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  1. Sawney’s childhood bond with Calhoun gave him a unique position at Fort Hill, where, even though he remained an enslaved person, he was given special privileges. Other slaves were less fortunate at Fort Hill. One slave, Alec, (sic Alick), offended Floride Calhoun, and she threatened him with a “severe whipping.”

  2. John C. Calhoun. Title Vice President, Secretary of War, Secretary of State. Affiliation American. Date of Birth - Death March 18, 1782-March 31, 1850. John C. Calhoun served as one of the most influential politicians in the United States during the antebellum era, and his shifting political loyalties exemplifies the politics of many Americans ...

  3. When Floride Isabella Lee was born on 15 May 1870, in New York City, New York, United States, her father, Gideon Lee, was 46 and her mother, Floride Elizabeth Clemson, was 27. She married Andrew Pickens Calhoun II on 15 August 1895, in Carmel, Carmel, Putnam, New York, United States. They were the parents of at least 4 sons and 1 daughter.

  4. Rebecca Floride Calhoun (daughter of Ezekiel Calhoun and Jane Ewing) was born 1745, and died 1814 in Tomassee, Pendleton, SC. She married Gen. Andrew Pickens on March 19, 1765 in Long Cane Creek, SC, son of Andrew Pickens and Nancy Ann Davis Rebecca Floride Calhoun: Rebecca Calhoun, d/o Ezekiel Calhoun, g/d of James...

  5. When Rebecca Floride Calhoun was born on 18 October 1745, in Augusta, Virginia, British Colonial America, her father, Ezekiel Calhoun Sr, was 25 and her mother, Jane Ewing, was 21. She married General Andrew Pickens on 19 March 1765. They were the parents of at least 11 sons and 10 daughters. She registered for military service in 1765.

  6. He began to blame the ambition of Vice President Calhoun for Floride Calhoun’s actions, deciding “it was necessary to put him out of the cabinet and destroy him.” Jackson was so indignant because had recently been through a similar scandal with his late wife Rachel.

  7. Floride Bonneau Calhoun, née le 15 février 1792 à Charleston (Caroline du Sud) et morte le 25 juillet 1866 à Pendleton (Caroline du Sud), est en sa qualité de femme du 7e vice-président des États-Unis, John Caldwell Calhoun, deuxième dame des États-Unis .