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Andrew Jackson
— 7th President of the United States —
1767 - 1845

ELECTED FROM: Tennessee
POLITICAL PARTY:Democratic
TERM: March 4, 1829 to March 3, 1837
BORN: March 15, 1767
BIRTHPLACE: Waxhaw settlement on North Carolina-South Carolina
border; site claimed by both states
DIED:June 8, 1845, The Hermitage near Nashville, Tennessee
OCCUPATION:Lawyer, soldier, planter
MARRIED: Rachel Donelson Robards, 1791
CHILDREN: Adopted son, Andrew Jackson, Jr., nephew of Mrs.
Jackson
When the Revolutionary War started, Andy (as he was known then)
Jackson was only nine. When the older men of the community of
Waxhaw marched off to Charleston to fight the British, Andy
Jackson stayed to protect the citizens of Waxhaw.
When the British first reached Waxhaw, Andy and his friends
drove them away. But a few days later, the soldiers returned,
and a skirmish took place. During the skirmish, Andy received a
cut on his forehead from the sword of a British soldier. When
the fight ended, the soldiers took Andy and his friends as
prisoners of war. While in prison, smallpox broke out, and his
brother and most of his friends died of the disease. His mother
was able to convince the British commander to let Andy go before
he got the disease, too. Fortunately, Andy did not get smallpox,
but his mother did, and she died shortly after saving him from
prison.
A few years later, Andrew Jackson joined the colonial army and
fought in battles during the final year of the Revolutionary
War. After the war, Jackson became a backwoods lawyer and a
member of Congress who represented the state of Tennessee. When
the War of 1812 broke out, "Old Hickory" (as he came to be
known) remembered what the British had done to his family and
friends and led the charge against the invaders. General Jackson
led troops to many victories. The biggest was the defeat of the
British in the Battle of New Orleans. The victory in New Orleans
led to the end of the war.
When the war ended, many people began to mention Jackson for
president. In 1824, he ran for president but lost the election
to John Quincy Adams. Four years later, he ran again and won.
This was the first election that was decided by the vote of the
people, not the congressional caucus. Thus, Andrew Jackson
became the first president of and for the common man.
As president, Jackson removed as much of the federal bureaucracy
as possible. He replaced 2,000 federal workers with ordinary
citizens, and he constantly fought against corrupt politicians.
What he is most remembered for as president was his declaration,
"Our Union – It must be preserved." Even though he was from the
South, when South Carolina threatened to leave the Union, he
fought it.
President Jackson was elected to a second term as president
where he continued to fight as the people's champion. He retired
to his home near Nashville, Tennessee – The Hermitage – where he
died on June 8, 1845.
~~~<"((((((><~~~<"((((((><~~~<"((((((><~~~<"((((((><~~~<"((((((><~~~
Andrew Jackson (1767-1845), seventh president of the United
States, symbolized the democratic advances of his time. His
actions strengthened the power of the presidential office in
American government.
When Andrew Jackson emerged on the national scene, the United
States was undergoing profound social and economic changes as
the new, postrevolutionary generation pushed forward in search
of material gain and political power. Jackson was a classic
example of the self-made man who rose from a log cabin to the
White House, and he came to represent the aspirations of the
ordinary citizen struggling to achieve wealth and status. He
symbolized the "rise of the common man." So total was his
identification with this period of American history that the
years between 1828 and 1848 are frequently designated the "Age
of Jackson."
Andrew Jackson was born on March 15, 1767, in Waxhaw country,
which straddles North and South Carolina. His father, who died
shortly before Andrew's birth, had come with his wife to America
from Ireland in 1765. Andrew attended several academies in the
Waxhaw settlement, but his education was spotty and he never
developed a taste for learning.
After the outbreak of the American Revolution, Jackson, barely
13 years old, served as an orderly to Col. William Richardson.
Following one engagement, Jackson and his brother were captured
by the British and taken to a prison camp. When Jackson refused
to clean an officer's boots, the officer slashed him with a
sword, leaving a permanent scar on his forehead and left hand.
Jackson was the only member of his family to survive the war,
and it is generally believed that his harsh, adventuresome,
early life developed his strong, aggressive qualities of
leadership, his violent temper, and his need for intense loyalty
from friends.
