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Background

Born: November 19,1831 Birthplace: Orange, Ohio Parents: Abram and Eliza Ballou Garfield Wife: Lucretia Rudolph Children: Eliza, Harry, James, Mary, Irvin, Abram, Edward. Background. James A. Garfield was the last president to be born in a log cabin, with his father dieing two years after. .

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Background

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  1. Born: November 19,1831Birthplace: Orange, OhioParents: Abram and Eliza Ballou GarfieldWife: Lucretia RudolphChildren: Eliza, Harry, James, Mary, Irvin, Abram, Edward

  2. Background • James A. Garfield was the last president to be born in a log cabin, with his father dieing two years after. • James mother worked in the fields and took in washing and • Garfield took to reading novels and living a fantasy life so vivid • That he was very accident prone. • Garfield had three siblings, two sisters and a brother, and they all grew up in relative Poverty.

  3. Personality • “ Garfield is a grand, noble fellow , but fickle, unstable, more brains but no such will as Sherman, brilliant like Blaine but timid and timid and hesitating” concluded Sen. Henery L. Dawes who spent a dozen years with Garfield in the house.

  4. Education • James A Garfield became a sailor at sixteen. After falling over board fourteen times and became seriously ill. • His mother persuaded him that he needed a education. • She packed him off to Geauga Academy, • Here he discovered that he loved learning. • Garfield remained in in the • Class room for the next • Dozen years. • He attended the Western Reserve • Eclectic Institute at Hiram, Ohio • He then graduated from Williams • College in 1856.

  5. Occupations • When Garfield was younger he had a dream to pursue sailing. So he left at the age of sixteen and worked on a canal boat. • His early disadvantages made him susceptible to get-rich-quick schemes. • He became a teacher at Western Reserve and soon became its president. He taught Latin, Greek, English lit. He was admitted to the bar

  6. Military • Garfield was a General in the civil war • Ordered into field at Big Sandy. • Garfield commanded a Brigade at Shiloh but was not ordered into fighting until the second day, late in the afternoon, when the battle was over. • He was appointed chief of staff under General Rosecrans. • He resigned from army to take a seat in house of representatives.

  7. Political careers • James A. Garfield was a U.S Representative from Ohio. • He was quite popular, especially in Ohio. • It was thought by many that Garfield engaged in some scandal in the House, as had many other Republicans in those days, so it didn’t damage his reputation too much. • He was a supporter of the radical republicans party

  8. Important actions as president • Garfield’s one important action was to challenge the stranglehold of • Senator Roscoe Conkling on the Port Authority of New York. • Garfield had unwittingly nominated a man for the Port Authority that • the powerful Conkling did not support. • The boss tried to persuade other Senators to join him against the • President, but when the president refused to back down, they bailed • on Conkling, giving Garfield the victory. • Garfield served only four months before he was shot by Charles J. Guiteau. So he did not accomplish much in office’

  9. This is an accurate rendering of the moment when Charles guiteau shot president James Garfield as Garfield and secretary of state James G. Blaine entered the Baltimore and Potomac Railroad station

  10. Assassination • Charles J. Guiteau believed that he was some what responsible for Garfield’s victory in the 1980 election. He purchased a .44 Webley British Bulldog revolver, after he insisted Garfield award him a political post. He shot Garfield in the back at the Baltimore and Potomac railroad station. After eleven months of bad medical care Garfield Succumbed to infections and died.

  11. Legacy • Garfield is known as being one of the four almost forgotten presidents after the civil war. • He was also the second president to be assassinated while in office • James A. Garfield attacked political corruption and won back for the presidency a measure of prestige it had lost during the reconstruction period.

  12. Citations • James M. McPherson.To The Best of My Ability.New York: Sean Moore, 2000. • Joseph N. Kane.Facts About The President. United States of America • H.W. Wilson company, 2009. • Balites,Gerald. “James Abraham Garfield (1831-1881).” http://millercenter.org/academic/americanpresident/garfield • Harvey,James. “The Legacy Of James A Garfield.” • http://www.helium.com/items/749003-the-legacy-of-james-garfield

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