Background The front-runner for the nomination was Douglas, who was considered a moderate on the
slavery issue. With the 1854
Kansas–Nebraska Act, he advanced the doctrine of
popular sovereignty: allowing settlers in each
Territory to decide for themselves whether slavery would be allowed—a change from the flat prohibition of slavery in most Territories under the
Missouri Compromise, which the South had welcomed. However, the
Supreme Court’s ensuing 1857
'Dred Scott' decision declared that the
Constitution protected slavery in all Territories. Douglas was challenged for his Senate seat by
Abraham Lincoln in 1858, and narrowly won re-election, after the
Lincoln-Douglas debates, by professing the
Freeport Doctrine, a
de facto rejection of
Dred Scott, with militant Southern "
Fire-Eaters", such as
William Yancey of
Alabama, opposing him as a traitor. Many of them openly predicted a split in the party and the election of
Republican front-runner
William H. Seward. The 1860 Democratic National Convention convened at South Carolina Institute Hall (destroyed in the Great Fire of 1861) in
Charleston, South Carolina, on April 23, 1860: the galleries at the convention were packed with pro-slavery spectators. The "Fire-eater" majority on the convention's
platform committee, chaired by
William Waightstill Avery of North Carolina, produced an explicitly pro-slavery document, endorsing
Dred Scott and Congressional legislation protecting slavery in the territories. Northern Democrats refused to acquiesce, as
Dred Scott was extremely unpopular in the North, and the Northerners said they could not carry a single state with that platform: this would end any Democratic prospect of retaining the White House, as no previous candidate had won the presidency without winning either New York or Pennsylvania, and only four (
John Adams in 1796,
James Madison in 1812,
John Quincy Adams in 1824, and
James Buchanan in 1856) had been elected without winning both. Douglas and supporters thus preferred the 1856 Cincinnati platform. On April 30, the minority (Northern) report was substituted for that of the majority (Southern) report by a vote of 165 to 138. The question next in order before the convention was upon the adoption of the second resolution of the minority of the committee: on this question Alabama, Arkansas, one of Delaware's delegates, Florida, Georgia, Louisiana, Mississippi, and Texas refused to vote. The Douglas party abandoned the vague second resolution, and it was defeated by an overwhelming vote of 238 to 21 (with 44 abstentions). File:1860DNCMinorityReport1stResolutionVote.png|
Minority Report Substitution Vote File:1860DNCMinorityReport2ndResolutionVote.png|
Minority Report 2nd Resolution Vote Between April 30 and May 1, 51 Southern delegates walked out of the convention in protest: and declared themselves the real convention as the Institute Hall convention proceeded to nominations. Since both the majority and the minority resolutions on the Territorial question were rejected, nothing remained except the Cincinnati platform as the Douglas faction had desired. The dominant Douglas forces believed their path was now clear.
Two-thirds rule Before the balloting for president commenced, Mr. Howard of Tennessee succeeded in obtaining a vote of the convention in affirmance of the two-thirds rule: on his motion they resolved, by 141 votes to 112, "that the President of the Convention be and he is hereby directed not to declare any person nominated for the office of President or Vice President unless he shall have received a number of votes equal to two-thirds of the votes of all the Electoral Colleges." It was well known at the time that this resolution would render the regular nomination of Douglas impossible. File:1860DNCTwoThirdsRuleVote.png|
Two-Thirds Rule Vote Presidential balloting Six major candidates were nominated at the convention: Douglas, former
Treasury Secretary James Guthrie of
Kentucky, Senator
Robert M. T. Hunter of
Virginia, Senator
Joseph Lane of
Oregon, former Senator
Daniel S. Dickinson of
New York, and Senator
Andrew Johnson of
Tennessee.
Presidential candidates File:BradyHandy-StephenADouglas restored.jpg|
Senator Stephen A. Douglas of Illinois File:JamesGuthrieKentuckyCropped.png|Former
Secretary of the Treasury James Guthrie of Kentucky File:RobertMercerTaliaferroHunter.png|
Senator Robert M. T. Hunter of Virginia File:JosephLane.png|
Senator Joseph Lane of Oregon File:DanielSDickinson.png|Former
Senator Daniel S. Dickinson of New York File:Andrew Johnson, seated, facing left 1860.jpg|
Senator Andrew Johnson of Tennessee While Douglas led on the first ballot, receiving of the 253 votes cast, the convention had required a two-thirds vote to win the nomination: further to this, convention chairman
Caleb Cushing ruled that this was two-thirds of
the whole membership, not two-thirds of those
present and voting. This ruling meant Douglas needed 202 votes ( more votes), or 80% of the remaining 253 delegates: this was all but impossible as it would have required several of the remaining Southern delegates to vote for Douglas, who they vehemently opposed. Consequently, the convention held 57 ballots, and though Douglas led on all of them, he never received more than votes. On the 57th ballot, Douglas received votes, still votes short of the nomination, though far ahead of Guthrie, who was second with . On 3 May, the delegates voted to adjourn the convention, and reconvene in
Baltimore six weeks later. A few votes went to former Senator
Isaac Toucey of
Connecticut and Senator
James Pearce of
Maryland, while Senator
Jefferson Davis of
Mississippi (the future
Confederate President) received one vote on over fifty ballots from
Benjamin Butler of
Massachusetts. Ironically, during the Civil War, Butler became a Union general, and Davis ordered him hanged as a criminal if he was captured.
1st Day of Presidential Balloting / 8th Day of Convention (Tuesday, May 1, 1860) File:1860DemocraticPresidentialNomination1stBallot.png|
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12th Ballot 2nd Day of Presidential Balloting / 9th Day of Convention (Wednesday, May 2, 1860) File:1860DemocraticPresidentialNomination13thBallot.png|
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57th Ballot == Baltimore convention (Northern Democratic) ==