After the war Jackson drifted from one occupation to another and
from one relative to another. He squandered a small inheritance
and for a time lived a wild, undisciplined life that gave free
rein to his passionate nature. He developed lifelong interests
in horse racing and cock-fighting and frequently indulged in
outrageous practical jokes. Standing just over 6 feet tall, with
long, sharp, bony features lighted by intense blue eyes, Jackson
presented an imposing figure that gave every impression of a
will and need to command.
After learning the saddler's trade, Jackson tried
school-teaching for a season or two, then left in 1784 for
Salisbury, N. C., where he studied law in a local office. Three
years later, licensed to practice law in North Carolina, he
migrated to the western district that eventually became
Tennessee. Appointed public prosecutor for the district, he took
up residence in Nashville. A successful prosecutor and lawyer,
he was particularly useful to creditors who had trouble
collecting debts. Since money was scarce in the West, he
accepted land in payment for his services and within 10 years
became one of the most important landowners in Tennessee.
Unfortunately his speculations in land failed, and he spiraled
deeply into debt, a misadventure that left him with lasting
monetary prejudices. He came to condemn credit because it
encouraged speculation and indebtedness. He distrusted the
note-issuing, credit-producing aspects of banking and abhorred
paper money. He regarded hard money - specie - as the only
legitimate means by which honest men could engage in business
transactions.
While Jackson was emerging as an important citizen by virtue of
his land holdings, he also achieved social status by marrying
Rachel Donelson, the daughter of one of the region's original
settlers. The Jacksons had no children of their own, but they
adopted one of Rachel's nephews and named him Andrew Jackson, Jr.
When Congress created the Southwest Territory in 1790, Jackson
was appointed an attorney general for the Mero District and
judge advocate of the Davidson County militia. In 1796 the
northern portion of the territory held a constitutional
convention to petition Congress for admission as a state to the
Union. Jackson attended the convention as a delegate from his
county. Although he played a modest part in the proceedings, one
tradition does credit him with suggesting the name of the state:
Tennessee, derived from the name of a Cherokee Indian chief.
In 1796, with the admission of Tennessee as the sixteenth state
of the Union, Jackson was elected to its sole seat in the U.S.
House of Representatives. His voting record revealed strong
nationalistic tendencies. The following year he was elected U.S.
senator but he soon resigned to become judge of the Superior
Court of Tennessee. His decisions as judge were described by one
man as "short, untechnical, unlearned, sometimes ungrammatical,
and generally right." He resigned from the bench in 1804 to
devote himself exclusively to his plantation, where he later
built a graceful mansion called the "Hermitage," and to his
other business enterprises, including boatbuilding, horse
breeding, and storekeeping.
Military Career
By the beginning of the War of 1812, Jackson had achieved the
rank of major general of the Tennessee militia. He and his
militia were directed to subdue the Creek Indians in Alabama who
had massacred white settlers at Ft. Mims. At the Battle of
Horseshoe Bend (1814) Jackson inflicted such a decisive defeat
that the Creek's power to wage war was permanently broken.
During this engagement Jackson's men acknowledged his toughness
and indomitable will by calling him "Old Hickory."
When the U.S. government heard rumours of an impending British
penetration of the South through one of the ports on the Gulf of
Mexico, Jackson was ordered to block the invasion. Supposing
that New Orleans was the likeliest point of attack, he
established a triple line of defense south of the city. After
several minor skirmishes and an artillery bombardment, the
British attacked in force on Jan. 8, 1815, and were decisively
defeated. Over 2,000 British soldiers, including their
commanding general, perished in the battle, while only 13
Americans were killed. It was a stupendous victory. Jackson
became a national hero overnight, for he had infused Americans
with confidence in their ability to defend their new liberty.
Florida Territory
When the war ended, Jackson returned to his plantation. However,
he soon resumed military duty to subdue Indian raids along the
southern frontier emanating from Spanish Florida. In a series of
rapid moves he invaded Florida, subdued the Seminole Indians,
extinguished Spanish authority, and executed two British
subjects for inciting Indian attacks. Despite an international
furore over this invasion, President James Monroe defended
Jackson's actions and prevailed upon Spain to sell Florida to
the United States for $5 million. Jackson served as governor of
the Florida Territory briefly, but he was highhanded, was
antagonistic to the Spanish, and tried to exercise absolute
authority. He quit in disgust after serving only a few months.
