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Unit 2: Building the Nation 1776-1860 • Chapter 9: The Confederation and the Constitution, 1776-1790 • Chapter 10: Launching the New Ship of State, 1789-1800 • Chapter 11: The Triumphs and Travails of the Jeffersonian Republic, 18001812 • Chapter 12: The Second War for Independence and the Upsurge of Nationalism, 1812-1824 • Chapter 13: The Rise of a Mass Democracy, 1824-1840 • Chapter 14: Forging a National Economy, 1790-1860 • Chapter 15: The Ferment of Reform and Culture, 1790-1860 • Unit Exam: Politics & Power Chapter 13 The Rise of Mass Democracy, 1824-1840 “In the full enjoyment of the gifts of Heaven and the fruits of superior industry, economy, and virtue, every man is equally entitled to protection by law; but when the laws undertake to add to those natural and just advantages artificial distinctions . . . and exclusive privileges . . . the humble members of society – the farmers, mechanics, and laborers . . . have a right to complain of the injustice of their government.” Andrew Jackson, 1832 I. The “Corrupt Bargain” of 1824 • Corrupt bargain (1824) last old-style election • John Quincy Adams-Mass., Henry Clay-Kentucky, William H. Crawford-Georgia, Andrew Jackson-Tenn. – ALL “REPUBLICANS” • Results of the campaign: Jackson won the popular vote, but no candidate won a majority of the electoral college votes • Deadlock must be broken by the House of Representatives (12th Amendment) • How did this play out? • Why was it so controversial? Clockwise from top left Andrew Jackson, Henry Clay, William Crawford, and John Quincy Adams They were all best friends, except that they weren’t. Jackson and JQA strongly disliked each other. The intellectual vs. the soldier. Clay and Jackson, rivals in the west, detested each other. Crawford didn’t live long enough to be a major factor in the House of Representatives. II. A Yankee Misfit in the White House • He ranks as one of the most successful secretaries of state, yet one of the least successful presidents • First “minority president”—had difficulty winning popular support • Honor! – He was so “old school”. • While most people were moving away from nationalism towards sectionalism, JQA remained a nationalist: roads, canals, etc. • Public reaction to these proposals was negative. John Quincy Adams 6th President of the United States “One-termer” just like his dear old dad III. Going “Whole Hog” for Jackson in 1828 • Election of 1828 started immediately after the election of 1824 • Jeffersonian Republicans split: • The National Republicans with Adams • The Democratic-Republicans with Jackson • Election Day: Americans split along sectional lines • Jackson supporters came from the West and South • The middle states/Old Northwest were divided • Adams won New England and the Northeast • Electoral College: Jackson 178, Adams 83 IV. “Old Hickory” as President • President Andrew Jackson: • The first president from the West • The first nominated at a formal party convention (1832) • Only the second without a college education (Washington was the first) • Jackson rose from the masses to become a “frontier aristocrat”. • Jackson’s inauguration: • Symbolized the ascendancy of the masses. • The White House, for the first time, was thrown open. The “Inaugural Brawl”, 1829 V. The Spoils System • Spoils System—rewarding political supporters with public office • Was introduced into the federal government on a large scale. • Jackson defined it on democratic grounds: • “Every man is as good as his neighbor, perhaps equally better.” • Washington was due for a housecleaning. • The spoils system was mostly about rewarding long-time supporters. • Scandal accompanied the new system. • Those who openly bought their posts by campaign contributions were appointed to high office – were they qualified?? VI. The Tricky “Tariff of Abominations” • Tariffs—problem for Adams and Jackson: • Tariffs protected American industry – good for NE & supported by middle colonies • Tariffs also drove up prices for all Americans – especially southerners who didn’t make any of their own manufactured goods • Tariffs invited retaliatory tariffs on American agricultural exports abroad • “Tariff of Abominations” - 1829 • In 1824 Congress had increased the general tariff significantly – Jacksonites said “NOOOO!!” • Congressional Jacksonites supported a high-tariff bill in 1828 as a jab at Adams – never expected it to pass, but it did problem for Jackson when he took over in 1829 VI. The Tricky “Tariff of Abominations” (cont.) • Much deeper issues behind southern hatred of tariffs: a growing anxiety about possible federal interference with the institution of slavery • The South Carolina Exposition: • It was secretly written by John C. Calhoun (Jackson’s VP!) • It denounced the recent tariff as unjust and unconstitutional. • It bluntly and explicitly proposed that the states should nullify the tariff. John C. Calhoun South Carolinian States’ Rights Advocate VII. “Nullies” in South Carolina • The Nullification Crisis • SC Delegates, meeting in Columbia, declared the existing tariff null and void in South Carolina. • The convention threatened to take South Carolina out of the union if Washington attempted to collect the customs duties by force. • Jackson did not support the tariff, but believed in preserving the union above all else. • He threatened to invade the state and have the nullifiers hanged & issued an anti-nullification proclamation • Henry Clay stepped