
Grant, the great military hero of the Civil War, is considered one of the least successful American Presidents. He was incapable of controlling the financial scandals that seemed to engulf his administration. Elected 1868 Elected 1872
Ulysses S. Grant was born in Point Pleasant, Ohio. While Grant was still an infant, his family moved Eastwood to Georgetown, Ohio. Grant was an avid horseman from a young age. He undertook all the tasks in the house that related to horses, while avoiding working in his father's tannery.
Grant received a basic education at the local schools. In 1838, unbeknownst to Ulysses, his father arranged his acceptance to West Point. At West Point, he was only an average student. He graduated 21st in a class of 39 students in 1843.
Grant participated in the Mexican War as a lieutenant, later writing that he had thought the war immoral. Grant's military career continued uneventfully and without distinction until he resigned from the army in 1854 with the rank of captain.
With the outbreak of the Civil War, he asked to be recommissioned in the regular army but received no reply. Eventually, he was appointed Colonel in the Twenty-First Illinois Infantry. In August he was promoted to Brigadier General. In February, 1862, he captured Fort Donelson, Tennessee, in the first major Union victory. At this battle, he uttered his famous words "No terms except an unconditional surrender can be accepted."
Grant was promoted to Major General. He successfully laid siege to Vicksburg, cutting the Confederacy in half. After further victories, he became commander of all Union troops, whom he led to ultimate victory over the Confederacy. After the war, Grant was promoted to the rank of General of the Army, the first commandeer since Washington to hold this rank.
Grant entered office determined to bring peace to a country that had endured the Civil War and the subsequent turmoil of Reconstruction. His lack of knowledge of politics and administration hampered his efforts, and caused his administration to become mired in scandal. Among the scandals were the attempt by Jay Gould and James Fisk to corner the gold market; the Credit Mobilier scandal where officers skimmed huge profits off of the federally subsidized construction of the Union and Pacific railroad; a whiskey ring scandal in which millions of dollars of federal money were diverted into private pockets; and, finally, there was the Belknap bribery case, which revealed that the Secretary of War had been receiving kickbacks.
Grant continued the policy of reconstruction that included the Federal occupation of much of the South. During his second term, the US economy fell into a depression lasting five years. For his financial and political loss of control, Grant is considered by many historians to be among the least successful American Presidents.
Father: Jesse Root Grant
  Mother: Hannah Simpson
  Wife: Julia Bogs Dent
  Daughter: Ellen Wrenshall
  Sons: Frederick Dent, Ulysses Buck, Jesse Root
Tweed Corruption in NY 
  Economic Panic of 1873 
  Resumption of Specie Act 
  Gold Discovered in the Black Hills 
  Treaty of Washington 
  Custer Killed 
Secretaries of State: Elihu B. Washburne, Hamilton Fish 
  Secretaries of Treasury: George Boutwell, William Richardson, Benjamin Bristow, Lot Morrill 
  Secretaries of War: John Rawlins, Willliam Sherman William Belknap Alphonos Taft 
  Attorney Generals: Ebenezer Hoar, Amos Akerman, George Willimas, Edwards Pierraapoints, Alfonso Taft 
  Secretaries of Navy: Adolph Borie George Robeson
  Postmaster Generals: John Creswell, James Marshall, Marshall Jewell, James Tyner 
  Secretaries of Interior: Jacob Cox, Columbus Delonao, Zacharia Chandler 
Long Military Career.
First President born in Ohio.
First President to have both parents alive at his inauguration.
Reputed to have smoked 20 cigars a day.