1 / 28

The Jacksonian Age & Social Differences

The Era of the Common Man. The Jacksonian Age & Social Differences. Election of 1828. Andrew Jackson vs. John Quincy Adams Jackson was billed as the “common man” while Adams was portrayed as an “aristocratic elitist” Jackson won both the popular and electoral vote in a majority.

taline
Download Presentation

The Jacksonian Age & Social Differences

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. The Era of the Common Man The Jacksonian Age & Social Differences

  2. Election of 1828 • Andrew Jackson vs. John Quincy Adams • Jackson was billed as the “common man” while Adams was portrayed as an “aristocratic elitist” • Jackson won both the popular and electoral vote in a majority

  3. Andrew Jackson • 1767 – 1845 • Democrat • 7th president • Nicknamed “Old Hickory,” a tribute to his background as a frontiersman • War hero from both War of 1812 and Seminole Indian War • First president to survive an assassination attempt

  4. Jacksonian Democracy • Suffrage extended to any adult white male • Jackson was 1st president to come from background of poverty, so he was the hero of the common man • Still, Jackson hated Native Americans and supported slavery • http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vYh7pato4uE&feature=related

  5. “The Spoils System” • Jackson began new tradition of dismissing what had been career government officials and replacing them with his party’s loyal followers • This still happens today – Presidents reward their supporters with important government jobs

  6. Nat Turner • 1800 – 1831 • Virginia slave who had religious “visions” • Practiced as a Baptist preacher (nicknamed “The Prophet” by other slaves) • Believed that God called on him to lead a slave rebellion

  7. Nat Turner’s Rebellion • August 21, 1831 • Slave uprising that resulted in the deaths of 56 whites in VA • Quickly suppressed by the militia, dozens of slaves (including Turner) were executed for their roles in the rebellion • Led to harsher slave codes- bans throughout the South on educating slaves and allowing slaves to freely assemble without white supervision

  8. South Carolina Nullification Crisis • 1832: South Carolina declared new tariffs unconstitutional and thereby nullified • John C. Calhoun resigned as Vice-President to support SC position as a senator • Jackson considered this treasonous and prepared to use military force on SC to enforce the tariffs • SC threatened to secede (leave the US) if high tariffs weren’t repealed

  9. Compromise of 1833 • Henry Clay delayed passage of the Force Bill which would give Jackson permission to take military action against SC until he could force through a bill that would gradually reduce tariffs over the next 10 years • Once this compromise tariff was passed, SC repealed its nullification and crisis was averted

  10. Jackson and the National Bank • Jackson disliked the Bank • Congress passed a bill extending the Bank’s charter in 1832, but Jackson vetoed; instead, Jackson withdrew all of the federal governments deposits from the Bank and moved them to state banks or “pet banks” • National Bank no longer had money to lend and closed

  11. King Andrew • Turn to page 257 • Look at “Analyzing Political Cartoons” • Answer 1 & 2

  12. The Whig Party • 1834: National Republican Party changed its name to the Whig Party • “Whigs” in England were people who opposed the power of the king; American Whigs felt that Andrew Jackson had been abusive of his power as president

  13. Election of 1836 • Jackson supported his VP Martin Van Buren as his successor • Van Buren easily won the Democratic nomination at convention (1st time national party convention used) • Whigs could not settle on one candidate to run and so their votes were split; Van Buren won

  14. Martin Van Buren • 1782 – 1862 • Democrat • 8th President (1837-41) • Former Vice-President and Secretary of State under Jackson • Lost presidential elections of 1840 and 1848

  15. Panic of 1837 • State banks loaned money freely without the National Bank to oversee them • Loaned more money than they had, leading to failure of many of the banks • Inflation soared, unemployment rose, businesses closed, many people lost everything • Ruined Van Buren’s presidency

  16. Election of 1840 • Whigs nominated war hero William Henry Harrison after Henry Clay and Daniel Webster each proved too divisive to win majority support within the party • Harrison easily defeated Van Buren

  17. William Henry Harrison • 1773 – 1841 • Whig • 9th President (1841) • Nicknamed “Old Tippecanoe” from his fame as hero of Northwest Indian War • Shortest tenure in US history – president for only 32 days before dying of pneumonia

  18. Social differences fuel sectionalism

  19. Slavery • 1808: Congress banned the importation of new slaves • 1820: 1.5 million slaves in US • 1850: 4 million slaves in US • Demand for slaves grew as demand for cotton grew

  20. Slave ownership • 1850: South’s white pop = 6 million • 1850: South’s slave pop = 3.6 million • 350,000 slave owners • 37,000 owned 20+ slaves • 8,000 owned 50+ slaves • 11 owned 500+ slaves

  21. Immigration • 1825 – 1855: 5 million European immigrants arrived • Arrived poor, concentrated in ethnic neighborhoods • Created a cheap labor force for Northern factories • NYC Immigrant Central

  22. Nativism • Many Americans began to oppose immigration and promote the rights of “Native” Americans • Resented immigrants taking jobs from American citizens

  23. The “Know-Nothings” • 1840s – 1850s • Anti-Catholic nativist group • To be a member, had to be a male Protestant of English descent over the age of 21 • If questioned about the group, members would reply, “I know nothing” • Briefly became a political party, with some success in Massachusetts and Illinois • Broke apart due to divisions over slavery issue

  24. Oddly, immigrants were pro-slavery • Didn’t want to compete with freed slaves for jobs, so supported Southern slave owners! • Many Irish, in fact, would fight for the South in the Civil War

  25. Growth of Northern cities • Causes of growth: • Urbanization: people move from country to cities • Immigration: European immigrants arrived at northern ports, tended to stay in north or go west

  26. North’s population growth worried the South • Number of seats in the House of Representatives is based purely on population, so North was gaining control of one house of Congress • Slaves only counted as 3/5ths of a person in the 3/ 5ths compromise • naturalized immigrants counted as a whole person for population counts

  27. North vs. South: SectionalismKey Differences • North • Economy based on the “factory system”: manufacturing and commerce • Relied on plentiful immigrant labor • Favored high tariffs that protected US industries • Wanted a strong federal government to build transportation networks, protect trade, and regulate the economy • South • Economy based on the “plantation system”: large-scale farming of cash crops • Relied on slave labor • Opposed to high tariffs – imported many European goods, feared Europeans would retaliate by putting tariffs on Southern agricultural exports • Favored strong state government, feared a strong federal government would restrict slavery

  28. Exit Ticket 3.2.1 • 3 events/people that promoted nationalism. • 2 events/people that promoted sectionalism. • 1 example of how nativism brought division to the country

More Related