1 / 30

Ch. 12

Ch. 12. Jacksonian Era p. 358-375. Ch. 12.1. New Era in Politics p. 358-364. **Election of 1824**. Carolinas & TN (S & W). MA (N). * son of former president *professional/political family *Harvard-educated. * orphan *poor farming family (frontier) *self-educated. * US Congress

shay
Download Presentation

Ch. 12

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Ch. 12 Jacksonian Era p. 358-375

  2. Ch. 12.1 New Era in Politics p. 358-364

  3. **Election of 1824** Carolinas & TN (S & W) MA (N) *son of former president *professional/political family *Harvard-educated *orphan *poor farming family (frontier) *self-educated *US Congress *Sec. of State (Monroe) [Adams-Onis Trty. – 1821] *US Congress *military leader (Gen.) [Indians, 1812, FL] NATIONAL REPUBLICAN (later: “WHIG”) DEMOCRATIC- REPUBLICAN (later: “DEMOCRAT”) *strong FED. govt. *supported bank/tariffs *govt. support of business, arts, sciences, transportation *strong STATE govts. *opposed bank/tariffs *govt. support of agriculture (small farms), common ppl.

  4. more than 1/2 The Candidates all “Republicans” • John Quincy Adams (support in New England) • Andrew Jackson (support in the west) • Henry Clay (support in the West) • William Crawford (support in the South) The Election • William Crawford became too ill to campaign (still had 3rd most electoral votes) • Andrew Jackson won the popular vote. • No candidate won a MAJORITY(more than half) of the electoral vote; the election went to the House of Representatives: Jackson, Adams, Crawford (too ill to be elected) • The House named John Quincy Adams President. Hard feelings • In the electoral vote, Henry Clay finished 4th; he was out of the running when the election went to the House. • Clay was Speaker of the House; he urged House members to vote for Adams. • Later, Adams named Clay his Secretary of State • Jackson and his supporters said thatAdamsand Clay had worked together to steal the election. (“CORRUPT BARGAIN”) The Dispute Over the Election of 1824 Chapter 12, Section 1

  5. Adams’ Plan How Most Americans Reacted • The federal government should promote economic growth. • It should pay for roads and canals to help farmers transport goods to market. • The government should promote the arts and sciences by building a national university and an observatory. • These programs cost too much money. • These programs would make the federal government too powerful. What Jackson’s Supporters Said What Adams’ Supporters Said • Adams had made a “corrupt bargain” in the 1824 election; should not be reelected in 1828 • Adams was a member of the upper class - the “elite” - not a common person like farmers of the South and West. • Jackson was a dangerous “military chieftain.” • If Jackson won the election of 1828, he could easily become a dictator like Napoleon. John Quincy Adams Was an Unpopular President Chapter 12, Section 1

  6. People who supportedAdamsand his programs for national growth became known as WHIGS. • Supporters included the “elite”: eastern business people, some southern planters, former Federalists • Wanted the federal government to spur the economy through support of manufacturing & trade National Republicans, known as WHIGS (Last of the old-line Federalists) DEMOCRATS • Jackson and his supporters called themselves DEMOCRATS. • Supporters included the common people: frontier farmers, eastern factory workers, new immigrants • Wanted the government to support “common people” (farmers, family-owned businesses) National Republicans + Federalists [J. Adams] New Political Parties Democratic Republicans + Common ppl. [Jefferson]

  7. Chapter 12, Section 1 • The United States was growing rapidly. • Many new states were in the west, between the Appalachians and the Mississippi (KY, TN, OH, IL, IN, MS, AL, LA)

