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Nathaniel Fillmore
Nathaniel Fillmore
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Nathaniel Fillmore Jr. (April 19, 1771 – March 28, 1863), was an American farmer. He was the father of U.S. president Millard Fillmore. A native of Bennington, Vermont, he farmed there until he was in his mid-twenties when his brother Calvin and he moved to western New York. Duped by unscrupulous land agents, their titles proved defective and they lost their new farms. He became a tenant farmer and occasionally taught school; the Fillmore family's circumstances were so dire that they sometimes relied on the charity of their landlords to survive.

Key Information

Over time, Fillmore's fortunes turned for the better. While living in Niles, New York he became prominent enough in the community to serve in local offices including justice of the peace. While living in Niles, he followed the advice of his wife and procured a clerk's position for their son Millard in the law office of Judge Walter Wood, who was also their landlord. This clerkship began Millard Fillmore's training to become an attorney, and placed him on the path to a legal and political career that culminated with the presidency.

Nathaniel Fillmore eventually bought a farm in East Aurora, which he developed into a successful venture, and which he continued to work on until well into his later years. Millard Fillmore became president in 1850, and his father visited him at the White House in 1851. He died in East Aurora in 1863, and was buried at East Aurora Cemetery.

Early life

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Nathaniel Fillmore Jr. was born in Bennington, Vermont on April 19, 1771, a son of Nathaniel Fillmore Sr. and Hepzibah Wood.[1] He was educated in Bennington, and worked on his father's farm as a young man.[2]

After his marriage, Fillmore began farming in Bennington.[3] Shortly thereafter, Nathaniel and his brother Calvin Fillmore were approached by land agents offering tracts in Western New York state.[3] Unhappy with trying to make the stony ground of their Vermont farms productive, they quickly grabbed the opportunity and moved to Cayuga County, New York, sight unseen.[4]

Move to New York

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According to biographers of Millard Fillmore, "The Fillmore brothers moved their two families to their new homeland nestled deep within a timber-laden forest. Location was not their greatest problem. Nor was the dense clay they unearthed once the land was cleared. Their greatest setback came with the realization that faulty surveying coupled with corrupt local government officials had left them with virtually nothing."[3] The Fillmore brothers lost their land because of defective titles.[5] Duped, tired, and poor, Nathaniel eventually became a tenant farmer while occasionally teaching school, working the soil for landlords and taking their charity when necessary to survive.[4]

Over time, Nathaniel Fillmore's fortunes changed; he became prominent enough while living in Niles, New York that he served as a justice of the peace for eleven years.[6][a] He eventually purchased a farm in East Aurora, New York which he developed into a productive enterprise, and on which he continued to be active until well into his old age.[8][b] While living in Niles, Fillmore followed his wife's advice to secure a clerk’s position for their son Millard in the law office of their landlord, Judge Walter Wood.[4] Though Millard did not complete the clerkship, it set him on the eventual path to a successful legal and political career that carried him to the presidency.[10]

Later life

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Millard Fillmore assumed the presidency in 1850, and Nathaniel visited him at the White House in 1851.[11] President Fillmore and his wife anticipated this visit more than any other, and were concerned that some circumstance requiring Fillmore's attention might prevent it.[11] The other guests at the formal reception for Nathaniel Fillmore attended expected to see someone elderly and infirm, given that Millard Fillmore was then 51 years old.[12] They were surprised to meet a man, then approaching 80, who noticeably resembled Millard Fillmore, and was in such good health that he did not appear old enough to be the president's father.[13] Questioned by a guest who wanted to know how to raise a son to become president, Nathaniel Fillmore alluded to his one-time poverty by replying "Cradle him in a sap trough."[14]

Death and burial

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He died in East Aurora, New York on March 28, 1863.[7] He was buried at East Aurora Cemetery, also known as Pioneer Cemetery.[9][15][16]

Family

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In 1796, the 25 year-old Fillmore married fifteen year-old Phoebe Millard, daughter of a prominent physician, in Bennington. Together, they had nine children:[17]

