• James Silas Calhoun (1802–1852) was best known as the Governor of New Mexico Territory from 1851 to 1852. He had many careers, though, including time...
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  • Calhoun (politician, born 1802) (1802–1852), American politician, first governor of the Territory of New Mexico James Calhoun (Atlanta politician) (1811–1875)...
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  • Supreme Court of Appeals of West Virginia James Calhoun (politician, born 1802) (1802–1852), Georgia politician, Army colonel, federal Indian agent, and...
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  • Senate Charles Calhoun Jr. (1931–2014), Texas State Senate James Calhoun (politician, born 1802) (1802–1852), Georgia State Senate Riemer Calhoun (1909–1994)...
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  • Thumbnail for John C. Calhoun
    brothers, he went to Yale College in Connecticut in 1802. For the first time in his life, Calhoun encountered serious, advanced, and well-organized intellectual...
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  • Thumbnail for Floride Calhoun
    Floride Bonneau Calhoun (née Colhoun; February 15, 1792 – July 25, 1866) was the wife of U.S. politician John C. Calhoun. She was known for her leading...
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  • other attorney in American history. A close friend of James Madison, James Marshall and John Calhoun, he also held the rank of Major General of the Army...
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  • 22, 1813) was an American lawyer and politician; he served as the Lieutenant Governor of South Carolina from 1802 to 1804. Pickens was the second of twelve...
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  • Thumbnail for William Lowndes (congressman)
    South Carolina Governor James Hamilton, Jr. replaced him in Congress. During the Nullification Crisis, Hamilton and John C. Calhoun had led the states' forces...
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  • Thumbnail for John Eaton (politician)
    Women in Washington social circles led by Floride Calhoun, the wife of Vice President John C. Calhoun, snubbed the Eatons because they married so soon...
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  • Christ (born 1788) March 9 – James F. Trotter, U.S. Senator from Mississippi in 1838 (born 1802) March 28 – Solomon Foot, politician (born 1802) April...
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  • Thumbnail for John E. Colhoun
    John E. Colhoun (category Calhoun family)
    her father's first cousin John Caldwell Calhoun, and James Edward (1798–1889 later changed last name to Calhoun), a planter who would become an officer...
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  • (1749–1802), member of the South Carolina Legislature, U.S. Senator from South Carolina 1801–02. First cousin of Joseph Calhoun and John Caldwell Calhoun....
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  • Thumbnail for James Monroe
    Manhattan. The marriage produced three children, Eliza in 1786, James in 1799 and Maria in 1802. Although Monroe was raised in the Anglican faith, the children...
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    Secretary of War, Monroe turned to South Carolina Congressman John C. Calhoun, leaving the cabinet without a prominent Westerner. In late 1817, Rush...
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  • Thumbnail for John Ridge
    John Ridge (category People from Calhoun, Georgia)
    Ridge was born to the Cherokee chief Major Ridge and his wife Sehoya around 1802 in their village of Oothacaloga, near present-day Calhoun, Georgia. The...
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  • Thumbnail for John Quincy Adams
    John Quincy Adams (category 18th-century Massachusetts politicians)
    States Senate in 1802, but Adams broke with the Federalist Party over foreign policy and was denied re-election. In 1809, President James Madison, a member...
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  • Thumbnail for George Clinton (vice president)
    York from 1777 to 1795 and again from 1801 to 1804. Along with John C. Calhoun, he is one of two vice presidents to hold office under two consecutive...
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    military officer, politician, and statesman (b. 1782) July 20 – Bernhard Riemann, German mathematician (b. 1826) July 25 – Floride Calhoun, Second Lady of...
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  • Thumbnail for James M. Mason
    James Murray Mason (November 3, 1798 – April 28, 1871) was an American lawyer and politician who became a Confederate diplomat. He served as senator from...
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  • Thumbnail for Henry Clay
    Henry Clay (category 19th-century Kentucky politicians)
    fellow Whig Daniel Webster and Democrat John C. Calhoun. Clay died at the age of 75 in 1852. Clay was born in Virginia, in 1777, and began his legal career...
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  • Thumbnail for Andrew Jackson
    Andrew Jackson (category 18th-century American politicians)
    the military to enforce the tariff. It was attacked by Calhoun as despotism. Meanwhile, Calhoun and Clay began to work on a new compromise tariff. Jackson...
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  • Thumbnail for Daniel D. Tompkins
    Daniel D. Tompkins (category Politicians from Scarsdale, New York)
    American politician. He was the fourth governor of New York from 1807 to 1817, and the sixth vice president of the United States from 1817 to 1825. Born in...
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  • Thumbnail for James G. Blaine
    James Gillespie Blaine (January 31, 1830 – January 27, 1893) was an American statesman and Republican politician who represented Maine in the United States...
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  • Thumbnail for James Madison
    Madison Square Garden, James Madison University, the James Madison Memorial Building, and the USS James Madison. James Madison Jr. was born on March 16, 1751...
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  • Thumbnail for William H. Crawford
    William H. Crawford (category 19th-century American politicians)
    1807. He allied himself with Senator James Jackson. Their enemies were the Clarkites, led by John Clark. In 1802, he shot and killed Peter Lawrence Van...
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  • Thumbnail for Thomas Cooper (American politician, born 1759)
    Philosophical Society in 1802. In the rapid developments stemming from the French Revolution, Cooper was sent to Paris in 1792 with James Watt Jr., by the Constitutional...
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  • Thumbnail for Harrison family of Virginia
    Dowdey 1957, pp. 291–315. Gugin & St. Clair, p. 18. Bruce 1895, p. 229. Calhoun 2005, pp. 7–8. New York Times, "Albertis S. Harrison Jr., 88, Dies; Led...
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  • Thumbnail for John (given name)
    American politician and businessman from Vermont, father of Calvin Coolidge John C. Calhoun (1782–1850), American vice president John Coleman Calhoun (1871–1950)...
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  • Thumbnail for John Tyler
    Clay and other Whig politicians and left Tyler estranged from both of the nation's major political parties at the time. Tyler was born into a prominent slaveholding...
    143 KB (16,856 words) - 17:00, 17 August 2024