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  1. Breckinridge's grandfather, U.S. Attorney General John Breckinridge, influenced his political philosophy. Historian James C. Klotter has speculated that, had John C. Breckinridge's father, Cabell, lived, he would have steered his son to the Whig Party and the Union, rather than the Democratic Party and the Confederacy, but the Kentucky Secretary of State and former Speaker of the Kentucky ...

  2. John Cabell Breckinridge was a prominent statesman and lawyer from Lexington, Kentucky. He was born into the Breckinridge political family of Kentucky and shared close family ties to the Preston political family of Virginia. Breckinridge was surrounded by politics at the local and national levels from a young age and thus decided to pursue a ...

  3. 16 de mar. de 2024 · In 1869, Breckinridge returned to Kentucky where he practiced law and served as vice president of the Elizabethtown, Lexington, and Big Sandy Railroad Company. John C. Breckinridge died in Lexington, Kentucky on May 17, 1875, at age 54, from complications from cirrhosis. His final resting place is in Lexington Cemetery, Lexington, Kentucky.

  4. John C. Breckinridge's last major battle was fought on September 19, 1864, Third Winchester. Following the Confederate defeat, Breckinridge was ordered by the Confederate War Department to take command of the new Department of Western Virginia and East Tennessee, he was to leave the majority of his forces in the Valley with Early.

  5. John C. Breckinridge. General January 16, 1821 — May 17, 1875 . On December 15, 1862, Breckinridge took leave in Richmond. Premature rumors of his death prompted the New York Times to print a quite vituperative obituary arguing that Kentucky’s decision to stay in the Union denied Breckinridge the notion of states’ rights to justify his siding with the Confederacy.

  6. John Breckinridge (born Dec. 2, 1760, Staunton, Va.—died Dec. 14, 1806, Lexington, Ky., U.S.) was a Kentucky politician who sponsored Thomas Jefferson’s Kentucky Resolutions, which, like James Madison’s Virginia Resolutions, advocated a states’ rights view of the Union. Breckinridge grew up on the Virginia frontier but nonetheless ...

  7. John C. Breckinridge. John C. Breckinridge. John Cabell Breckinridge (* 16. Januar 1821 in Lexington, Kentucky; † 17. Mai 1875 ebenda) war Offizier des US-Heeres, Vizepräsident der Vereinigten Staaten und Senator für den Bundesstaat Kentucky. Im Amerikanischen Bürgerkrieg war er General im konföderierten Heer .