Title: Andrew%20Jackson
1Age of Jackson
2Essential Question
Champion of the Common Man?
KingAndrew?
OR
3Why Increased Democratization?
- White male suffrage increased
- Party nominating committees.
- Voters chose their states slate of Presidential
electors. - Spoils system.
- Rise of Third Parties.
- Popular campaigning (parades, rallies, floats,
etc.) - Two-party system returned in the 1832 election
- Dem-Reps ? Natl. Reps.(1828) ? Whigs
(1832) ? Republicans (1854) - Democrats (1828)
4Results of the 1824 Election
A Corrupt Bargain?
5John Quincy Adams Administration (1825-1829)
6Opposition to John Quincy Adams
- Some believed he allowed too much political
control to be held by elites. - Some objected to his support of national economic
development on constitutional grounds. - Adams believed a strong, active central
government was necessary. - A national university.
- An astronomical observatory.
- A naval academy.
- Many Americans saw Adams vision of a might
nation led by a strong president as a threat to
individual liberties.
7What were the key issues in 1828?
8The Tariff of Abomination
9Tariff Battles
- Tariff of 1816 ? on imports of cheap textiles.
- Tariff of 1824 ? on iron goods and more expensive
woolen and cotton imports. - Tariff of 1828 ? higher tariffs on imported raw
materials like wool hemp. - Supported by Jacksonians to gain votes from
farmers in NY, OH, KY. - The South alone was adamantly against it.
- As producers of the worlds cheapest cotton, it
did not need a protective tariff. - They were negatively impacted ? American textiles
and iron goods or the taxed English goods were
more expensive!
10Land Indian Policies
- John Quincy Adams
- His land policies gave westerners anothr reason
to dislike him. - He attempted to curb speculation for public lands
? his opponent accused him of denying their
individual rights and freedoms to expand
westward! - He supported the land rights of Native Americans
against white settlers. - 1825 ? govt. officials negotiated a treaty with a
group of Creek Indians to cede their land rights
to GA. - The Creek Indians appealed to Adams to renounce
the treaty. - Congress sided with the governor of GA.
11The 1828 Election
- Jacksons campaign was engineered by Senator
Martin Van Buren of NY - He wanted to recreate the old Jeffersonian
coalition of - Northern farmers and artisans.
- Southern slave owners.
- Farmers with small land holdings.
- He created the Democratic Party from the remains
of Jeffersons old party - Created a national committee that oversaw local
and state party units. - Mass meetings, parades, picnics.
- A lot of political mudslinging on both sides.
12The New Jackson Coalition
- The Planter Elite in the South
- People on the Frontier
- Artisans competition from factory labor.
- State Politicians ? spoils system
- To the victor belong the spoils of the enemy!
William Marcy of NY - Immigrants in the cities.
13Jacksons Faith in the Common Man
- Intense distrust of Easternestablishment,
monopolies, special privilege. - His heart soul was with theplain folk.
- Belief that the common man was capable of
uncommon achievements.
14Andrew Jackson as President
15The Nullification Issue
16Calhoun Ascends the Platform that Leads to
Despotism
17Jackson's Native-American Policy
18Indian Removal
- Jacksons Goal?
- 1830 ? Indian Removal Act
- Cherokee Nation v. GA (1831) domestic
dependent nation - Worcester v. GA (1832)
- Jackson John Marshall has made his
decision, now let him enforce it!
19Indian Removal
20Trail of Tears (1838-1839)
21Jacksons Professed Love forNative Americans
22Renewing the Charter of the 2nd National Bank
23Jacksons Use of Federal Power
VETO
1830 ? Maysville Road project in KY
state of his political rival, Henry
Clay
24The National Bank Debate
PresidentJackson
NicholasBiddlean arrogant aristocrat from
Philadelphia
25Opposition to the 2nd B.U.S.
Soft(paper)
Hard(specie)
- state bankers feltit restrained theirbanks from
issuingbank notes freely. - supported rapid economic growth speculation.
- felt that coin was the only safecurrency.
- didnt like any bankthat issued banknotes.
- suspicious of expansion speculation.
26The Monster Is Destroyed!
- Pet Banks
- 1832 ? Jackson vetoed the extension of the 2nd
National Bank of the United States. - 1836 ? the charter expired.
- 1841 ? the bank went bankrupt!
27The Bank the 1832 Election
- Jackson saw Biddles pushing forward a bill to
renew the Banks charter earlier as an attempt to
block his re-election! - Biddle his associates preferred Clay.
- Jackson refused to sign the bill to re-charter.
- The Bank is trying to destroy me, but I will
destroy it! - Jackson drops Calhoun and runs with Martin Van
Buren. - BUT, both parties Democrats Whigs had
contradictory positions regarding their party
principles, to many of the issues of the day!
28An 1832 Cartoon KingAndrew?
29The Specie Circular (1836)
- Speculators created wildcat banks that fueled
the runaway inflation. - So, buy future federal land only with gold or
silver. - This move shocked the system.
- Jacksons goal ? to curb the land speculation.
30Results of the Specie Circular
- Banknotes loose their value.
- Land sales plummeted.
- Credit not available.
- Businesses began to fail.
- Unemployment rose.
The Panic of 1837!