14th President
Democratic
1853-1857Franklin Pierce
Sectional Crisis
Pierce’s administration deepened sectional conflict, especially after the Kansas-Nebraska Act effectively reopened the expansion of slavery question.
Sequence
14th President
Years
1853-1857
Party
Democratic
Why This Presidency Matters
Kansas-Nebraska Act
Bleeding Kansas
Weakening of the national party system
Sequence Recall
Previous
Millard Fillmore
Next
James Buchanan
Term Structure
1853-03-04 to 1857-03-04
Elected by the Electoral CollegeWhat This President Actually Did
A full dossier has not been written for this presidency yet. The page still includes timeline, institutional themes, measures, crises, and study prompts, and the dossier model is ready to be filled out presidency by presidency.
Vice Presidents
William R. King
Constitutional Themes
Sectional collapse under party government
Signature Measures
Kansas-Nebraska Act
Defining Crises
Bleeding Kansas
Self-Test Prompts
Which party did Franklin Pierce represent, and what broader era does this presidency belong to?
Democratic. This presidency is grouped here under Sectional Crisis.
How did Franklin Pierce first enter office?
Elected by the Electoral College.
What are the three most important moments to remember from this presidency?
Kansas-Nebraska Act; Bleeding Kansas; Weakening of the national party system.
Daily Drill Extension
Which presidents bracket Franklin Pierce in the sequence?
Millard Fillmore and James Buchanan.
Which party and era should you associate with Franklin Pierce?
Democratic; Sectional Crisis.
How did Franklin Pierce first enter office?
Elected by the Electoral College.
Name two high-signal moments that make Franklin Pierce historically memorable.
Kansas-Nebraska Act; Bleeding Kansas.
Which constitutional or institutional themes should you connect to Franklin Pierce?
Sectional collapse under party government.
