Pres $1 Uncir SMS - 79086
2009 D ZACHARY TAYLOR, SMS

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Coin Details

Origin/Country: United States
Design Description: DOLLARS - PRESIDENTS
Item Description: $1 2009 D SMS ZACHARY TAYLOR
Full Grade: NGC MS 68
Owner: JJWhizman

Set Details

Custom Sets: This coin is not in any custom sets.
Competitive Sets: Pres $1 Uncir SMS - 79086   Score: 94
Research: NGC Coin Explorer NGC Coin Price Guide
NGC US Coin Census for Presidential Dollars (2007-2020)

Owner Comments:

Zachary Taylor Presidential $1 Coin — Twelfth President, 1849 - 1850

• Born: 24 November 1784
• Birthplace: Montebello, Virginia
• Died: 9 July 1850 (gastrointestinal illness)
• Best Known As: U.S. President from 1849-1850

A hero of the war with Mexico in 1846, Zachary Taylor was the first U.S. President who was "regular army". Nicknamed "Old Rough and Ready" while in the army.

Taylor was not so tough as president. He was nominated by the Whigs and elected because of his military reputation and southern roots, not because of his politics, whatever they may have been. He died after a five-day illness, having served just sixteen months in office. He was replaced by Millard Fillmore.

Because he spent much of his adult life soldiering, Taylor did not vote until he was 62 years old... His wife, Margaret, survived him by two years.

Zachary Taylor, twelfth U.S. President, was born in 1784 in Virginia. His family moved shortly after his birth to a plantation outside Louisville, Kentucky, where he spent his childhood. His long Army career began at the age of 23 and for the next 30 years, he served in many remote outposts that stretched from Louisiana to northern Wisconsin. He led his forces to decisive victories in the Mexican-American War, which earned him the nickname “Old Rough and Ready.”

His reputation as a national hero made him an attractive presidential candidate, and he won the general election in a three-candidate race. Although he had little prior political experience, Taylor proved to be independent-minded, to the dismay of his political party, the Whigs. As the debate over slavery in western territories threatened to tear the country apart, he was determined that the Union be preserved at all costs. He warned southern leaders that he would command the Army himself, if necessary, to enforce the law.

Taylor became ill after attending a long ceremony at the Washington Monument on a scorching 4th of July in 1850. He died five days later, having served only 16 months in office. He was the second president to die in office.


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