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US history
Course: US history > Unit 4
Lesson 2: The age of Jackson- Jacksonian Democracy - background and introduction
- Jacksonian Democracy - the "corrupt bargain" and the election of 1824
- Jacksonian Democracy - mudslinging and the election of 1828
- Jacksonian Democracy - spoils system, Bank War, and Trail of Tears
- Expanding democracy
- The presidency of Andrew Jackson
- Indian Removal
- The Nullification crisis
- The age of Jackson
- Manifest Destiny
- Annexing Texas
- Developing an American identity, 1800-1848
- James K. Polk and Manifest Destiny
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Jacksonian Democracy - spoils system, Bank War, and Trail of Tears
Andrew Jackson, the first modern-day Democrat, reshaped American politics. He championed the common white man, introduced the spoils system, and expanded the Executive Branch's power. His presidency marked the start of the modern American political system. Despite his populist image, his policies led to the Trail of Tears and the Panic of 1837.
Want to join the conversation?
- I understand that the Democratic party back in the 1800's was very different from the Democratic party now, but I have a question: Around which years (or period) did the Democratic party evolve into the party that we now know today?(9 votes)
- Great question pinkpuppy! There are a couple of places where the Democratic Party started to shift: one was in the 1890s, during an economic depression. At that time there was a populist movement (actually quite similar to the Occupy Wall Street movement! except with farmers) that demanded fairer economic policies from government. This led the Democratic Party to start advocating a more active federal government in terms of money policy, which saw its ultimate expression in the New Deal of the 1930s.
At this time, there were two "wings" of the Democratic Party - a progressive, pro-Civil Rights wing centered mostly in the Northeast, and a conservative, anti-Civil Rights wing located mostly in the South. In the 1960s, as the Democratic Party put through lots of Civil Rights legislation (the Civil Rights Act, the Voting Rights Act) most of the Southern Democrats switched to the Republican Party.
If you want to learn more, there's a video featuring yours truly and Grammarian David on the History of the Democratic Party here: https://www.khanacademy.org/humanities/us-history/american-civics-parent/american-civics/v/history-of-the-democratic-party(21 votes)
- Isn’t Andrew Jackson just kind of being King George the third? Like how he wanted more power than the other branches?(10 votes)
- "The rabble came in and they trashed the place, and the older aristocratic class of Washington politicians thought that this was more or less the end of the republic as they knew it. This was going to be the era of mob rule. But, you know, the wheels didn't come off democracy."
Hmm...
Didn't something like this happen recently in Washington DC?
Nah, must be my imagination.(10 votes) - why was Jackson so cruel the " five civilized tribes?"(3 votes)
- You ask why"? I respond: He was a vicious racist and his supporters wanted what the tribes had, land and resources.(10 votes)
- why did Andrew Jackson choose to ignore John Marshals decision to treat the Native Americans as a sovereign nation(4 votes)
- Probably because Jackson disagreed with the Supreme Court's decision. Jackson wanted to move Native Americans off their lands and open these lands up to westward American expansion.
