The Nomination of Andrew Jackson To the
President's Hall of Fame
Like any hall of fame, its inductees are the best in whatever they do, from baseball or
football to something like being President. If you are a member of any hall of fame
(including the one for the Presidents), it means that you have done something special or
have a certain quality about yourself that makes you worthy to be in a hall of fame. My
nominee for the Presidents hall of Fame is our seventh President of the United States,
Andrew Jackson. I'll go over his presidency, focusing on both the highs and the lows of
his two terms in office, from 1829-1837. The issues that I'll focus on are states' rights,
nullification, the tariff, the spoils system, Indian removal and banking policies; these
controversies brought forth strong rivalry over his years of president. He was known for
his iron will and fiery personality, and strong use of the powers of his office that made
his years of presidency to be known as the "Age of Jackson."
Andrew Jackson was born on March 15, 1767, in a settlement on the border of North and
South Carolina. He was orphaned at age 14. After studying law and becoming a member of the
Bar in North Carolina later he moved to Nashville Tennessee. Their he became a member of a
powerful political faction led by William Blount. He was married in 1791 to Rachel
Donelson Robards, and later remarried to him due to a legal mistake in her prior divorce
in 1794.
Jackson served as delegate to Tenn. in the 1796 Constitutional convention and a
congressman for a year (from 1796-97). He was elected senator in 1797, but financial
problems forced him to resign and return to Tennessee in less than a year. Later he served
as a Tennessee superior court judge for six years starting in 1798. In 1804 he retired
from the bench and moved to Nashville and devoted time to business ventures and his
plantation. At this time his political career looked over.
In 1814 Jackson was a Major General in the Tennessee Militia, here he was ordered to
march against the Creek Indians (who were pro-British in the war of 1812). His goal was
achieved at Horseshoe Bend in March of 1814. Eventually he forced All Indians from the
area. His victory's impressed some people in Washington and Jackson was put in command of
the defense of New Orleans. This show of American strength made Americans feel proud after
a war filled with military defeats. Jackson was given the nickname "Old
Hickory", and was treated as a national hero.
In 1817 he was ordered against the Seminole Indians. He pushed them back into Spanish
Florida and executed two British subjects. Jackson instead that his actions were with
approval of the Monroe administration. His actions helped to acquire the Florida
territory, and he became a provisional governor of Florida that same year.
In 1822 the Tennessee Legislature nominated him for president and the following year he
was elected the U.S. senate. He also nearly won the presidential campaign of 1824 however
as a result of the "corrupt bargain" with Henry Clay. Over the next four years
the current administration built a strong political machine with nationalistic policies
and a lack of concern of states rights. In 1828 through a campaign filled with mud
slinging on both sides, Andrew Jackson became the seventh President to the United States.
Instead of the normal cabinet made up by the president, he relied more on an informal
group of newspaper writers and northern politicians who had worked for his election. I
believe that this made him more in contact with the people of the United States, more in
contact with the public opinion and feelings toward national issues President Jackson
developed the system of "rotation in office." This was used to protect the
American people from a development of a long-standing political group by removing
long-term office holders. His enemies accused him of corruption of civil service for
political reasons. However, I think that it was used to insure loyalty of the people in
his administration. States rights played an important part in Jackson's policy's as
president. In the case of the Cherokee Indians vs. The State of Georgia, two Supreme Court
decisions in 1831 and 1832 upholding the rights of the Cherokee nation over the State of
Georgia who had wanted to destroy Cherokee jurisdiction on it's land because gold had been
found on it, and the state seeing the Indians as tenants on state land decided to
"kick them out". Chief Justice John Marshall ruled that Georgia had no
jurisdiction to interfere with the rights of the Cherokee and removal of them would
violate treaties between them and the U.S. Government. However, Jackson, not liking these
decisions was reported of saying "John Marshall has made his decision, now let him
enforce it." It seems to me like a slap in Justice Marshall's face, that Jackson was
and always will be an Indian fighter. I think he just liked pushing around the Indians
because he new that whatever resistance they had was no match for the U.S. army. To
emphasize his point, in 1838 (one year after Jackson left office), a unite of federal
troops rounded up the 15,000 Cherokee who resisted relocation and remained in Georgia and
during the cold and rain of winter forced them to march to their lands in the west, this
was known as the "Trail of Tears" since about 25% of the people died in route of
either disease, starvation, and exposure to the cold. Even though Jackson wasn't in office
at the time and is not a part of his presidency, his effluence still existed through his
predecessor, Martin Van Burin.