forward: Compromise Tariff of 1833 gradually reduced the tariff • Congress passed the Force Bill—which authorized the president to use the army and navy if necessary to collect federal tariff duties. Henry Clay “The Great Compromiser” “Harry of the West” “Stealer of Jackson’s Thunder” Jackson: “Our federal Union: It must be preserved.” Calhoun: “To the Union, next to our liberty, most dear.” Jackson (left) and Calhoun (right) pictured later in life. If you stare into Calhoun’s eyes long enough, all the secrets of the universe will be revealed to you. p255 VIII. The Trail of Tears • 125,000 Native Americans lived east of Mississippi • Many whites wanted to civilize/Christianize the natives. • “Five Civilized Tribes”—Cherokees, Creeks, Choctaws, Chickasaws, and Seminoles • Jackson wanted to open native lands to white settlement • Indian Removal Act (1830) • Forced removal of all native tribes (100,000) then living east of the Mississippi • Many died of forced migration, most notably the Cherokees along the Trail of Tears (1838-1839) • The Bureau of Indian Affairs was established in 1836. • Some natives did resist: • Black Hawk War of 1832 ended brutally. • In Florida the Seminole Natives, led by Osceola, joined runaway black slaves in the Everglades (fought 1835-1842). Jackson the “Great Father” Indian Removals, 1830–1846 p257 IX. The Bank War • Jackson did not hate all banks and all business, but he distrusted monopolist banking and big businesses. • The Second Bank of the United States had been a source of credit and stability for a growing economy. • But the Bank was a private institution: • Bank President Nicholas Biddle had immense power (constitutional?) • To some, the bank seemed to sin against American democracy – Jackson was of this belief. • 1832: Daniel Webster and Henry Clay presented the Congress with an early bill to renew the Bank of the United States’ charter • WHY recharter the bank early? – political attack on Jackson • Jackson vetoed the bill anyway – established real power of the veto over Congress Nicholas Biddle President of the Second National Bank of the United States & Lex Luthor to Jackson’s Superman X. “Old Hickory” Wallops Clay in 1832 • Clay and Jackson were the main candidates. • For the first time a third party entered the field—the newborn Anti-Masonic Party. • First time: calling of national nominating conventions (three of them) to name candidates • The Anti-Masons and the National Republicans added the formal platform, publicizing their positions on the issues • Clay and National Republicans had support of National Bank’s funds and the newspapers. • Yet Jackson, hero of the masses, easily defeated Clay (219-49). XI. Burying Biddle’s Bank • The Bank of the United States was due to expire in 1836 – Jackson didn’t wait, removed all government funds as his second term began. • The death of the Bank of the United States left a financial vacuum. • More funds were deposited in state banks – “wildcat” pet banks – no central control led to booms and busts. • Jackson tried to control the ups and downs. • He authorized the Treasury to issue a Specie Circular—a decree that required all public land to be purchased with “hard,” or metallic, money. • This brought the speculative boom to an end, thus contributing to the financial panic and crash in 1837. “The bank, Mr. Van Buren, is trying to kill me. But I will kill it.” -President Andrew Jackson XII. The Birth of the Whigs • 1828: the Democratic-Republicans adopted the name “Democrats” • The Whigs were created by Jackson’s opponents – Clay, Webster, Calhoun • Others who joined the Whigs: supporters of Clay’s American System, southern states’ righters, larger northern industrialists and merchants, and many evangelical Protestants • Whigs supported active government in a market economy. • Called for internal improvements like canals, railroads, telegraph lines, and support for institutions-prisons, asylums, and public schools. • By absorbing the Anti-Masonic party, they appealed to the common man. XIII. The Election of 1836 • Martin Van Buren (D-NY) was Jackson’s chosen successor. • The Whigs were unable to nominate one candidate. • The Whigs’ strategy was to run several “favorite sons”: • Each “son” had a different regional appeal, hoping to scatter the vote so no one candidate would win a majority to the House! • The Whigs’ scheme failed – Van Buren won 170-124 XIV. Big Woes for the “Little Magician” • Martin Van Buren: first president to be born after Revolution • MVB’s Problems: • Was seen as a politician who was created by the “political machine” – Jackson had been a man of the people. • He inherited his mentor’s enemies. • MVB in the White House: • Rebellions in Canada caused trouble along border in 1837. • Abolitionists were condemning the the possible annexation of Texas. • Jackson left the economic beginnings of the Panic of 1837. Martin Van Buren 8th President of the United States & early proponent of “big hair” XV. Depression Doldrums and the Independent Treasury • The Panic of 1837: basic cause was rampant speculation prompted by a mania of “get-rich-quickism”. • Over-speculation spread through “wildcat banks” to canals, roads, railroads, and slaves. • Jackson’s financial policies, including the Bank War and the Species Circular, gave an additional jolt. • Failures of wheat crops deepened the distress. • RESULT: American banks collapsed, prices dropped, sale of public lands dropped, revenue dried up, factories closed • Whigs