American Biography – Andrew Jackson Jackson said that he was born in South Carolina; other sources state that he was born in North Carolina. According to another story, he was born on a ship sailing from Ireland to the United States. His father died around the time Andrew was born. In his youth, he was always in fights or trouble of some sort. He received little, if any formal education, although he did learn how to read and write. When he was fourteen, he joined the revolutionary forces. He and his brother were taken prisoner. His brother died from smallpox and Andrew hovered near death for a few weeks. After he recovered he learned that his mother had died while nursing American prisoners. (Another brother died also during the Revolution). While a prisoner, he was ordered by a British officer to clean his boots; Andrew refused. The officer beat him with a sword, scarring Andrew across the face for life. After gambling away an inheritance from an Irish grandparent, he realized that he needed a profession to survive. He decided to study the law with a local lawyer. In 1787 he was admitted to the bar. An old friend had been appointed as a judge for a remote frontier settlement near present day Nashville, Tennessee. He arranged for Andrew to be appointed as the Public Prosecutor. In Tennessee Andrew prospered. His law practice went very well. He became district attorney and a judge. For the most part, he supported the landowners and moneylenders over the poor. He also speculated heavily in land. He became very rich. Purchasing a plantation, which he increased in size over the years, he owned as many as 100 slaves He was a member of the elite. In 1791, Andrew married Rachel Donelson Robards. She had fled her husband and they had heard that he had divorced her. She was a plump, quiet, unassuming woman, who loved to be left alone to smoke her corncob pipe by the fireside. Soon after their marriage, they learned that Robards had not divorced her and he publicly accused of adultery. She secured a divorce from him and the Jackson’s were re-married in 1794. In 1796, Tennessee entered the Union. Andrew was elected to the Senate. Years later, when Andrew ran for the Presidency in 1824, Thomas Jefferson wrote to a friend about him: “I feel much alarmed at the prospect of seeing Gen.Jackson President. He is one of the most unfit men I know of for such a place. He has had very little respect for laws or constitutions, and is in fact, an able military chief, nothing more. When I was President of the Senate, he was a Senator; and he could never speak on account of the rashness of his feelings. I have seen him attempt it repeatedly; and as often choke with rage. His passions are no doubt cooler now; he has been much tried since I knew him. But he is a dangerous man.” After one year in the Senate, he retired and became a judge of the state Supreme Court. At the same time, hew driven to bankruptcy because of his speculation in land. The experience gave him an intense dislike of debts, paper money, speculation and banks. In 1802, Andrew was elected commander of the Tennessee militia. In 1813-14, he defeated the Creeks. The peace treaty he imposed on them was harsh that even the government in Washington refused to support it. In 1814, he was ordered to defend the city of New Orleans against British invasion. He put together a rag-tag army which included militia, local pirates, Choctaw natives and freed slaves. On January 5, 1815, the British landed. They advanced directly into the American line of fire. The British lost over 2000 men killed and wounded, including three of their highest ranking officers. Andrew’s forces had very few casualties. It was a decisive victory. However, the War had actually ended a few weeks before the Battle of New Orleans, but the news had not yet reached the West. In 1818, he was ordered to pursue the Seminoles who had fled into Spanish-held Florida. He invaded the region, capturing two Spanish forts. Also he captured two British subjects. Accusing them of aiding the Seminoles, he had them hanged. Before he returned to the United States, he appointed one of his subordinates as Governor. His actions caused an international crisis with the British and the Spanish. In 1824, Andrew was nominated for the Presidency. In the election, he received more popular votes than any of the four other candidates. However, since none of them received a majority of votes, the decision on who had won was given to the House of Representatives. It chose John Quincy Adams. Andrew and his supporters were furious. They did whatever they could to undermine Adams administration, and succeeded. They also prepared for the Presidential election of 1828. The Presidential election of 1828 can be interpreted on several levels. As a political campaign it pitted “John Q. Adams who can write, (against) Andy Jackson who