andrew jackson
DESCRIPTION
Intro to Andrew Jackson's presidencyTRANSCRIPT
![Page 1: Andrew Jackson](https://reader033.vdocuments.mx/reader033/viewer/2022060117/5584707cd8b42abf538b49da/html5/thumbnails/1.jpg)
Andrew Jackson
Essential Question
“King Andrew”Champion of the Common Man ?
![Page 2: Andrew Jackson](https://reader033.vdocuments.mx/reader033/viewer/2022060117/5584707cd8b42abf538b49da/html5/thumbnails/2.jpg)
Andrew Jackson
Democratic trends in the early
19th century
![Page 3: Andrew Jackson](https://reader033.vdocuments.mx/reader033/viewer/2022060117/5584707cd8b42abf538b49da/html5/thumbnails/3.jpg)
Andrew Jackson
Voting Requirement in the Early 19th Century
![Page 4: Andrew Jackson](https://reader033.vdocuments.mx/reader033/viewer/2022060117/5584707cd8b42abf538b49da/html5/thumbnails/4.jpg)
Andrew Jackson
Voter Turnout 1820-1860
![Page 5: Andrew Jackson](https://reader033.vdocuments.mx/reader033/viewer/2022060117/5584707cd8b42abf538b49da/html5/thumbnails/5.jpg)
Andrew Jackson
Politics for the People
• Under the Federalists democracy was not respected
• By the 1820s, democracy was widely appealing
![Page 6: Andrew Jackson](https://reader033.vdocuments.mx/reader033/viewer/2022060117/5584707cd8b42abf538b49da/html5/thumbnails/6.jpg)
Politics for the People
• Politicians now had to bend to appease and appeal to the masses
• The popular ones were the ones who claimed to be born in log cabins and had humble backgrounds.
Andrew Jackson
![Page 7: Andrew Jackson](https://reader033.vdocuments.mx/reader033/viewer/2022060117/5584707cd8b42abf538b49da/html5/thumbnails/7.jpg)
Andrew Jackson
Politics for the People
• Those who were aristocratic (too clean, too well dressed, too grammatical, to highly intellectual) were scorned
• During the Jacksonian era, voter turnout rose dramatically, as clear political parties developed and new styles of politicking emerged
![Page 8: Andrew Jackson](https://reader033.vdocuments.mx/reader033/viewer/2022060117/5584707cd8b42abf538b49da/html5/thumbnails/8.jpg)
Andrew Jackson
Politics for the People
• Candidates increasingly used banners, badges, parades, barbecues, free drinks, and baby kissing in order to “get the vote.”
![Page 9: Andrew Jackson](https://reader033.vdocuments.mx/reader033/viewer/2022060117/5584707cd8b42abf538b49da/html5/thumbnails/9.jpg)
Andrew Jackson
Why the Increased Democratization
• White male suffrage increased• Party nominating committees.
– Voters chose their state’s slate of Presidential electors.
• Spoils system.
![Page 10: Andrew Jackson](https://reader033.vdocuments.mx/reader033/viewer/2022060117/5584707cd8b42abf538b49da/html5/thumbnails/10.jpg)
Why the Increased Democratization
• Rise of Third Parties.• Popular campaigning (parades,
rallies, floats, etc.)• Two-party system returned in the
1832 election
Andrew Jackson
![Page 11: Andrew Jackson](https://reader033.vdocuments.mx/reader033/viewer/2022060117/5584707cd8b42abf538b49da/html5/thumbnails/11.jpg)
Andrew Jackson
Jackson's First Presidential Run
![Page 12: Andrew Jackson](https://reader033.vdocuments.mx/reader033/viewer/2022060117/5584707cd8b42abf538b49da/html5/thumbnails/12.jpg)
Andrew Jackson
1824
![Page 13: Andrew Jackson](https://reader033.vdocuments.mx/reader033/viewer/2022060117/5584707cd8b42abf538b49da/html5/thumbnails/13.jpg)
Andrew Jackson
Henry Clay[KY]
John Quincy John Quincy AdamsAdams[MA][MA]
John C. Calhoun
[SC]
William H. CrawfordWilliam H. Crawford[GA][GA]
Jackson's Opponents 1824
![Page 14: Andrew Jackson](https://reader033.vdocuments.mx/reader033/viewer/2022060117/5584707cd8b42abf538b49da/html5/thumbnails/14.jpg)
Andrew Jackson
Election of 1824
A Corrupt Bargain?
