Finding Aid for the Stereoview of Andrew Johnson's Office, 1875 August 3
MS-2495 University of Tennessee Special Collections Library, Knoxville, TN
Encoded by: Elizabeth Dunham, July 19, 2006.
Summary Information
Stereoview of Andrew Johnson's Office
Date/Date Range : 1875 August 3
0.1 linear feet
Abstract: This collection contains a single stereoview photograph of Andrew Johnson's Greeneville, Tennessee office taken on August 3, 1875, three days after Johnson's death.
MS-2495
University of Tennessee Special Collections Library, Knoxville, TN
Access and Use
This collection was donated to the University of Tennessee Special Collections Library.
Collection is open for research.
The copyright interests in this collection remain with the creator. For more information, contact the Special Collections Library.
[Identification of Item], Stereoview of Andrew Johnson's Office, MS-2495. University of Tennessee, Knoxville, Special Collections Library.
Arrangement
Collection consists of a single folder.
Biography / History
Born December 29, 1808, Andrew Johnson began his political career in Greeneville, TN. After serving as both alderman and mayor of Greeneville, Johnson successfully ran for a seat in the lower house of the state legislature in 1835. After serving three terms in the state Senate, Johnson moved to the United States House of Representatives, where he served for ten years, 1843-1853. He also served as Governor of Tennessee from 1853-1857. In the fall of 1857, he was chosen as a United States Senator. In 1861, Johnson returned to East Tennessee to fight the surging secessionist movement, joining former political opponents such as William G. Brownlow, Thomas A. R. Nelson, Horace Maynard, and others in his support of the Union. After a June 8 referendum in which Tennesseeans voted for secession, Johnson returned to Washington to escape physical harm. After the Federal capture of Forts Henry and Donelson and the occupation of Nashville in February 1862, however, President Lincoln sent Johnson back to Tennessee to serve as military governor, a position in which he was charged to restore civil government and bring the state back to the Union. In 1864, the Republicans nominated Johnson as Lincoln's running mate because of his staunch Unionism as a War Democrat. After Lincoln's assassination on April 14, 1865, Johnson was sworn in as the seventeenth President of the United States.
Johnson faced the difficult task of reconstructing the nation in the wake of the Civil War as he assumed the presidency. Johnson and Congress clashed over control of Reconstruction, and in 1868, the House Republicans in Congress impeached Johnson, the first president to face impeachment. Johnson's presidency was spared by a single vote in the Senate.
Following his tumultuous presidency, Johnson returned to Greeneville, eager for vindication. In 1874, he became the first former President of the United States to win a seat in the United States Senate. However, four months after taking his seat in the Senate, Johnson suffered a stroke and died on July 31, 1875. He was buried wrapped in a American flag with his head resting on a copy of the Constitution.
Collection Scope and Content Note
This collection contains a single stereoview photograph of Andrew Johnson's Greeneville, Tennessee office taken on August 3, 1875, three days after Johnson's death. The stereoview is numbered four out of a series of twelve taken by L. W. Keen, a photographer from Jonesboro, Tennessee to "form an interesting and comprehensive idea" of Johnson's funeral. Other Andrew Johnson materials may be found in MS collections 21, 216, 829, 2213, 2284, and 2392.
Subject Terms
- Keen, L.W.
- Johnson, Andrew, 1808-1875 -- Homes and haunts -- Tennessee -- Greeneville.
- Greeneville (Tenn.) -- Pictorial works.
Contents List
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Item
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Stereoview of Andrew Johnson's Greeneville, Tennessee office, 1875 August 3
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