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Although it has never been proven, there is a good chance that one or two members of the executive branch, both elected by the Electoral College, were gay.
While many plantation owners were rumored to have affairs with their slaves, King was rumored to have had "sexual liaisons" with his male salves. All this would have been forgotten by history had it not been for his alleged affair with a fellow Senator with whom he shared rooms, James Buchanan who went on to be the 15th President of the United States, and was the only bachelor to be President. King was elected to Congress in 1810. In 1819, he was elected to the Senate. Buchanan arrived in the Senate in 1834. The two became fast friends, and moved in together and shared rooms for many years. Before his election to the Senate, Buchanan had been engaged to Anne Coleman. Two years before Buchanan was elected to the Senate, Anne Coleman broke off their engagement and committed suicide. Anne's father would not allow Buchanan to attend to funeral. The rumor was that she discovered his homosexuality and could not face the humiliation. In 1844, Buchanan was a leading candidate for the Democratic nomination for President. He and King began thinking about running as a team, with King taking the second place on a Buchanan ticket. Buchanan was defeated by a surprise candidate, James K. Polk who had been considered a leading candidate for the Vice Presidential nomination. Buchanan was one of the leading candidates in 1848 and 1852, and finally got the nomination in 1856. King was a leader for the Vice Presidential nomination again in 1848, and got the nomination in 1852. After he lost the Vice Presidential nomination, President Tyler named King to the position of minister to Paris, the fashion capital of the world. Although he initially enjoyed France, he began to miss Buchanan and wrote him letters that survived.
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