Title: The Age of Andrew Jackson Nationalism to Sectionalism
1The Age of Andrew Jackson Nationalism to
Sectionalism
2Nationalism v. Sectionalism
- NATIONALISM
- Devotion to ones country
- People are willing to put interests of the nation
before their own - vs.
- SECTIONALISM
- Loyalty to a region or area
- Primary concern is for what helps me the most
3Jacksonian Democracy1820s Expansion of Democracy
- States dropped property qualifications to vote ?
Universal adult white male suffrage - Rotation in office gave more people the
opportunity to serve in government - Spoils system
- To the victor belongs the spoils
- Appointments were made on basis of political
loyalties (not always on merit or ability) - National Nominating Convention replaced caucus as
method to choose political party candidates - Return of the 2-party system
4Increased A White Mans Democracy
- Slavery existed
- Women had no political or legal rights
- Native Americans lost rights and land
5Election of 1824
- All candidates were Republicans
- Only real issue in the campaign was the character
of the candidates
6The Results no majority in Electoral College!
Andrew Jackson Tennessee 99 electoral votes (43 of popular vote)
John Quincy Adams Massachusetts 84 electoral votes (31 of popular vote)
William Crawford Georgia 41 electoral votes (13 of popular vote)
Henry Clay Kentucky 37 electoral votes (13 of popular vote)
7Election to be decided by House of Representatives
Andrew Jackson Tennessee 99 electoral votes
John Quincy Adams Massachusetts 84 electoral votes
William Crawford Georgia 41 electoral votes
Henry Clay - eliminated Kentucky 37 electoral votes
8The Corrupt Bargain
- Deal between JQ Adams and Clay
- Clay would encourage his states to vote for
Adams when the House of Representatives voted,
if Adams would appoint Clay to be Secretary of
State
9Jackson supporters were outraged
- Jackson had received the greatest number of
popular votes and the greatest number of
electoral votes, but Adams was chosen to be
President - Jackson supporters felt they had been robbed
vowed to get Jackson elected the next time
10Election of 1828
- Andrew Jackson v. John Quincy Adams
- Only issue personalities
- Jackson won after a campaign filled with
mud-slinging and name calling - Revolution of 1828
- 3 times the number of voters than in previous
election
11All Creation Going to the White House
12Why was Andrew Jackson so popular?... The
Peoples President
- Frontiersman not from Virginia or Massachusetts
- Common man could identify with him believed
they had elected one of their own lacked a
formal education - War hero Battle of New Orleans
- Indian fighter fought the Creek in Tennessee
and the Seminoles in Florida
13Jacksons Cabinet
- Official Cabinet
- Political new-comers not much help to Jackson
- Kitchen Cabinet
- Jacksons friends who met with him in the Kitchen
of the White House gave him honest,
straight-forward advice
14Issues in the Jackson Administration
- Nullification and the Tariff
- The Bank of the United States
- Removal of the Indians
15The Tariff and Nullification
16- Opinions
- North supported to protect developing
industries and jobs - South opposed because it raised prices and few
industries were located in the South - West sided with North success tied to success
of the North
- Tariff of Abominations
- 1828 High protective tariff lowered in 1832 but
not enough to please some (South).
17Nullification
- Define the act of canceling a law (usually a
state canceling a national law) - South Carolina Exposition and Protest written
by J.C. Calhoun - Expressed the states rights philosophy that if
the states created the union the states had the
right to decide whether or not to accept laws
passed by the national government
18- South Carolina declared the tariff null void
in the state and warned they would secede from
the Union if the national govt attempted to
collect the tariff.
- FORCE BILL
- Congress authorized President Jackson to collect
the tariff by using military force
19Compromise Tariff of 1833
- Arranged by Henry Clay (The Great Compromiser)
- Gradually lowered the tariff over 10 year period
- Accepted by all sides
- (But just to prove the point, South Carolina
nullified the Force Bill) - Andrew Jackson ignored SC action
20The Bank of the United States
21- Opinions
- North generally supported the BUS provided
money for industrialization - South generally opposed the BUS symbol of the
wealthy powerful central government preferred
local, state banks - West generally opposed the BUS didnt favor
farmers
22The Bank of the United States
- Why was it the Monster?
- Powerful institution used by the wealthy and the
industries to make a profit - Jackson hated the BUS and vowed to veto the
re-charter when it came up in 1836
23- Why was the Bank charter rescheduled for 1832
(when it was originally scheduled for 1836)? - To make it an election year issue for Andrew
Jackson and force Jackson to take a stand that
was the only hope Clay had to defeat Jackson - Veto lose support of North
- Not Veto lose support of South West
What action concerning the Bank did President
Jackson take? He vetoed the re-charter
24- What was the result of the Election of 1832?
- Jackson won by a wide margin
- Saw that as a sign from the people that they
approved of his veto and he took steps to kill
the Bank - Jackson ordered the Secretary of the Treasury to
remove govt deposits from the BUS
- Pet Banks
- Were specially selected state banks that would
hold the govt money - More sympathetic to farmers
25Indian Removal
26Indian Removal Policy
- 1830 Congress passed the Indian Removal Act
forced resettlement to the west of the
Mississippi River - Cherokee Nation v. Georgia 1831
- Supreme Court ruled that the Cherokee were not a
foreign nation and had no right to sue in federal
court
27Worcester v. Georgia 1832
- Supreme Court ruled that Georgia law had no
authority on Cherokee land - Native Americans were not a state matter
- Jackson refused to enforce the Courts order
- John Marshall made his decision, now let him
enforce it - Cherokee won the case but ended up losing the
land and were force westward along what is known
as the Trail of Tears
28The Trail of Tears
29The Trail of TearsBy Robert Lindneux,1942
30King Andrew the First