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The Age of Jackson

The Age of Jackson. Election of 1824. Reference to the election of 1824 This election was particularly nasty--a smear campaign Despite losing the popular and the electoral vote J. Q. Adams is president. “ The Corrupt Bargain ”. Breakdown-Electoral College. Election Breakdown. Vote in House

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The Age of Jackson

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  1. The Age of Jackson

  2. Election of 1824

  3. Reference to the election of 1824 This election was particularly nasty--a smear campaign Despite losing the popular and the electoral vote J. Q. Adams is president “The Corrupt Bargain”

  4. Breakdown-Electoral College

  5. Election Breakdown Vote in House Of Representatives KEY PLAYERS: JACKSONADAMS CRAWFORD

  6. The Election of 1824:The “Corrupt Bargain”

  7. Highly qualified worked for father Secretary of state under Monroe Intelligent, spoke s number of languages Plenty of foreign policy experience But… Referred to as “a chip off the old iceberg” Advocates strong central government Unpopular Indian Policies Unsuccessful in obtaining Texas “America Plan” seen as bias by south JQA as President

  8. Election 1828

  9. Key Issue-1828 Rachel Jackson Final Divorce Decree

  10. Presidential Election of 1828 (with electoral vote by state) Jackson swept the South and West, whereas Adams retained the old Federalist stronghold of the Northeast. Yet Jackson’s inroads in the Northeast were decisive. He won twenty of New York’s electoral votes and all twenty-eight of Pennsylvania’s. If those votes had gone the other way, Adams would have been victorious—by a margin of one vote.

  11. Reshaping the Presidency Andrew Jackson

  12. The Spoils System “To the Victor belongs the Spoils” • Positions for Jackson supporters • Many men from positions of wealth

  13. Nullification Crisis.

  14. The America System • Created for trade between the North and South and expanding buildling infrastructure in the West • As well as: • a high protective tariff to promote industry • the sale of public lands at low prices to encourage western settlement • federally financed transportation improvements • expanded markets for western grain and southern cotton • a strong national bank to regulate the economy

  15. So where is the problem? • “Tariff of Abomination”-1828 • Tariff supposed to promote growth in all parts of the country. • infuriated Southerners who believed that it favored Northeastern industrial interests at their region’s expense • Why? • it raised the cost of manufactured goods, which they did not produce

  16. ConsequencesNullification Crisis • John C. Calhoun-V.P. • Maintains that a state might overrule or “nullify” a federal law within its own territory, until three-quarters of the states had upheld the law as constitutional.

  17. Nullification Crisis • Tariff of 1832, Jackson passes in an attempt to ease tension • Still viewed as oppressive to the South and South Carolina declares the Tariff of 1828 and the Tariff of 1832 null and void • To defend nullification the state legislature agrees to raise an army

  18. Nullification Crisis-Response • Jackson declares nullification illegal • Asked congress to use force to execute the federal law=the Force Act • Jackson promises to “hang every leader….of that infatuated people, sir, by martial law, irrespective of his name or political or social position.” • Sends 8 ships and 5,000 muskets to Fort Pickney in Charleston Harbor

  19. Nullification Crisis-Response • Clay “great compromiser” persuades Congress to pass a tariff with lower protectionist levels • South Carolina backs down, but passes a state law that permits nullification

  20. Nullification Crisis • I consider the Tariff, but as the occasion, rather than the real cause of the present unhappy state of things. The truth can no longer be disguised, that the peculiar domestick institution of the Southern States, and the consequent direction, which that and her soil and climate have given to her industry, have placed them in regard to taxation and appropriations in opposite relation to the majority of the Union; against the danger of which, if there be no protective power in the reserved rights of the States, they must in the end be forced to rebel, or submit to have their permanent interests sacraficed, their domestick institutions subverted by Colonization and other schemes, and themselves & children reduced to wretchedness. Thus situated, the denial of the right of the State to interfere constitutionally in the last resort, more alarms the thinking, than all other causes. –John C. Calhoun

  21. Rationale against Nullification • Daniel Webster (MA): declared that states who disagreed with action of the federal government had the right to sue or amend the Constitution, but no right to nullify the federal Law • “Liberty and Union, now and forever, one and inseparable.”

  22. War on the Bank of the United States

  23. War on the Bank • Had been rechartered in 1816 • had been blamed for the Panic of 1819 • People resented its political influence • Private banks resented its privileged position in the banking industry

  24. War on the BUS • During 1832-Henry Clay, Daniel Webster and other Jackson opponents made the BUS a political issue for the campaign • Congress rechartered the Bank –but WHY? • Wanted to force Jackson to either sign the bill for the recharter or ostracize voters who favored the bank

  25. Result • Jackson VETOES the recharter of the BUS. • Clay and Webster had underestimated the peoples opinion of the Bank and Jackson easily sweeps the election of 1832-defeating Clay 219 votes to 49.

  26. Symptoms of a Locked Jaw An outraged and outmaneuvered Henry Clay vainly tries to “muzzle” Andrew Jackson after Jackson’s stinging message vetoing the bill to recharter the Bank of the United States.

  27. Jackson’s view on the BUS • attacked the bank as an agency through which speculators, monopolists, and other seekers after economic privilege cheated honest farmers and mechanics.

  28. Opposition to the 2nd B.U.S. Soft (paper) $ V. • state bankers feltit restrained theirbanks from issuingbank notes freely. • supported rapid economic growth & speculation. Hard $ • felt that coin was the only safecurrency. • didn’t like any bankthat issued banknotes. • suspicious of expansion &speculation.

  29. Jackson’s Response • September 1833, Jackson ordered his Treasury secretary to divert federal revenues from the Bank of the United States to selected state banks, which came to be known as Pet Banks

  30. Jackson and Native Americans

  31. Jackson and Native Americans • 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!

  32. The Cherokee Nation

  33. The Cherokee Nation Constitution • WE, THE REPRESENTATIVES of the people of the CHEROKEE NATION, in Convention assembled, in order to establish justice, ensure tranquility, promote our common welfare, and secure to ourselves and our posterity the blessings of liberty; acknowledging with humility and gratitude the goodness of the sovereign Ruler of the Universe, in offering us an opportunity so favorable to the design, and imploring his aid and direction in its accomplishment, do ordain and establish this Constitution for the Government of the Cherokee Nation.

  34. The Cherokee Nation Constitution • THE POWER of this Government shall be divided into three distinct departments;—the Legislative, the Executive, and the Judicial. • Sec. 14. In all criminal prosecutions, the accused shall have the right of being heard, of demanding the nature and cause of the accusation against him…a speedy public trial by an impartial jury of the vicinage; nor shall he be compelled to give evidence against himself. • Sec. 3. The free exercise of religious worship, and serving God without distinction, shall forever be allowed within this Nation… • Sec. 9. The right of trial by jury shall remain inviolate. • http://www.pbs.org/kcet/andrewjackson/edu/constitutionofcherokeenation.pdf

  35. Indian Removal

  36. Trail of Tears

  37. Jackson the “Great Father” An anonymous cartoonist satirizes Jackson’s alleged compassion for the Indians, but in fact his feelings toward Native Americans were complicated. He made ruthless war on the Creeks as a soldier, but he also adopted a Creek Indian son (who died of tuberculosis at the age of sixteen). At least in part, his motives for pursuing Indian removal stemmed from his concern that if the Indians were not removed from contact with the whites, they would face certain annihilation.

  38. Andrew Jackson-1844

  39. The 1836 Election Results Martin Van Buren “Old Kinderhook”[O. K.]

  40. The Panic of 1837 Spreads Quickly!

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