Perhaps the three most influential men in the pre-Civil War era were Henry Clay‚ John C. Calhoun‚ and Daniel Webster. These men all died nearly a decade before the civil war began‚ but they didn’t know how much they would effect it. States’ rights was a very controversial issue‚ and one which had strong opposition and radical proposals coming from both sides. John C. Calhoun was in favor of giving states the power to nullify laws that they saw unconstitutional‚ and he presented this theory in his
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John C. Calhoun John C. Calhoun was born March 18‚ 1782 in South Carolina. He was known as the "cast iron man" for his rigid defense of Southern beliefs and practices. Calhoun was elected into legislature in 1808. Two years later Calhoun moved into the House of Representatives. Calhoun is part of the Democratic Party. He also went to serve as a U.S Secretary of War and helped steer the United States into war with Great Britain. John C. Calhoun was elected into Congress in 1811. Calhoun supported
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John Caldwell Calhoun was born on March 18‚ 1782‚ in Abbeville‚ South Carolina‚ the son of a farmer. He received little formal education early in life‚ but was able to graduate with honors from Yale‚ in 1804. He remained in Connecticut to study law in Litchfield‚ but returned to his home state and was admitted to the bar in 1807. Calhoun served briefly in the state assembly from 1809 to 1811‚ where he helped establish a balance of power between the tidewater planters and the piedmont farmers. In
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John C. Calhoun supported slavery because he believed that it was beneficial to the states in order for them to become prosperous. Because of that belief‚ Calhoun stated that it is up to individual states to protect the existence of slavery in order to keep moving forward. Another idea he brings up is that slaves should never be equal to white American citizens. If there were to be two free races‚ both of equal size‚ one will always have to be subjective to the other. Basically‚ he believed that
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Representative and Senator John C. Calhoun‚ a Democrat who represented South Carolina’s 6th congressional district‚ was a good Congressman because he was a skilled orator and helped pass laws that promoted economic and national stability; however‚ his defense for slavery and support for the unconstitutional act of nullification proved to be dangerous to the Union. After being elected into the House of Representatives in 1810‚ he pushed for the war against Britain by drafting the war bill which Congress
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John C. Calhoun: The Starter of the Civil War If one person could be called the instigator of the Civil War‚ it was John C. Calhoun -- Unknown. The fact that he never wanted the South to break away from the United States as it would a decade after his death‚ his words and life ’s work made him the father of secession. In a very real way‚ he started the American Civil War. Slavery was the foundation of the antebellum South. More than any other characteristic‚ it defined Southern social‚ political
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John C. Calhoun was born in Abbeville‚ South Carolina on March 18th‚ 1782 and he supported his family whenever his father was ill when he was still a child. In 1807‚ John became a lawyer and was soon elected to congress in 1810 where he was openly a “war hawk” or someone who wanted to go to war with Great Britain for independence‚ and in 1812 he got his wish when the war of 1812 began. During the war‚ he raised troops so that he could support congress which made him a nationalist and he fought for
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Henry Clay‚ John C. Calhoun‚ and Daniel Webster dominated national politics from the end of the War of 1812 until their deaths in the early 1850s. Although none were ever President‚ they had a huge impact in Congress. Their impact outweighed the impact of any of the presidents of that era‚ with the exception of Andrew Jackson. There was one issue effecting the nation throughout their time in power — slavery. They were all successful in keeping peace in America by forging a series of compromises. The
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MWF-10:30 14 September 2012 Jim Calhoun Retires According to a source from Sports Illustrated‚ Jim Calhoun retires from coaching college basketball at age 70. After twenty six years of being the University of Connecticut head coach‚ Jim Calhoun leaves a great legacy. On September 13‚ 2012‚ Calhoun gave his final news conference as Connecticut ’s basketball coach (Uconn 1). While coaching at Connecticut‚ he battled through several obstacles and controversy. Jim Calhoun had to fight through cancer
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John C. Calhoun: The Other side of the American Dream Slavery was the foundation of the antebellum South. More than any other characteristic‚ it defined Southern political‚ cultural‚ and social life. It also united the South as a section different from the rest of the country. John Caldwell Calhoun of South Carolina was committed to both state’s rights and slavery as seen as the South’s only protection from destruction by the industrious North. John C. Calhoun‚ the South ’s recognized intellectual
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