Teacher Mrs. Tracey Villanueva
College Transition
28 November 2016 Millard Fillmore Millard Fillmore once said, “Nations, like individuals in a state of nature, are equal and independent, possessing certain rights and owing certain duties to each other.” Millard Fillmore always thought that everyone was suppose to have the same respect. He showed this throughout his whole presidency. What would have been different if he had not been president? I believe if they hadn’t picked Fillmore that the United States would have been a very different place.
On January 7, 1800 Millard Fillmore was …show more content…
California became a state as a part of the Compromise of 1850. The 1849 request of Californians for statehood led to fierce argument in Congress, mainly over the issue of slavery. The compromise allowed admission of the state to the Union, with the concern that it enter as a free state.
Second, if President Fillmore had not been in office, slavery would never be noticed???can you think of another word for noticed. Though Fillmore directly ???antislavery and he saw the Compromise as basic to protect the Union and imposed its strong Fugitive Slave Act during his presidency this is a run-on sentence.The slave trade in Washington D.C., was abolished, while a strong Fugitive Slave Act put federal officers at ???the removal of slave owners seeking their runaway slaves. Try to clear this up a bit
You need a third argument for what would be different. This argument does not address that. Third, if President Fillmore had ???in office it wouldn’t probably be any changes because he did poorly . His decisions had good and bad effects, but don’t get me wrong he did some things that affected America in a good way. Millard Fillmore was weak to edge causes. Falling for the old American fear of secret organizations, his first party was the distrustful Anti-Masonic movement, and he blamed his loss in the New York governor's race on "foreign