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Complete HarpWeek Biography:
Blair, Francis Preston, Jr. (February 19, 1821 – July 8,
1875)
Francis (“Frank”) Preston Blair Jr. was a congressman and the Democratic
vice–presidential nominee in 1868. He was born on February 19, 1821, to Eliza
Gist Blair and Francis Preston Blair Sr., who was a member of President Andrew
Jackson’s “kitchen cabinet” and editor of the Congressional Globe. He was a
brother of Montgomery Blair, who was a mayor of St. Louis and postmaster general
in President Abraham Lincoln’s cabinet.
Young Frank Blair was a bright but difficult student, who was expelled from
several private schools and later from the University of North Carolina and
Yale. In 1841, he managed to complete his studies at Princeton, but faculty
objections to his rude behavior postponed his graduation until the following
year. In 1842, he attended law school at his father’s alma mater, Transylvania
University in Lexington, Kentucky. After passing the bar, he joined his
brother’s law firm in St. Louis, and then worked in the law office of Democratic
Senator Thomas Hart Benton. In 1845, he traveled to the west in an effort to
improve his health. At the commencement of the Mexican–American War, he enlisted
in the army. At the end of the war, he returned to St. Louis to resume his law
practice and briefly edit the Missouri Democrat. He married Appoline
Alexander; they had eight children.
Blair was a slaveowner, but opposed the expansion of slavery into the
American West and favored the colonization of blacks to Africa. In 1848, he
helped to found the Free–P in Missouri and edited the party’s organ, the
Barnburner. His energetic condemnation of slavery and its expansion provoked
an assassination attempt on his life. He did endorse, however, the Compromise of
1850, which allowed the electorates in the Utah and New Mexico territories to
vote on the slavery issue and let California enter the Union as a free state.
His stance on the 1850 Compromise led to a break with his political mentor,
Senator Benton.
Blair represented the Democratic Party first in the Missouri legislature
(1853–1856) and then in the U. S. Congress (1857–1859). He was the only
Free–Soil advocate among slave–state congressmen, and he supported Republican
John C. Frémont for president in 1856. His maiden speech on the House floor,
partly written by his father, depicted slavery as a national problem, rather
than as a regional institution. Arguing that slavery’s dissolution was
inevitable, he advocated gradual emancipation and the colonization of free and
freed blacks to Africa. In 1859, Blair gained national recognition for an
anti–slavery speech (another collaboration with his father), in which the
congressman articulated his plan of gradual emancipation, colonization, and free
labor. The oration was published as The Destiny of the Races on This
Continent.
In 1858, running as a Democrat, Blair lost his bid for reelection to
Congress. In 1860, he became a Republican and after endorsing Missouri’s Edward
Bates for the presidential nomination, switched at the national convention to
back Abraham Lincoln. Blair campaigned vigorously for Lincoln in the general
election and was himself elected by a narrow margin to Congress as a Republican.
When the Southern slave states seceded and the threat of civil war mounted,
Blair personally financed the organization of paramilitary units (called “Home
Guards”) to defend St. Louis and Missouri for the Union. His home state was
bitterly divided and became a bloody battleground during the Civil War. In the
early months of the war, Blair led state militia units against Confederate
troops before leaving to take his seat in Congress, where he chaired the House
Committee on Military Defense. His actions in Missouri were instrumental in
keeping that state within the Union.
Blair persuaded President Lincoln to name Frémont as Western Department
commander, but the congressman soon became critical of what he considered to be
Frémont’s incompetence and lobbied for the general’s removal. In 1862, Blair
resigned from Congress to take a commission in the Union army, and returned to
Missouri where he used his own money to raise seven infantry regiments. After
the siege of Vicksburg, Mississippi (March 29 – July 4, 1863), he was promoted
to the rank of major general. He also saw action in the Chattanooga Campaign
(October–November 1863) and in General William Tecumseh Sherman’s March to the
Sea (November–December 1864). In 1862, Blair was reelected to Congress as a
Republican, so resigned from the army to take his seat in the House on March 4,
1865.
In Congress, Blair backed the more lenient Reconstruction plans proposed by
President Lincoln and, after Lincoln’s assassination, by President Andrew
Johnson, while he fought strenuously against the policies of the Radical
Republicans. He so embittered his congressional colleagues that they rejected
President Johnson’s nominations of him as revenue collector in St. Louis and as
U.S. minister to Austria.
In 1868, the Democratic Party nominated Blair as Horatio Seymour’s
vice–presidential running mate. During the campaign, Blair advocated
nullification of the Reconstruction acts and predicted that if General Ulysses
S. Grant, the Republican presidential nominee, were elected, his presidency
would degenerate into a military dictatorship. Blair’s harsh words and abrasive
personality tended to alienate potential supporters and provided fodder for his
Republican opponents. He and Seymour lost the 1868 election.
In 1871, Blair won a special election to the U.S. Senate, supported by a
coalition of Democrats and Liberal Republicans. In 1872, he campaigned for
Horace Greeley, the presidential nominee of the Democratic and Liberal
Republican Parties. Blair failed to win reelection to the Senate in 1873. Two
years later, on July 8, 1875, he died in St. Louis of head injuries sustained in
a fall.
Sources consulted: Christopher Phillips, “Blair, Francis Preston,
Jr.,” American National Biography (online); Biographical Directory of
the U.S. Congress; and, Mark Boatner, The Civil War Dictionary.
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