![Page 15: Andrew Jackson](https://reader033.vdocuments.mx/reader033/viewer/2022060117/5584707cd8b42abf538b49da/html5/thumbnails/15.jpg)
Andrew Jackson
Election of 1824
• 12th Amendment• Top three Electoral vote getters
would be voted upon in the House of Reps.
• The majority (over 50%) would be elected president
![Page 16: Andrew Jackson](https://reader033.vdocuments.mx/reader033/viewer/2022060117/5584707cd8b42abf538b49da/html5/thumbnails/16.jpg)
Andrew Jackson
• The Election would come down to Andrew Jackson and John Quincy Adams.
• They both had the most electoral votes
Election of 1824
![Page 17: Andrew Jackson](https://reader033.vdocuments.mx/reader033/viewer/2022060117/5584707cd8b42abf538b49da/html5/thumbnails/17.jpg)
Andrew Jackson
Election of 1824
• When Clay was appointed Secretary of the State, Jacksonians cried foul play
• Evidence of any possible deal has never been found
• Adams and Clay reputations ruined
![Page 18: Andrew Jackson](https://reader033.vdocuments.mx/reader033/viewer/2022060117/5584707cd8b42abf538b49da/html5/thumbnails/18.jpg)
Andrew Jackson
John Q. Adams Presidency
• Not that memorable
![Page 19: Andrew Jackson](https://reader033.vdocuments.mx/reader033/viewer/2022060117/5584707cd8b42abf538b49da/html5/thumbnails/19.jpg)
Andrew Jackson
1828 Election Key Issues
![Page 20: Andrew Jackson](https://reader033.vdocuments.mx/reader033/viewer/2022060117/5584707cd8b42abf538b49da/html5/thumbnails/20.jpg)
Andrew Jackson
Final Divorce Decree
Rachael Jackson
![Page 21: Andrew Jackson](https://reader033.vdocuments.mx/reader033/viewer/2022060117/5584707cd8b42abf538b49da/html5/thumbnails/21.jpg)
Andrew Jackson
Adams Supporters • Jackson's was a slave-trading,
gambling, brawling murderer. • Call Jackson's dead mother "a
common prostitute, brought to this country by the British soldiers,"
• after whose service she "married a MULATTO MAN, with whom she had several children of which number General JACKSON IS ONE!!!"
![Page 22: Andrew Jackson](https://reader033.vdocuments.mx/reader033/viewer/2022060117/5584707cd8b42abf538b49da/html5/thumbnails/22.jpg)
Andrew Jackson
Jackson supporters
• Accuse Adams of – having premarital relations with his
wife – being a pimp, arranging an
American prostitute for Czar Alexander I.
![Page 23: Andrew Jackson](https://reader033.vdocuments.mx/reader033/viewer/2022060117/5584707cd8b42abf538b49da/html5/thumbnails/23.jpg)
Andrew Jackson
![Page 24: Andrew Jackson](https://reader033.vdocuments.mx/reader033/viewer/2022060117/5584707cd8b42abf538b49da/html5/thumbnails/24.jpg)
Andrew Jackson
tells voters that candidate Andrew Jackson is unfit for the office of President, having "illegally and wantonly shed the blood of his countrymen and fellow soldiers" by ordering six militiamen executed on 1815 Feb. 21 after a military trial in which they were convicted after leaving camp to return home, although their tours of duty were not up.
![Page 25: Andrew Jackson](https://reader033.vdocuments.mx/reader033/viewer/2022060117/5584707cd8b42abf538b49da/html5/thumbnails/25.jpg)
Andrew Jackson
The Center of Population in the Country Moves West
![Page 26: Andrew Jackson](https://reader033.vdocuments.mx/reader033/viewer/2022060117/5584707cd8b42abf538b49da/html5/thumbnails/26.jpg)
Andrew Jackson
The Jackson Coalition
• Andrew Jackson brought together a coalition of white men who were not happy:– Factory workers in the Northeast– Immigrants in the cities.– Farmers (non-slaveholders) in the South– Pioneer farmers in the West
• Introduced the spoils system• It was the coalition of the Common Man.
