American History I: The Presidencies of Andrew Jackson and Martin Van Buren

I. The Election of 1828

l Rematch of Andrew Jackson vs. John Quincy Adams

l Jackson had resigned from the Senate and dedicated the past four years of his life to winning this election

l Jackson was billed as the “common man” while Adams was portrayed as an over-educated aristocratic elitist

l Jackson won both the popular and electoral vote, taking the entire _________________________________

II. Andrew Jackson (1767 – 1845)

l Democrat

l 7th president

l Nicknamed “________________________________________________________________,” a tribute to his toughness and his background as a frontiersman

l Hero of the Creek War, War of 1812 and Seminole War

l First president to survive an _________________________________________________________ attempt

l Jackson’s Background

l Jackson had been born to poor Irish immigrants somewhere in the mountains of either North or South Carolina worked as a teacher and lawyer

l Had served as a messenger during the Revolution as a boy and was orphaned at age 14

l Jackson was a self-made man, putting himself through school and became a lawyer, practicing in both North Carolina and Tennessee

l Jackson later made himself wealthy through land speculation (buying up cheap land along the frontier and then selling it later for large profits after more people had moved into the region)

l Between serving in his various military capacities, Jackson was elected to the House of Representatives and later the Senate (from the state of Tennessee) and served on the Tennessee Supreme Court

III. Jacksonian Democracy

l Under Jackson, _____________________________ (the right to vote) was extended to all adult white males

l Jackson was the first president to come from a background of poverty (although he had made himself quite wealthy and owned several plantations and businesses), so he was the hero of the common man

l Jackson was, however, like most in his day, a racist – he owned hundreds of slaves and almost single-handedly wiped out Native American cultures east of the Mississippi

IV. “The _____________________________________________________________ System”

l Under pressure from the many supporters who had helped him get elected, Jackson fired large numbers of bureaucratic-level government officials and replaced them with his own followers

l This was came to be referred to as the “spoils system,” based on the quote attributed to Jackson: “to the victors belong the spoils”

l This still happens today – politicians reward their supporters with important government jobs, although not to the extent of the Jackson administration

V. Indian ________________________________________________________ Act (1830)

l Believing it was in the best interests of both whites and Native Americans, Jackson pressured the Indian tribes of the east to relocate to the Great Plains, west of the Mississippi River

l Several tribes cooperated and sold their lands to the U.S., but many of the larger tribes resisted, prompting Congress to pass the Indian Removal Act and force them off their land

l Most tribes relented and moved west, but the ______________________________ tribe in Georgia refused

l _________________________________________________ v. Georgia (1832)

l Instead, the Cherokee sued government on the grounds that they had negotiated treaties with the U.S. as an independent nation and, therefore, U.S. laws did not apply to them anymore than they did to Canada or Mexico

l The Supreme Court ruled that the Cherokee were a separate nation and that treaties with them must be honored

l Jackson, however, refused to enforce the court’s decision: “(Chief Justice) Marshall has made his decision, not let us see him enforce it.”

l The Trail of _____________________________________________________

l Instead, Jackson exercised his power as commander-in-chief to have the U.S. Army forcibly remove the Cherokee, Creek, Seminole, and Choctaw nations from their homes in the east to the newly created Indian Territory (modern _________________________________________________)

l 46,000 Native Americans moved, but thousands died along the way, especially among the Cherokee

l Some remnants of the Cherokee, however, remained hidden in the remote Smoky Mountains of NC & Tennessee

VI. __________________________________________________________'s Rebellion (August 21, 1831)

l Nat Turner was a Virginia slave who had religious “visions”

l Nicknamed “The Prophet” by other slaves, Turner was a practicing (but not ordained) Baptist minister with a significant following

l In 1831, he believed that God had called on him to lead a slave rebellion

l Turner led a brief but disorganized slave uprising that resulted in the deaths of 56 whites

l The uprising was quickly suppressed by the local militia, and dozens of slaves (including Turner) were executed for their roles in the rebellion

l Turner’s Rebellion led to bans throughout the South on educating slaves, allowing slaves to freely assemble without white supervision, and on allowing black ministers to lead worship services

VII. South Carolina __________________________________________________________________ Crisis

l Still bitter over the Tariff of Abominations, in 1832 South Carolina declared federal tariffs unconstitutional and nullified them (refused to enforce them)

l Vice-President John C. ___________________________________________________________ resigned in favor of serving his home state of South Carolina as a Senator in order to fight the tariffs

l Jackson considered South Carolina’s actions (and Calhoun’s) treasonous and threatened to use the military against South Carolina (and to hang Calhoun) to make them comply with the tariff

l South Carolina threatened to __________________________________________________ (leave the U.S.) unless the tariffs were repealed

l Compromise of __________________________________________________

l Henry ___________________________________________________ managed to delay passage of the Force Bill, which would have given Jackson permission to take military action against South Carolina, until he could force through a bill reducing tariffs over the next 10 years

l Once this compromise tariff was passed, South Carolina repealed its nullification and the crisis ended

VIII. Jackson and the “____________________________________ War”

l Jackson, who had managed to completely pay off the federal debt, saw no reason to continue the Bank of the U.S., but Congress extended the Bank’s charter for another 10 years in 1832

l Jackson vetoed the bill extending the charter and exercised his power as president to withdraw all of the federal government’s money from the Bank; with no money and no charter, the Second Bank of the United States closed

l Jackson then split the government’s deposits among state and private banks, referred to as Jackson’s “______________________________________________________”

IX. The ________________________________________________ Party

l Angered that Jackson had defied the Supreme Court over the Indian Removal Act and Congress over the Bank of the United States, in 1834 the National Republican Party symbolically changed its name to the Whig Party

l “Whigs” in England were people who opposed the power of the king; American Whigs felt that Andrew Jackson was ignoring the Constitution and acting like a king – they even began to refer to him as “King Andrew I”

X. Expansion Under Jackson

l Two more states joined the Union while Jackson was president:

l _______________________________________________________, as a slave state in 1836

l _______________________________________________________, as a free state in 1837

l By adding both a slave state and a free state, the balance in the Senate was maintained and sectional conflict avoided

XI. The Election of 1836

l Jackson supported his Vice-President Martin Van Buren as his successor

l Van Buren easily won the Democratic nomination at convention (This is the first time national party conventions were used to select candidates)

l Whigs could not settle on a single candidate to run, leading to a split Whig vote; this allowed Van Buren to win the election

XII. Martin Van Buren (1782 – 1862)

l Democrat

l 8th President (1837-41)

l Former Vice-President and Secretary of State under Jackson

l Largely ineffective as president due to crippling economic crises

l Later failed in his bids to get re-elected president in 1840 and 1848

XIII. The _________________________________________________ of 1837

l Without the Bank of the U.S. to oversee state and private banks, these banks overextended themselves by loaning money too freely

l By loaning more money than they had in deposits, many banks bankrupted themselves when people didn’t pay back loans

l As banks closed, inflation soared, unemployment rose, and businesses closed; many people who had invested in banks lost everything

l This financial crisis ruined Van Buren’s presidency

XIV. The Election of 1840

l Whigs nominated war hero William Henry Harrison after Henry Clay and Daniel _______________________ each proved too divisive to win majority support within the party

l Harrison easily defeated Van Buren

XV. William Henry Harrison (1773 – 1841)

l Whig

l 9th President (1841)

l Nicknamed “Old _____________________________________________________” from his fame as hero of the Northwest Indian War

l Shortest tenure in U.S. history – president for only 32 days before dying from pneumonia (first President to die in office)

l His Vice-President, John Tyler, became President