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  1. King Andrew the First. " King Andrew the First " is an American political cartoon created by an unknown artist around 1832. [1] The cartoon depicts Andrew Jackson, the 7th United States president, as a monarch holding a veto bill and trampling on the Constitution and on internal improvements of the national banks.

  2. The caricature is of Andrew Jackson as a despotic monarch, probably issued during the fall of 1833 in response to the president's September order to remove federal deposits from the Bank of the United States. The print is dated a year earlier by Weitenkampf and related to Jackson's controversial veto of Congress's bill to recharter the Bank in ...

  3. Isabell Schimmel. | Certified Educator. Share Cite. There is a widely published cartoon from President Andrew Jacksons time in office in which he is portrayed as a king and is labeled as...

    • I. Introduction
    • II. Democracy in The Early Republic
    • III. The Missouri Crisis
    • IV. The Rise of Andrew Jackson
    • V. The Nullification Crisis
    • VI. The Eaton Affair and The Politics of Sexuality
    • VII. The Bank War
    • VIII. The Panic of 1837
    • IX. Rise of The Whigs
    • X. Anti-Masons, Anti-Immigrants, and The Whig Coalition

    On May 30, 1806, Andrew Jackson, a thirty-nine-year-old Tennessee lawyer, came within inches of death. A duelist’s bullet struck him in the chest, just shy of his heart (the man who fired the gun was purportedly the best shot in Tennessee). But the wounded Jackson remained standing. Bleeding, he slowly steadied his aim and returned fire. The other ...

    Today, most Americans think democracy is a good thing. We tend to assume the nation’s early political leaders believed the same. Wasn’t the American Revolution a victory for democratic principles? For many of the founders, however, the answer was no. A wide variety of people participated in early U.S. politics, especially at the local level. But or...

    A more troubling pattern was also emerging in national politics and culture. During the first decades of the nineteenth century, American politics shifted toward “sectional” conflict among the states of the North, South, and West. Since the ratification of the Constitution in 1789, the state of Virginia had wielded more influence on the federal gov...

    The career of Andrew Jackson (1767–1845), the survivor of that backcountry Kentucky duel in 1806, exemplified both the opportunities and the dangers of political life in the early republic. A lawyer, enslaver, and general—and eventually the seventh president of the United States—he rose from humble frontier beginnings to become one of the most powe...

    Nearly every American had an opinion about President Jackson. To some, he epitomized democratic government and popular rule. To others, he represented the worst in a powerful and unaccountable executive, acting as president with the same arrogance he had shown as a general in Florida. One of the key issues dividing Americans during his presidency w...

    Meanwhile, a more personal crisis during Jackson’s first term also drove a wedge between him and Vice President Calhoun. The Eaton Affair, sometimes insultingly called the “Petticoat Affair,” began as a disagreement among elite women in Washington, D.C., but it eventually led to the disbanding of Jackson’s cabinet. True to his backwoods reputation,...

    Andrew Jackson’s first term was full of controversy. For all of his reputation as a military and political warrior, however, the most characteristic struggle of his presidency was financial. As president, he waged a “war” against the Bank of the United States. The charter of the controversial national bank that Congress established under Alexander ...

    Unfortunately for Jackson’s Democrats (and most other Americans), their victory over the Bank of the United States worsened rather than solved the country’s economic problems. Things looked good initially. Between 1834 and 1836, a combination of high cotton prices, freely available foreign and domestic credit, and an infusion of specie (“hard” curr...

    The disaster of the Panic of 1837 created an opportunity for the Whig Party, which had grown partly out of the political coalition of John Quincy Adams and Henry Clay and opposed Andrew Jackson and the Democratic Party. The National Republicans, a loose alliance concentrated in the Northeast, had become the core of a new anti-Jackson movement. But ...

    The Whig coalition drew strength from several earlier political movements, including two that harnessed American political paranoia. The Anti-Masonic Party formed in the 1820s for the purpose of destroying the Freemasons. Later, anti-immigrant sentiment formed the American Party, also called the Know-Nothings. The American Party sought and won offi...

  4. Sep 14, 2018 · King Andrew the First is one of the most famous political cartoons of all time. It depicts Andrew Jackson in a king’s garb, with a flowing robe, fancy shoes, and a crown, holding a veto in one hand and trampling on the Constitution, internal improvements of the U.S. Bank, and the seal of Pennsylvania. This print was first made in 1832 by an ...

  5. A political cartoon from 1832 portrayed Andrew Jackson as "King Andrew the First" The cartoon is in response to Jackson's veto of National Bank deposits and he was viewed as an abuser of presidential powers. Date Made: 1832 Associated Date: 1832. Associated Person: Jackson, Andrew. Location: Currently not on view.

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  7. King Andrew. date made. 1832. associated date. 1832. associated person. Jackson, Andrew. Description. A political cartoon from 1832 portrayed Andrew Jackson as "King Andrew the First" The cartoon is in response to Jackson's veto of National Bank deposits and he was viewed as an abuser of presidential powers.

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