![Page 27: Andrew Jackson](https://reader033.vdocuments.mx/reader033/viewer/2022060117/5584707cd8b42abf538b49da/html5/thumbnails/27.jpg)
Andrew Jackson
Jackson's faith in the common Man
• Intense distrust of Eastern“establishment,” monopolies, & special privilege.
• His heart & soul was with the “plain folk.”
• Belief that the common man was capable of uncommon achievements.
![Page 28: Andrew Jackson](https://reader033.vdocuments.mx/reader033/viewer/2022060117/5584707cd8b42abf538b49da/html5/thumbnails/28.jpg)
Andrew Jackson
Election of 1828
![Page 29: Andrew Jackson](https://reader033.vdocuments.mx/reader033/viewer/2022060117/5584707cd8b42abf538b49da/html5/thumbnails/29.jpg)
Andrew Jackson
The Reign of King Mob
![Page 30: Andrew Jackson](https://reader033.vdocuments.mx/reader033/viewer/2022060117/5584707cd8b42abf538b49da/html5/thumbnails/30.jpg)
Andrew Jackson
Jacksonian Democracy Characteristics
• The "New Democracy" • Aristocracy replaced with democracy • Most high offices still held by wealthy
citizens
![Page 31: Andrew Jackson](https://reader033.vdocuments.mx/reader033/viewer/2022060117/5584707cd8b42abf538b49da/html5/thumbnails/31.jpg)
Jacksonian Democracy Characteristics• Spoils system • Based on universal white
manhood suffrage not property
• Demand a new type of politician
• Rise of workingmen’s parties
Andrew Jackson
![Page 32: Andrew Jackson](https://reader033.vdocuments.mx/reader033/viewer/2022060117/5584707cd8b42abf538b49da/html5/thumbnails/32.jpg)
Andrew Jackson
Who was Jackson?
• First President born west of the Appalachian Mountains.
• He was a populist – he was a supporter of the rights and power of the people.
• Jackson viewed himself as a spokesperson of the people.
![Page 33: Andrew Jackson](https://reader033.vdocuments.mx/reader033/viewer/2022060117/5584707cd8b42abf538b49da/html5/thumbnails/33.jpg)
Andrew Jackson
What was Jacksonian democracy?• Rise of Andrew Jackson and the
Democratic Party in 1828.• Democratic reforms brought by
President Jackson– expanding suffrage to restructuring
federal institutions. – Spoils system invented
![Page 34: Andrew Jackson](https://reader033.vdocuments.mx/reader033/viewer/2022060117/5584707cd8b42abf538b49da/html5/thumbnails/34.jpg)
Andrew Jackson
Jacksonian Democracy
• An authentic democratic movement!• Expanded suffrage and popular
participation in government.
![Page 35: Andrew Jackson](https://reader033.vdocuments.mx/reader033/viewer/2022060117/5584707cd8b42abf538b49da/html5/thumbnails/35.jpg)
Jacksonian Democracy
• For the first time, white men with little or no property could vote.
• No country, not even England, allowed poor white men to vote.
Andrew Jackson
![Page 36: Andrew Jackson](https://reader033.vdocuments.mx/reader033/viewer/2022060117/5584707cd8b42abf538b49da/html5/thumbnails/36.jpg)
Andrew Jackson
Jacksonian Democracy; The contradiction
• Jacksonian Democracy was only for white men
• Against class supremacy, but they believed in white supremacy.
![Page 37: Andrew Jackson](https://reader033.vdocuments.mx/reader033/viewer/2022060117/5584707cd8b42abf538b49da/html5/thumbnails/37.jpg)
Jacksonian Democracy; The contradiction
• They supported slavery and the subjugation of Native Americans!
• The Democratic Party never opposed slavery– Jackson was determined to keep that
issue out of national affairs.– Under the “gag rule,” Congressmen
were not allowed to discuss slavery on the floor of Congress.
Andrew Jackson
![Page 38: Andrew Jackson](https://reader033.vdocuments.mx/reader033/viewer/2022060117/5584707cd8b42abf538b49da/html5/thumbnails/38.jpg)
Andrew Jackson
President Andrew Jackson