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The Corrupt Bargain of 1824: Rise of a Mass Democracy

Explore the controversial election of 1824, where the "Corrupt Bargain" led to John Quincy Adams becoming president despite Andrew Jackson's popular appeal. Learn about Adams' presidency, his nationalist views, and the rise of Jacksonian democracy.

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The Corrupt Bargain of 1824: Rise of a Mass Democracy

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  1. Chapter 13 The Rise of a Mass Democracy, 1824–1840

  2. I. The “Corrupt Bargain” of 1824 • Corrupt bargain (1824) last old-style election • James Monroe, last Virginia dynast, completed his second term; four new candidates: • John Quincy Adams-Mass., highly intelligent, experienced, and aloof • Henry Clay-Kentucky, the gamy and gallant “Harry of the West” • William H. Crawford-Georgia, an able though ailing giant of a man • Andrew Jackson-Tenn., gaunt, gutsy hero of New Orl.

  3. I. The “Corrupt Bargain” of 1824(cont.) • Four candidates: • All four rivals professed to be “Republicans.” • Results of the campaign: • Jackson, the war hero, had the strongest personal appeal, especially in the West • Polled as many popular votes as his next two rivals combined, but failed to win the majority of the electoral vote (see Table 13:1) • The deadlock must be broken by the House of Representatives by the 12th Amendment

  4. I. The “Corrupt Bargain” of 1824 (cont.) • Twelfth Amendment (see Appendix) • They must choose among the top three candidates • Clay was eliminated, who was Speaker of the House • Clay could throw his vote to whoever he chose • Crawford, felled by a paralytic stroke, out of the picture • Clay hated Jackson, his archrival in the West • Jackson bitterly resented Clay’s public denunciation of his Florida foray in 1818 • The only candidate left was the puritanical Adams

  5. I. The “Corrupt Bargain” of 1824(cont.) • Clay and Adams: • Both were fervid nationalists and advocates of the American System • Clay met privately with Adams and assured him of his support • Decision day 1825: on the first ballot Adams was elected president • A few days later Adams announced Clay would be the new secretary of state

  6. I. The “Corrupt Bargain” of 1824(cont.) • The office of secretary of state: • The prize office then, even more than today • Three preceding secretaries had reached the presidency • It was considered the high cabinet office on the pathway to the White House • According to Jackson’s supporters, Adams had bribed Clay with the position. • Masses of angry common folk denounce “corrupt bargain”

  7. Table 13-1 p247

  8. II. A Yankee Misfit in the White House • John Quincy Adams: • Came to the presidency with a brilliant record in statecraft, especially foreign affairs • He ranks as one of the most successful secretaries of state, yet one of the least successful presidents • A man of scrupulous honor • Entering the White House under charges of “bargain,” “corruption,” and “usurpation.”

  9. II. A Yankee Misfit in the White House (cont.) • Fewer than 1/3 of the voters voted for him • First “minority president”—having difficulty winning the popular support • He did not possess many of the usual arts of the politician and scorned those who did • He had achieved high office by commanding respect rather than by courting popularity • He resolutely declined to oust efficient officeholders in order to create vacancies for his supporters • He only ever removed twelve public servants

  10. II. A Yankee Misfit in the White House (cont.) • Nationalist views: • Most people were swinging away from post-Ghent nationalism and toward states’ rights and sectionalism • He swung against the tide toward nationalism • First annual message urged Congress to the construction of roads and canals • He renewed Washington’s proposal for a national university • Went so far as to advocate federal support for an astronomical observatory

  11. II. A Yankee Misfit in the White House (cont.) • Public reaction to these proposals was prompt and unfavorable • His land policy antagonized the westerners • He attempted to deal fairly with the Cherokee Indians of Georgia • Nullification of the national will was another nail driven into Adam’s political coffin.

  12. III. Going “Whole Hog” for Jackson in 1828 • Adams’ second presidential campaign started on February 9, 1825: • The day of Adams’ controversial election by the House • And continued noisily for nearly four years • The united Republicans under the Era of Good Feeling split: • The National Republicans with Adams • The Democratic-Republicans with Jackson

  13. III. Going “Whole Hog” for Jackson in 1828 (cont.) • Mudslinging reached new lows in 1828 • On election day the electorate split on largely sectional lines: • Jackson supporters came from the West and South (see May 13.1) • The middle states/Old Northwest were divided: • Adams won New England and the Northeast • When the popular vote was converted to electoral vote, General Jackson’s triumph could not be denied • Old Hickory had trounced Adams by an electoral count of 178 to 83.

  14. p249

  15. Map 13-1 p250

  16. IV. “Old Hickory” as President • Youthful Carolinian moved “up West” to Tennessee: • There—through native intelligence, force of personality, and powers of leadership—he became a judge and a member of Congress • The first president from the West: • The first nominated at a formal party convention (1832)

  17. IV. “Old Hickory” as President (cont.) • Only the second without a college education (Washington was the first) • Jackson was unique: • His university was adversity. He had risen from the masses, but he was not one of them, except insofar as he shared many of their prejudices. • Essentially a frontier aristocrat, he owned many slaves, cultivated broad acres, and lived in one of the finest mansions in America—the Hermitage, near Nashville. • Jackson’s inauguration: • Symbolized the ascendancy of the masses. • The White House, for the first time, was thrown open.

