24 February 1868 A.D. President Andrew Johnson Impeached
24 February 1868 A.D. President Andrew Johnson
Impeached
President Andrew Johnson impeached
Editors. “President Andrew Johnson impeached.” History Channel. N.d. http://www.history.com/this-day-in-history/president-andrew-johnson-impeached. Accessed 23 Feb 2015.
President Andrew Johnson impeached
The U.S. House of
Representatives votes 11 articles of impeachment against President Andrew Johnson, nine of which cite Johnson's removal of
Secretary of War Edwin M.
Stanton, a violation of the Tenure of
Office Act. The House vote made President Johnson the first president to be
impeached in U.S. history.
At the outbreak of the Civil War in 1861, Andrew Johnson, a senator from Tennessee,
was the only U.S. senator from a seceding state who remained loyal to the
Union. In 1862, President Abraham Lincoln appointed him military governor of Tennessee,
and in 1864 he was elected vice president of the United States.
Sworn in as president after Lincoln's assassination in April 1865, President
Johnson enacted a lenient Reconstruction policy for the defeated South,
including almost total amnesty to ex-Confederates, a program of rapid
restoration of U.S.-state status for the seceded states, and the approval of
new, local Southern governments, which were able to legislate "Black Codes"
that preserved the system of slavery in all but its name.
The Republican-dominated
Congress greatly opposed Johnson's Reconstruction program and in March 1867
passed the Tenure of Office Act over the president's veto. The bill prohibited
the president from removing officials confirmed by the Senate without
senatorial approval and was designed to shield members of Johnson's Cabinet
like Secretary of War Edwin M. Stanton, who had been a leading Republican
radical in the Lincoln administration. In the fall of 1867, President Johnson
attempted to test the constitutionality of the act by replacing Stanton with
General Ulysses S.
Grant. However, the U.S. Supreme
Court refused to rule on the case, and Grant turned the office back to Stanton
after the Senate passed a measure in protest of the dismissal.
On February 21, 1868, Johnson
decided to rid himself of Stanton once and for all and appointed General
Lorenzo Thomas, an individual far less favorable to the Congress than Grant, as
secretary of war. Stanton refused to yield, barricading himself in his office,
and the House of Representatives, which had already discussed impeachment after
Johnson's first dismissal of Stanton, initiated formal impeachment proceedings
against the president. On February 24, Johnson was impeached, and on March 13
his impeachment trial began in the Senate under the direction of U.S. Supreme
Court Chief Justice Salmon P. Chase. The trial ended on May 26 with Johnson's
opponents narrowly failing to achieve the two-thirds majority necessary to
convict him.
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