Profile - Andrew Johnson, Accidental Soldier, Accidental President
In many ways the life of Andrew Johnson (1808-1875) was an iconic
American success story; born into poverty, with only a rudimentary education,
and for a time an indentured servant, he leveraged his innate talents to rise to
the highest offices in the nation. Yet
his presidency was a troubled and contentious one.
President Johnson’s family migrated from England to Virginia in the
1700s. Although they initially
prospered, and acquired considerable land and some distinction in their
community, the president’s grandfather made a series of disastrous financial
decisions and they lost nearly everything during the American Revolution. The future president was born in North Carolina, where
the family had relocated. Although quite
poor, his father, Jacob Johnson, had served as a captain of militia at Raleigh, for several
years. But Jacob died when Andrew was
only three, and the boy grew up in extreme poverty. He never attended a day of school. His older brother was indentured to a tailor,
which required to serve his master for several years in return for training and
room and board. In 1820 Andrew himself
was also indentured to the same tailor.
In 1824, the two boys escaped from semi-servitude. Despite a reward posted for their recapture,
they made their way to Tennessee,
where Andrew set up as a tailor. He
prospered, and married; tradition has it that he was taught to read and write
by his wife.
The young man became politically active. As the years passed Johnson became very
influential in Tennessee
politics, and was elected to a succession of increasingly important positions, rising
to governor (1853-1857) after which he was elected to the Senate. During the "Secession Crisis" that
began in late 1860, Senator Johnson proved a staunch Unionist, and was the only
southern senator to stick by the Republic; some historians believe that had he
been governor of Tennessee
at the time, the state would not have seceded.
During the early part of the Civil War, Johnson remained in the Senate
and proved to be one of the most ardent “War Democrats.” On March 4, 1862, President Lincoln appointed Johnson a
brigadier general of volunteers; although he had probably been enrolled on
paper in the Tennessee
state militia, it seems probable that Johnson actually had no military
experience of any sort. Lincoln then made Johnson military governor
of Tennessee,
which was by then almost entirely under Union control.
Johnson was aggressive in asserting federal authority in Tennessee, removing
office holders suspected of disloyalty, taking control of the railroads, and
penalizing newspapers and clergymen who openly opposed the Union.
There was considerable unrest in the state, which was
plagued by pro-Confederate guerrillas.
Authorized to raise a home guard of nearly 25,000 men for local
security, he found recruiting difficult, due partially to the fact that many of
the able-bodied men in the state were already in uniform, mostly in Confederate
service.
Johnson never served in combat. He did, however, demonstrate considerable
courage. On several occasions
Confederate raids or offensives approached Nashville.
Had Johnson been captured, he would probably have be hanged. Nevertheless, he consistently refused to
leave the city. During one particularly
dangerous period Johnson announced, “I am no military man, but anyone who talks
of surrender I will shoot.”
In June 1864 Lincoln
selected Johnson to be his running mate for the coming elections. Johnson did not campaign for office,
preferring to remain at his post on active duty as military governor of Tennessee. Shortly before his inauguration as
vice-president, he resigned from the army.
Johnson became vice-president on March 4, 1861. He
succeeded to the Presidency upon Lincoln’s
death on April 15, 1865,
just a few days after the surrender of Robert E. Lee and his army on August 9th.
Johnson presided over the closing weeks of the Civil War, as
the last Confederate forces surrendered or, more often, merely went home.
Militarily, Johnson’s administration was concerned with
several problems. The occupation of the South had to be taken in
hand, and there was, for a time, the possibility of war with France over
Napoleon III’s intervention in Mexico,
which was dealt with by a show of force on the Rio Grande.
Then too, as the westward movement grew, war with the Plains Indian
became increasingly likely. Despite
these demands for military forces, military strength fell steadily during
Johnson’s years in office, from slightly over a million troops to just under
200,000 by mid-November of that year, to about 27,000 troops in March of 1869;
during the same period the Navy fell from nearly 60,000 men and some 600 ships
to about 10,000 sailors and fewer than 100 ships.
Johnson’s presidency was not successful, due largely to his
stand on Reconstruction. The President did
little to help secure the rights of the freedmen as white racist regimes came
to power in the former Confederate States.
This set up a clash with Congress, dominated by the so-called
"Radical Republicans," those dedicated to asserting the rights of the
freedmen, along with a harsher line toward former Confederates. This culminated in Johnson’s impeachment,
which failed by one vote. Johnson was
not re-nominated for the presidency in 1868, and retired to private life.
During the Civil War Johnson’s son Charles served as a
surgeon in a Unionist Tennessee infantry regiment, and died as a result of an
accidental fall from a horse in 1863.
The president’s younger son, Robert, also served as a volunteer, helping
to organize the Unionist 3rd Tennessee Cavalry, of which he became
colonel. Although the president had
several grandchildren, none of them appears to have served.
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