Its debatable if Jackson had the constitutional right to ignore the Supreme Court ruling. However, Congress did nothing to hold Jackson accountable so he was able to do so.(5 votes)
- Did he help the poor or people in need of money?(3 votes)
- He helped his friends and supporters. He helped white people who wanted the land occupied by Native Americans in the Carolinas, and he helped himself. He set a bad pattern for leaders who followed him.(6 votes)
- why was Jackson so cruel the " five civilized tribes?"(3 votes)
- Jackson was just cruel to anyone who wasn't white. It didn't matter if they were civilized or not. Being "other than white" made a person eligible for Jackson's cruelty.(5 votes)
- In this video, it names a lot of bad things Jackson did. What where some of the good things Jackson did in his presidency?(5 votes)
- Is there now laws today that enforce a two-term presidency?(3 votes)
- The 22nd amendment to the Constitution limits presidents to two terms.(4 votes)
- I know that Andrew Jackson worked hard for one of the government branches (Executive, legislative and judicial branches), but where was the Whig Party from?(3 votes)
- I got this from Britannica:
Whig Party, in U.S. history, major political party active in the period 1834–54 that espoused a program of national development but foundered on the rising tide of sectional antagonism. The Whig Party was formally organized in 1834, bringing together a loose coalition of groups united in their opposition to what party members viewed as the executive tyranny of “King Andrew” Jackson. They borrowed the name Whig from the British party opposed to royal prerogatives.(4 votes)
Video transcript
- [Professor] So we've been talking about Jacksonian democracy, and when we last left off, Andrew Jackson had
defeated John Quincy Adams in the election of 1828, largely by claiming that Quincy Adams had won the previous election through a corrupt bargain. So Jackson played upon the
sympathies of the public by claiming that he was the common man or the representation of the common man. He took advantage of the growing number of white male voters who could participate in elections. And particularly the growing
numbers of frontier settlers, who not only wanted to vote
for the first president to be born in the west, also supported Jackson because he was known for his
anti-Native American sentiment and his promise to remove Native Americans from lands that whites wanted to settle east of the Mississippi. So in the first video in this series, I mentioned that most
scholars point to this moment of Jackson's election in 1828 as the beginning of modern democracy. So let's investigate some of those claims a little bit further. So what was it about Jackson's
election and presidency that began the modern
American political system? Well, for one thing
Jackson was the very first democratic president, as in the first president
to be a modern-day democrat. And this is the same democratic party that we still have today. And Jackson really
mobilized this sentiment of the party of the common man. And in his idea that meant the common white man, that he was not one of these eastern elites, banking elites, who made their fortunes by
nickel-and-diming other people. He was a backwoods frontiersman, a war hero, someone who had pulled
himself up by his bootstrap. So he was, I guess, one of
the earliest self-made men. And it was clear from the
get-go that the age of Jackson was going to be a completely different kind of political culture
than had existed previously because at his inauguration he had a giant inaugural celebration, he opened up the White House to anybody. The rabble came in and
they trashed the place, and the older aristocratic
class of Washington politicians thought that this was more or less the end of the republic as they knew it. This was going to be the era of mob rule. But, you know, the wheels
didn't come off democracy. And one thing that Jackson really did was he rewarded his supporters. He rewarded the people
who had voted Democrat, who saw themselves as part
of the Democratic Party with government positions. And this is called the spoils system, along the lines of to the
victor, go the spoils. So to reward the democratic machine that had put him in office, he kicked out earlier office-holders and rewarded the Democrats with offices. That was very common in this time period for people to be, who are known as office seekers, to kinda hang out in Washington, D.C. trying to get the president to appoint you postmaster of some random place so that you could draw
a government salary. Now, earlier presidents would
have thought something like rewarding an office seeker quite vulgar. John Quincy Adams, for example, refused to replace anyone who
was actually doing a good job in their government post with someone who was
one of his supporters. So you can debate whether or not this is actually a good thing, to kick out people who
are good at their job in favor of people who have supported you during the campaign. But what it does is it
keeps people in the party. So it makes sure that
even if the party loses, they know that they
have put in their labor for the Democratic Party and later for the Whig
and Republican Party. And so they're going to keep working to put their candidate in office so that they can reap some rewards. So this is one way in which Jackson kind of solidifies party politics so that you stop just
