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  1. Millard Fillmore became president upon the death of Zachary Taylor in July 1850. Born in upstate Cayuga County, New York on January 7, 1800, Fillmore as a youth endured the privations of frontier life. He worked on his father’s farm, and at 15 was apprenticed to a cloth maker. He attended a local school where he met Abigail Powers, who was 19 ...

  2. 21 de mai. de 2024 · Legacy: Millard Fillmore’s presidency stalled disunion, but because he did not use the power of his office, he resolved no major issues. Millard FillmoreThirteenth President, 1850-1853Campaign:A powerful congressman from New York, Millard Fillmore was Zachary Taylor’s vice president and ascended to the presidency upon Taylor’s death.Ch...

  3. ミラード・フィルモア. ミラード・フィルモア ( Millard Fillmore 、漢字: 美辣達・斐謨 [1], 1800年 1月7日 - 1874年 3月8日 )は、 アメリカ合衆国 の 政治家 、 弁護士 で、第12代 副大統領 及び第13代 大統領 。. 大統領の死に際して副大統領から昇格した2人目の ...

  4. 7 de mar. de 2014 · Bettmann Archive/Getty Images. 1. Fillmore rose up out of extreme poverty. Born in a log cabin, Millard Fillmore spent much of his youth clearing land and raising crops on the 130-acre farm that ...

  5. Millard Fillmore nacque il 7 gennaio 1800 in una capanna nella foresta di Locke, nello Stato di New York (la odierna Summerhill), da una famiglia di agricoltori, Phoebe Millard e Nathaniel Fillmore. Poiché i genitori erano molto poveri, fin da bambino Fillmore dovette aiutarli lavorando duramente, sia nei campi sia esercitando la professione di cardatore di lana .

  6. The presidency of Millard Fillmore began on July 9, 1850, when Millard Fillmore became President of the United States upon the death of Zachary Taylor, and ended on March 4, 1853. Fillmore had been Vice President of the United States for 1 year, 4 months when he became the 13th United States president. Fillmore was the second president to ...

  7. Born into desperate poverty at the dawn of the nineteenth century, Millard Fillmore climbed to the highest office in the land—and inherited a nation breaking into fragments over the question of slavery. Despite his best efforts, the lines of the future battles of the Civil War were drawn, and Fillmore found himself rejected by his own dying ...