1824-1840 THE AGE OF JACKSON. The Election of 1824 1. Republican Party unchallenged at the national...

27
1824-1840 THE AGE OF JACKSON

description

The Election of As Speaker of the House, Clay occupied a unique position of power. 8. Clay could use his position to influence the choice of the next president. 9. Clay despised Jackson as a “military chieftain” who was unfit for office. 10. Although Clay was not personally close to Adams, the two men were both nationalists and strong proponents of the American system. 11. Clay’s influence prevailed and Adams won the presidency. 12. Shortly after winning the House vote, Adams named Clay his new Secretary of State. 13. Jackson’s outraged supporters promptly accused Adams and Clay of a “corrupt bargain” that thwarted the will of the people by cheating “Old Hickory” out of the presidency.

Transcript of 1824-1840 THE AGE OF JACKSON. The Election of 1824 1. Republican Party unchallenged at the national...

Page 1: 1824-1840 THE AGE OF JACKSON. The Election of 1824 1. Republican Party unchallenged at the national level. 2. In February 1824 Republicans selected William.

1824-1840

THE AGE OF JACKSON

Page 2: 1824-1840 THE AGE OF JACKSON. The Election of 1824 1. Republican Party unchallenged at the national level. 2. In February 1824 Republicans selected William.

The Election of 18241. Republican Party unchallenged at the national level. 2. In February 1824 Republicans selected William Crawford of Georgia as their party’s presidential nominee. 3. The Kentucky legislature nominated Henry Clay. 4. a group of New England Republicans nominated John Quincy Adams.5. Buoyed by his fame as a war hero, Jackson received far more popular and electoral votes than his three rivals. 6. However, since Jackson did not receive a majority of the electoral votes the election went to the House of Representatives, which voted by states.

Page 3: 1824-1840 THE AGE OF JACKSON. The Election of 1824 1. Republican Party unchallenged at the national level. 2. In February 1824 Republicans selected William.

The Election of 1824

7. As Speaker of the House, Clay occupied a unique position of power. 8. Clay could use his position to influence the choice of the next president. 9. Clay despised Jackson as a “military chieftain” who was unfit for office. 10. Although Clay was not personally close to Adams, the two men were both nationalists and strong proponents of the American system. 11. Clay’s influence prevailed and Adams won the presidency.12. Shortly after winning the House vote, Adams named Clay his new Secretary of State. 13. Jackson’s outraged supporters promptly accused Adams and Clay of a “corrupt bargain” that thwarted the will of the people by cheating “Old Hickory” out of the presidency.

Page 4: 1824-1840 THE AGE OF JACKSON. The Election of 1824 1. Republican Party unchallenged at the national level. 2. In February 1824 Republicans selected William.

Did get it?The “Corrupt Bargain” of the presidential election of 1824 occurred primarily because

a. John Quincy Adams won a majority of the electoral college vote

b. Henry Clay was most qualified to become president

c. No candidate won a majority of the electoral college vote

d. Henry Clay was dishonest

Page 5: 1824-1840 THE AGE OF JACKSON. The Election of 1824 1. Republican Party unchallenged at the national level. 2. In February 1824 Republicans selected William.
Page 6: 1824-1840 THE AGE OF JACKSON. The Election of 1824 1. Republican Party unchallenged at the national level. 2. In February 1824 Republicans selected William.
Page 7: 1824-1840 THE AGE OF JACKSON. The Election of 1824 1. Republican Party unchallenged at the national level. 2. In February 1824 Republicans selected William.

Election of 18281. Adams’ political deal with Clay tarnished his presidency and energized Jackson’s supporters. 2. Adams lacked personal charm and a common touch. 3. In contrast, Jackson was hailed as a military hero and champion of the people. 4. “Adams can write,” Old Hickory’s followers proudly boasted that “Jackson can fight!” 5. In the 1828 presidential election, Jackson swept the South and West and easily defeated Adams.

Page 8: 1824-1840 THE AGE OF JACKSON. The Election of 1824 1. Republican Party unchallenged at the national level. 2. In February 1824 Republicans selected William.
Page 9: 1824-1840 THE AGE OF JACKSON. The Election of 1824 1. Republican Party unchallenged at the national level. 2. In February 1824 Republicans selected William.

Did I get it?In the election of 1828, the two states which provided Andrew Jackson with the greatest number of electoral votes were

a. Tennessee and Kentuckyb. South Carolina and Georgiac. Pennsylvania and Virginiad. New York and Ohio

Page 10: 1824-1840 THE AGE OF JACKSON. The Election of 1824 1. Republican Party unchallenged at the national level. 2. In February 1824 Republicans selected William.

