Andrew Johnson's Presidential
Andrew Johnson became president in 1829. He became a Greenville alderman along with a tanner and a plaster. Andrew Johnson was the first president to be impeached, and he became chief exeutive upon the assisination of Abraham Lincoln. At the end of the Civil War, Johnson inherited a wartime dispute between Lincoln and congress over how to treat the South after the war. A lot of Republicans in congress opposed Johnson's views, but the senate failed, by one vote, to remove Johnson from office. Throughout his life and his presidentcy, Johnson aroused either strong support or fierce dislike. Some people view him as an unfit leader who was to generous to the southerners after the war. Some people also
portrayed him as a leader of universal vision who accurately saw the harsh treatment of the southern states would increase divisions in the Union. Some of Johnson's accusers tried to implicate him in Lincon's murder, but failed. Andrew's life in the White House became livelier during his administration years. The household included, the Jonson's two surviving sons, Robert and Andrew, and their daughters, Mary Stover and Martha Patterson. One of his daughters, Martha, married the Senator D.T. Patterson of Tennessee, and had the president's five grandchildren. When congress met in December 1865, they rejected plan and would not seat newly elected southern congressmen, and some congressman criticized Johnson's plan. Later after le
Some common words found in the essay are:
House Representive, War Johnson, Johnson March, House Representatives, Tennessee Johnson, Andrew Johnson, House Johnson, Union Scholars, White House, Patterson Tennessee, impeachment trial, johnson president, johnson's plan, white house, andrew johnson president, andrew johnson,
Approximate Word count = 500
Approximate Pages = 2 (250 words per page double spaced)
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