had proposals for active government remedies: called for the expansion of bank credit, higher tariffs, and for internal improvements. • Van Buren’s “Divorce Bill” ignored Whig ideas. • “Divorce” the government from banking altogether using an independent treasury – not popular, but it passed in 1840. The Long Bill Americans who bought on credit, confident that they could make their payments later, were caught off guard by the panic of 1837. Customers like the one shown here found themselves confronted with a “long bill” that they could not pay, particularly when the banks holding their savings collapsed. XVI. Gone to Texas • In 1821 Mexicans won their independence. • 1823: Mexico concluded agreements for granting part of Texas to Stephen Austin. • He would bring 300 Roman Catholic American families to Texas to become “Mexicanized” • By, 1835, there were 30,000 Americans in Texas: Davy Crockett, Jim Bowie, Sam Houston • Friction increased between Mexicans and Texans. • The Texans refused to honor Mexican decrees on slavery, immigration. • War: Mexican Dictator Santa Anna wiped out all rights of Texans in 1835 & raised an army to use against Texans – he messed with Texas. Sam Houston The “Texan GW” XVII. The Lone Star Rebellion • In 1836 Texas declared its independence: Lone Star Republic w/Sam Houston as president • Santa Anna & 6000 men invaded Texas. • He trapped 200 Texans at the Alamo in San Antonio. • Later 400 Texans was surrounded and killed at Goliad. • Results: Alamo & Goliad delayed the Mexican advance and galvanized American opposition – “Remember the Alamo!” • General Sam Houston’s small army retreated to the east: San Jacinto • Mexicans were 13,000 men, and the Texans 900 • On April 21, 1836, Houston, taking advantage of the Mexican siesta, wiped out the pursuing forces and captured Santa Anna • Terms of the treaty: Mexican troops withdrew, Rio Grande became border • Texas petitioned for annexation in 1837 – disrupted by the slavery question “Come and Take It” This mosaic, done in 1959 by Bert Rees of Austin, Texas, shows one of the defenders’ cannon, as well as their legendary battle flag of defiance. p266 XVIII. Log Cabins and Hard Cider of 1840 • Martin Van Buren was re-nominated in 1840 by the Democrats. • The Whigs nominated one candidate: Ohio’s William Henry Harrison & John Tyler • Whigs published no official platform – WHY? • Whigs adopted hard cider and log cabin as symbols • Electoral Vote: Harrison won the popular vote by a small margin, but destroyed MVB in the electoral college 234-60. Harrison and Tyler Campaign Kerchief, 1840 As the two-party system came into its own by 1840, presidential elections became more public contests. Lively campaigns used banners, posters, flags, and other paraphernalia like this kerchief to whip up voters’ support. Log Cabin Whigs took particular interest in attracting female supporters. They gathered up women at campaign stops, supplied them with Harrison kerchiefs for waving at key moments, and included them conspicuously in events. Although women could not vote, they had moral influence on their menfolk that the Whigs hoped to tap. p270 Martin Van Buren Gags on Hard Cider This 1840 “pull-card” shows Van Buren on the left as an aristocratic fop sipping champagne. When the right-hand card was pulled out, Van Buren’s face soured as he discovered that his “champagne” was actually hard cider. The cartoonist clearly sympathized with Van Buren’s opponent in the 1840 presidential election, William Henry Harrison, who waged the famous “log cabin and hard cider” campaign. Martin Van Buren Gags on Hard Cider This 1840 “pull-card” shows Van Buren on the left as an aristocratic fop sipping champagne. When the right-hand card was pulled out, Van Buren’s face soured as he discovered that his “champagne” was actually hard cider. The cartoonist clearly sympathized with Van Buren’s opponent in the 1840 presidential election, William Henry Harrison, who waged the famous “log cabin and hard cider” campaign. Poor Marty . . . XIX. Politics for the People • The election of 1840 conclusively demonstrated two major changes in American politics since the Era of Good Feelings: • The triumph of a populist democratic style • Aristocracy is out, democracy is respected • Politicians were now forced to go to the masses • The common man was at last moving to the center of the national political stage. The County Election, by George Caleb Bingham, 1851–1852 The artist here gently satirizes the drinking and wheeling and dealing that sometimes marred the electoral process in the boisterous age of Jacksonian politics. XX. The Two-Party System • The second dramatic change resulting from the 1840 election was the formation of a vigorous and durable two-party system. • Both national parties were parties of the people who claimed Jefferson as their greatest influence. • But they had some real differences: • Democrats: • Glorified the liberty of the individual & states • Guarded against the overbearing federal government • Whigs: • Glorified the natural harmony of society and the value of community • Were willing to use government to realize their objectives • Tended to favor a renewed national bank, protective tariffs, internal improvements, public schools, and moral reforms—prohibition and slavery While the Whigs would not last, and the Democratic Party would undergo incredible changes after the age of Jackson, these two parties helped create the political system that exists today.