  • Olive Fillmore (1797–1883)
  • Millard Fillmore (1800–1874)
  • Cyrus Fillmore (1801–1889)
  • Almon Fillmore (1806–1830)
  • Calvin Fillmore (1810–1879)
  • Julia Fillmore (1812–1891)
  • Darius Fillmore (1814–1837)
  • Charles Fillmore (1817–1854)
  • Phoebe Fillmore (1819–1843)

After Phoebe died in 1831, he remarried to Eunice Love in 1834.[18]

See also

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Notes

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References

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Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia

Nathaniel Fillmore Jr. (April 19, 1771 – March 28, 1863) was an American farmer and occasional , best known as the father of , the 13th . Born in , to Nathaniel Fillmore Sr., a in the Continental , and Hepzibah Wood, he married Phoebe Millard in 1797 and relocated the family from to a farm in , by the time of their second child's birth in 1800. As a supporting a family of nine children amid frequent relocations in search of viable work, Fillmore exemplified the economic hardships of early 19th-century rural America, providing his son Millard with minimal formal education but instilling values of self-reliance that influenced the future president's ascent from poverty. He lived to witness Millard's inauguration in 1850, dying over a decade later at age 91 in East Aurora, New York.

Early Life

Birth and Ancestry

Nathaniel Fillmore was born on April 19, 1771, in , then part of the Republic of . He was the son of Lieutenant Nathaniel Fillmore and Hepzibah Wood, who had married on October 29, 1767, in Bennington. His father, born March 20, 1739, in , had moved to Bennington and registered for military service in 1776 during the Revolutionary War. The elder Nathaniel died on September 7, 1813, in Bennington, where he was buried. The Fillmore family's paternal lineage traces to Captain John Fillmore and Dorcas Day, parents of the lieutenant, who were established in by the mid-18th century. Broader ancestry reveals English origins, with the immigrant ancestor John Fillmore, born circa 1676 in —possibly in or —arriving in as a mariner in the late . This progenitor settled in and later areas, representing typical Puritan settler stock in , though exact parentage of the immigrant remains unverified in primary records. The family maintained roots in colonial before migrating northward to frontiers.

Upbringing in Vermont

Nathaniel Fillmore Jr. was born on April 19, 1771, in Bennington, , then part of the following its brief independence after the . His father, Lieutenant Nathaniel Fillmore Sr. (1739–1814), had migrated from Franklin, Connecticut, to become one of Bennington's early settlers in the 1760s, serving as a farmer and officer who participated in the in 1777 as part of the Continental Army. His mother, Hepzibah Wood (born 1747), managed the household in this rural, frontier setting where the family engaged in amid the challenges of post-war , including land disputes from the era. Fillmore grew up in a large family of modest means, the second son among several siblings, contributing to farm labor from an early age in Bennington's agrarian economy, which relied on clearing land, raising , and basic crops like corn and potatoes. The region's harsh climate and isolation fostered , with the Fillmores embodying the struggles of pioneer settlers who faced economic hardship and limited . Formal education was rudimentary, confined to local common schools offering basic and arithmetic, reflecting the era's priorities for rural youth where practical skills overshadowed extended schooling. By his mid-twenties, Fillmore had gained experience in farming and local affairs in Bennington, marrying Phoebe Millard on February 28, 1797, in the same town, before contemplating westward expansion amid Vermont's resource constraints. This upbringing instilled a and resilience, shaped by his father's military service and the family's Baptist faith, though persistent marked their early years without inherited wealth or social prominence.

Relocation and Settlement

Move to New York State

In the late 1790s, dissatisfied with the unproductive, rocky soil on their family farms in Bennington, Vermont, Nathaniel Fillmore and his brother Calvin sought improved prospects for agriculture amid the opening of public lands in New York following the Revolutionary War. Land speculators promoted tracts in the state's central region, particularly within the Military Tract—a vast area in Cayuga and surrounding counties allocated to veterans—and the brothers purchased holdings in Locke Township (now Summerhill), Cayuga County, without prior inspection. The relocation occurred around 1799, with Nathaniel moving his wife Phoebe Millard Fillmore—whom he had married in February 1797—and their young children to the heavily forested wilderness, where they faced immediate challenges in clearing timber for cultivation. This shift marked a departure from Vermont's established communities toward frontier conditions, driven by promises of fertile ground that proved overstated, as the land required years of laborious effort to render farmable. , Nathaniel's future presidential son, was born in Locke on January 7, 1800, soon after the family's arrival.

