Zachary Taylor
Famous as | Military Leader and the 12th President of United States |
Born on | 24 November 1784 |
Born in | Barboursville, Virginia |
Died on | 09 July 1850 |
Nationality | United States |
Works & Achievements | War of 1812, Black Hawk War, Second Seminole War, Mexican-American War, Battle of Monterrey Battle of Buena Vista |
Zachary Taylor Childhood & Early Life
Zachary Taylor was born in a well-to-do prominent family of planters on 24th
November, 1784 in Orange County Virginia. He was the youngest of all
the nine children in the family. He was born to Richard Taylor and Sarah
Strother Taylor. His father had served under George Washington during
the American Revolution. His father Taylor was a direct descendant of
the Elder William Brewster, the Pilgrim colonist leader and spiritual
elder of the Plymouth Colony. He was a passenger aboard the Mayflower
and one of the persons signing the Mayflower Compact along with Isaac
Allerton Jr., the son of Mayflower Pilgrim Isaac Allerton and Fear
Brewster.
Education and Early Life
Zachary graduated from the Harvard College became a merchant in
Colonial America. It was his first venture in business with his father
in New England, and after his father's death he served as a Burgess for
Northumberland County and also as a Councillor of Virginia. He was an
active member of the Virginia militia and was promoted to the rank of
colonel. James Madison was his second cousin, and Franklin Delano
Roosevelt and Robert E. Lee were his kinsmen.
He lived on the frontier in Louisville, Kentucky, in his youth and
he stayed there in a small wood cabin during his entire childhood. He
later moved to a brick house after his family prospered financially. He
lived there with all his seven brothers and sisters. His father was a
proud owner of 10,000 acres of land in Louisville and his father owned
10,000 acres (40 km2), town lots in Louisville, and twenty-six slaves by 1800.
Taylor did not attend any school since there was none on the Kentucky frontier. His only source of primary education was his tutors appointed by his father to teach him during his early years. He was not a very bright student when it came to studies. His handwriting, spelling, and grammar were described as "crude and unrefined throughout his life." As he grew up, he decided to join the military. Military Career
Taylor joined the U.S. Army on May 3, 1808 after receiving a
commission as a first lieutenant of the Seventh Infantry Regiment from
his cousin James Madison. He was posted to the Indiana Territory, and
was later promoted to the rank of captain in November 1810. He took
command of Fort Knox and held it until 1814.
Taylor’s military career started off with a success after he defeated Fort Harrison in Indiana Territory, following an attack by Indians in the War of 1812 under the command of Shawnee chief Tecumseh. Post this victory, Taylor was promoted to the temporary rank of major and led the 7th Infantry in a campaign putting an end to the Battle of Wild Cat Creek. Taylor was also chosen as the commander of Fort Johnson (1814) for a short period and his troops retreated to Fort Cap au Gris. He was then demoted to the rank of captain after the war in 1814. He then resigned from the army and took re-entry only after he was re-commissioned as a major a year later. He was promoted to the rank of lieutenant colonel in 1819, and later to a higher position of colonel in 1832. In 1821 he was stationed along with the remaining of 7th Infantry. In March 1822, Colonel Taylor took command of Fort Jesup originally called Shield's spring. Taylor led the 1st Infantry Regiment during the Black Hawk War in 1832. In 1837, he was sent to Florida where he defeated the Seminole Indians. Hereafter, he was promoted to the position of Brigadier General. He then had the sole command over all the American troops in Florida. He later became the commander of the southern division of the United States Army in 1841. Mexican-American War
In 1845, Texas became a U.S state. In order to avoid any
dispute and guard against Mexico’s attempt to take it back in 1836,
President James K. Polk deployed Taylor and his troops on the
Texas-Mexico border. Taylor was vested with the command of American
troops on Rio Grande and the Army of Occupation on April 23, 1845. An
attack on Taylor’s army by the Mexican forces initiated the start of the
American-Mexican war in 1846. The same month, Taylor commanded the
American troops in the Battle of Palo Alto and also defeated the Mexican
forces at the Battle of Monterrey. Taylor’s army was then asked to join
General Winfield Scott’s soldiers after they had seized Veracruz. Mexican
General Antonio López de Santa Anna, with the intention of defeating
Taylor’s 6000 men, went with an army of 20,000 men to attack Taylor at
the Battle of Buena Vista in February 1847. This resulted in 672
American and 1,800 Mexican casualties. Taylor’s success in the Buena
Vista war with much lesser military strength turned him to a hero among
the mass. He was then compared to the likes of George Washington and
Andrew Jackson in the American popular press.
Presidency
He served as the President from 4th March, 1849 to 9th July, 1850. He went on to become the 12th President of the United States. Taylor defeated his democratic candidate Lewis Cass and the Free Soil candidate Martin Van Buren.
Marriage
Taylor got married to Margaret Smith in 1810, and together they had
six children. Among them their only son Richard, became the Lieutenant
General in the Confederate Army. Sarah Knox Taylor was one of Taylor's
daughters who decided to marry Jefferson Davis, the future President of
the Confederate States of America who was then serving as a lieutenant in 1835. Taylor's another daughter, Margaret Anne, died of liver failure at the age of 33.
Death
It is assumed that Taylor died of gastroenteritis on 9th July, 1850 at the age of 65 in Washington D.C.
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Timeline: | ||||
1784- He was born on 24th November in Barboursville, Virginia
1810- Taylor got married toMargaret Smith
1849-1850- He served as the President of the United States
1850- Taylor died on 9th July, at the age of 65 in Washington D.C.
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