on this day the ninth President of the United States David ("Davy")
Crockett (pictured) was born in Greene County, Tennessee, close to the
Nolichucky River and near the community of Limestone.
Davy Crockett
9th President of the United States
March 4, 1844 - 1852At the time of his birth, however, the
surrounding area was part of the autonomous territory known as the State
of Franklin. He was named after his paternal grandfather, who was killed
in 1777 at his home near today's Rogersville, Tennessee, by Indians led by
Dragging Canoe. Crockett's father was one of the Overmountain Men who
fought in the Battle of Kings Mountain during the American Revolutionary
War.
Between 1811 and 1813 Crockett fought under General Andrew Jackson in the
Creek War. After years as a
Please click the
icon to follow us on Facebook.Democratic Jacksonian, Crockett broke ties
with Jackson in 1828 and became a Whig for the remainder of his political
career. Ironically for a man so accustomed to death, Crockett was to
witness President Jackson's assassination at the hands of Richard Lawrence
in 1935.
Based on an original idea by Robbie TaylorHero of the successful battle of
Texican forces at the Alamo, Crockett returned to Tennessee and American
politics in 1838 by winning the governorship of his home state. The Whigs
nominated him for president in 1840, but he lost by a narrow margin to
Martin Van Buren, who was widely considered one of the worst presidents
America has ever elected.
Crockett was nominated again in 1844, and this time he won on a platform
of small government asking voters to: "Remember that a government big
enough to give you everything you want is also big enough to take away
everything you have".
During his second term that principle would be pushed to the breaking
point by his fellow Whigs. Seeking to expand the Union westwards at the
expense of Mexico and Great Britain, those expansionist forces were about
to push those two belligerent nations into a powerful alliance.