Our gay Commander-in-Chief
Our gay Commander-in-Chief
by Harvey
Wasserman
December 17, 2010
As "conservatives" scream
and yell about gays in the military, they might remember
that in all likelihood we have already had a
gay
Commander-in-Chief.
His name was James Buchanan. He was the 15th President of the United States.
A Democrat from Pennsylvania, Buchanan is discreetly referred to in official texts as "our only bachelor president."
In fact, many
historians believe that he may well have been "married" to
William Rufus King, a pro-slavery Democrat from Alabama
who was our only bachelor Vice President.
The two
men lived together for years. Andrew Jackson, never one to
shy from bullhorn bigotry, was among those who variously
referred to them as "Aunt Nancy" and "Mr. Fancy." Other
Washington wags called them "Mr. & Mrs. Buchanan," and the
like.
The nature of their relationship was never
officially confirmed or proclaimed in public. They were
widely referred to as "Siamese
twins," slang at the time
for a gay couple. But there was no incriminating gap dress
or heartfelt double-ring ceremony, civil or
otherwise.
It was not uncommon at the time for men and women of the
same gender to live together and even share a bed while
remaining sexually uninvolved.
Buchanan was once
engaged to marry a wealthy young woman named Ann Coleman.
But the complex affair ended with her
mysterious,
untimely death. When King became ambassador to France in
1844, Buchanan complained that "I have gone wooing to
several gentlemen, but have not succeeded with any of
them."
With no Moral Majority or Bible thumping
fundamentalists to plague them, the King-Buchanan liaison
was generally embraced as a
political and personal fact
of life in a nation consumed with real issues of life and
death, freedom and slavery.
In 1852 King was elected
as Franklin Pierce's Vice President. But on an official
mission, King contracted a fever and died, leaving
Buchanan alone and deeply distraught.
In 1856,
Buchanan defeated John C. Fremont, the first presidential
candidate from the new Republican Party. Buchanan did not
run for re-election in 1860, when Abraham Lincoln was
the victor.
Buchanan's presidency was plagued by
economic and sectional disaster. He was a "doughface"
northerner with sympathies for
southern slavery.
Devoted to consensus and compromise, he was swept away by
the intense polarization that led to Civil War.
Through
his entire time in the White House, President Buchanan lived
alone. His niece served as "First Lady." He stayed
unmarried, and had his personal letters burned upon his
death, further fueling speculation about his sexual
preferences.
Maybe it's time those legislators so
fiercely opposed to gays in the military face the high
likelihood that at least one Commander
in Chief would
probably be among them.
--
HARVEY WASSERMAN'S HISTORY
OF THE UNITED STATES is at www.harveywasserman.com, along with
PASSIONS OF THE
POTSMOKING PATRIOTS by "Thomas Paine,"
which portrays George Washington as a gay potsmoker.