yes
Yes,Andrew Johnson had one wife and her name is Eliza McCardle.I like that name I think it is a beautiful and Andrew Johnson was a wonderful president. ;0
Andrew Johnson, I believe.
Andrew Johnson had been vice President under Lincoln, and he became President only because of the assassination of Lincoln. Even though this was exactly what the constitution required, many people at the time felt that Johnson did not have the right to become President, and resented him. This was particularly true because Johnson was from the South. It almost seemed like a final coup d'etat by the Confederacy, for Johnson to become President.
Andrew Johnson was the first to be impeached. Like Clinton, he was not convicted.
president Andrew Johnson said that we shall pay taxes and now we hove to and some people didn't like it. Some people burned down some houses
He was elected Vice-President and was first in the line of succession to the presidency when Abraham Lincoln was assassinated in 1865. The Radical Republicans did not like Johnson for a multitude of reasons, one was being a Democrat. The Republican congress fought Johnson on Reconstruction issues and finally impeached him. He was tried and found not guilty by one vote.
Andrew Jackson should be praised because when he was the president, it was like him being king he had too have power or else he would start killing
MY NAME is steve and he didi this cus he suck mad dick. lebron james is whack
Andrew Johnson, because he wanted to treat the Southern states more gently like Lincoln did and let them back into the union right away after the Civil War.
write and read books
Bill Clinton and Andrew Johnson are the only two US presidents to be impeached, but impeachment is only the first step in the process of removing a president. (Many people think "impeached" means "thrown out of office," but that is not true.) The procedure for removing a president involves both houses of Congress. After first being impeached (which is like being indicted) in the House of Representatives, a vote must then be taken in the US Senate; if a majority of senators agree, then the president is removed. In the cases of Presidents Clinton and Johnson, the Senate did not vote to convict them, so both men finished their terms as president.
Andrew Johnson did not like the Freedman's Bureau and vetoed the extension of it's life. Despite the veto from Johnson, in 1866, Congress extended the life of the organization.