John C. Calhoun: An Effective Leader

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John C. Calhoun John Caldwell Calhoun was an American Statesman and became the most effective protagonist of the antebellum South. On March 18, 1782, John was born to Martha Caldwell and Patrick Calhoun in Abbeville Area. He was the fourth child of his guardians who were transients from Pennsylvania to Carolina Piedmont (“John C. Calhoun”). Due to his father’s condition, at age seventeen, John dropped out from school to offer assistance to his father on the family cultivate. Later, he went to finish his studies and was rewarded with a degree from Yale College, in 1804. A while later, he examined law at the Tapping Reeve Law School and was appointed to the South Carolina bar in 1807 (“John C. Calhoun”). John entered the public service in 1808, he was elected to South Carolina’s state governing body, where he served for a year (Capers). Through many trials, John C. Calhoun was able to fight past adversity to become an influential and effective leader. …show more content…
Calhoun”). Also, he married a distant cousin, Floride Bonneau, which he had 10 children with and three out of those ten died while an infant. Marriage brought an amount of fortune, he enlarged his money and in 1825 established a plantation called Fort Hill in his native area(“John Caldwell Calhoun”). In 1812, Calhoun presented the confirmation of war against Britain. A nationalist at the start of his political career, John was one of the leading War Hawks who played a major role in steering the unprepared United States into war with Great Britain in 1812 (“John C.