  18. V. The Spoils System • Spoils System—rewarding political supporters with public office • Was introduced into the federal government on a large scale • Jackson defined it on democratic grounds: • “Every man is as good as his neighbor, perhaps equally better.” • Washington was due for a housecleaning.

  19. V. The Spoils System(cont.) • The spoils system was less about finding new blood than about rewarding old cronies. • Scandal accompanied the new system • Those who openly bought their posts by campaign contributions were appointed to high office • Illiterates, incompetents, and plain crooks were given positions of public trust. • Despite its abuse, the spoils system was an important element of the emerging two-party order.

  20. VI. The Tricky “Tariff of Abominations” • Tariffs—problem for John Quincy Adams and now for Andrew Jackson: • Tariffs protected American industry against competition from European manufactured goods • But they also drove up prices for all Americans • And invited retaliatory tariffs on American agricultural exports abroad • The middle states had long been supporters of protectionist tariffs

  21. VI. The Tricky “Tariff of Abominations” (cont.) • Daniel Webster gave up his traditional defense of free trade to support higher tariffs • In 1824 Congress had increased the general tariff significantly • Jacksonites supported a high-tariff bill • which surprisingly was passed in 1828 • Andrew Jackson inherited the political hot potato • Southerners were hostile to tariffs and branded it the “Tariff of Abominations”

  22. VI. The Tricky “Tariff of Abominations” (cont.) • Why did the South react so angrily? • They believed that the “Yankee tariff” discriminated against them • The Old South was falling on hard times, and the tariff provided a convenient and plausible scapegoat • Protectionism protected the Yankee and middle-state manufacturers • The farmers and planters of the Old South felt they were stuck with the bill

  23. VI. The Tricky “Tariff of Abominations “(cont.) • Much deeper issues underlay southern outcry: • A growing anxiety about possible federal interference with the institution of slavery • Kindled by congressional debate on the Missouri Compromise • Further fanned by an aborted slave rebellion in Charleston in 1822, led by a black named Denmark Vesey

  24. VI. The Tricky “Tariff of Abominations” (cont.) • Abolitionism in America might use the power of the government in Washington to suppress slavery in the South • Now was the time, using the tariff, to take a stand on principle against all federal encroachments on states’ rights • South Carolinians took the lead in protesting against the “Tariff of Abominations” • They published a pamphlet known as The South Carolina Exposition

  25. VI. The Tricky “Tariff of Abominations” (cont.) • The South Carolina Exposition: • It was secretly written by John C. Calhoun, one of the few topflight political theorists ever produced by America • It denounced the recent tariff as unjust and unconstitutional • It bluntly and explicitly proposed that the states should nullify the tariff—that is, they should declare it null and void within their borders.

  26. Table 13-2 p253

  27. VII. “Nullies” in South Carolina • Nullifiers—“nullies”: • Tried to get the 2/3 vote for nullification in the South Carolina legislature • They were blocked by the Unionists-“submission men” • In Washington, Congress tipped the balance by passing the new Tariff of 1832 • The Nullification Crisis deepened • South Carolina was now ready for drastic action • Nullifiers and Unionists clashed in the election of 1832

  28. VII. “Nullies” in South Carolina (cont.) • The Nullification Crisis (cont.) • “Nullies” emerged with 2/3 majority vote • The state legislature called for a special session • Several weeks later the delegates, meeting in Columbia, declared the existing tariff null and void in South Carolina • The convention threatened to take South Carolina out of the union if Washington attempted to collect the customs duties by force.

  29. VII. “Nullies” in South Carolina(cont.) • Jackson was neither a supporter of the tariff, nor would he permit defiance or disunion: • He threatened to invade the state and have the nullifiers hanged • He issued a ringing proclamation against nullification • If civil war was to be avoided, one side would have to surrender, or both would have to compromise

  30. VII. “Nullies” in South Carolina(cont.) • Henry Clay stepped forward: • Not a great supporter of the tariff • But did influence a compromise bill that would gradually reduce the tariff • Congress passed the Force Bill—which authorized the president to use the army and navy if necessary to collect federal tariff duties. • Facing civil war within and invasion from without, the Columbia convention met again and repealed the ordinance of nullification.

