Unlike in 1844, there was no obvious candidate who could command the unanimous support of the Liberty Party. While leaders of the Liberty League hoped to persuade Birney to stand for a third time, his reputation had been damaged by missteps during the 1844 campaign, and Birney himself was disinclined to run again.
Liberty League convention The Liberty League met at
Macedon Lock, New York over June 8–10, 1847 and nominated Smith for president and
Elihu Burritt for vice president. (Burritt declined the nomination, and the League eventually promoted
Charles C. Foote to be Smith's running mate.) Seventy delegates were in attendance, including Goodell, who presided over the meeting. The convention adopted a platform endorsing an antislavery interpretation of the
United States Constitution,
free trade, abolition of the army and navy, and
land reform. Reflecting the influence of early
feminists within the League, prominent female abolitionists
Lydia Maria Child and
Lucretia Mott received one vote apiece in the balloting for president. Image:GerritSmith-1840s.jpg| File:James Birney(Cropped).jpg| File:Mott Lucretia Painting Kyle 1841.jpg| File:Lydia Maria Child engraving.jpg|
Liberty Party convention A deputation from the Liberty League was present when the Liberty Party held their national convention at
Buffalo, New York on October 20, 1847. They aimed to secure Smith's nomination by the national party on a platform accepting the resolves of the Macedon convention. The faction led by Chase, meanwhile, continued to seek support from disaffected members of the two major parties. In the months preceding the convention, they began to promote Hale as a candidate capable of uniting a broad coalition of Liberty men, Conscience Whigs, and Independent Democrats on the basis of opposition to slavery's extension. A contingent of Liberty leaders including
Joshua Leavitt,
Henry B. Stanton, and
John Greenleaf Whittier met with Hale in Boston in July 1847 to encourage him to make a public declaration of his candidacy. Hale, however, was concerned that accepting the party's nomination would weaken his position in the Senate and asked for the convention to be delayed until the following spring. When the Chase faction failed to secure the delay of the convention, Hale wrote to
Lewis Tappan requesting that his name not be placed in nomination at the Buffalo convention, but Tappan ignored this request. Acceptance of Hale required a significant shift in the party's attitude and approach to politics. Hale had earned the high regard of many Liberty Party voters for his protests against the
gag rule and his opposition to the
annexation of Texas; however, he was not a member of the Liberty Party, had never belonged to any antislavery society, and stopped short of calling for the immediate abolition of slavery, instead adopting a policy of non-extension. Chase and his allies worked tirelessly throughout the summer in support of Hale's candidacy; their efforts were rewarded, as Hale was nominated overwhelmingly by the national convention, with 103 votes to 44 for Smith. Former
Ohio Supreme Court Justice Leicester King was nominated for vice president. Image:JP-Hale.jpg| Image:GerritSmith-1840s.jpg| File:Samuel Lewis; first superintendent of common schools for the state of Ohio (cropped).jpg| File:Samuel Clement Fessenden (Maine Congressman).jpg| File:William-Goodell(Cropped).png| File:Appletons' Jay John - William.jpg| File:Francis Bicknell Carpenter - Salmon P. Chase - NPG.69.47 - National Portrait Gallery.jpg| File:John Jay II.jpg| ==1848 Free Soil nomination==