can fight!” It was bitter contest. Personal attacks were common. Jackson’s wife died of a heart attack a few weeks after the election and Andrew blamed her death on his political enemies. As he vowed, “May God Almighty forgive her murderers, as I know she forgave them. I never can.” Although Andrew had won, he entered the White House a bitter and lonely man. On another level the election of 1828 witnessed a national political change. It ended the domination by the Jeffersonian Democrats of national politics. New political parties soon emerged to replace it; The Democratic Party (centered around Jackson) and the Whig Party (centered around Clay). On a third level, Jackson’s victory had been described as the “triumph of the common man”. Religious and property qualifications had been removed as barriers to the right to vote throughout the country prior to the election. Twice as many people voted in 1828 than in any previous election. Andrew benefited from this development; however he was not responsible for it. In any event, more voters identified with him than with his opponent. He swamped Adams by winning over 140,000 more popular votes and almost 100 more Electoral College votes. Andrew’s electoral victory (and re-election in 1832) and his two terms as President have been referred to as “Jacksonian Democracy”. Some historians dislike that term because they believe that the developments which occurred during these years were not the results of Andrew’s efforts. He did increase the power of the Presidency to a degree it had never experienced before. For example, he vetoed twelve congressional bills, more than any of his predecessors. He also strengthened the sense of union during the crisis with South Carolina. On the other hand, he retained his Anti-Amerindian and pro-slavery sentiments. Andrew also set the guiding image that men who wished to enter the White House have followed ever since: born in a log cabin (of poor birth), being “self-made” (amassing wealth through one’s own talents, and having some military reputation. In 1836, Andrew retired from public life, although he remained a powerful influence in his party. Jackson was a violent and vengeful man. He had a fiery temper, although he often pretended to be angrier than he really was to scare people into doing what he wanted them to do. He was a bully and a tyrant. On the other side, he was extremely loyal to his friends. He tended to view political disputes as personal duels rather than conflicts over principles or issues. It is said that Jackson reflected the fundamental changes that were occurring during his lifetime; he did not cause them. Explain this statement. Andrew Jackson and The Bank War (handout) A contemporary Cartoon shows President Jackson trying to kill the “many-headed monster,” the Bank of the United States. Why did Jackson set out to destroy the bank? Democratic cartoon shows Jackson fighting the monster Bank. "The Bank," Jackson told Martin Van Buren, "is trying to kill me, but I will kill it!" King Andrew The economic consequences of the Bank War, the harsh treatment of Native Americans and his dictatorial methods of dealing with Congress made President Jackson many enemies. Bringing to the United States its first full measure of true democracy, “Old Hickory” was also derided as “King Andrew”, a tyrant. A believer in individual rights, Jackson made the federal government more power than ever. A frontier southerner, he didn’t want to disturb the institution of slavery, yet he turned against the South when that region threatened the authority of the his government. A military hero who had build his reputation in large part by killing natives, he espoused what was considered, his day, the most enlightened approach to the so-called “Indian Problem” – relocation from the East (“removal”) to new lands in the West. The great removal opened the darkest chapter of Indian-white relations in the history of the United States. Taking their cue from the English critics of King George III in the late 18th century, the anti-Jackson groups formed a new political party: The Whigs. Pursuing the analogy to George III, the Whigs openly attacked Jackson as “King Andrew,” A tyrant who trampled on the constitution with his excessive use of the presidential veto to thwart Congress. While the Democrats continued to draw their traditional support from small farmers and from the South and West, the Whigs now attracted former Federalists, social Reformers and merchants from the North and Northwest. A political cartoon from 1832 satirizing Andrew Jackson’s belief in the need for a strong presidency to govern the United States. His critics denounced him as a tyrant and called him “King Andrew the first.” He is shown in the cartoon trampling the Constitution and ruling by veto. Why would it be considered an insult to refer to the president as “King”?