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  1. 26 de mar. de 2019 · John C. Calhoun and Slavery as a “Positive Good:” What He Said. The “positive good” speech of February 6, 1837, is vintage Calhoun, an exercise of his conception of the proper role of a statesmen placed in the highest deliberative body of the Union. That role was to look beyond the present clamour and clatter of routine politics and ...

  2. John C. Calhoun. John Caldwell Calhoun, född 18 mars 1782 i Abbeville i South Carolina, död 31 mars 1850 i Washington D.C., var en amerikansk politiker som tjänstgjorde i flera betydelsefulla befattningar under första hälften av 1800-talet. Han har framför allt gått till historien som en av slaveriets främste försvarare.

  3. Hace 3 días · South Carolina's most storied national politician, John C. Calhoun served as secretary of war, vice president, secretary of state, and finally as U.S. senator, where his final act was to help ...

  4. 31 de mar. de 2018 · The Great Triumvirate was the name given to three powerful legislators, Henry Clay, Daniel Webster, and John C. Calhoun, who dominated Capitol Hill from the War of 1812 until their deaths in the early 1850s. Each man represented a particular section of the nation. And each became the primary advocate for that region's most important interests.

  5. As a politician and political philosopher of constitution, federalism, and state sovereignty, John Caldwell Calhoun (1782–1850) was the most preeminent spokesperson for the antebellum South. Born near Calhoun Mills, Abbeville District (presently Mount Carmel, McCormick County), in the South Carolina upcountry on March 18, 1782, Calhoun ...

  6. Search for: 'John C. Calhoun' in Oxford Reference ». (1782–1850)Calhoun has three claims to fame. One stems from his prominence as an American politician between 1811 and 1850. During that period he was, successively, an important member of the House of Representatives (1811–17), Secretary of War (1817–25), Vice‐President of the United ...

  7. No hubo una verdadera elaboración de una teoría de la resistencia frente a la autoridad nacional sino hasta 1828, cuando la idea de invalidación volvió al Sur. Se originó con John C. Calhoun, como una racionalización de la oposición sureña al constante aumento de aranceles, entre 1816 y 1818. Ante la amenaza secesionista del Sur, …