1848 Free Soil & Liberty national conventions

1848 Free Soil National Convention
1848 presidential election
Nominees
Van Buren and Adams
Convention
Date(s)August 9–10, 1848
CityBuffalo, New York
VenueCourt House Park
ChairNathaniel Sawyer
Notable speakers
Candidates
Presidential nomineeMartin Van Buren of New York
Vice-presidential nomineeCharles F. Adams Sr. of Massachusetts

National conventions of the Free Soil and Liberty parties met in 1847 and 1848 to nominate candidates for president and vice president in advance of the 1848 United States presidential election. These assemblies resulted in the creation of the national Free Soil Party, a union of political abolitionists with antislavery Conscience Whigs and Barnburner Democrats to oppose the westward extension of slavery into the U.S. territories. Former President Martin Van Buren was nominated for president by the Free Soil National Convention that met at Buffalo, New York on August 9, 1848; Charles Francis Adams Sr. was nominated for vice president. Van Buren and Adams received 291,409 popular votes in the national election, almost all from the free states; his popularity among northern Democrats was great enough to deny his Democratic rival, Lewis Cass, the crucial state of New York, throwing the state and the election to Whig Zachary Taylor.