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The Age of Jackson

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Title: The Age of Jackson


1
The Age of Jackson
Presentation created by Robert Martinez Primary
Content Source The Americans
2
  • In the early decades of the 19th century, the
    economies of the various regions of the United
    States developed differently. The Northeast began
    to industrialize while the South and West
    continued to be more agricultural.

3
  • The Industrial Revolution large-scale
    production resulting in massive change in social
    and economic organization. A movement away from
    an agricultural society. Modern industrial
    revolution began in Great Britain during the 18th
    century.

4
  • Industry began first in New England
    (agriculture was never profitable in the area),
    whose economy depended on shipping and foreign
    trade. New Englanders were ready to embrace new
    forms of manufacturing (textiles, fabrics, mills.)

5
Cotton Gin
  • The South continued to grow as an agricultural
    power. Eli Whitneys invention of a cotton gin in
    1793 made it possible for Southern farmers to
    produce cotton more profitably.

6
King Cotton
  • The emergence of a Cotton Kingdom in the
    South, and the need for more field labor,
    contributed to the expansion of slavery. Between
    1790 and 1820, slave population increased from
    less than 700,000 to over 1.5 million.

7
  • By 1804, states north of Delaware had either
    abolished slavery or had enacted laws for gradual
    emancipation. These differences created political
    tensions between the different sections of the
    nation.

8
Missouri Compromise
  • In 1818 settlers in Missouri requested
    admission to the Union. Northerners and
    Southerners disagreed, on whether Missouri should
    be admitted as a free state or a slave state.

9
  • Under the Missouri Compromise of 1820, Maine
    was admitted as a free state and Missouri as a
    slave state. The rest of the Louisiana Territory
    was split into two parts. The dividing line was
    set at 36-30 north latitude.

10
  • South of the line, slavery was legal. North of
    the line, except Missouri, slavery was banned.

11
Old Hickory
  • The man who embraced the spirit of American
    expansion was personified in Andrew Jackson, who
    captured the presidency in 1828.

12
  • Jacksons ideal of political power is called
    Jacksonian democracy.. Jackson sought to give
    common people a chance to participate in
    government. He did this through the spoils
    system, in which new administrations hire their
    own supporters to replace supporters of the
    previous administration.

13
  • In 1830, Congress passed the Indian Removal
    Act. Under this law, the federal government
    provided funds to negotiate treaties that would
    force the Native Americans to move west.

14
  • Many of the tribes signed removal treaties.
    However, the Cherokee Nation refused and fought
    the government in the courts. In 1832, the
    Supreme Court ruled in Worchester v. Georgia that
    the state of Georgia could not regulate the
    Cherokee nation by law or invade Cherokee lands.

15
  • President Jackson refused to honor the Supreme
    Court decision, saying, John Marshall Chief
    Justice has made his decision now let him
    enforce it.

16
  • U.S. troops rounded up the Cherokees and drove
    them into camps to await the journey west.
    Beginning in 1838, the Cherokee were sent off in
    groups of about 1,000 each on the 800-mile
    journey west, mostly on foot.

17
  • As winter came, many Cherokee died. The
    Cherokee buried more than a quarter of their
    people along the Trail of Tears, the forced
    marches the Cherokee followed from Georgia to the
    Indian Territory.

18
  • In 1824 1828, Congress increased Tariffs.
    Senator John C. Calhoun of South Carolina, called
    the 1828 tariff a Tariff of Abominations because
    he blamed it for economic problems in the South.

19
  • The Souths economy depended on cotton
    exports. The tariff reduced British exports of
    manufactured goods to the United States (England
    purchased less cotton.) The South was forced to
    purchase more expensive Northern manufactured
    goods. From the Souths point of view, the North
    was getting rich at the expense of the South.

20
  • To try to free South Carolina from the tariff,
    Calhoun developed a Theory of Nullification. The
    theory held that the U.S. Constitution was based
    on a compact among the sovereign states.

21
Sovereign States
  • If the Constitution had been established by 13
    sovereign states, then the states must still be
    sovereign, and each state would have the right to
    determine whether acts of Congress were
    constitutional.

22
  • Simply put, if a state found an act to be
    unconstitutional, the state could declare the
    offending law nullified, or void (cancelled),
    within its borders.

23
  • In 1832, the issue of states rights was put
    to a test when Congress raised tariffs again.
    South Carolina declared the tariffs, null, void,
    and no law. They threatened to secede, or
    withdraw from the Union, if customs officials
    tried to collect payment.

24
  • An outraged Jackson urged Congress to allow
    the federal government to use the military if
    state authorities resisted paying duties. A
    bloody confrontation seemed likely until Henry
    Clay found a compromise in 1833.

25
  • Congressman Henry Clay proposed a tariff bill
    that gradually lowered taxes over a ten-year
    period. Temporarily, tension between states
    rights and federal authority settled down.
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