being a Jackson partisan, a Jefferson partisan, someone who follows a political candidate. And remember that earlier
political candidates kind of stood as men of virtue, right? Now, the virtue is shifting
from the men themselves to the party that they represent. And this party system was cemented by 1832 when Jackson was reelected, when they held a national
nominating convention, it sounds very familiar to us today, and put out an official party platform. So what else did Jackson do
that was really influential? Ironically, for someone
billing himself as a man of the people, Jackson worked really
hard to expand the power of the Executive Branch. So he wanted the presidency to be as powerful, if not more powerful, than the Judicial Branch or the Legislative Branch
of the United States, more powerful than the
Supreme Court or Congress. And there were two major instances where he shows his interest in becoming the most powerful part of
the American government. One of these was and what's
known as the Bank War when Jackson attempted to kill the bank of the United States, and he succeeded, because he thought that the
national bank was corrupt, that it benefited the elite, that it deserved more oversight
from the federal government, some of which was true. And when congress tried to
recharter the national bank, he vetoed the charter. Basically saying that
he felt that his vote was more important than
the vote of Congress. And for this, a group of
people who started to coalesce around their hatred for Jackson started calling him King Andrew the First because Jackson used the power
of the veto all the time, because he was trying to, in some ways, reduce the power of
the federal government, which was one of the key
tenants of the Democratic Party, but at the same time kind
of increase his own power because he used his veto in many cases to further his own agenda. And as much as the national bank was not a great institution, it did help to keep the
United States' economy more or less humming along. And once Jackson killed it, there was a major
economic depression called the Panic of 1837, which we can lay pretty much
squarely at Jackson's feet. We can see this political
cartoon here has him trampling on the constitution as he pushes his own agenda forward. And it's through their
hatred of Jackson that a new group comes
together, the Whig Party, which will provide the second half of the two-party system
that comes to the fore in this time period. So this is Andrew Jackson arguing that the president has more
power than Congress. There's the second
example of Andrew Jackson trying to argue that he had more power than the Supreme Court, which comes comes in the Trail of Tears. So Andrew Jackson
represented the interests of white settlers who really saw Native Americans as no more than an obstacle to their continuous push westward, the availability of land, which they saw really as the cornerstone of American prosperity. And I can't do justice to the
entire Trail of Tears here. We have an article about that and there'll be more
to come in the future. But suffice it to say
that the American Indians, who were living in Georgia particularly and who were known as
the Five Civilized Tribes because they had adopted many
of the ways of the Europeans including Christianity
and in some cases slavery, the Supreme Court ruled that they were entitled to be
treated as a sovereign nation. So when Georgia is trying
to remove Native Americans from their lands in Georgia, the chief justice of the Supreme Court, John Marshall, rules in their favor. And Andrew Jackson was quoted as saying, "John Marshall has made his decision. "Now let him enforce it." So even though the Supreme Court defended the status of the Native
Americans living in Georgia east of the Mississippi in general, Andrew Jackson and the state of Georgia went ahead with forcing
the Five Civilized Tribes to move westward to Oklahoma during which at least 3,000 people died. So Andrew Jackson serves a second term and finishes out his presidency in 1836. He considered running for a third term, decided against it. Instead, his crony Martin Van Buren, who's basically Andrew Jackson Jr., serves as president for one term. But due to the Panic of 1837, Martin Van Buren, like
poor Herbert Hoover later, is forced to deal with
an economic depression. And you know that people are never happy with the incumbent president when there's an economic decline. So in the election of 1840, the Whigs, the opposition party to Andrew Jackson, run William Henry Harrison
as their candidate. And he is mostly famous for being a fellow who died in
office after only 40 days. But what's interesting about William Henry Harrison's campaign is that the Whigs have
learned their lesson about the political climate
of the Jacksonian age. They marketed William Henry Harrison as having been born in a log cabin, a war hero, he was a man of the people, just a common guy who had pulled himself up by his bootstraps. Now, none of this was true. William Henry Harrison was from Virginia, he was from a very wealthy family, he had been college educated. He was no more rough and tumble than John Quincy Adams had been. But the Whigs had
learned a valuable lesson about what American
political culture was like in the age of mass democracy. And from this point forward, it's clear that Americans
don't like their politicians too highfalutin and woe betide any candidate
who wasn't born in a log cabin, the modern American
political system had begun.