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| Term 1865-1869 |
Party Democrat |
Born December 29, 1808, in Raleigh, North Carolina |
Died July 31, 1875, in Carter's Station, Tennessee |
| Vice President None. Johnson assumed the presidency upon President Lincoln’s assassination, and the Constitution did not allow for the successionof the vice president until Congress passed the 25th Amendment in 1967. |
First Lady Eliza McCardle Johnson (Wife) |
Previous Occupation Tailor, Public Official |
States in Union 37 |
| Family
Johnson’s parents were Jacob and Mary McDonough Johnson. Johnson married Eliza McCardle in 1827. They had five children: Martha, Charles, Mary, Robert, and Andrew. |
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Legacy Johnson became president upon Lincoln’s assassination. However, he had not been Lincoln’s first vice president. Hannibal Hamlin had served as vice president during Lincoln’s first term, but was removed from the Republican ticket during Lincoln’s reelection campaign. Johnson was selected to run as Lincoln’s running mate for his second term because he was a southerner who had proven himself dedicated to healing the country. Indeed, he was the only southern Senator who opposed secession and also refused to relinquish his office as the southern states seceded. The battles between Johnson and Congress escalated when he removed the Secretary of War, Edwin Stanton, who had insisted to Johnson that the southern military governors were answerable to Congress, not the president. Johnson was subsequently charged with “high crimes and misdemeanors” and impeached for violating the recently enacted Tenure-of-Office Act. He was acquitted by the Senate, but did not seek a second term. Johnson was later reelected as senator for Tennessee in 1874, but died only a few months after taking that office. |
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Quotes Regarding his refusal to leave his position as a senator representing Tennessee when every other southerner had left, Johnson asserted, “I voted against Lincoln. I spoke against him. I spent my money to defeat him. But still I love my country.” |
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| At This Time 1865: The U.S. abolishes slavery via the 13th Amendment • George Innes paints Peace and Plenty • 1866: Alfred Nobel invents dynamite • 1867: The U.S. purchases Alaska from Russia for $7.2 million • Karl Marx publishes volume I of Das Kapital • 1868: The 14th Amendment to the Constitution is ratified, which protects an individual’s rights and privileges of citizenship, and ensures due process • Louisa May Alcott writes Little Women • Tchaikovsky writes Symphony No. 1 • The skeleton of a Cro-Magnon man is discovered in France. |
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| Did You Know? Johnson is the only president who never went to school. His family did not have the money to have him educated, so he and his brother were apprenticed to a tailor as young boys. They ran away after two years, but continued working as journeymen until Johnson eventually opened his own business. He became quite skilled and continued to sew his own suits throughout his life, and was subsequently nicknamed the “Tennessee Tailor.” Through self-dedication and the assistance of his wife, he taught himself how to read and write. His wife also taught him math. |
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| Learn More At: http://statelibrary.dcr.state.nc.us/nc/bio/public/johnson.htm (Biographical information and further resources about Johnson from the North Carolina Encyclopedia.) |
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| Field Trips for Andrew Johnson
Andrew Johnson National Historic Site |
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