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A Zachary Taylor Christmas

Zachary Taylor served as the 12th President of the United States for 16 months before dying in office. He spent only one Christmas in the White House (1849), and there is very little information as to how the President and his family celebrated the holidays or whether they exchanged White House Christmas cards with friends and acquaintances.

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First Lady Margaret Mackall Smith Taylor cared so little about performing the traditional social duties of a president’s wife and Zachary Taylor was empathetic to his wife’s feelings since she had endured a life of hardships as the spouse of a career military man. One of their daughters, newly-married Mary Elizabeth (Betty) Taylor Bliss, assumed her mother’s role at official functions and carried on in that capacity during Taylor’s short term in office.

As a 40-year military officer, Zachary Taylor had never held any political office prior to becoming President of the United States. Reportedly, he did not even vote in his own election since his constant moving precluded him from ever establishing legal residency in any one place.

Taylor was born in Orange County, Virginia, and was one of nine children. His father, Richard, served in the American Revolution under General George Washington. He was a second cousin to James Madison and a distant relative to Robert E. Lee. He lived on the Kentucky frontier and never went to a formal school. In 1808, at the age of 23, Taylor joined the U.S. Army. He began his career as a first lieutenant and was subsequently promoted to the ranks of major, captain, lieutenant colonel, and colonel while serving first in the Indiana Territory and in the War of 1812, as well as in a succession of Indian uprisings at frontier areas during the 1820s and 1830s.rs.

In 1837, just before the Christmas season, Taylor was ordered to report to the Lake Okeechobee area of Florida to help put down the Seminole Indians. The Battle of Lake Okeechobee, fought on Christmas Day, was a hard-fought battle from which Colonel Taylor’s forces emerged overwhelmingly victorious. It was during this horrific skirmish that Taylor earned the nickname “Old Rough and Ready” – a handle that became popular later during his years in politics.

During this period of his life Taylor was seldom at home and had to rely on family members and friends as well as acquaintances to help Margaret Taylor manage his lands and plantations. He knew that his military career made family life difficult, and he hoped that neither of his daughters would choose to marry a military man. When daughter Sarah was to marry Lieutenant Jefferson Davis (future president of the Confederate States of America) in 1835, Taylor exclaimed, “I’ll be damned if a daughter of mine will marry into the army!” Davis resigned from the army prior to the wedding. Unfortunately, the marriage lasted only three months due to Sarah’s death from malaria.

In 1845, serving as commander of the southern division of the U.S. Army, General Taylor was ordered by President James K. Polk to proceed to the Texas-Mexico border to defend disputed land Mexico had lost during the clashes involving the Texas territory nine years earlier. It was during the subsequent successful war with Mexico that Taylor gained the notoriety which propelled him in the minds of the Whig party as a viable presidential candidate.

Just before Christmas of 1847, Taylor wrote to his son-in-law, Major William W.S. Bliss, that “if the people call upon him he would serve.” Following his election to the presidency in November of 1848, Taylor and his family spent that year’s Christmas awaiting the move into the White House. Upon his inauguration the following March, they became occupants of the “people’s house.”

The overriding issue during Taylor’s stint in the White House involved the sectional dispute over slavery and the issue of keeping the North-South slave dispute from boiling over. Although Taylor had slaves at his Louisiana plantation, he wanted both California and New Mexico to be admitted to the Union as free states. In a message to Congress on Christmas Eve, he reminded them that he felt their first obligation was not to the cause of slavery but to the interests of their country.

By the summer of the following year, during the final stages of the eventual agreement on the issue which became known as the Compromise of 1850, President Taylor died. At a ceremony on the 4th of July connected with the building of the Washington Monument and celebrating the 74th birthday of our country, the President drank a large amount of cold water along with cherries and iced milk to help overcome the high temperatures. After contacting gastroenteritis and suffering from a high fever that night, Taylor passed away four days later from a reported coronary thrombosis. After a eulogy given by future president Abraham Lincoln, President Taylor was buried in Louisville, Kentucky, at a location which is now known as the Zachary Taylor National Cemetery.

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Taylor’s death, however, has been clouded in controversy. Being a robust man in good health, historians have surmised that perhaps because of the controversy surrounding the country at that time, certain people upset with Taylor’s stance on slavery might have had reason to do him harm. In 1991, acting on the idea that Taylor was possibly poisoned, the former president’s body was exhumed, and hair and fingernail samples were taken. After testing, it was determined that there was arsenic present but the levels were too low to support the theory that Taylor had been assassinated.