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Henry Clay Should have been Pr

I chose Henry Clay as the person who I think should have been president instead of these four other men. These other men were incompetent, they lacked leadership, and they each didn't have much support. None of them had much drive or motivation to be a good president, and as for a couple of them, they didn't have much political background at all. Henry Clay, on the other hand would have made a fantastic president instead of these four men. Even though he had already run for president three times, and lost, he still had the potential to be a great president. He had a vast background in politics. He had so much to do with what was going on that time in politics, it seem as if he never died (, from our pages of our history book that is). Henry Clay was a great man and I believe that he stood head-and-shoulders above the rest of the presidents of the 1850's. He was a great man who was secretary of state under John Quincy Adams and an unsuccessful candidate for the presidency in 1824, 1832, and 1844. He was one of the most popular and influential political leaders in Amer


His genius in the art of compromise three times resolved bitter political conflicts that threatened to tear the nation apart, winning him the title "The Great Pacificator. Clay, who was ambitious for worldly success, married into a wealthy, and socially prominent, family and soon gained entry into Kentucky's most influential cliques. "Clay was born on April 12, 1777, in Hanover County, Virginia, to a middle-class family. In the presidential election of 1824, after his own candidacy had failed, Clay threw his support to John Quincy Adams, whom the House early in 1825 elected as the sixth president. He was blessed with a quick mind, a flair for oratory, and an ability to charm both sexes with his easy, attractive manner. Clay established his great reputation in the United States House of Representatives, where he served from time-to-time from 1811 to 1825. When Adams named Clay secretary of state, his Jacksonian opponents yelled out, "corrupt bargain!" This accusation was unfair; however, Clay was haunted by it throughout his subsequent career. After studying law with the eminent George Wythe, Clay, at the age of 20, moved to Lexington, Kentucky, where he developed a thriving practice. In 1820-21 it was Clay above all who engineered the Missouri Compromise, that slowed a debate for equal balance between free and slave states. Perhaps the most heartbreaking event of Clay's career was his close defeat in the presidential contest of 1844, when his reluctance to back the annexation of Texas cost him support in the South. Clay was selected as one of the lead people who in 1814 negotiated the Treaty of Ghent, ending that war.

Common topics in this essay:
Henry Clay, Elected Senate, Lexington Kentucky, Adams House, Quincy Adams, American System, Missouri Compromise, War Hawks, Conclusively Clay, House Representatives, henry clay, president instead, quincy adams, john quincy, john quincy adams,

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