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yes he did alot of people
President Franklin Pierce.
Daniel Webster, Franklin Pierce,
Franklin Pierce
I am not sure what you want to know. Pierce lived before there was electronic communication. Like the other people of his day, he wrote letters, made speeches and talked to people.
Frankiln Pierce was open, congenial and even-tempered. He liked to socialize and strike up conversations with people. He wanted people to like him and he was sensitive to criticism. He hated to say "no" to people and that trait got him into trouble sometimes.
Around 29 million was the the US population in 1853.
People in general rarely think about Franklin Pierce. He served only one term as US president more than 150 years ago and his term was a prelude to the great Civil war that followed soon after. Historians that like to judge presidents give him low marks.
In Pierce's day, people walked or traveled on horseback or horse-drawn vehicles. Trains were available some places and river boats sailed the rivers.
Pierce was personally honest and he appointed people to serve him that were honest. He ran a clean administration and encouraged his cabinet members to ferret cheats and incompetents from their departments.
I am not sure what he would say, but happiest time of his life was after he came back from the Mexican War as a hero and people called him General Pierce. His father held the same title and was known for telling his tales of military exploits. His found a new law partner who complemented Pierce's own talents and his law practice really picked up, Moreover, his wife who suffered from depression and hated their time in Washington, delighted from their handsome and bright young son, Benjamiin and life was good.
No- Pierce was not an abolitionist. He was not personally in favor of slavery, but considered the right to keep slaves as something that was part of the agreement that states made when they ratified the US Constitution. He agreed with people like John Adams and Benjamin Franklin who did not like slavery but accepted it as a compromise needed to form the union.