Land Acquisition and Disputes

In 1799, Nathaniel Fillmore and his brother Calvin purchased a farm in Locke Township, , within the originally allocated to Revolutionary War veterans. The acquisition was part of the family's relocation from in search of more fertile soil, but the title proved defective due to faulty surveys, fraudulent practices by land agents, and incomplete knowledge of prior claims. New York State commissioners examined contested titles in the region, and the Fillmores failed to substantiate their ownership, resulting in the complete forfeiture of the property without compensation. Following the loss, the family relocated within Cayuga County to Sempronius and later Niles, where Nathaniel secured a perpetual on 130 acres of unimproved, timber-covered in 1809. This arrangement provided temporary stability but yielded ongoing economic hardship owing to the parcel's poor and dense , exacerbating the family's and necessitating frequent subsistence labor. No further disputes arose from this , though the initial Cayuga County experience underscored the prevalence of insecure in frontier New York, where speculative sales often outpaced reliable surveying and legal validation. By 1821, seeking improved prospects amid regional development near the future terminus, Nathaniel relocated to East Aurora in Erie County and purchased a that proved viable and prosperous over time. This acquisition marked a turning point, free from prior encumbrances, and allowed the family to establish a more secure agrarian base, though early clearing and cultivation demanded substantial effort from all members, including Nathaniel's Millard. The earlier defective incident influenced Nathaniel's emphasis on for his children, as he recognized the need for expertise in resolving such vulnerabilities inherent to rapid western expansion.

Occupational Pursuits

Farming and Economic Struggles

Upon relocating to , in 1799, Nathaniel Fillmore attempted to establish a on land purchased from agents, but defective titles led to repeated legal disputes and loss of holdings, forcing him into tenancy. He cultivated lean, rocky soil in the region between Syracuse and Ithaca, which yielded poor harvests insufficient to support his growing family of ten, including eight children born between 1796 and 1814. These agricultural challenges, compounded by the harsh conditions, resulted in chronic food shortages, with the family frequently experiencing hunger. Economic hardship persisted through the early 1810s, as Fillmore's tenant farming provided meager income amid fluctuating crop prices and limited in the undeveloped upstate area. In a bid to reduce financial strain and mouths to feed, he apprenticed his eldest son, Millard, at age fourteen in to a clothier in nearby New Hope, forgoing wages in exchange for basic sustenance and rudimentary . The family's desperation reflected broader difficulties faced by early settlers in the region, where soil infertility and title fraud hindered self-sufficiency. By around 1819, ongoing unprofitability prompted Fillmore to abandon the Cayuga farm and relocate to East Aurora in Erie County, seeking more viable land near Buffalo, though initial years there continued patterns of subsistence-level toil and debt. This period of tenancy and crop failure underscored the precarious economics of pioneer agriculture, reliant on manual labor and vulnerable to environmental and legal setbacks.

Teaching and Other Work

In addition to farming, Nathaniel Fillmore occasionally taught school in rural New York districts, particularly during winter seasons when field labor subsided, supplementing the family's meager income amid persistent economic hardship. This role aligned with customary practices for under-resourced farmers seeking temporary employment, though specific dates or durations of his teaching stints remain undocumented in primary records. Fillmore's community involvement extended to public service; by the early 19th century, while residing in Niles, Cayuga County, New York, he attained enough local prominence to hold elective positions, including justice of the peace. Census and genealogical records from 1814 explicitly list his occupation as justice of the peace in Cayuga County, a role he reportedly maintained for approximately eleven years, adjudicating minor civil and criminal matters in the frontier setting. These duties reflected his growing reputation for reliability despite the family's tenant-farmer status, though they provided limited financial relief.

