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  1. Jesse Root Grant (January 23, 1794 – June 29, 1873) was an American farmer, tanner and successful leather merchant who owned tanneries and leather goods shops in several different states throughout his adult life.

  2. La Orden general nº 11 fue una controvertida orden emitida por el General Mayor de la Unión Ulysses S. Grant el 17 de diciembre de 1862, durante la campaña de Vicksburg, que tuvo lugar durante la guerra de Secesión. La orden expulsó a todos los judíos del distrito militar de Grant, que comprendía áreas de Tennessee, Misisipi y Kentucky.

  3. Jesse Root Grant II (February 6, 1858 – June 8, 1934) was an American politician. He was the youngest son of President Ulysses S. Grant and First Lady Julia Grant. He joined the Democratic Party and sought the party nomination for President, running against William Jennings Bryan in 1908. In 1925, he wrote a biography of his father.

  4. Jesse Root Grant II was the youngest son of Ulysses and Julia Grant and a mining engineer and lawyer in California. He ran for president in 1908 as a Democrat and wrote a book about his father's life.

  5. Biography. The father of U.S. President Grant, Jesse Root Grant was born 23 Jan 1794 at Greensburg, Pennsylvania. He was the second child of Noah Delano Grant by his second wife Rachel (Miller) Kelly. He moved with his family to Ohio at a young age and served apprenticeships at farms and tanneries during his youth.

  6. 16 de may. de 2024 · Jesse Root Grant in Wikipedia. Born, February 6, 1858, at Hardscrabble, near St. Louis. Attended Cornell University, studying engineering. He also attended Columbia Law School. He did not graduate from any college. Married on September 21, 1880, to Elizabeth Chapman. Children: Nellie Grant Cronan, Chapman Grant.

  7. 17 de abr. de 2020 · Learn how Ulysses S. Grant, the last U.S. president to own an enslaved person, inherited his views on slavery from his abolitionist father Jesse Root Grant. Explore the history of the Grant family and their involvement in slavery at White Haven plantation in Missouri.