The Indian removal act was an
The Indian removal act was an
Andrew Jackson was a one man show unless it came to putting on a fake smile to “win” over his followers support. If something that he saw posed as a threat to his ideas then it was no good. Take cooperation’s or businesses for example, Andrew Jackson and most of his Democratic followers feared the growing economic and political power exercised by some corporations. Their ability to amass wealth, through banking and manufacturing operations, and to influence and even coerce individual citizens, posed a threat to the Jeffersonian ideals that Jackson held dear. So once again, those companies threatened his power and he did not like that.…
Jackson also supported the ban of anti-slavery pamphlets in the mail because he was a slave owner as well. During Andrew Jackson's term of presidency, he confronted some of the issues that defined a nascent nation still searching for its identity. The removal of all the Native Americans off their home land, the rise of the corporations, and slavery. A great president is someone who is a very strong and confident leader. Someone who can make choices that will change the country for the better, and does what is best for the good of all the people. Some people might just consider Andrew Jackson to be a very good president because he did things such as revolutionizing presidential campaigning, which also made him the very first modern president, and using his presidential powers to veto some of the bills that he thought could be unfit or harmful. Some others would argue that The former president Andrew Jackson was an evil president because he did things like enforce the Indian Removal Act and abided the power to veto in an effort to take more control over and intimidate congress. Speaking of the Indian Removal Act, it is the one thing Andrew Jackson did that most people totally and completely disagree with. Andrew Jackson instated the Indian Removal Act in 1830. This act evicted thousands and thousands of Native American families, specifically Cherokees, from their homes in Georgia and the Carolinas so the white…
The largest example the author uses to illustrate the repugnant actions of President Jackson is Native American removal. Even before he became president, he worked to acquire Native American land for the United States as treaty commissioner. In his time with that position, he gained large areas of land that would grow the United States. This would seem like an honorable achievement for the country, but Jackson and his fellow commissioners did not always use fair tactics when negotiating with Native American tribes that refused to give up their homes. Not only is this morally wrong, but it is the exact sort of oppression that many American colonists were trying to leave when they declared independence of Great Britain. This…
Secondly, the bad if not malicious duties Jackson did during his presidency was the force removal of Native Americans from Georgia to the west and the ending the National Bank system. The state of Georgia was against the Supreme Court who was against the removal of the Natives. Even though the Supreme Court won, Georgia as well as Jackson ignored it and forced the Natives out of Georgia to the present state of Oklahoma. Many died before they even got there. As to the National Bank issue, Jackson believed that it was a monopoly towards the upper class people and as a result refuse to recharter it. Jackson used one of his vetoes, and the Bank's congressional supporters did not have enough votes to override him. The Bank ceased to exist when its charter expired in 1836, but even before that Jackson had weakened it considerably by withdrawing millions of dollars of federal…
I think that there were many reasons and situations that proved Andrew Jackson to be a bad president. One of the reasons was “The Spoils System”. He wasn’t a very fair president. He gave government jobs to his friends and the people that voted for him. This was known as the spoils system. The spoils system corrupted the government because no one had a chance to get good at their job or even get a job. He was almost similar to a king, which was not a good thing for the country. For example, when the Supreme Court sided with the Indians against the state of Georgia, Jackson ignored the ruling of the Supreme Court. Another reason was the withdrawal of the second national bank. Jackson tried to destroy the National Bank by withdrawal federal funds and placing them into state banks. The bank supported the rich white men, but did not cater to the needs of the working white men. Jackson believed that “Congress had no right under the Constitution to charter a bank.” But, it was not Jackson’s position to determine the constitutionality of the bank, because the Supreme Court had already ruled that the bank was constitutional in the case “McCulloch vs. Maryland”.…
Andrew Jackson was in no uncertain terms, a tyrant. Specifically to native Americans, but somewhat extending to the African American slave population as well. Under Andrew Jackson’s administration, the policy of Indian Removal saw its greatest enactment. Jackson essentially forced the Native Americans off their lands, all the while ignoring supreme court decisions that stated such actions were indeed unconstitutional.…
