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  1. Abraham Van Buren (February 17, 1737 – April 8, 1817) was an American businessman and local public official from Kinderhook, New York. A Patriot and militia veteran of the American Revolutionary War, he was the father of Martin Van Buren, the eighth president of the United States.

  2. Battle of Churubusco. Abraham Van Buren II (November 27, 1807 – March 15, 1873) was an American soldier and the eldest son of Martin Van Buren, the eighth President of the United States and his wife, Hannah Hoes Van Buren. A career soldier and veteran of the Second Seminole War and Mexican–American War, Van Buren was named in ...

  3. 17 de set. de 2022 · While Martin van Buren was running on the Free Soil ticket in 1848, a party that was committed to stopping the expansion of slavery, Abraham inherited, on behalf of his wife, over 200 enslaved people. Abraham resigned from the army officially in June of 1854, almost 31 years after his admission to West Point.

  4. The Van Burens were a large, struggling family of Dutch descent. Martin's father, Abraham Van Burena supporter of Thomas Jefferson in a region populated by supporters of Jefferson's opponents, the Federalists—ran a tavern where politicians often gathered as they traveled between New York City and Albany.

  5. Biography. Timeline. Quotes & Misquotes. Suggested Readings. FAQs. 1782. December 5: Born in Kinderhook, New York, the third of five children of Maria Hoes Van Alen and Abraham Van Buren, five days after the preliminary articles of the Treaty of Paris are signed, making Van Buren the first U.S. president not born a British subject. 1787.

  6. Timeline. 1782, Dec. 5. Born in Kinderhook, Columbia County, N.Y., on the Hudson River near Albany, to a family of Dutch descent. His parents were Abraham Van Buren (1737-1817) and Maria (“Marytje”) Goes Hoes Van Alen Van Buren (1747-1818). Abraham Van Buren, a Jeffersonian Republican, was a slave-owning farmer, tavern keeper, and town clerk.

  7. In a humble Inaugural Address, Van Buren praises the great Presidents before him and gives a positive assessment of the first half century of American statehood. President Van Buren addresses two points of concern: the rising incidence of mob action and abolitionist agitation, which he vowed to vote down.