Millard Fillmore

Zachary Taylor

Zachary Taylor was the 12th President of the United States and a Mexican-American War general. His biography includes frontier service, victories at Palo Alto, Monterrey and Buena Vista, the slavery crisis and his death in 1850.

Born
1784 CE
Died
1850 CE
Role
12th President of the United States

12th President of the United States (1784–1850)

Portrait of Zachary Taylor in military uniform
Facts

Zachary Taylor timeline facts

Selected specifics from this profile's life story.

1784
Frontier childhood

Zachary Taylor was born in Virginia in 1784 and raised in Kentucky, where frontier life shaped the practical soldier later known as Old Rough and Ready.

1840s
Rising reputation

Taylor became nationally famous when the United States went to war with Mexico in 1846 and his army won early victories near the Rio Grande.

1849–1850
Presidential challenges

As president, Taylor urged California and New Mexico toward statehood without first organising them as slave territories, angering many southern politicians.

Post-1850
Legacy of leadership

Taylor's legacy rests on military fame, an unexpectedly firm Unionist presidency and the unanswered question of how he might have handled the slavery crisis.

Life Journey

Old Rough and Ready, war fame, and a presidency cut short

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1784

Frontier childhood

Zachary Taylor was born in Virginia in 1784 and raised in Kentucky, where frontier life shaped the practical soldier later known as Old Rough and Ready.

1808

Military entry

Taylor joined the U.S. Army in 1808, beginning four decades of service on the expanding frontier.

1810s–1830s

Frontier conflicts

Taylor served in the Black Hawk War, the Second Seminole War and other frontier conflicts, gaining experience in the violent machinery of U.S. expansion.

1840s

Rising reputation

Taylor became nationally famous when the United States went to war with Mexico in 1846 and his army won early victories near the Rio Grande.

1846–1848

War achievements

Victories at Monterrey and Buena Vista turned Taylor into a war hero, even as the Mexican-American War intensified sectional arguments over slavery's expansion.

1848

Presidential election

In 1848, the Whigs nominated Taylor as a military hero who could appeal across sections despite his lack of elected experience.

1849–1850

Presidential challenges

As president, Taylor urged California and New Mexico toward statehood without first organising them as slave territories, angering many southern politicians.

1850

Sudden death

Taylor died suddenly in July 1850 after sixteen months in office, leaving Millard Fillmore to support the Compromise of 1850.

Post-1850

Legacy of leadership

Taylor's legacy rests on military fame, an unexpectedly firm Unionist presidency and the unanswered question of how he might have handled the slavery crisis.

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American Presidents lineage
Lineage47 presidents
American Presidents
1789 CE–present

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Content note

This profile is written for educational use and connects to related Stories of History pages. Illustrations are original artistic interpretations.

References

Sources & Further Reading

Reliable reference works, archives and reading paths connected to this profile.

Further reading

  1. Encyclopaedia Britannica, Search results for Zachary Taylor,” accessed June 2026.Open source
  2. WorldCat, Books and library holdings for Zachary Taylor,” accessed June 2026.Open source

Primary sources

  1. Library of Congress, Search results for Zachary Taylor,” accessed June 2026.Open source

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