  8. ELECTION OF 1828: J. Q. ADAMS (Whig) vs. A. JACKSON (Democrat) Chapter 12, Section 1

  9. right to vote Growing Spirit of Equality Suffrage Expands Political Parties Change The “Common Man” Rises • US expanding rapidly • Frontier life encouraged democratic spirit • More white men are eligible to vote - property qualifications for voters end • Before 1828: voter turnout @28% • 1828: voter turnout @58% • 1840: voter turnout @80% • [Anyone not a white male still denied suffrage…] • The caucus system ends (private meetings) • Nominating conventions are held to choose presidential candidates (open to more people) • ppl. choose political candidates through conventions • The spoils system lets ordinary citizens participate in government • Ideas about social classes change private meeting to choose political candidates Chapter 12, Section 1 open/public meeting in which delegates from all states choose political candidates

  10. Ch. 12.2 Jackson in the White House p. 365-368

  11. Andrew Jackson – elected 1828 Chapter 12, Section 2 • Strong-willed • Tough • Complex • Quick temper • Ability to inspire and lead others • A man of his word • A champion of the common people

  12. self-educated; lawyer; land broker; US Congressman; military leader

  13. Jackson Takes Over • When he took office, Jackson fired many government employees and replaced them with his supporters. • Critics accused Jackson of rewarding Democrats for helping to elect him instead of choosing men who were qualified. • Jackson said he was serving democracy by letting more citizens take part in government; he felt that ordinary Americans were capable of doing government jobs. • A Jackson supporter explained, “To the victor belong the spoils.” • The practice of rewarding supporters with government jobs became known as the spoils system. • Jackson rewarded a number of supporters with Cabinet jobs. Few of them were qualified. So, Jackson relied on unofficial advisers. He met with them in the White House kitchen. The group became known as the “kitchen cabinet.”

  14. *appointing “ordinary citizens” to govt. jobs *pushing for states’ rights *allowing “common ppl.” to serve rewarding supporters with govt. jobs ”To the victor belong the spoils” AJ’s group of informal advisors met in the kitchen of the White House

  15. *unconstitutional *undemocratic (supported the wealthy, not the common ppl.) *too powerful (controlled $$ supply) *controlled production (minting/printing) of $$ *controlled & limited loans by state banks NICHOLAS BIDDLE President of the Bank of the United States

  16. President Jackson vs. the Bank of the United States Chapter 12, Section 2 • The Bank of the United States had great power because it controlled the loans made by state banks. • President Jackson thought the Bank was undemocratic. • He felt that Bank president Nicholas Biddle chose his rich friends to receive loans. • Whigs persuaded Biddle to try to renew the Bank’s charter before the 1832 election. • They thought that if Jackson vetoed the bill to renew the charter, he would anger voters and lose the election. • When the bill to renew the Bank’s charter reached the President, AJ vetoed it. • 1st: Bank was unconstitutional. • 2nd: Bank helped aristocrats at the expense of the common people. • Jackson reelected (his supporters didn’t like the bank, either!) • Jackson ordered the Secretary of the Treasury to stop putting federal money in the Bank of the United States. • The bank closedin 1836.

  17. *asked bank pres. to apply for early renewal in time for election of 1832 *hoped AJ would veto bank & lose election *vetoed bank *ppl. approved *AJ reelected in 1832 *ordered Sec. of Treas. to use state banks – NOT Nat. Bank *Sec. Treas. stopped putting $$ in Nat. Bank; Nat. Bank closed in 1836

  18. King Andrew the First

  19. Ch. 12.3 A New Crisis p. 370-374

  20. The Tariff Crisis and the Nullification Act • In 1828, Congress passed the highest tariff in the history of the nation. Southerners called it the Tariff of Abominations. • Northern manufacturers favored the tariff; it protected them from foreign competition. • Southern planters were against the tariff; it raised the cost of the manufactured goods they bought from Europe. *thought it was unconstitutional *it raised the prices of imported goods (highest in US history) *unfairly targeting South

  21. The Tariff Crisis and the Nullification Act • Vice President John C. Calhoun (S) fought against the tariff by introducing the idea of nullification. • Calhoun (S) claimed that a state had the right to nullify(cancel) a federal law that it considered unconstitutional. • Daniel Webster (N) attacked the idea of nullification. **violation of Article VI (National Supremacy) – Const. unites ppl. & states **if states can choose to nullify fed. laws, the US will fall apart • AJ believed in states’ rights, but he disagreed with NULLIFICATION. • Calhoun believed so strongly in nullification, he resigned as VP • Calhoun was then elected Senator from SC

