Tuesday, August 20, 2019
The Political Career of Daniel Webster Essay -- Biography Biographies
The Political Career of Daniel Webster           Daniel Webster contributed a large potion of the Civil War.  To begin,  he was born in Salisbury, New Hampshire on January 18, 1782. His parents  were farmers so many people didn't know what to expect of him.  Even though  his parents were farmers, he still graduated from Dartmouth College in 1801.   After he learned to be a lawyer, Daniel Webster opened a legal practice in  Portsmouth, New Hampshire in 1807.         Webster quickly became an experienced and very good lawyer and a  Federalist party leader.  In 1812, Webster was elected to the U.S. House of  Representatives because of his opposition to the War of 1812, which had  crippled New England's shipping trade.  After two more terms in the House,  Webster decided to leave the Congress and move to Boston in 1816.  Over the  next 6 years, Webster won major constitutional cases in front of the  Supreme Court making him almost famous.  Some of his most notable cases  were Dartmouth College v.  Woodward, Gibbons v. Ogden, and McCulloch v.  Maryland.  He made himself the nations leading lawyer and an outstanding  skilled public speaker or an orator. In 1823, Webster was returned to  Congress from Boston, and in 1827 he was elected senator from Massachusetts.           New circumstances let Daniel Webster become a champion of American  nationalism.  With the Federalist Party dead, he joined the National  Republican party, he joined with Westerner Henry Clay and then endorsing  federal aid for roads in the West.  In 1828, since Massachusettses had  shifted the economic interest from shipping to manufacturing, Webster  decided to back the high-tariff bill of that year to help the small new  manufacturing businesses grow.  Angry souther...              ...sue of expansion  of slavery.  Webster opposed the expansion but feared even more the  separation of the union over the dispute of the expansion of slavery.  In a  powerful speech on March 7, 1850, he supported the Compromise of 1850,  lowering southern threats of separation but urging northern support for a  stronger law for the recovery of fugitive slaves.  Webster was again named  secretary of state in July 1850 by President Millard Fillmore and  supervised the strict enforcement of the Fugitive Slave Act.  Webster's  stand on the Act divided the Whig party, but it helped preserve the Union  and keep it together for a little while after until the Civil War started.    BIBLIOGRAPHY    1. Prodigy - Grolier Electronic Publishing, 1990, W-section 2. Daniel  Webster - John Melvin, Copyright 1976, Bonhill Publishing 3. Civil War  Heros - American Books, 1979, p.244-247                        
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