Jacksonian Democracy1. Jackson’s election marked the beginning of a new era in American political history. 2. As the hero of the common man, Jackson vowed to include the voice of the people in the election process. 3. The Jacksonians dramatically expanded the suffrage to include virtually all white men. In addition, Jackson created a more open political system by replacing legislative caucuses with a party nominating convention.4. As a self-made soldier, politician, and planter, Jackson believed that the average American could quickly master most government jobs. “Every man is as good as his neighbor,” Jackson confidently declared. 5. supported a “spoils system” by rewarding loyal party workers with government jobs.6. As the first president from the West, Jackson shared the frontier’s distrust of the Eastern elite. He promised to represent the interests of the common man by attacking special privileges in American life.

Page 11: 1824-1840 THE AGE OF JACKSON. The Election of 1824 1. Republican Party unchallenged at the national level. 2. In February 1824 Republicans selected William.

The Tariff of Abominations and the Nullification Crisis1. The Tariff of Abominations• Tariffs traditionally raised revenue

and protected American industry from European competitors. • In 1828, Congress passed a

protective tariff that set rates at record levels.• Led by South Carolina, the

Southern states branded the hated law the “Tariff of Abominations.” • Planters argued that while the

industrial Northeast flourished, the South was forced to sell its cotton in a world market unprotected by tariffs and buy manufactured goods at exorbitant prices.

Page 12: 1824-1840 THE AGE OF JACKSON. The Election of 1824 1. Republican Party unchallenged at the national level. 2. In February 1824 Republicans selected William.

The Tariff of Abominations and the Nullification Crisis

2. John C. Calhoun and the Doctrine of Nullification• In 1828 Vice-President John C. Calhoun

anonymously wrote the “South Carolina Exposition and Protest” to denounce the Tariff of Abominations.• Calhoun argued that the Union was a compact

formed by sovereign states. If a state believed that a federal law exceeded the delegated powers of Congress, the state could declare the law “null and void” within its own boundaries.• Calhoun’s Doctrine of Nullification used states

rights’ arguments first formulated by Jefferson and Madison in the Kentucky and Virginia Resolutions. • Calhoun did not advocate secession. Instead he

saw nullification as a viable option that would prevent disunion.

Page 13: 1824-1840 THE AGE OF JACKSON. The Election of 1824 1. Republican Party unchallenged at the national level. 2. In February 1824 Republicans selected William.

The Tariff of Abominations and the Nullification Crisis3. The Webster-Hayne Debate, 1830• In January 1830, Senator Robert Hayne of South Carolina vigorously defended states’

rights and Calhoun’s doctrine of nullification in a Senate speech that attracted national attention.

• Hayne’s speech triggered a national debate with Senator Daniel Webster of Massachusetts. Renowned as the nation’s great orator, Webster argued that the Constitution was created by the people, not the states. The Supreme Court, not the states, had the power to decide the constitutionality of a law. Webster denounced states’ rights and concluded by thundering, “liberty and union, now and forever, one and inseparable!”

Page 14: 1824-1840 THE AGE OF JACKSON. The Election of 1824 1. Republican Party unchallenged at the national level. 2. In February 1824 Republicans selected William.

The Tariff of Abominations and the Nullification Crisis4. Jackson and the Force Bill• South Carolina refused to back down. The South Carolina

legislature adopted an ordinance of nullification that repudiated the tariff acts of 1828 and 1832.• Pres. Jackson angrily called nullification an “impractical

absurdity” and warned South Carolina that “disunion by armed force is treason.” • He then called upon Congress to pass a “Force Bill” authorizing

him to use the army to enforce federal laws in South Carolina.• As tensions mounted, Henry Clay proposed a new compromise

tariff that would gradually reduce duties over the next ten years. • The compromise worked and South Carolina rescinded its

nullification ordinance.

Page 15: 1824-1840 THE AGE OF JACKSON. The Election of 1824 1. Republican Party unchallenged at the national level. 2. In February 1824 Republicans selected William.

Did I get it?According to John C. Calhoun, the proper response of the South Carolina legislature to the “Tariff of Abominations” was to

a. Declare it null and voidb. Pay it in fullc. Keep tariff revenues within the stated. Secede from the Union

Page 16: 1824-1840 THE AGE OF JACKSON. The Election of 1824 1. Republican Party unchallenged at the national level. 2. In February 1824 Republicans selected William.

Jackson and the Indian Removal Act

1. The approximately 125,000 Native Americans who lived east of the Mississippi were surrounded by white settlers who wanted the tribes resettled across the Mississippi.2. Congress responded by passing the Indian Removal Act providing for the exchange of Indian lands in the East for government lands in the newly established Indian Territory.

Page 17: 1824-1840 THE AGE OF JACKSON. The Election of 1824 1. Republican Party unchallenged at the national level. 2. In February 1824 Republicans selected William.

