Examples of John C. Frémont in the following topics:
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- The
Republicans nominated John C.
- Frémont, who condemned the Kansas-Nebraska Act
and supported measures to curtail the expansion of slavery.
- Although Buchanan won the election and Frémont received fewer than 600
votes in all slave states, the results in the Electoral College indicated that
the Republican Party could succeed in the next election if they won just two
more states.
- Buchanan had won 45.3 percent of the popular vote and 174 electoral votes
whereas Frémont had won 33.1 percent of the popular vote and 114 electoral votes.
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- US Army Captain John C.
- Frémont entered California in December 1845 and was slowly marching to Oregon when he received word that war between Mexico and the United States was imminent.
- Army, led by Frémont, took over on June 23.
- Stockton who put Frémont's forces under his orders.
- On July 19, upon receiving official word of the start of war, Frémont's so-called California Battalion entered Monterrey in a joint operation with some of Stockton's sailors and marines.
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- Indeed, many Northern leaders married
into slave-owning Southern families without any moral qualms, including Stephen
Douglas (the Democratic nominee for president in 1860), John C.
- Fremont (the
Republican nominee for president in 1856), and Ulysses S.
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- Republicans nominated John C.
- Frémont,
who publicly criticized the Kansas-Nebraska Act and the expansion of slavery
into U.S. territories.
- Democratic-nominated James Buchanan won the election and Frémont received
fewer than 600 votes in all slave states.
- John Brown, a radical abolitionist from the North, led an
attack on the federal arsenal Harper's Ferry in 1859.
- Southern Democrats, on the other hand, nominated secessionist John C.
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- For a brief time in 1864, Radical Republicans formed a new political
party called the "Radical Democracy Party" with John Frémont as their
presidential candidate, but the party dissolved when Frémont withdrew his
candidacy.
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- With the outbreak of war with Mexico in 1846, the U.S. sent in Frémont and an army unit, as well as naval forces, and quickly took control.
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- McClure and John Sanborn Phillips started McClure's Magazine in May 1893.
- Hendrick, George Kennan (explorer), John Moody (financial analyst), Henry Reuterdahl, George Kibbe Turner, and Judson C.
- Galvin and John Moody), Collier's Weekly (Samuel Hopkins Adams, C.P.
- Hampton, John L.
- Mathews, Charles Edward Russell, and Judson C.
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- John Quincy Adams was elected president by the House of Representatives in 1824, despite not winning the popular vote.
- John Quincy Adams was elected president on February 9, 1825, in the United States presidential election of 1824, after the election was decided by the House of Representatives.
- The crowded field included John Quincy Adams, the son of the second president, John Adams.
- A second candidate, John C.
- Meanwhile, John C.
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- The high protectionist tariffs Hamilton originally called for were not adopted until after the War of 1812, when nationalists such as Henry Clay and John C.
- John C.
- John C.
- John C.
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- In 1845, John L.
- John C.
- John L.