan has always
suffered--rightly--by the comparison.