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How Was Franklin Pierce Successful

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Mini Research Paper: Franklin Pierce Franklin Pierce was an underappreciated, forgotten president that set the stage for the Civil War while trying to ease the Northerners and the Southerners with his unsuccessful policy that left a bitter taste after his term. In his early life, Pierce was surrounded by many political leaders like his father while growing up. During his presidency, he had a pro-slavery policy that would make slavery expand in the United States creating a lead to the Civil War. Even though Franklin Pierce had tried to make good on both of the opposing sides; he was unsuccessful. After his term, Franklin Pierce was left as an outcast towards his hometown as well as in the political world. Franklin Pierce was the fourteenth president that was raised in a successful political environment, but did not live up to his expectations while in office. …show more content…
His parents, Anna B. Kendrick and Benjamin Pierce had both influenced him to become something in the political field. Benjamin Pierce served as Governor of New Hampshire from 1827 to 1828 and 1829 to 1830. Having 6 siblings, Franklin grew up in a big family. He had three sisters, Nancy M., Harriet B., Half-sister Elizabeth Andrews and three brothers, Benjamin Kendrick, John Sullivan Charles Grandson, and Henry Dearborn. Growing up, he attended a public school and soon after attended Bowdoin college to study law. Many other political leaders James Bowdoin II, who was a governor of Massachusetts, as well as many others attended Bowdoin college. Pierce served in the Mexican war but soon resigned from the army in 1848. “At 24 he was elected to the New Hampshire legislature; two years later he became its Speaker. During the 1830's he went to Washington, first as a Representative, then as a Senator” (White House). On November 19, 1834, Franklin Pierce got married to Jane Means Appleton in Amherst, New

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