These exploits served to increase Jackson's popularity
throughout the country, alerting his friends in Tennessee to the
possibility of making him a presidential candidate. First, he
was elected to the U.S. Senate in October 1823. Then, the
following year four candidates sought the presidency, each
representing a different section of the country: Jackson of
Tennessee, William H. Crawford of Georgia, John Quincy Adams of
Massachusetts, and Henry Clay of Kentucky. In the election
Jackson won the highest plurality of popular and electoral
votes, but because he did not have the constitutionally mandated
majority of electoral votes, the issue of selecting the
president went to the House of Representatives. Here, on the
first ballot, John Quincy Adams was chosen president. Adams's
subsequent selection of Clay as his secretary of state convinced
Jackson that a "bargain" had been concluded between the two to
"fix" the election and cheat him of the presidency. For the next
4 years Jackson's friends battered the Adams administration with
the accusation of a "corrupt bargain." In the election of 1828
Jackson won an overwhelming victory. During the campaign Martin
Van Buren of New York and John C. Calhoun of South Carolina
joined forces behind Jackson, and out of this coalition emerged
the Democratic party. Supporters of Adams and Clay were now
called National Republicans.
"Old Hickory" as President
Jackson's presidential inauguration demonstrated the beginning
of a new political age as thousands of people swarmed into
Washington to witness the outdoor inauguration, then poured
through the White House to congratulate their hero, nearly
wrecking the building in the process. Jackson appointed many
second-rate men to his Cabinet, with the exception of Martin Van
Buren, his secretary of state.
An initial estrangement between Jackson and his vice president,
John C. Calhoun, soon grew worse because of their obvious
disagreement over the important constitutional question of the
nature of the Union. During a Senate debate between Daniel
Webster of Massachusetts and Robert Y. Hayne of South Carolina,
Hayne articulated Calhoun's doctrine of nullification (that is,
the right of a state to nullify any objectionable Federal law).
Although Jackson was politically conservative and a strong
advocate of states' rights, he was also intensely nationalistic,
and he regarded nullification as an abomination. At a dinner
commemorating Thomas Jefferson's birthday, Jackson found the
opportunity to express his feelings. When called upon to deliver
a toast, he is said to have looked straight at Calhoun and said,
"Our Federal Union. It must be preserved."
The final break between Jackson and Calhoun occurred when it was
disclosed that, earlier, as secretary of war in James Monroe's
Cabinet, Calhoun had sought to censure Jackson for his invasion
of Florida. In self-defense, Calhoun gave his side of the
controversy in a newspaper statement and ended by arguing that
Van Buren had deliberately sought his downfall in order to
eliminate him as a presidential rival. Van Buren there-upon
resigned from the Cabinet, thus forcing the resignation of the
remaining members, which gave Jackson the opportunity of
reconstituting his Cabinet and ridding himself of Calhoun's
friends. Later, however, when Jackson made Van Buren U.S.
minister to Great Britain, confirmation of this appointment
resulted in a tie vote in the Senate, and Calhoun, as vice
president, gained a measure of revenge by voting against it.
This action prompted Jackson to insist on Van Buren as his
vice-presidential running mate in the next election.
Bank War
The presidential contest of 1832 involved not only personal
vindication for Van Buren but also the important political issue
of the national bank. The issue developed because of Jackson's
prejudice against paper money and banks and because of his
contention that the Second Bank of the United States
(established in 1816) was not only unconstitutional but had
failed to establish a sound and uniform currency. Moreover, he
suspected the Bank of improper interference in the political
process. Jackson had informed the Bank's president, Nicholas
Biddle, of his displeasure in his first message to Congress back
in December 1829. Following this, Biddle, at the urging of Henry
Clay and other National Republicans, asked Congress for a
recharter of the Bank 4 years before it came due. In this way
the issue could be submitted to the people during the 1832
election if Jackson blocked the recharter.
Although the bank bill passed Congress rather handily, Jackson
vetoed it in a strong message that lamented how "the rich and
powerful too often bend the acts of government to their selfish
purposes." This veto message broadened presidential power
because it went beyond strictly constitutional reasons in
faulting the bill. By citing social, political, and economic
reasons, Jackson went beyond what all his predecessors had
considered the limit of the presidential veto power.