Beliefs and Community Involvement

Religious Faith as a Baptist

Nathaniel Fillmore's religious outlook emphasized personal moral integrity over formal doctrinal adherence, encapsulated in his of simply "do right," as recounted in biographical sketches of his life. This approach aligned with broader Protestant values of individual accountability prevalent in early 19th-century rural America, including those associated with Baptist communities, though direct evidence of his affiliation with Baptist churches remains scant. His paternal ancestors traced to Scottish Presbyterians, while the family's early roots involved the Congregational Church in Bennington, where his father united under Rev. Jedidiah Dewey's ministry in 1773. Upon relocating to New York State around 1795, Fillmore settled in areas like Cayuga and Wyoming Counties, where Baptist congregations were active amid the Second Great Awakening's influence, yet records do not indicate his active participation or leadership in such groups. His son Millard Fillmore, born in 1800, received no formal religious instruction and displayed minimal interest in organized faith until adulthood, when he affiliated with Unitarianism in Buffalo around 1831, suggesting the elder Fillmore's influence prioritized ethical conduct over denominational piety. This practical faith sustained Fillmore through economic hardships and family migrations, reflecting a resilient, undogmatic spirituality consistent with dissenter traditions from his English maternal lineage.

Political Views and Anti-Masonry

Nathaniel Fillmore's political involvement was confined to local governance, where he served as a in Niles, , for eleven years beginning around 1815, a role that underscored his reputation for reliability among settlers facing land disputes and economic hardships. This position, typically filled by individuals trusted for impartiality in minor judicial matters, did not align him publicly with national parties during the early republic's Federalist-Democratic-Republican divide, though regional dynamics in favored agrarian interests wary of centralized power. The Fillmore family resided in , ground zero for the Anti-Masonic fervor ignited by the 1826 abduction and presumed murder of William Morgan in nearby Batavia, an event that exposed Freemasonry's oaths and fueled accusations of undue political sway by the fraternity. As devout , Nathaniel and his wife Phoebe likely shared the evangelical Protestants' distrust of secret societies, viewing Masonic rituals as antithetical to open Christian allegiance and biblical transparency. This sentiment permeated the household, propelling son Millard into the nascent in 1828, where he secured election to the amid widespread calls to bar Masons from public office and scrutinize their influence. Nathaniel's own views remained unrecorded in detail, but the family's Baptist piety and rural context—devoid of Masonic lodges in their immediate circles—aligned with the movement's base of farmers and reformers opposing elite fraternal networks. By the mid-1830s, as the merged into the Whigs, Nathaniel's local stature facilitated community transitions away from single-issue anti-secrecy campaigns toward broader economic platforms favoring tariffs and internal improvements.

Family Dynamics

Marriage and Household

Nathaniel Fillmore married Phoebe Millard on an unspecified date in 1796 in . Phoebe, born August 12, 1781, in , came from a of modest means; her father, Abiathar Millard, was a in Pittsford, . The couple settled initially in before relocating westward, where they established a centered on subsistence farming amid ongoing economic hardships. The Fillmore household was marked by chronic poverty and a large family, with Nathaniel and Phoebe raising at least nine children who reached adulthood, including sons Millard (born January 7, 1800), Cyrus, and Oliver, and daughters such as Olive (born 1797) and Phoebe Maria (born 1819). Daily life revolved around labor-intensive tasks on marginal land, with limited resources forcing reliance on family labor for survival; Millard Fillmore later recalled the family's "desperate poverty" and constant struggle against failure. Phoebe managed domestic responsibilities, including child-rearing and basic provisioning, in a frontier setting lacking formal education or amenities. Phoebe died on April 2, 1831, in , leaving Nathaniel to oversee the household alone in his later years. The marriage produced no documented , reflecting broader patterns of tenant farming instability in early 19th-century , where land quality and market access constrained household prosperity.