Andrew Jackson was one of the most popular US presidents of all time. He was president from 1829 to 1837. During this time the US was evolving, becoming more and more democratic. Jackson was from a poor family, and his father died before he was born. He was in the revolutionary war at the age of 13. Jackson was considered somewhat of a war hero. One great accomplishment of his military career was when he led American troops in defending New Orleans against the British. At the end of this battle there were 2,037 British troops killed and only 71 Americans. By the age of 21 Jackson became a lawyer, and at 29 years old he was elected as Tennessee’s first house member and one year later he was elected to the senate. In 1824 Jackson ran for president, and the popular vote was split four ways. When that happened the House of Representatives was supposed to decide the election. Jackson received the majority of the popular vote. One of the reps traded his electoral votes to John Quincy Adams so long as he made that rep the secretary of state. Jackson called this the corrupt bargain. A definition of democratic could be a person who believes in the majority rule, rule by the people and universal suffrage. After examining his actions on the following issues, it is clear that Andrew Jackson was democratic: Native Americans, elections and politics and African Americans.…
When it came to protecting individual liberties, Jacksonians favored the white male population, but totally ignored others. They wanted to move all of the Indians who lived in the eastern lands to western lands past the Mississippi River. Jackson bolstered their case. Even after the Supreme Court ruled in favor of the Cherokee tribe and its right to remain where it was, Jackson did not comply and he forcefully ejected the native people from their land. The Trail of Tears shows the painful journey the Indians had to take; the journey killed almost 4,000 people (doc. G). Jackson, by instigating the demise of the Bank, failed to protect the individual liberties of the wealthy class. In Document C, Daniel Webster states, “…It manifestly seeks to inflame the poor against the rich; it wantonly attacks whole classes of people, for the purpose of turning against them the prejudices and the resentments of the other classes.” This quote shows that Jackson violated the wealthy peoples’ liberties because of his own biased opinions.…
"I cannot be intimidated from doing that which my judgment and conscience tell me is right by any earthly power."…
Andrew Jackson was born in rural South Carolina in 1767 and became president nearly sixty years later. Jackson was a child during the Revolutionary War, so his youth was tainted by the horrors of war. Jackson became a military hero in 1815 when New Orleans was under attack of the British who freed the slaves, abused the women, and destroyed the city. Jackson put an end to this while he was headquartered in New Orleans.…
Andrew Jackson helped to provide for a strong protection of popular democracy and individual liberty to the United States. Andrew Jackson known as the people’s president held a strong emotion in the states right’s which advocated to the increase of executive power. President Andrew Jackson was good for his country, because he provided certain decisions that helped form America into a better place than where it was before. President Andrew Jackson showed significant positives towards the people of the United States. President Andrew Jackson’s creation of the Democratic Party still exists today. His great efforts to eliminate the Bank of the United States helped to pay off all the national debts in America. Jackson’s Indian Policy wanted to end any future conflicts between Indian land owners and white land owners. Andrew’s views on how government should be rotated provided a reform in government. The spoils system affected America positively because the spoils system let people who earn their power is able to switch throughout the government positions. Under Andrew Jackson the people of the United States were given more to the states rights than any other president before Andrew. Andrew Jackson proved through his actions that he was state rights advocate, while expanding his executive power.…
After reviewing Andrew Jackson’s positive and negative actions, it has come to a conclusion that he was in the position of a hero. In the 1800’s President Andrew Jackson showed he was a hero to the reduce in Federal debts, winning the Battle of New Orleans, and hearing the voices of the people and giving them the chance to vote for their president. Despite all his positive work, he also made many negative decisions, but none mayor and serious. Andrew Jackson made an amazing impact in our world, and without hesitation we can all say that if it wasn’t for his positive work, we would not be in the position we are in today.…
While President Andrew Jackson is often made out to be a villain for his treatment of the Native Americans, he is not to blame for the massive loss of life the tribes experienced. Most of the non-natives in the South, especially Georgia, supported the Indian Removal Act, shaping the South’s political views and putting pressure on Congress, the Senate, and Jackson himself. Eager to take on Native American lands, appetites were large for the Native Americans to be removed.…
If I was Andrew Jackson during that time I would have a big decision to make. Considering the war of 1812 would have ended around 20 years earlier, another costly war wouldn't be good for the economy or the people. The country had to borrow money for the war of 1812 so getting the money back from the French from the Napoleonic Wars would help the economy a great deal. Sometimes in life from what I have learned it is better to give up the small battles in order to win the war. That is just the situation Andrew Jackson was faced with. He could give an explanation and get his money back or not apologize and incur more debt without getting that payment from France. Also being an important trade partner, keeping good relations with France would…
Jackson’s strong democratic beliefs spoke for expansion and freedom. Even though he wasn’t honorable all the time, he only had the people’s interest to drive him forward. In a way, he was a villain with a noble cause. He just didn’t always follow the heroic path to achieve what he wanted. Killing the bank was probably his worst move but he’s only human and feared for his future. Nobody wanted to keep the nation’s unity more than he did. His sentiment breathed liberty and…