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  1. Andrew Johnson ran away from his apprenticeship as a teenager. With a reward on his head, he traveled throughout the South honing his trade. He eventually returned to Raleigh, NC for his mother and step-father. They settled in Greeneville, TN, where Andrew opened his own shop and married a local girl, Eliza McCardle.

  2. Johnson's fiercest opponents in the Senate maneuvered a vote on only 3 of the 11 articles of impeachment, believing those 3 offered the greatest chance to gain conviction. On May 16, 1868, in a dramatic call of the roll, 35 senators voted to convict the president of "high crimes and misdemeanors," while 19 senators voted to acquit.

  3. 2 de abr. de 2014 · Andrew Johnson became the 17th president of the United States upon the assassination of President Abraham Lincoln in April 1865. His lenient Reconstruction policies toward the South, and his ...

  4. Andrew Johnson - Reconstruction, Impeachment, Legacy: To broaden the base of the Republican Party to include loyal “war” Democrats, Johnson was selected to run for vice president on Lincoln’s reelection ticket of 1864. His first appearance on the national stage was a fiasco. On Inauguration Day he imbibed more whiskey than he should have to counter the effects of a recent illness, and as ...

  5. Andrew Johnson Event Timeline. April 17, 1865. Address Upon Assuming the Office of President of the United States. April 25, 1865. Proclamation 129—Day of Fasting, Humiliation and Mourning for the Death of President Lincoln. April 29, 1865. Executive Order.

  6. Andrew Johnson. Andrew Johnson ( 29 de dezembro de 1808 — 31 de julho de 1875) foi o 17º Presidente dos Estados Unidos, na posição de 1865 a 1869. Ele primeiro foi vice-presidente até o momento do assassinato de Abraham Lincoln. Johnson era um Democrata que concorreu com Lincoln na chapa do Partido União Nacional ao lado de Lincoln.

  7. 28 de oct. de 2019 · Johnson opened his tailor shop when he was just 19, and by the age of 22, he was elected the mayor of Greeneville, Tennessee. He served as mayor for four years. He was then elected to the Tennessee House of Representatives in 1835. He later became a Tennessee State Senator before being elected to the Congress in 1843.

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