Title: The Age of Jackson
1The Age of Jackson
2Presidential Election
- John Quincy Adams is elected president over
Jackson in 1824 - Jackson won the popular vote, but neither
candidate received a majority in the electoral
vote - Corrupt Bargain Henry Clay influenced the House
of Representatives to elect Adams and was
appointed Clay Secretary of State
3Voting Requirements
- Prior to 1828 majority of Americans were content
with allowing the aristocracy to select the
President. - Aristocracy wealthy, educated, privileged class
- By 1828 most states got rid of property
qualifications for voting, therefore more people
could vote
4Election of 1828
- Adams characterized as an intellectual elitist
- Jackson characterized as a man of humble
origins, president for the common man - In reality Jackson was a wealthy plantation owner
5General Jacksons Military Career
- Defeated the Creeks at Horseshoe Bend in 1814
- Defeated the British at New Orleans in 1815
- Took Florida and claimed it for the US in 1819.
- Loved by his soldiers called him Old Hickory
6jackson the man
JACKSON THE MAN
1824, Thomas Jefferson said of Jackson When I
was President of the Senate he was a Senator and
he could never speak on account of the rashness
of his feelings. I have seen him attempt it
repeatedly, and as often choke with rage. His
passions are no doubt cooler now.BUT HE IS A
DANGEROUS MAN.
7Jacksons Top Ten
- 10. Andrew Jackson was the first President from a
state west of the Appalachian Mountains. - 9. Andrew Jackson was the first Tennessean to
serve in the U.S. House of Representatives. - 8. Andrew Jackson was the first territorial
Governor of Florida. - 7. Andrew Jackson was the first person to serve
as a U.S. Representative, Senator, and President.
- 6. Andrew Jackson exercised his veto power 12
times as President, more than all of his
predecessors combined.
8Jacksons Top Ten
- 5. Andrew Jackson was the first President to
articulate that as President he represented all
the people and the will of the majority must
govern. - 4. Andrew Jackson helped found and was the first
U.S. President to represent the Democratic Party. - 3. Andrew Jackson is the only U.S. President to
be censured by the U.S. Senate. The censure
(official criticism) was cancelled in the last
year of his presidency.
9Jacksons Top Ten
- 2. The first assassination attempt on a sitting
U.S. President occurred on January 30, 1835, when
Robert Lawrence failed to slay Andrew Jackson. - 1. Andrew Jackson was the only President in
American History to pay off the national debt and
leave office with the country in the black.
10Common man cluster
- Common Man and the west become politically
powerful - Jackson brought democracy to the Common man
Land easy to obtain in the West so property
qualifications were dropped Education not as
important
BricklayersBlacksmith FarmersCarpentersThe
Working Class
Rise of the Common Man and The New Democracy
Jackson stood for the common man which was most
of the population
Other Common Men in US History Davy CrockettSam
Houston
Powerful movement in the country to expand
involvement and participation of the common man
in democracy.
11New Democracy
NEW DEMOCRACY
JEFFERSONIAN DEMOCRACY People should be governed
as little possible JACKSONIAN DEMOCRACY Whatever
governing needed to be done, it should be done by
the common man. Government by the majority of
people instead of a government governed by the
upper class was introduced during Jacksons
Presidency.
- Property ownership/education not needed to vote
- Growth of political power of the working class
- Increased number of elected officials
- Land easy to get out West
- Ideas of the DOI become important and people saw
inequalities in society.
12President Jackson
- Presidential veto - the right of a president to
reject bills passed by the legislature.
- Spoils system to the victor belongs the spoils
- Rewarded loyal friends from the campaign with
government positions
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14Spoils System
- Jacksons policy was said to be product of the
kitchen cabinet, a group of close friends who
also served as his informal advisors
15President Jackson
- Indian Removal Act of 1830
- Jackson believed assimilation would not work and
reservations required too many soldiers to
prevent white settlement - Indian Removal Act a series of treaties that
moved Native American Tribes west
16Worcester v. Georgia (1832)
- Supreme court rules that Georgia does not have
the right to regulate the Cherokee or invade its
lands - Andrew Jackson on the subject John Marshall has
made his decision now let him enforce it.
17Trail of Tears
- November 1838 Cherokee made an 800-mile trip
west - Government officials stole their money
- Outlaws stole their livestock
- More than a quarter of the Cherokee died along
the way
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19Dont Drink the Water
Come out, come out no use in hiding Come out,
come out can you not see? Theres no place here,
what were you expecting? Not room for both, just
room for me So you will lay your arms down Yes I
will call this home Away, away youve been
banished Your land is gone and given to me And as
you go I will spread my wings Yes I will call
this home Don't Drink the Water
20Tariff of 1828Tariff of Abominations
- Limited exports from Great Britain forcing the
South to buy more expensive items from the North
- John C. Calhoun nullification
- Questioned the legality of applying federal laws
in sovereign states - U.S. was a compact of sovereign states which
could nullify, or reject a law considered
unconstitutional
21Jackson vs. Calhoun (Pres. vs. VP)
- Jackson on Calhouns Beliefs on nullification
secession
- Our Union it must be preserved!
- The Union, next to our liberty, the most dear
may we all remember that can only be preserved by
respecting the rights of the States
Calhoun resigns as VP in 1832
22Jackson on Calhoun Clay
"I have only 2 regrets that I have not shot
Henry Clay or hanged John C. Calhoun."
23South Carolina Rebels
- Tariff of 1832 caused South Carolina to threaten
to secede or withdraw from the Union - Jackson threatened military action against South
Carolina - Henry Clay proposed a bill that would gradually
decrease the taxes of 10 years
24The National Bank
- Viewed the bank as a tool of the elite or
privileged institution - In 1832, Jackson vetoed the
re-chartering of the bank - Jackson began removing government funds and
placing them in state banks called pet banks
25Panic of 1837
- A direct result of the closing of the National
Bank - Pet banks over-speculated and paper money
became nearly worthless - People lost their savings, businesses went
bankrupt and 1/3 of the population was out of work
26Jacksons Legacy
- Increase of respect and power for the common man
- Voting rights expanded to all white male adult
citizens, rather than only land owners in that
group - Increased the strength of the Executive branch at
the expense of the Legislative branch
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28Conflicts in Jacksons Administration
- Tariff
- Nullification
- Indian
- Second Bank
- Panic of 1837 Specie Circular
29Texas Saga
- Austin
- Houston
- Alamo
- San Jacinto
- Sectionalism Slavery Annexation debate
30Politics
- Old Hickory
- Corrupt Bargain
- Kitchen Cabinet
- Spoils System
- Universal Manhood Suffrage
- Jacksonian Democrats