William L. Marcy: Difference between revisions
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William Learned Marcy was a Democratic Party leader and [[U.S. Secretary of State]]. He once remarked about the system of patronage and party politics emerging during the era of [[Andrew Jackson]], "To the victor go the spoils," after which the [[spoils system]] came to called. As Secretary of State, he asked U.S. European Diplomats [[James Buchanan]], [[John Y. Mason]], and [[Pierre Soulé]] to draft the [[Ostend Manifesto]], but because of its aggressively pro-slavery slant, Marcy disavowed any connection with it. | William Learned Marcy was a Democratic Party leader and [[U.S. Secretary of State]]. He once remarked about the system of patronage and party politics emerging during the era of [[Andrew Jackson]], "To the victor go the spoils," after which the [[spoils system]] came to called. As Secretary of State, he asked U.S. European Diplomats [[James Buchanan]], [[John Y. Mason]], and [[Pierre Soulé]] to draft the [[Ostend Manifesto]], but because of its aggressively pro-slavery slant, Marcy disavowed any connection with it. | ||
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Latest revision as of 12:00, 8 November 2024
William Learned Marcy was a Democratic Party leader and U.S. Secretary of State. He once remarked about the system of patronage and party politics emerging during the era of Andrew Jackson, "To the victor go the spoils," after which the spoils system came to called. As Secretary of State, he asked U.S. European Diplomats James Buchanan, John Y. Mason, and Pierre Soulé to draft the Ostend Manifesto, but because of its aggressively pro-slavery slant, Marcy disavowed any connection with it.