In the 1832 election Henry Clay, running against Jackson on the
bank issue, was decisively defeated. Jackson interpreted his
reelection as a mandate to destroy the Bank of the United
States. He therefore directed his secretary of the Treasury to
remove Federal deposits and place them in selected state banks
(called pet banks). Biddle counterattacked by a severe
contraction of credit that produced a brief financial panic
during the winter of 1833/1834. But Jackson held his ground,
Biddle was finally forced to relax the pressure, and the Bank of
the United States eventually collapsed. With the dispersal of
government money among state banks and, later, with the
distribution of surplus Federal funds to individual states, the
nation entered a period of steep inflation. Jackson
unsuccessfully tried to halt the inflation by issuing the Specie
Circular (1836), which directed specie payments in the purchase
of public land.
At the beginning of his second term, Jackson informed Congress
of his intention to pay off the national debt. This goal was
achieved on Jan. 1, 1835, thanks to income the Federal
government received from land sales and tariff revenues. Jackson
also advocated a policy of "rotation" with respect to Federal
offices. In a democratic country, he declared, "no one man has
any more intrinsic right to official station than another." He
was accused of inaugurating the spoils system, but this was
unfair for, actually, he removed only a modest number of
officeholders. Jackson also advocated moving Native Americans
west of the Mississippi River as the most humane policy the
government could pursue in dealing with the Native American
problem. Consequently he signed over 90 treaties with various
tribes, in which lands owned by Native Americans within the
existing states were exchanged for new lands in the open West.
Jackson's veto of the Maysville Road Bill as an unwarranted
exercise of Federal authority was widely interpreted as an
expression of his opposition to Federal aid for public works.
Nullification Ordinance
Jackson also sought to modify tariff rates because they provoked
sectional controversy. The North advocated high protective
rates, but the South considered them a way of subsidizing
northern manufacturers at the expense of southern and western
purchasers. With the passage of the Tariff of 1832, South
Carolina reacted violently by invoking Calhoun's doctrine of
nullification. At a special convention in November 1832, South
Carolina adopted the Ordinance of Nullification, declaring the
tariffs of 1828 and 1832 null and void and warning the Federal
government that if force were used to execute the law, the state
would secede from the Union. In response to this threat, Jackson
issued the Proclamation to the People of South Carolina that
blended warning with entreaty, demand with understanding. "The
laws of the United States must be executed," he said. "Those who
told you that you might peaceably prevent their execution
deceived you…. Disunion by armed force is treason."
Meanwhile a compromise tariff was hurried through Congress to
reduce the rates schedule over a 10-year period, while another
bill was passed giving Jackson permission to use the military to
force South Carolina to obey the laws. The state chose to accept
the compromise tariff and repealed its nullification ordinance,
thereby averting a national crisis. Jackson's actions during the
controversy were masterful. Through the careful use of
presidential powers, by rallying the public to his side,
alerting the military, and offering compromise while preparing
for possible hostilities, he preserved the Union and upheld the
supremacy of Federal law.
Foreign Affairs
Jackson also exercised forceful leadership in his relations with
foreign nations, and he scored a number of notable diplomatic
victories. He obtained favorable treaties with Turkey, Cochin
China, and Siam (the first United States treaties with Asiatic
powers), and he was also able to reopen American trade with the
British West Indies. Furthermore, he forced France into agreeing
to pay the debts owed to American citizens for the destruction
of American property during the Napoleonic Wars. However, when
the French chamber of deputies failed to appropriate the money
to pay the debt, Jackson asked Congress to permit reprisals
against French property in the United States. The French
interpreted this as a deliberate insult, and for a time war
between the two countries seemed unavoidable. The French
demanded an apology, which Jackson refused to give, although in
a message to Congress he denied any intention "to menace or
insult" the French government. France chose to accept Jackson's
disclaimer as an apology and forthwith paid the debt; thus
hostilities were avoided.
At the end of his two terms in office, having participated in
the inauguration of his successor, Martin Van Buren, Jackson
retired to his plantation. He continued to keep his hand in
national politics until his death on June 8, 1845.
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