Martin Van Buren
File:Martin Van Buren Presidential Portrait.jpg
Order 8th President of the United States
In office March 4, 1837 – March 4, 1841
Vice President Richard Mentor Johnson
Preceded by Andrew Jackson
Succeeded by William Henry Harrison
Born December 5, 1782
Kinderhook, New York, United States
Political Party Democratic
Spouse Hannah Van Buren (m. 1807–1819)
Children 4 (including John Van Buren)
Profession Lawyer, politician
Alma mater Read law (no formal college)
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Martin Van Buren (December 5, 1782 – July 24, 1862) was the **8th president of the United States** (1837–1841). A skilled organizer and protégé of Andrew Jackson, he helped build the modern Democratic Party and later ran as the **Free Soil** candidate in 1848 opposing the spread of slavery.

Early Life and Career

Born in **Kinderhook, New York**, to a Dutch-speaking family, Van Buren read law and rose quickly in New York politics as a savvy party strategist. He served in the **New York State Senate**, as **state attorney general**, and in the **U.S. Senate** (1821–1828). As New York governor (briefly, 1829) and then **Secretary of State** under Jackson, he became a central architect of Jacksonian politics. He served as **vice president** (1833–1837) during Jackson’s second term.

Presidency (1837–1841)

Van Buren took office just as the **Panic of 1837** struck, triggering a deep depression marked by bank failures and unemployment. He backed the creation of an **Independent Treasury** (enacted 1840) to keep federal funds separate from private banks, a cornerstone of Jacksonian finance.

Other notable issues:

  • **Indian Removal:** Removals initiated under Jackson continued during Van Buren’s term, including the tragic **Trail of Tears** for the Cherokee.
  • **Foreign affairs:** Managed tensions with Britain during the **Aroostook “War”** (Maine–New Brunswick boundary dispute), which ended without large-scale fighting.
  • **Domestic politics:** Faced opposition from emerging Whigs and intra-party dissent as hard times persisted.

Defeated by **William Henry Harrison** in 1840, Van Buren’s single term was defined by economic crisis and his adherence to limited-government principles.

Later Life

In 1848, Van Buren led the anti-slavery Free Soil Party for president, opposing the expansion of slavery into western territories; he won no states but drew significant votes. He spent his final years at his Kinderhook estate, Lindenwald, writing and advising.

Legacy

Renowned as a master politician—the “Little Magician”—Van Buren helped shape America’s two-party system and disciplined national party organization. His presidency suffered from the Panic of 1837, but his Independent Treasury idea influenced U.S. finance for decades. His late-life Free Soil stance foreshadowed the antislavery coalition that would form the Republican Party.

See also