did not have 1
He wanted to keep the country safe.
no, you should keep your alligator gar with your fishes or else your alligator gar will eat them.
John Adams described the petition as an effort to "Keep open the door of reconciliation, to hold the Sword in One hand and the olive branch in the other."
John Adams
Yes you do need a license to own a alligator
He helped keep peace between America and europee
a caiman
Which country? that's a really broad question
ok first of all the answer is in the question it was james monroe lol this was by bunnyluver2433^ I wouldn't trust anyone named bunny "luver". James Monroe did not write the Monroe Doctrine, he adopted it.Not a fact. It is asserted by others that James Monroe authored the Doctrine, while accepting the input from cabinet members. Harlow Giles Unger, author of The Last Founding Fatherargues "The assertion that Adams is the author of the Monroe Doctrine is not only untrue, it borders ludicrous implying that Monroe was little more than a puppet manipulated by another's hand". John Quincy Adams is given credit for influencing Monroe's opinion though.
The only way to keep your pet alligator from eating your other animals is to have a controlled environment for the alligator by keeping it separated and isolated from your other pets.
Quincy M-E- - 1976 Promises to Keep 4-19 was released on: USA: 1 March 1979
This refers to the election when Andrew Jackson won a plurality of the vote (< 50%, but most of all candidates), but the electors decided to elect John Quincy Adams instead as a compromise candidate.Though some would say yes, I'd say arguably no.Andrew Jackson was not entitled to the Presidency simply because he won a plurality of the electoral votes. If he was, then the constitution would have been written that way by the founders.Andrew Jackson became President at a later time, the next election.Andrew Jackson arguably kept himself from becoming President by taking centrist positions during his campaign, possibly obscuring his true positions and making him less likely to be supported if you stood strongly on one side of an issue.