Andrew Johnson.
Publié le 10/05/2013
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As senator, Johnson continued to work for a homestead law, and he was disappointed when President James Buchanan vetoed the homestead act of 1860.
On theslavery issue, Johnson still followed the orthodox Southern line, but with no great enthusiasm.
He voted for the resolutions proposed in 1860 by Senator Jefferson Davisof Mississippi to implement the Dred Scott Decision of 1857, which stated that Congress could not prohibit slavery in the territories of the United States.
C1 Presidential Election of 1860
In January 1860 the Democratic National Convention met in Charleston, South Carolina, to select a presidential candidate.
The Tennessee delegation put Johnson’sname up for the office, but he did not win the nomination.
The Democrats split into two groups.
One faction nominated Senator Stephen A.
Douglas of Illinois forpresident.
The Southern faction, which opposed Douglas’s stand on slavery, nominated Buchanan’s vice president, John C.
Breckinridge of Kentucky.
Johnson, goingalong with the Southerners, supported Breckinridge.
The Republican candidate, Abraham Lincoln, won the election with ease, largely because of the split in theDemocratic ranks.
C2 War Democrat
In December 1860, the nation was so divided over the slavery issue that Southern states were considering secession, or leaving the Union.
On December 18, Johnsondelivered a speech in the Senate, denouncing secession and declaring for the federal Union.
Two days later, South Carolina seceded.
When the Civil War between Northand South began the following year, Johnson remained in the Senate, after his Southern colleagues walked out and his own state of Tennessee seceded.
He was a chiefspokesman for the small group of loyal Democrats known as the War Democrats.
C3 Military Governor
By early 1862, parts of Tennessee had been occupied by the Union Army.
In March 1862, President Lincoln appointed Johnson military governor of Tennessee, with therank of brigadier general of volunteers.
Johnson’s purpose was, as he explained to his fellow Tennesseeans, “as speedily as may be, to restore the government to thesame condition as before the existing rebellion.”
The bitterness, hatred, violence, and lawlessness of the times made Johnson’s task extremely difficult.
Except in eastern Tennessee, he was regarded as a traitor.
WhenNashville’s mayor and city council refused to swear allegiance to the United States, Johnson replaced them with loyal Unionists.
D Vice President of the United States
In June 1864 the Republicans met in Baltimore, Maryland, and renominated President Lincoln.
The convention was known as the National Union Convention to attractthe support of the War Democrats.
To reward the Southerners who had remained loyal to the Union, Johnson, a War Democrat, was nominated as Lincoln’s runningmate in place of Vice President Hannibal Hamlin.
In November the Lincoln-Johnson slate was elected.
On inauguration day, March 4, 1865, Johnson felt weak and sick.
He was ill with typhoid fever and had taken some brandy before the ceremony.
He made a long,rambling speech, boasting of his rise from humble origins.
His friends were embarrassed, and his enemies used the unfortunate incident to label him a ruffian and analcoholic.
However, Lincoln defended Johnson by stating, “I have known Andy Johnson for many years; Andy ain’t a drunkard.”
Only six weeks after Johnson was sworn in as vice president, Lincoln was assassinated by John Wilkes Booth.
One of Booth’s accomplices, George A.
Atzerodt, wassupposed to assassinate Johnson on the same night, April 14, 1865, but he failed to carry out his part of the plan.
IV PRESIDENT OF THE UNITED STATES
Johnson was sworn in as president by the chief justice of the United States Salmon P.
Chase, on April 15, 1865, a few hours after Lincoln died.
The new presidentimmediately announced that he would retain Lincoln’s Cabinet.
Johnson faced many difficult issues upon becoming president.
Although most of them concernedreuniting the country torn apart by war, several international situations also required attention.
A Foreign Affairs
In foreign affairs, Johnson allowed himself to be guided by his secretary of state, William H.
Seward.
Seward’s most farsighted act of diplomacy was the acquisition ofAlaska from Russia for $7,200,000.
However, in 1867, when the purchase was made, it was ridiculed as “Seward’s folly.”
In 1863, by force of arms, France had set up a European prince as the so-called emperor of Mexico.
This was a flagrant violation of the U.S.
policy called the MonroeDoctrine, which forbade European intervention in the western hemisphere.
During the war, Seward had been unable to do more than register the disapproval of theUnited States.
By 1867, however, Seward’s firm pressure on France had resulted in the withdrawal of all French troops from Mexico.
Seward was not able to solve one vexatious international problem that was also connected with the Civil War.
Supported by Johnson, Seward insisted that Britain payfor damages caused by the Alabama and other cruisers of the Confederate States of America that had been built and outfitted in British ports ( see Alabama Claims).
In January 1869, almost at the end of Johnson’s term, a settlement of the claims was submitted to the Senate for ratification.
In April 1869 the Senate rejected theconvention.
Another instance of international conflict during Johnson’s administration was the raiding of Canada by Irish revolutionaries based in the United States, known as theFenians.
In June 1866, 1500 Fenians crossed into Canada and were defeated by Canadian militia.
When the Fenians retreated into New York, they were arrested.Although they were soon freed, the Fenians did not again invade Canada during Johnson’s term.
B Reconstruction
Embittered by Lincoln’s assassination, Johnson was at first inclined to be vindictive in his treatment of the defeated Confederate leaders, who also represented theprivileged class that he hated.
In the first month of his administration the president and Secretary of War Edwin M.
Stanton hunted down and imprisoned officials of theConfederacy.
“Treason must be made infamous and traitors must be impoverished,” President Johnson said.
His attitude won him the approval of the militant wing ofthe Republican Party, called the Radical Republicans.
However, to the chagrin of the Radicals, Johnson soon dropped these punitive activities for more constructive tasks.
Basing his program for Reconstruction of the Unionon the policy of conciliation developed by Lincoln, Johnson started a process to restore the former Confederate states to full membership in the Union.
First, the whiteresidents were to take an oath to uphold the Union.
When 10 percent of a state’s 1860 voting population had taken the oath, they could elect a state government..
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