He was President of the Confederacy. He had hoped to be General-in-Chief instead, and tried to combine the two roles. He was out of his depth in both, not able to control either his cabinet or his Generals.
Trying to do your mom
Jefferson with Adams and Franklin was in France trying to get help.
England and France.
Thomas Jefferson did not like the Missouri Compromise very much and he feared that it would lead to the destruction of the Union. He held this opinion, because the Missouri Compromise was trying to imprint more slavery and was also trying to balance it. This would obviously lead to a bad end.
Nothing!
He was President of the Confederacy. He had hoped to be General-in-Chief instead, and tried to combine the two roles. He was out of his depth in both, not able to control either his cabinet or his Generals.
Trying to do your mom
people trying to kill him
Union by trying to preserve it.
No. He was promoted General-in-Chief in January 1865, too late to make any difference. The Confederate president, Jefferson Davis (an ex-Regular officer), had been trying to do this job himself, but he was out of his depth.
Unintentionally, a good question! It was the Confederacy itself, not the army, that had a president (Jefferson Davis). There was no General-in-Chief until the final weeks of the war, when the job was given to the only possible choice, Robert E. Lee. Davis, however, was an ex-Regular officer who could claim a respectable record as a Colonel in the Mexican War, and he had hoped to be made General-in-Chief instead of President. So he kept trying to combine both roles, and feuding viciously with his Generals as he did so. It could indeed have been joked that he was President of the Army.
Jefferson with Adams and Franklin was in France trying to get help.
delivery of war supplies
My friend is always trying to dominate me. In other words my friend is always trying to rule, govern, or control me.
The Knights of Labor overcame the obstacles of having the government hear them out and pass what laws they were trying to present.
Fort Sumter - in Charleston Harbour (South Carolina), where the Confederacy was trying to assert its authority as a separate nation.