James Buchanan was born on 23rd April 1791 at the Cobb Gap, Pennsylvania. He became the 15th president of the United States on March 4, 1857. He is the only president who has never been married. His first woman was his niece Harriet Lane. He is the only Pennsylvania citizen with this position. He was criticized for failing to take a positive action and tried to stop falling into the Civil War. Some even speculate that there is a tendency for homosexuality with William Rufus King of Senator Alabama.
Buchanan is the son of James Buchanan and Elizabeth Spear of the Scottish Presbyterian Northern Ireland church. His father moved to the United States in 1783 and served as the owner. Buchanan was educated at Dickinson University in Carlisle, Pennsylvania, graduated in 1809 and studied law at Lancaster, Pennsylvania. He entered the court in 1812 and soon established a successful legal practice. He gave a presentation gift to make him participate in politics. Buchanan has never been married, yet he is the only bachelors degree. In 1819, when he was 28 years old, he was engaged in Ann C. Coleman, a daughter of a wealthy family in Pennsylvania. He interrupted his engagement for reasons not being disclosed, and soon Coleman died, perhaps suicide. Buchanan is a senator but he shared accommodation with another bachelor's degree, William R. King of Senator Alabama. Relationship is not public relations.
The 15th president of the United States, James Buchanan (1791-1868) served from 1857 to 1861. During his tenure, the seven southern countries withdrew from the alliance, paralyzed in crisis of civil war. Buchanan from Pennsylvania began a political career in his native Congress, continued to serve in both houses of the US Congress afterwards, then became a diplomat and the US Secretary of State. Buchanan is a Democrat who is morally opposed to slavery, but I believe it was protected by the Constitution of the United States and elected the White House in 1856. As a president, he tried to maintain peace between slavery faction factions and anti-slavery factions within the government, but the tension only increased. In 1860, after Abraham Lincoln (1809-1865) was elected as the successor of Buchanan, the South Carolina was separated from the Union Army and soon set up the Union Army. In April 1861, one month after the departure of Buchanan, the American Civil War (1861 - 1865) began.