Andrew
Johnson was the 11th president of the United States.
He was born in Raleigh, North
Carolina in 1808. He was born into poverty
and ran away to Tennessee at an early age. After
starting his own tailor shop, he married Eliza
McCardle. He soon entered politics and became
known as an adept speaker. He frequently spoke
against the southern aristocracy and was an advocate
for the common man and poor farmer.
Johnson
was elected to the House of Representatives in
1835, and later, to the Senate in 1841. In 1853,
Johnson became governor of Tennessee.
He then served as a Democrat in the United
States Senate until 1862. During secession
and the Civil War,
Johnson was the only senator from a seceded state
that continued to participate in Congress. President
Abraham Lincoln
appointed him military governor of Tennessee.
Johnson was elected vice-president by Abraham
Lincoln in 1864, but took over the presidency
when Lincoln was assassinated. Johnson presided
over Reconstruction,
the period after the Civil War in which the southern
states were re-integrated into the Union. Johnson
and Congress argued over the specifics of Reconstruction.
Johnson favored a quick restoration of rights
and privileges, whereas Congress favored a more
gradual approach. Tensions grew when Johnson replaced
Secretary of War Edwin Stanton. Republicans claimed
Johnson violated the newly passed Tenure-of-Office
Act. The House of Representatives passed a resolution
to impeach Johnson. Although he was acquitted
(19 votes to 18), he was the first president to
be impeached.