The question of the tariff was a major controversy in the United States around the
years of his Presidency and his strong support for a unified nation oven states rights
would hold the country together in this national crisis. Jackson had promised the south a
reduction in duties to levels established in 1828, which were acceptable to southerners as
opposed to the higher rates since then. In 1832 his administration only sliced away a
little bit of the duties, not close to what the south expected he would do. In retaliation
of this insulting lack of concern of the South's voice in government, South Carolina
acting on the doctrine of Nullification which stated that the union was made up of the
states and that the states had the right to null or void a law if they didn't agree with
it, declared the federal tariff laws of 1828 and 1832 invalid and prohibited collection of
tariff's after February first of 1833. Jackson's response to this came on his
Nullification Proclamation on December 10, 1832. He declared his intent to enforce the law
and was willing to seek and agreement in a lowering of tariff's. In 1833 congress passed a
compromise bill which set a new tariff, when the other southern states accepted the new
tariff the threat of S. Carolina breaking away form the union was brought to a
"happy" end.
The Second Bank of the United States was not made into an issue of his election in 1828
by Jackson. However he decided the bank, which is not a government bank, but chartered by
it in 1826, had failed to provide a stable currency, and had favored the Northern states,
and few loans were granted to the southern and western areas because they were a larger
risk and the bank didn't see it in it's interest to make such a gamble with it's money.
And in his mind the bank was in violation on the Constitution. Even though the bank's
charter wasn't due to expire until 1836, Jackson's political enemies pushed a bill through
congress granting the banks re-charter, Jackson vetoed the bill. The "Bank"
issue was a major item in his re-election in 1832. In his second term Jackson decided to
remove federal deposits from the bank into "pet banks" which virtually took away
the power Nicholas Biddle's power as president of the Second National Bank, which left him
and anti-Jackson people very upset with what they called the abuse of his powers. The
increase in loans from the state chartered caused a land boom and gave the federal
government a surplus (which it split up amongst the states), the increase in loans brought
on the use of paper currency that was issued by the state banks, Jackson prohibited the
use of paper money to by federal land or pay federal debts. This demand for coins called
specie led to many bank failures in the Panic of 1837. I don't think he knew what he got
himself into when he did this, and could of handled the situation a little better, but not
all the blame should fall on his shoulders, because it wasn't his fault the private
state-chartered banks issued the paper money when they didn't have the specie to back it
up.
Jackson's foreign policy showed a strong interest in making the French to pay
long-overdue spoliation claims and reopening the British West Indian Trade. Even thought
he personally agreed with the rebellion of Texas against Mexico. He didn't recognize the
Lone Star republic until the day before he left office in 1837, and left the problem of
Texas annexation to Martin Van Buren. Even though Jackson switched support form his
successor Martin Van Buren to James K. Polk (probably due to Van Burins failed economic
policy). Jackson was a powerful voice in the Democratic party even after retired. He died
on June 8, 1845 on his plantation, the Hermitage, in Nashville Tennessee.
Andrew Jackson was the first "peoples president." This comes from his youth
in a frontier territory and his "people qualities" which helped him to be more
touch with the people of the United States, and therefore the people of the United States
took a more active role in the Government. He even went so far as to call himself the
elected representative of all American people. I think that Jackson's strengthening of the
powers of the presidency are the biggest influence to this day. He used the power of the
veto 12 times (more times than all of his successors combined). And his use of the powers
of removal and of executive orders made a standard for a modern American Presidency. I
only wish that their was a candidate like that running for election in '96. The closest to
someone like Jackson would of probably been Colin Powel, unfortunately he decided not to
run. When you gave this project, I though Jackson was a mean tempered Indian fighter who
found his way to office because he took over Florida and defended New Orleans
Successfully. But I grew to learn that he was really a great president and did a lot for
the presidency of the United States of America.