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  1. Andrew Johnson, who became the 17th U.S. president following the assassination of Abraham Lincoln, was one of the last U.S. Presidents to personally own slaves. [a] Johnson also oversaw the first years of the Reconstruction era as the head of the executive branch of the U.S. government.

  2. Mar 5, 2020 · Andrew Johnson’s successful election to the Tennessee House of Representatives and Tennessee Senate in 1835 and 1841, respectively, provided increased income and status that led him to purchase an enslaved teenage girl named Dolly and her younger half-brother Sam.

    • Andrew Johnson and slavery1
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  3. Aug 24, 2021 · Andrew Johnson was a racist, like most white Americans of the time. But he was a racist who believed strongly that he cared about Black people. He regularly asserted in his speeches that he was the rare southern leader who had taken a stand against slavery, most emphatically in his October 1864 Moses speech, which […]

  4. Despite his ownership of slaves, Andrew Johnson became a critic of slavery after Abraham Lincoln freed Southern slaves. In a speech on January 8, 1864, Johnson said: "Slavery is the cancer upon the body politic, which must be rooted out before perfect health can be restored."

  5. According to family lore, Andrew Johnson freed all his personal slaves on August 8, 1863. They all remained with him afterwards as paid servants. An early image of the Tailor SHop. NPS Image. When Andrew Johnson became president in 1865, journalists became interested in his history and hometown.

    • Andrew Johnson and slavery1
    • Andrew Johnson and slavery2
    • Andrew Johnson and slavery3
    • Andrew Johnson and slavery4
    • Andrew Johnson and slavery5
  6. Andrew Johnson freed his slaves on August 8, 1863; they remained with him as paid servants. A year later, Johnson, as military governor of Tennessee, proclaimed the freedom of Tennessee's slaves. Sam and Margaret, Johnson's former slaves, lived in his tailor shop while he was president, without rent. [25]

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  8. Nov 9, 2022 · Following President Abraham Lincoln's assassination on April 15, 1865, President Andrew Johnson rescinded Field Order 15 and returned to Confederate owners the 400,000 acres of land—“a strip ...