Van Buren, MARTIN, eighth president of the United States, was born 5th December 1782, the son of a small farmer, at Kinderhook, New York. He became office-boy to the village lawyer, studied hard, and was called to the bar in 1803. Long before this, however, he had developed a precocious interest in politics, and at the age of eighteen we find him already member of a nominating convention. In 1812 and 1816 he was elected to the state senate, and in 1815-19 he was state attorney-general. In 1821 he entered the United States senate, of which he was a member until his election in 1828 to the governorship of New York. In the same year he zealously supported Jackson for the presidency, and in 1829 he was rewarded with the portfolio of secretary of state. This he resigned in 1831. Two years later he was elected vice-president, and in 1835 president, but by a popular majority of less than 25,000, and that largely owing to his declared opposition to the 'slightest interference' with slavery. Van Buren's four years of office were darkened by the gloom of financial panic; but what one man could he did to lighten it, by wringing from congress its assent to a measure for a treasury independent of private banks. This and his firm adherence to obligations of neutrality during the Canadian rebellion of 1837 are his most statesmanlike acts, but both cost him popularity and votes: in 1840 he and his party were overwhelmingly defeated by the Whigs. He lost the nomination in 1844, because he opposed the annexation of Texas; and his nomination by the Free Soil party in 1848 only secured the return of the
Whig candidate and the rejection of both Democrats. This was his last important appearance, and he died at Kinderhook, 24th July 1862. Van Buren was a master of the politician's arts, but he used his great skill for what he counted the highest ends. He loved not to follow, but rather to make public opinion and a party for himself; for he had on the whole a statesman's soul and not a place-hunter's. So we see him often doggedly ranging himself on the unpopular side—favouring negro suffrage, and opposing an elective judiciary. He was intensely partisan, trained a Jefferson Democrat, and loyal to his early teaching; yet his political antipathies did not destroy his warm private friendship for great opponents such as Henry Clay.
See Lives by W. L. Mackenzie (Boston, 1846) and E. M. Shepard ('American Statesmen' series, 1888), and George Bancroft's eulogistic Martin Van Buren to the End of his Public Career (New York, 1889).