  22. The Tariff Crisis and the Nullification Act of 1832 • Congress passed a lower tariff in 1832, but South Carolina was not satisfied. The state passed the Nullification Act, declaring the new tariff illegal. • SC threatened to secede (withdraw from the Union); this could lead to civil war • Jackson asked Congress to pass the Force Bill. • The FORCE BILL allowed the President to use the army to enforce fed. laws (tariff) • South Carolina repealed (did away with) the Nullification Act • The Nullification Crisis again brought up states’ rights: the power of states to limit the power of the federal government.

  23. Native Americans Are Forced From Their Homeland • The Creek, Choctaw, Chickasaw, Cherokee, and Seminole nations lived in the Southeast. Settlers wanted the Indian lands for growing cotton. • President Jackson sided with the settlers. The federal government set aside lands beyond the Mississippi and had begun to persuade/force Indians to move there. • GA ordered the Cherokees to move west. • The Cherokees went to court, arguing that they were a sovereign nation not bound by the laws of GA. Treaties with the federal government protected their rights and their property (the US government only makes treaties with sovereign nations) • When the case reached the Supreme Court, the Court agreed that the Cherokees were an independent nation not bound by the laws of GA (Worcester v. GA) • President Jackson refused to enforce the Court’s decision [In the Cherokee case, he backed states’ rights]. • Congress passed the Indian Removal Act in 1830. It forced many Native Americans to move west of the Mississippi (in direct violation of the Supreme Court’s decision) • 1838: Jackson ordered the United States Army to force more than 15,000 Cherokees westward. • Thousands perished during the march. • The long, sad journey west became known as the Trail of Tears.

  24. move W of Miss. River **lands chosen by US govt.; no water, not good for farming/hunting **became known as TRAIL OF TEARS (5,000+ died)

  25. Native Americans Are Forced From Their Homelands (continuation) • 1817-1818 - First Seminole War: In Florida, the Seminole Indians resisted removal; they fought against the United States Army • 1835-1842 - The Second Seminole War: continuing conflicts with the US army • 1845-1858 – The Third Seminole War: Seminoles were finally defeated. The federal government forced most Seminoles to leave Florida.

  26. Martin Van Buren (AJ’s VP – 2nd term) – elected in 1836 • Martin Van Buren faced the worst economic crisis the nation had known: the Panic of 1837: • The federal government sold off millions of acres of land in the West. • Speculators borrowed money from state banks to buy up the land. • To make the loans, state banks printed a lot of paper money. • To slow down the wild buying, Jackson (1836) ordered that anyone buying public land had to pay with gold or silver. • Buyers rushed to the banks to exchange paper money for gold and silver • Many banks did not have enough gold & silver; banks had to close down. • The panic became worse when cotton prices fell. • Cotton planters had borrowed money to plant crops.; too much cotton on the market • When prices fell, they could not repay their loans. • As a result, more banks failed. • The nation plunged into a deep economic depression (period when business declines and many people lose their jobs). • Many people blamed Van Buren.

  27. **state bank loans to land speculators **drop in cotton prices **printing of paper $$ not backed by gold/silver **banks closing **tried to set up more stable banking system **cut govt. expenses **LAISSEZ FAIRE economics (“let it alone”)

  28. The Campaign of 1840 * candidates traveling & making public speeches *rallies *gifts Democrat: Martin Van Buren vs. Whig: William Henry Harrison * parades *banquets *entertainments *MUDSLINGING

  29. Most people blamed VanBuren for the economic depression • Harrison was a war hero (Battle of Tippecanoe, War of 1812) • Harrison was easily elected • Harrison died 1 month after inauguration • VP John Tyler became president

  30. C A B John Tyler “The Accidental President”

More Related