Children and Parental Influence

Nathaniel Fillmore and his wife, Phoebe Millard, whom he married around 1796, had nine children born between 1797 and 1819. The children were Olive Armstrong Fillmore (1797–1893), (1800–1874), Cyrus Fillmore (1801–1889), Almon Hopkins Fillmore (1806–1830), Calvin Turner Fillmore (1810–1879), Julia Fillmore (1812–1883), Darius Ingraham Fillmore (1814–1837), Charles DeWitt Fillmore (1817–1854), and Phoebe Maria Fillmore (1819–1843). Several children died young, including Almon at age 24, Darius at 23, and Phoebe Maria at 24, reflecting the high mortality rates common in frontier families during the era. The Fillmore household operated under severe economic constraints, with Nathaniel's unprofitable farming leaving the large family often hungry and occasionally dependent on charity. This environment instilled a strong work ethic in the children from an early age, as they contributed to farm labor and household survival; formal education was minimal, limited to sporadic attendance at local schools, with Millard Fillmore receiving no schooling until age nine or ten due to familial demands. Nathaniel, viewing the burden of supporting additional dependents amid poverty, arranged apprenticeships for his sons to equip them with trades and reduce household strain, such as binding Millard at age thirteen to a cloth maker in New Hope, New York, where the boy endured grueling conditions before negotiating his release for $30 after about a year. Nathaniel's influence emphasized self-reliance and practical skills over intellectual pursuits initially, though he later supported Millard's ambition by facilitating a law clerkship with a local after recognizing his son's potential. This pragmatic , rooted in Baptist principles of diligence and moral rectitude, shaped the children's resilience; Millard credited the family's hardships with forging his determination to escape poverty through and , while siblings like and Calvin pursued farming or modest trades in . The parental approach prioritized economic independence, with Nathaniel occasionally teaching school himself to supplement income, exposing children to basic literacy amid otherwise austere circumstances.

Later Years

Residence and Daily Life

In his later years, Nathaniel Fillmore resided on a in East Aurora, Erie County, New York, to which he had relocated after earlier struggles with land in Wyoming County. This property became a productive agricultural holding under his . Fillmore's prominence as the father of President elevated his local status, earning him the moniker "the old Squire" and widespread respect in East Aurora. He continued to live there until his death on March 28, 1863, at the age of 91.

Witness to Son's Presidency


Nathaniel Fillmore witnessed his son 's assumption of the presidency on July 9, 1850, following the death of . Millard's administration extended until March 4, 1853, during which Nathaniel, aged 79 to 81, became the first father of a U.S. president to outlive an entire term. Residing on his in , Nathaniel maintained his routine of agricultural labor and community ties amid national events shaped by the Compromise of 1850.
In 1851, Nathaniel journeyed to , for a visit to the , the first by any presidential parent. This trip honored a commitment to his granddaughter to spend time with the family, surprising observers with his robust health and unassuming demeanor despite his advanced age. The visit underscored Nathaniel's simple, principled character, contrasting with the capital's formalities. Throughout the , Nathaniel expressed quiet pride in Millard's elevation from to the executive office, viewing it as validation of and rectitude. His , encapsulated as "Do right," informed his perspective on his son's leadership, which prioritized national stability over partisan strife. Nathaniel returned to New York post-term, continuing his rural existence until his death in 1863.

Death and Legacy

Nathaniel Fillmore died on March 28, 1863, at the age of 91 in East Aurora, , where he had resided in his later years. He was interred in East Aurora Cemetery alongside family members. No specific was recorded in contemporary accounts, consistent with his advanced age and the era's limited medical documentation for non-prominent individuals. Fillmore's legacy centers on his role as the father of , the 13th , whose ascent from poverty exemplified the self-made ethos Nathaniel embodied through his life as a and early settler. By arranging his son's at age 14 to a clothier—motivated partly by economic pressures in a large family—Nathaniel inadvertently fostered Millard's path to , political involvement, and eventual presidency, values rooted in Baptist-influenced discipline and anti-elitist independence rather than inherited wealth. He lived to witness Millard's in 1850 and service through 1853, outliving the presidency but dying amid the Civil War's early years, a period that tested the union his son had sought to preserve via the Compromise of 1850. Beyond paternity, Nathaniel left no independent public monuments or writings, his influence manifesting indirectly through family dynamics that prioritized resilience over formal achievement; Millard later credited parental examples of perseverance amid hardships for shaping his aversion to debt and commitment to practical . Historical assessments portray him as a typical early American —staunch in anti-Masonic sentiments and religious faith—whose unadorned life underscored causal factors in upward mobility, free from romanticized narratives of aristocratic lineage.

References

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