Free-Soil party
In U.S. history, political party that came into existence in
1847–48 chiefly because of rising opposition to the extension of
slavery into any of the territories newly acquired from Mexico.
The struggle in Congress over the Wilmot Proviso helped to
consolidate the Free-Soil forces, which comprised those New
York Democrats known as Barnburners, the antislavery Whigs,
and members of the former Liberty party. These forces met in
mass convention at Buffalo in Aug., 1848, where the party was
formally organized and Martin Van Buren and Charles F. Adams
(1807–86) were chosen as its candidates for President and Vice
President. The platform also declared for a homestead law,
internal improvements, and a tariff for revenue only. The party
polled nearly 300,000 votes and, by giving New York state to
the Whigs, was a decisive factor in making Zachary Taylor
President. The party elected one Senator, Salmon P. Chase of
Ohio, and 13 Congressmen. The Compromise of 1850
supposedly settled the slavery issue, and the Barnburner element
went back to its old allegiance. A few radical antislavery men
kept the organization in existence and nominated John P. Hale
for President in 1852; he received more than 150,000 votes. In
1854 the party was absorbed into the new Republican party.