Millard fillmore biography for kids
•
Millard Fillmore Biography
Please email or share this article!
Thirteenth President of the United States
Years Served as President:
Vice President: None
Party: Whig
Age at Inauguration: 50
Home State: New York
Date of Birth: January 7,
Died: March 8,
Married: Abigail Powers
Children: Millard, Mary
Nickname: Last of the Whigs
What is Millard Fillmore known for?
Millard Fillmore is best known for the Compromise of He did not take a strong stance on slavery, choosing instead to try to keep the peace between the North and the South.
The Compromise did keep the peace temporarily, but not for long.
Early Life
Millard Fillmore was born in a log cabin in Cayuga County, New York. His family was poor, and Millard was the oldest of nine children.
Fillmore received little formal education and taught han själv to read and write. As a teenager, he had an apprenticeship with a cloth maker before eventually switching to work in a law office.
When he
•
Millard Fillmore
President of the United States from to
Millard Fillmore | |
---|---|
Portrait c.– | |
In office July 9, – March 4, | |
Vice President | None[a] |
Preceded by | Zachary Taylor |
Succeeded by | Franklin Pierce |
In office March 4, – July 9, | |
President | Zachary Taylor |
Preceded by | George M. Dallas |
Succeeded by | William R. King |
In office January 1, – February 20, | |
Governor | |
Preceded by | Azariah C. Flagg |
Succeeded by | Washington Hunt |
In office March 4, – March 3, | |
Preceded by | John Winston Jones |
Succeeded by | James I. McKay |
In office March 4, – March 3, | |
Preceded by | Thomas C. Love |
Succeeded by | William A. Moseley |
In office March 4, – March 3, | |
Preceded by | Constituency established |
Succeeded by | Thomas C. Love |
Born | ()January 7, Moravia, New York, U.S. |
Died | March 8, () (aged74) Buffalo, New York, U.S. |
Resting place | Forest Lawn Cemetery • Millard FillmoreShare to Google ClassroomAdded by 3 Educators
Millard Fillmore was born to Nathaniel and Phoebe Millard Fillmore, the second of eight children, in Cayuga County, New York. The Fillmores were tenant farmers, and the family endured severe poverty. With no hopes of formal schooling, his father apprenticed him to a clothmaker and then at a nearby mill. Sometime before , Millard bought a share in a lending library and strove to improve himself, eventually enrolling at the New Hope Academy. Here, he met Abigail Powers, his teacher and future wife. By , Millard was teaching in East Aurora, near Buffalo, New York, where he continued his legal studies and was admitted to the bar in Three years later, he married Abigail Powers. He and his wife taught school, and he practiced law until moving to Buffalo, where Millard became interested in local politics, especially the Anti-Masonic Party. In Fillmore successfully ran for a seat in the U.S. House of Representatives ( and ) an |