Jane Appleton Pierce (Jane Appleton Pierce)

Jane Appleton Pierce

Born in Hampton, New Hampshire, the daughter of Reverend Jesse Appleton, a Congregationalist minister, and Elizabeth Means-Appleton, Jane was a petite, frail, shy, melancholy figure. After the death of her father, who had served as president of Bowdoin College not long before Franklin enrolled there, she moved at age 13 into the mansion of her wealthy maternal grandparents in Amherst.  How she met Pierce, a young lawyer with political ambitions, is unknown, but her brother-in-law Alpheus S. Packard was one of Pierce’s instructors at Bowdoin. Franklin, almost 30, married Jane, 28, on November 19, 1834, at the bride’s maternal grandparents’ home in Amherst, New Hampshire. The Reverend Silas Aiken, Jane’s brother-in-law, conducted the small ceremony. The couple honeymooned six days at the boardinghouse of Sophia Southurt near Washington, D.C..

Franklin Pierce was a member of the U.S. House of Representatives by the time they married and became a U.S. Senator in 1837. Jane hated life in Washington, D.C., and encouraged her husband to resign his Senate seat and return to New Hampshire, which he did in 1842. Service in the Mexican-American War brought him the rank of Brigadier General and local fame as a hero. He returned home safely, and for four more years the Pierces lived quietly at Concord, New Hampshire, in the happiest period of their lives, where they watched their son Benjamin “Benny” grow up.  In 1852, the Democratic Party made Pierce their candidate for president; Jane fainted at the news. When he took her to Newport for a respite, 11-year-old Benny wrote to her: “I hope he won’t be elected for I should not like to be at Washington and I know you would not either.” But the President-elect convinced his wife that his office would be an asset for Benny’s success in life.

The Pierces apparently had genuine affection for each other, but they quarreled often—preferring private life, she opposed his decision to run for president—and gradually they drifted apart. When Benny was killed in a train accident before the swearing-in, Jane believed that God was displeased with her husband’s political ambitions. She distanced herself during her husband’s presidency, wrapped in melancholia after losing every one of her young children. She never recovered from the tragedy.

For nearly two years, she remained in the upstairs living quarters of the White House, spending her days writing maudlin letters to her dead son. She left the social chores to her aunt Abby Kent-Means and her close friend Varina Davis, wife of War Secretary Jefferson Davis. Pierce made her first official appearance as First Lady at a New Year’s Day reception in 1855 and thereafter served as White House hostess intermittently.  She died of tuberculosis at Andover, Massachusetts, on December 2, 1863. She was buried at Old North Cemetery in Concord, New Hampshire; her husband was interred there beside her in 1869.

 

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Born

  • March, 12, 1806
  • USA
  • Hampton, New Hampshire

Died

  • December, 02, 1863
  • USA
  • Andover, Massachusetts

Cemetery

  • Old North Cemetery
  • Concord, New Hampshire
  • USA

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