  31. VII. “Nullies” in South Carolina(cont.) • Neither Jackson nor the “nullies” won a clear-cut victory in 1833 • Clay was the true hero

  32. VIII. The Trail of Tears • Jefferson committed to western expansion: • Meant confrontation with the current inhabitants • 125,000 Native Americans lived east of Mississippi • Federal policy toward them varied • 1790s the federal government recognized the tribes as separate nations and agreed to acquire land only through formal treaty • Many whites felt respect and admiration for the Indians and believe they could be assimilated

  33. VIII. The Trail of Tears(cont.) • Energy was devoted to “civilizing” and Christianizing the Indians. • In 1878 The Society for the Propagating the Gospel among the Indians was founded. • The federal government appropriated $20,000 for the promotion of literacy and agriculture and vocational instruction among the Indians

  34. VIII. The Trail of Tears(cont.) • The Cherokees of George made remarkable efforts to learn the ways of the white • Missionaries opened schools • 1808 the Cherokee National Council legislated a written legal code • Some Cherokees became prosperous cotton planters and even turn to slaveholding • Nearly 13,000 black slaves toiled for their Native American masters in 1820s

  35. VIII. The Trail of Tears(cont.) • “Five Civilized Tribes”—Cherokees, Creeks, Choctaws, Chickasaws, and Seminoles: • Jackson want to open Indian lands to white settlement, refused to recognize the Court’s decisions • To rescue the Indians, Jackson proposed to a bodily removal of the remaining eastern tribes • Emigration was supposed to be voluntary • Jackson’s policy led to uprooting of more than 100,000 Indians

  36. VIII. Trails of Tears (cont.) • Indian Removal Act—1830: • The transplantation of all Indian tribes then resident east of the Mississippi (see Map 13.2) • The heaviest blow fell on the Five Civilized Tribes • Many died of forced migration, most notably the Cherokees along the notorious Trail of Tears • The Bureau of Indian Affairs was established in 1836

  37. VIII. Trails of Tears(cont.) • Black Hawk War of 1832 was by regular troops and volunteers • In Florida the Seminole Indians joined runaway black slaves; retreated to the Everglades • For seven years (1835-1842) they waged a war that took 15,000 soldiers’ lives • The sprit of the Seminole was broken in 1837

  38. p256

  39. p257

  40. Map 13-2 p258

  41. IX. The Bank War • President did not hate all banks and all business, but he distrusted monopolist banking and overbig businesses: • The federal government minted gold and silver coins mid-nineteenth century, but no paper money • Paper money was printed by private banks. • Their value fluctuated with the health of the bank and the amount of money printed.

  42. IX. The Bank War(cont.) • The Bank of the United States: • Most powerful bank • It acted like a branch of the government • Principal depository for government funds • Controlled much of the government’s gold and silver • Its notes were stable • A source of credit and stability, it was an important and useful part of the nation’s expanding economy

  43. IX. The Bank War(cont.) • But the Bank was a private institution: • Bank President Nicholas Biddle had immense and, to many, unconstitutional power over the nation’s financial affairs • To some the bank seemed to sin against the egalitarian credo of American democracy • This conviction formed the deepest source of Jackson’s opposition • The banks won no friends in the West • Profit, not public service, was its first priority

  44. IX. The Bank War(cont.) • The Bank War erupted in 1832: • When Daniel Webster and Henry Clay presented the Congress with a bill to renew the Bank of the United States’ charter • The charter was not to expire until 1836, but Clay pushed for renewal four years early to make it an election issue in 1832 • Clay‘s scheme was to run a recharter bill through Congress and then send it to the White House

  45. IX. The Bank War(cont.) • If Jackson signed it, he would alienate his worshipful western followers • If he vetoed it, he would presumably lose the presidency in the upcoming election by alienating the wealthy and influential groups in the East • The recharter bill slid through Congress, but was killed by scorching veto from Jackson

  46. IX. The Bank War(cont.) • The Supreme Court declared the monopolistic bank to be constitutional in McCulloch v. Maryland (1819) • Jackson’s veto message reverberated with constitutional consequences • But vastly amplified the power of the presidency. • He was arguing that he vetoed because he personally found it harmful to the nation. • He was claiming for the president alone a power equal to 2/3 of the votes in Congress.

  47. X. “Old Hickory” Wallops Clay in 1832 • Clay and Jackson were the candidates for the upcoming election in 1832: • For the first time a third party entered the field—the newborn Anti-Masonic party: • They became a political force in New York and spread to the middle Atlantic and New England states • The Anti-Masons appealed to long-standing American suspicions of secret societies • Since Jackson was a Mason, the Anti-Masonic party was also anti-Jackson

  48. X. “Old Hickory” Wallops Clay in 1832 (cont.) • Anti-Masons attracted support from many evangelical Protestant groups seeking to use political power to effect moral and religious reforms • Another novelty of the presidential contest in 1832 was the calling of national nominating conventions (three of them) to name candidates • The Anti-Masons and the National Republicans added the formal platform, publicizing their positions on the issues

  49. X. “Old Hickory” Wallops Clay in 1832 (cont.) • Clay and National Republicans’ advantages: • They had ample funds, including $50,000 in “life insurance” from the Bank of the United States • Most newspapers editors dipped their pens in acid when they wrote of Jackson • Yet Jackson, idol of the masses, easily defeated the big-money Kentuckian • The popular vote was 687,502 to 530,189 for Jackson—electoral count was 219 to 49

  50. p261

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