Salmon P. Chase
Salmon P. Chase
No, Salmon Portland Chase was U.S. Treasury Secretary under President Abraham Lincoln.
William H. Seward as Secretary of State and Salmon P. Chase as his Secretary of the Treasury.
William H. Seward was U.S. Secretary of State from March 1861 until March 1869, serving throughout the presidencies of both Abraham Lincoln and Andrew Johnson.For U.S. Treasury Secretary, Pres. Lincoln appointed Salmon P. Chase in March 1861, William P. Fessenden in July 1864, and Hugh McCulloch in March 1865.
Salmon P. Chase, who was Secretary of the Treasury under President Lincoln, and later served as Chief Justice of the Supreme Court.
First off, the year was 1861. Second, the Secretary of State was William Seward, and the Secretary of the Treasury was Salmon Portland Chase. Source is here. http://www.angelfire.com/my/abrahamlincoln/Cabinets.html
The Secretary of State was William Seward, and the Secretary of the Treasury was Salmon Portland Chase. Both were Republicans and among all of Lincoln's cabinet, Chase was the most radical. As an aside, many Republicans had complained that Seward was more qualified to carry the Republican banner in the 1856 presidential elections. Fremont had received the nod.
Salmon P. Chase was Lincoln's secretary of the treasury who had aspirations of becoming president in 1864. Chase was a prominent figure in the Republican Party and had previously served as a U.S. Senator and Governor of Ohio. Despite his ambitions, Chase was ultimately unsuccessful in his bid for the presidency in 1864, as Lincoln secured the Republican nomination and was reelected.
Kennedy
No.John Nicolay was President Lincoln's Private Secretary; John Hay was President Lincoln's Assistant Private Secretary.Evelyn Lincoln was the name of President John F. Kennedy's Private Secretary.
If you're referring to the 50 cent note, issued in the 1860s and '70s, then the portrait varies by issue. The 1st issue features President George Washington. The 3rd issue shows Treasury Secretary F.E. Spinner (there was no 2nd series 50 cent note). Issue 4 has three versions, with President Abraham Lincoln, War Secretary E.M. Stanton, or War/Treasury Secretary Samuel Dexter. Then issue 5, the last of the series, shows War/Treasury Secretary William H. Crawford.
He was a lawyer, politician, and anti-slavery leader who later served as Abraham Lincoln's Secretary of the Treasury.