Monday, July 19, 2021

Dead Presidents Podcast Episode 14 - Franklin Pierce & Top 5 Would Be Presidents

Franklin Pierce was a Democratic congressman, party leader, Mexican-American war hero, and #1 on our list of Top 5 Drunkest Presidents. He was nominated as a compromise candidate in 1852 and, taking office in the wake of a terrible family tragedy, promised not to let slavery re-emerge as a national issue after the sectional crisis of 1850. But when Senator Stephen Douglas came calling with a plan to organize the Kansas-Nebraska territory, Pierce dove headlong into a new sectional crisis and sparked a violent prelude to the coming Civil War. Also: Our list of Top 5 Would Be Presidents looks at some of the most interesting failed presidential candidates and speculates about what might've been had they occupied the White House.

Dead Presidents Podcast Homepage (with links to access the podcast on your favorite podcast app!)






We're very proud of all of our wonderful Episode 14 sponsors:
National Baby Show – New York Daily Herald (New York, NY) – May 11, 1855
National Baby Show – New York Daily Herald (New York, NY) – May 26, 1855
National Baby Show – New York Tribune (New York, NY) – June 2, 1855
National Baby Show – New York Tribune (New York, NY) – June 12, 1855
Infant’s Shoes – Buffalo Morning Express (Buffalo, NY) – May 28, 1853
Toys for the Babies – Rutland Weekly Herald (Rutland, VT) – November 30, 1855
Edward Wadsworth and his wife Eliza – Hartford Courant (Hartford, CT) – December 17, 1853
George Hodges and his sleeping partner James Wilson – Belvidere Standard (Belvidere, IL) – August 7, 1855
John Woodward and his wife/slave Louisa – Evening Star (Washington, DC) – February 11, 1856
Patrick Hurley and his wife Amanda Jane Hurley – Evening Star (Washington, DC) – January 15, 1856
Amanda Jane Hurley responds – Evening Star (Washington, DC) – January 18, 1856
Dr. Locock’s Female Wafers – Bangor Daily Whig and Courier (Bangor, ME) – June 1, 1853
Reward for Horse Shooter – The Kansas Tribune (Lawrence, KS) – September 17, 1855