Old Tip vs. the Sly Fox: The 1840 Election and the Making of a Partisan Nation

Old Tip vs. the Sly Fox: The 1840 Election and the Making of a Partisan Nation

by Richard Ellis
Old Tip vs. the Sly Fox: The 1840 Election and the Making of a Partisan Nation

Old Tip vs. the Sly Fox: The 1840 Election and the Making of a Partisan Nation

by Richard Ellis

Hardcover

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Overview

Usually remembered for its slogan “Tippecanoe and Tyler too,” the election of 1840 is also the first presidential election of which it might be truly said, “It’s the economy, stupid.” Tackling a contest best known for log cabins, cider barrels, and catchy songs, this timely volume reveals that the election of 1840 might be better understood as a case study of how profoundly the economy shapes the presidential vote.

Richard J. Ellis, a veteran scholar of presidential politics, suggests that the election pitting the Democratic incumbent Martin Van Buren against Whig William Henry Harrison should also be remembered as the first presidential election in which a major political party selected—rather than merely anointed—its nominee at a national nominating convention. In this analysis, the convention’s selection, as well as Henry Clay’s post-convention words and deeds, emerge as crucial factors in the shaping of the nineteenth-century partisan nation. Exploring the puzzle of why the Whig Party’s political titan Henry Clay lost out to a relative political also-ran, Ellis teases out the role the fluctuating economy and growing antislavery sentiment played in the party’s fateful decision to nominate the Harrison-Tyler ticket. His work dismantles the caricature of the 1840 campaign (a.k.a. the “carnival campaign”) as all froth and no substance, instead giving due seriousness to the deeply held moral commitments, as well as anxieties about the political system, that informed the campaign.

In Old Tip vs. the Sly Fox, the campaign of 1840 can finally be seen clearly for what it was: a contest of two profoundly different visions of policy and governance, including fundamental, still-pressing questions about the place of the presidency and Congress in the US political system.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780700629459
Publisher: University Press of Kansas
Publication date: 06/18/2020
Series: American Presidential Elections
Pages: 520
Sales rank: 1,136,420
Product dimensions: 6.20(w) x 9.30(h) x 1.40(d)

About the Author

Richard J. Ellis is Mark O. Hatfield Professor of Politics, Policy, Law, and Ethics at Willamette University. His many books include The Development of the American Presidency (Third Edition), Historian in Chief: How Presidents Interpret the Past to Shape the Future (as coeditor), and, from Kansas, Presidential Travel: The Journey from George Washington to George W. Bush.

Table of Contents

Editors’ Foreword

Preface

1. The Age of Van Buren

2. The Politics of Boom and Bust

3. The Two Senators: Daniel Webster and Henry Clay

4. The Two Generals: William Henry Harrison and Winfield Scott

5. The Road to the Whig Convention

6. Come Together

7. “We Go for Principles, Not Men”: The Democratic Convention

8. See How They Run: Campaigning for President

9. “The Presidential Contest Absorbs Every Thing Else”

10. Tippecanoe and the Economy Too: Understanding the Election of 1840

Appendix A: Popular Vote for President in 1836 and 1840

Appendix B: Democratic Party Platform, May 6, 1840

Appendix C: William Henry Harrison Inaugural Address, March 4, 1841

Notes

Bibliographic Essay

Index

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