|
Ranking the Presidents |
"I like the Walrus best," said
"He ate more than the Carpenter, though," said Tweedledee.
"You see, he held his handkerchief in front, so that
the Carpenter couldn't see how many he took: contrariwise."
"That was mean!"
"Then I like the Carpenter best -- if he didn't eat so many as the
Walrus."
"But he ate as many as he could get," said Tweedledum.
-Lewis Carroll, Through The Looking-Glass
Throughout this website I have tried to
stick to the objective facts, except for the page titled WereThey Just Men of their
Time?
One problem with objectivity is that it treats Andrew Jackson and Ulysses Grant
as equal: both slave owners. Ditto with James Buchanan and Abraham
Lincoln, both non-owners.
On this page I try to distinguish between
different levels of commitment to slavery or anti-slavery. The categories
are arbitrary, subjective, and my own.
|
CATEGORY |
PRESIDENTS |
EXPLANATION |
|
1. Slave-trader |
Andrew Jackson |
|
|
2. Lifetime
commitment to slaveownership |
Thomas Jefferson |
Each of these
presidents owned slaves for all of their adult lives. Some owned over a
hundred, some owned only a few, but all owned "as many as they could
get." |
|
3. Lifetime only |
George Washington |
|
|
4. Interrupted
slaveowners |
William Henry Harrison |
Johnson was a Democratic pro-union Senator from
Confederate Tennessee. Rebel forces confiscated his slaves and at that
point things get murky. Some reports say they were given back.
Johnson says that at least some them came back on their own and he treated
them as free employees from then on. If he had any slaves left he
certainly freed them when, as Military Governor of |
|
5. Minimal
slaveownership |
Martin Van Buren |
Grant apparently never bought or sold slaves but his
wife received some from her father, and he used the labor of other of his
father-in-law's slaves. We have a certificate signed by Grant freeing a
slave. |
|
6. Technically
non-slaveowner |
James Buchanan |
|
|
7. Accidental
non-slaveowner |
Franklin
Pierce |
|
|
8. Passive
anti-slavery |
John Adams |
Fillmore said he despised slavery, but as president he
felt he had a constitutional duty to defend it. |
|
9. Active
anti-slavery |
John Quincy Adams |
|
Return to home page