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Zachary Taylor, 1785–1855?> (aged 69 years)
- Name
- Zachary /Taylor/
- Surname
- Taylor
- Given names
- Zachary
- Name suffix
- 12th President of the United States (1849-1850)
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1785–1855
Birth: 24 November 1785
— Barboursville, Orange County, Virginia, USA Death: 9 July 1855 — Washington D.C., USA |
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1785–1855
Birth: 24 November 1785
— Barboursville, Orange County, Virginia, USA Death: 9 July 1855 — Washington D.C., USA |
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Note: Washington, D.C., formally the District of Columbia, also known as just Washington or simply D.C., is the capital city and federal district of the United States. |
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Author of last change: Danny |
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Washington, D.C., formally the District of Columbia, also known as just Washington or simply D.C., is the capital city and federal district of the United States. |
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A U.S. general in the Mexican War and taken to Kentucky as a Child, he grew up on his father's plantation near Louisville, where he was educated by local tutors. He was married and had four Children; one of these was the first wife of JeffersonDavis, later Confederate president; another became a Confederate general. Military Career In 1808 Taylor joined the regular army as an infantry officer. After distinguishing himself under William Henry Harrison in the War of 1812 and briefly returning to civilian life, he saw active duty on various frontier posts in the Northwest andLouisiana, where he established a second home. He participated in the Black Hawk and Second Seminole wars and in 1838 defeated the Seminole in the Battle of Lake Okeechobee. Although not decisive, this engagement earned him promotion to the rankof brigadier general, and he was given overall command of the campaign against the Seminole in Florida. In the early 1840s Taylor was stationed at the southwestern boundaries of the United States. Sent to Texas shortly before the outbreak of war with Mexico, he was ordered to advance into the disputed territory between the Nueces River and the RioGrande, where he defeated Mexican detachments at Palo Alto and Roseca de la Palma (May 8-9, 1846). These Battles made him famous and led to the U.S. declaration of war on Mexico. Taylor, now a major general, subsequently captured Matamoros andMonterrey. Part of his command was detached to join General WinField Scott in central Mexico. Nevertheless, on February 22-23, 1847, Taylor routed a numerically superior force assembled under Mexican president Antonio le de Santa Anna at BuenaVista, a feat that thrilled the nation. Political Career Taylor, who had never bothered to vote, had little political experience, but he had quarreled with President James K. Polk and sympathized with the Whigs, and thus seemed a perfect candidate for the opposition. Although he declared himselfnonpartisan and was a slave owner, which might have made him unpopular in the North, the Whig party nominated him for the presidency in 1848. In the ensuing election, he defeated both his Democratic and Free-Soil opponents. The Taylor administration encountered severe difficulties. To end British encroachments in Central America, it concluded the Clayton-Bulwer Treaty (1850) neutralizing any future Atlantic-Pacific canal in that area, an arrangement that provedunpopular in the U.S. Taylor favored granting immediate statehood to California and New Mexico, which had been acquired as a result of the war, but when California prohibited slavery, the South opposed its admission to the Union. The president,however, refused to reconsider. Adamantly resisting Henry Clay's compromise proposals, which sought to balance southern with northern concessions, he declared himself ready to use force to prevent secession or a threatened seizure of eastern NewMexico by Texas. His stand completely alienated southern Whigs, and it contributed to an impasse in the U.S. Congress. In the midst of this controversy Taylor fell ill and died. His Death removed the principal obstacle to the ultimate passage ofthe Compromise Measures of 1850. Taylor was an adequate but by no means brilliant general, who reached the presidency without preparation at a critical moment. Whether, as has been suggested, a continuation of his hard-line policy toward the South might have prevented theAmerican Civil War will never be known. |