Yahoo Web Search

Search results

  1. May 17, 2024 · The Age of Jackson refers to the period of 1829 to 1849 in United States history, when President Andrew Jackson led the national government through a series of reforms and radical governmental changes.

  2. 24. The Age of Jackson. American painter George Catlin documented the disappearing tribes of the upper Missouri River. This double portrait of an Assiniboin named Wi-jun-jon (who was also know as Pigeon's Egg Head and The Light) was made in 1832.

    • Overview
    • The early life of Andrew Jackson
    • The election of 1828 and the Bank War
    • Jackson’s Indian policy
    • What do you think?

    Andrew Jackson was the president for the "common man." Under his rule, American democracy flourished as never before -- but the economy and the Native American population suffered at his hands.

    From humble beginnings, Andrew Jackson worked his way up to wealth and national prominence. His early life was colorful and filled with adventure. Born in 1767 in the Carolinas to a Scots-Irish immigrant family of modest means, Jackson became involved in politics as a child during the Revolutionary War when he worked as a courier for the revolutionary cause. At the tender age of 13, he was captured by the British and suffered both a head injury that left him permanently scarred and an outbreak of smallpox.

    Jackson survived and went on to study law, amass a personal fortune, serve as a colonel in the Tennessee militia, and represent the state of Tennessee in both the House of Representatives and the Senate. In 1806, he shot and killed a man in a duel to defend the honor of his wife, Rachel.1‍ 

    Jackson achieved national distinction for his performance in the War of 1812. In the Battle of Horseshoe Bend, he oversaw the destruction of 15 percent of the Creek population; the treaty that ended hostilities forced the Creek to cede over 20 million acres of their ancestral lands. Jackson is most remembered for his performance in the Battle of New Orleans, during which he led his troops to a decisive victory over the British after the Treaty of Ghent had been signed and hostilities had officially ended.2‍ 

    In December 1817, President James Monroe authorized Jackson to lead an offensive against the Seminole and Creek Indians in Georgia and Florida, sparking the First Seminole War. Jackson ordered his troops to destroy Seminole settlements, capture a Spanish fort, and execute two British citizens whom Jackson blamed for supporting the Seminoles against white people. In 1819, the Spanish ceded all of Florida to the United States in the Adams-Onís—or Transcontinental—Treaty.3‍

    The presidential election of 1828 pitted incumbent John Quincy Adams against Andrew Jackson. Adams was the candidate of the National Republicans, while the party that arose around Jackson became known as the Jacksonian Democrats, or simply, the Democrats.

    Observers of the 1828 presidential election witnessed the first truly national political campaigns. Styling himself the “man of the people,” Jackson campaigned on an anti-elitist platform that attacked the eastern elites and Congressional land policies. Though Adams retained the support of New England, Jackson swept the South and West, and even took parts of the Northeast.4‍  The election marked a transition from the small, elite political parties of the past to the mass political parties that the United States continues to host today.

    Jackson early on established himself as a champion of the white settler against the interests of Native Americans. As president, Jackson instituted his pro-white sentiment in a series of policies that culminated with the forced removal of Native Americans from their native lands.

    In 1830, Jackson signed the Indian Removal Act, which authorized the forced relocation of Indian tribes from their ancestral territories in the East and South to lands west of the Mississippi River. These involuntary relocations became known as the “Trail of Tears.” Those who resisted were compelled to either go into hiding or suffer violence at the hands of the US Army and white settlers keen on enforcing vigilante justice.6‍

    In your opinion, what were Jackson’s greatest achievements as president? What were his most consequential shortcomings?

    How would you characterize the impact of Jackson’s Indian policies on the Native American population?

    What do you think were the most significant changes that Jackson ushered in during his years as president?

    How did Jackson’s presidency mark a transition between a republic and a democracy?

  3. Jul 4, 2024 · The Age of Jackson is often referred to as the era of the "common man" because it marked a shift towards greater democratic participation by ordinary citizens.

  4. Jun 3, 2020 · The Age of Jackson, 1824-1840. As historian Arthur Schlesinger, Jr., stated in The Age of Jackson, the driving force in Jackson's time was a clash of ideas. The shift in focus of the relationship between the government and the American people in Jackson's era could be called revolutionary.

  5. Jackson was the first self-made man to be elected to the US Presidency. His election marked a long series of many "firsts". He was the first President not to come from one of the original colonies, and the first President not to come from one of the “founding families†of the United States.

  6. People also ask

  7. In 1946 his Pulitzer Prize-winning The Age of Jackson was published to widespread acclaim. In this book Schlesinger reinterpreted the American era of Jacksonian democracy in terms of its cultural, social, and economic aspects as well as its strictly political dimensions.

  1. People also search for