Jackson and the Indian Removal Act3. Worcester v. Georgia, 1832• The Cherokees legally challenged

Pres.Jackson’s removal order.• In Worchester v. Georgia Chief

Justice John Marshall upheld the Cherokee Nation’s legal right to their land.• The Supreme Court is dependent

upon the President to enforce its decisions. • As a famous Indian fighter, Jackson

harbored a well-known animosity toward Native Americans. • Jackson responded to the

Worchester v. Georgia decision by defiantly declaring, “John Marshall has made his decision, now let him enforce it.”

Page 18: 1824-1840 THE AGE OF JACKSON. The Election of 1824 1. Republican Party unchallenged at the national level. 2. In February 1824 Republicans selected William.

Jackson and the Indian Removal Act4. The Trail of Tears• Jackson defied the Court’s decision and pushed forward with his policy of

removing the remaining eastern tribes west of the Mississippi.• In 1838, the U.S. Army forcibly removed about 17,000 Cherokees from their

ancestral lands and marched them on an 800-mile journey to the Indian Territory. About one-fourth of the Cherokees died from disease and exhaustion on what poignantly (sorrowfully) came to be known as the Trail of Tears.

Page 19: 1824-1840 THE AGE OF JACKSON. The Election of 1824 1. Republican Party unchallenged at the national level. 2. In February 1824 Republicans selected William.

The Bank War1. The twenty-year charter of the Second Bank of the United States was scheduled to expire in 1836.2. Jackson regarded the bank as a “monster” that concentrated special financial privileges in the hands of an aristocratic elite. 3. July 1832, Jackson vetoed a bill to re-charter the bank. In his veto message, Jackson denounced the bank as a vehicle used by “the rich and powerful to bend the acts of government to their selfish purposes.”4. Without the bank’s restraining policies, state-chartered “pet banks” expanded credit, flooded the country with paper currency, and promoted rampant speculation in western lands and transportation projects.5. The demise of the Second Bank of the United States contributed to a financial panic in 1837. The Panic of 1837 evolved into a lengthy economic slump as businesses failed and unemployment rose.

Page 20: 1824-1840 THE AGE OF JACKSON. The Election of 1824 1. Republican Party unchallenged at the national level. 2. In February 1824 Republicans selected William.

Whig Political Cartoon

Page 21: 1824-1840 THE AGE OF JACKSON. The Election of 1824 1. Republican Party unchallenged at the national level. 2. In February 1824 Republicans selected William.
Page 22: 1824-1840 THE AGE OF JACKSON. The Election of 1824 1. Republican Party unchallenged at the national level. 2. In February 1824 Republicans selected William.

The Rise of the Whigs1. The South Carolina nullification crisis, the Indian Removal Act and the battle over the national bank were all issues that provoked national debates.2. Political opponents led by Henry Clay and Daniel Webster hated Jackson and derisively called him “King Andrew I.” Jackson’s rivals left the Democratic Party and formed the Whig Party.

Page 23: 1824-1840 THE AGE OF JACKSON. The Election of 1824 1. Republican Party unchallenged at the national level. 2. In February 1824 Republicans selected William.

The Rise of the Whigs

3. The Whigs favored protective tariffs, internal improvements, and a renewed national bank. 4. they were united by their animosity toward Jackson and his chosen successor Martin Van Buren.

Page 24: 1824-1840 THE AGE OF JACKSON. The Election of 1824 1. Republican Party unchallenged at the national level. 2. In February 1824 Republicans selected William.

The Rise of the Whigs 1840

5. In 1840 the Whigs nominated William Henry Harrison to oppose Van Buren. 6. The Whigs emphasized Harrison’s heroic victories over Indians and blamed “Van Ruin” for the economic slump. 7. Harrison’s election marked a new democratic style of running political campaigns. 8. the Whigs adopted the log cabin and hard cider as campaign symbols to connect with the common man. 9. Many historians consider the “log cabin and hard cider” campaign of 1840 the first “modern” election because both parties actively campaigned among the voting masses.

Page 25: 1824-1840 THE AGE OF JACKSON. The Election of 1824 1. Republican Party unchallenged at the national level. 2. In February 1824 Republicans selected William.

Did I get it?The Whig Party attracted all of the following EXCEPT

a. supporter’s of Clay’s American System

b. Northern industrialistsc. Evangelical Protestantsd. Supporters of Andrew Jackson

Page 26: 1824-1840 THE AGE OF JACKSON. The Election of 1824 1. Republican Party unchallenged at the national level. 2. In February 1824 Republicans selected William.
Page 27: 1824-1840 THE AGE OF JACKSON. The Election of 1824 1. Republican Party unchallenged at the national level. 2. In February 1824 Republicans selected William.