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Andrew%20Jackson

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Title: Andrew Jackson Author: Susan M. Pojer Last modified by: Vogt Joseph Created Date: 7/1/2005 1:51:51 PM Document presentation format: On-screen Show (4:3) – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Andrew%20Jackson


1
Age of Jackson
2
Essential Question
Champion of the Common Man?
KingAndrew?
OR
3
Why 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)

4
Results of the 1824 Election
A Corrupt Bargain?
5
John Quincy Adams Administration (1825-1829)
6
Opposition 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.

7
What were the key issues in 1828?
8
The Tariff of Abomination
9
Tariff 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!

10
Land 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.

11
The 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.

12
The 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.

13
Jacksons 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.

14
Andrew Jackson as President
15
The Nullification Issue
16
Calhoun Ascends the Platform that Leads to
Despotism
17
Jackson's Native-American Policy
18
Indian 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!

19
Indian Removal
20
Trail of Tears (1838-1839)
21
Jacksons Professed Love forNative Americans
22
Renewing the Charter of the 2nd National Bank
23
Jacksons Use of Federal Power
VETO
1830 ? Maysville Road project in KY
state of his political rival, Henry
Clay
24
The National Bank Debate
PresidentJackson
NicholasBiddlean arrogant aristocrat from
Philadelphia
25
Opposition 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.

26
The 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!

27
The 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!

28
An 1832 Cartoon KingAndrew?
29
The 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.

30
Results of the Specie Circular
  • Banknotes loose their value.
  • Land sales plummeted.
  • Credit not available.
  • Businesses began to fail.
  • Unemployment rose.

The Panic of 1837!
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