The Cabell Family Papers
John Cabell Breckinridge (1821-1875)
| Breckinridge answered his country's call during the Mexican War and raced towards Mexico City with a regiment of Kentucky volunteers. Though he did not arrive in time to to help win the war, he accrued the adoration of his fellow citizens with the way he handled himself on the campaign: "Of courage, talent and all the generous qualities requisite to make a noble soldier," one Kentuckian wrote, "Breckinridge, of your City, is in an eminent degree possessed." These grateful men elected him a state legislator upon their return home in 1849. The following year, 1850, Breckinridge was elected to the United States House of Representatives as a Democrat and began his career in the federal government. |
| After two terms in the House, Breckinridge joined James Buchanan on the Democratic ticket and became the youngest Vice-president in American history, elected at the age of thirty-five. Throughout the escalating sectional conflict during the Buchanan administration, Breckinridge expressed sympathy with Southern interpretations of the Constitution--and maintained for example, that slaveowners should be able to carry their property in persons into any United States territory--but argued against secession and was extremely pessimistic about the viability of an independent Southern Confederacy. Notwithstanding these personal reservations, admirers from the Deep South convinced him to run for President in the famous four-way race campaign of 1860. Representing Southern (States-Rights) Democrats, Breckinridge received 18% of the popular vote and the 72 electoral votes from 10 Southern states and Delaware. His strong showing split the Democratic party in two and guaranteed a Republican victory. |
| Fleeing Washington in September 1861, Breckinridge volunteered in the Confederate Army and received from President Davis a commission as a brigadier general on 3 November 1861. He served throughout the war with distinction, including a stint from February-April 1865 as Secretary of War in the Confederate Cabinet. Following the Civil War, he fled to Europe through Cuba and did not return to his Kentucky home until 1869. He died there in 1875. |
| Additional Sources Consulted:
William C. Davis, Breckinridge: Statesman, Soldier, Symbol (1974)
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