President of the Day
Who vowed he would burn Nashville before surrendering it?
- He had served Tennessee in both the House and the Senate.
- He sided with the Union.
- He was a former governor of Tennessee.
- He made his vow since he thought the secession was unconstitutional.
It seems a strange thing for a politician to say about his home state's capital city. Andrew Johnson had served Tennessee in both the U.S. House of Representatives (1843-53) and the U.S. Senate (1857-62); he had also been governor (1853-57). But after the Civil War broke out, the Southern democrat made a surprising move: he sided with the Union. This show of allegiance was largely owing to Johnson's strongly held belief that the South's secession was unconstitutional. Having thus made his stand, President Abraham Lincoln (1809-1865) saw fit to appoint Johnson as the Union's military governor in Tennessee. When rebel forces surrounded Nashville and seemed poised to take it, Johnson proclaimed he would sooner burn the city before surrendering it. But he was forced to do neither: In mid-December 1864 Union forces used the hand-cranked Gatling gun (invented in 1861) to help defeat the Confederate forces.
From The Handy History Answer Book by Rebecca Ferguson, (c) 2005 Visible Ink Press(R) More than a thousand questions explore a cast of thousands, including Socrates, an early advocate of the question-and-answer format.
< Previous Fact | Next Fact > |
Dig deeper with these related titles:
The Handy Presidents Answer Book Second Edition A complete look at every Presidents' who, what, when, where, why, and, how . . . Offering an engaging overview of the U.S.... Read More » |
||
The Handy History Answer Book, 2nd Edition All things must pass. In an understatement of historic proportions, quite a few things have passed since the end of the last millennium, when The... Read More » |
||
The Handy Supreme Court Answer Book What's arguably the Supreme Court's most controversial decision? Which Justices signed the Declaration of Independence? How much do you really know... Read More » |
||
The Handy Politics Answer Book In these politically charged times, interest in the political process is peaking. From the national election debacle in Florida to 9/11 to... Read More » |