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THE JACKSONIAN ERA (1828-1850): SECTIONALISM AND MANIFEST DESTINY The years between 1828 and 1850 were marked by rapid change, social turmoil, and vigorous growth for the young American republic. During this time, the last of the Founding Fathers died, seven new presidents took office, and the American political process became significantly more democratic. In addition, new lands were acquired from Mexico and seven new states were admitted to the Union. East of the Mississippi, sectional divisions between North and South widened, putting pro-slavery advocates in the South and anti-slavery reformers in the North increasingly onto a collision course. Their disagreements hinged increasingly upon economic justifications for slavery among southerners and moral outrage among northerners. Religious beliefs, racist attitudes, and democratic impulses in the North gave rise to a variety of social reform movements, chief among them perhaps being abolitionism, whose primary aim was to put a definitive end to slavery in America. The unresolved issue of slavery affected the admission of new states to the Union and frequently poisoned Congressional proceedings. Meanwhile, Americans in record numbers were moving westward, gradually pushing the frontier across the Mississippi river and ever closer to the Pacific Ocean. When gold was discovered in California in 1849, the movement westward became a flood of humanity seeking quick riches. Only a few ultimately struck it rich, but many of the less fortunate established permanent homes nearby, assuring the settlement of the far West and swelling the populations of western territories seeking statehood. Finally, revolutionary technological developments during this period were to have a profound impact upon America. The foundation of a modern factory system was established in New England, steam engines were improved and adapted to factory machines and new modes of transportation, canals were dug to speed the movement of bulk goods, railroads made their first appearance and proved to be even more versatile than canals for transporting freight and passengers, and miles of new roads were built, some of them even paved. These technical innovations were more readily accepted and implemented in the North during this time—a reality which was to have a significant impact on the outcome of the Civil War from 1861 to 1865. In the election of 1828, Andrew Jackson defeated John Quincy Adams and became the seventh President of the United States, much to his own satisfaction and to that of his followers, all of whom had felt cheated by the alleged "corrupt bargain" of 1824. Jackson broke the monopoly on executive power which had been held previously by well-to-do New Englanders and prosperous southern planters from Virginia. Jackson himself was a somewhat rough-cut figure—an Indian fighter, victor over the British at New Orleans in 1815, a resident of Tennessee in what was then the West, a man with a reputation for personal toughness whose nickname was "Old Hickory," and a product of the frontier whom the masses could more readily identify with, admire, and follow. His Democratic Party reflected rural more than urban values. Since foreign import taxes (tariffs), banks, and infrastructure development were largely of benefit to eastern merchants, factory owners, and urban dwellers, and since taxes in general were often viewed as a form of governmental oppression, Democrats tended to oppose them, but at the same time, Democrats also tended to be fiercely patriotic. Politically, they sought to empower the common man—at least the common white man—and to give him a more central role in the American political process. Fewer than a quarter million popular votes were cast in the presidential election of 1824, the first election in which popular votes were even recorded. Approximately 1.1 million votes were cast in 1828, with Jackson receiving almost 150,000 more than John Quincy Adams. The number of voters participating in national elections continued to rise in succeeding years, approaching the 3 million mark in the election of 1848. As president, Jackson also instituted the socalled "spoils system," by which he rewarded a large number of his political supporters with governmental positions and appointments. The term derives from the phrase, "to the victor belong the spoils," attributed to a New York senator just after Jackson's election in 1828. The flaw in the system, of course, was that governmental positions were frequently filled on the basis of party loyalty rather than on suitability or competence. Nevertheless, many commoners who likely would not have been selected for governmental service in previous administrations found positions in Jackson's government, and a number of presidents to come would follow Jackson's example. So important was this gradual democratization process of American politics, which began with Andrew Jackson's presidency, that historians often refer to the period from the 1820's to 1850 as the Jacksonian Era. A significant crisis with long term implications arose in 1828 when John Quincy Adams was still in the White House. The National Republicans in Congress approved a bill to impose a tariff or import tax on cheap foreign goods— particularly goods manufactured in Britain. This measure was aimed at protecting America's infant industries in New England. The effect of the tariff was to raise the cost of British goods to the point where Americans would buy primarily American- made products. The tariff was opposed and resented by southerners, however, because it increased the cost of manufactured goods which they needed but could not produce for themselves and because it induced the British to buy less raw cotton from them. In addition, most foreign trade was conducted through northern ports like Boston and particularly New York, and relatively few foreign goods came directly to southern ports like Charleston or Savannah. Southerners therefore knew they would not be deriving much revenue themselves from the new tariff. Led by Vice-President John C. Calhoun of Charleston, South Carolina, southerners lodged a formal protest against the Tariff of 1828, which they began to refer to as the Tariff of Abominations. Calhoun ultimately drew upon the federalist concept of "states' rights" and declared that states had the right to "nullify" laws passed by Congress, to declare them legally null, void, and unconstitutional. This controversial idea divided politicians even in South Carolina and frankly enraged President Jackson, who ultimately sought Congressional authority to use military action if necessary to force South Carolina's compliance with the tariff law. This crisis, created by the Tariff of 1828 and the Nullification Crisis which it provoked was resolved without armed conflict by passage of a compromise Tariff in 1833, brokered by Henry Clay of Kentucky. This incident, however, proved in retrospect to be a harbinger of things to come, for South Carolina in December of 1860 would once again invoke the principle of states' rights and the right of nullification, thereby setting in motion a series of events which would culminate in a devastating civil war. In the election of 1836, the Democratic candidate, Martin Van Buren of New York, was elected the eighth President of the United States. He had served previously as Andrew Jackson's Secretary of State and Vice-President, and his intention was largely to continue Jackson's policies. Both Jackson and Van Buren had opposed the idea of a National Bank, as an institution chiefly serving northern interests and as one of questionable constitutionality. Nonetheless, two national banks had been chartered by Congress. The First Bank of the United States had operated for twenty years (1791-1811), as had the Second Bank of the United States (1816-1836). Jackson's idea was to replace the Second Bank with a variety of smaller, regional institutions, sometimes called by his political opponents "pet banks" or "wildcat banks." They proved to be notoriously unstable, since they operated with little oversight from the government and since their officers were prone to risky investments in hope of getting rich quick. They also often issued their own paper currency, much of which was rendered worthless if they went bankrupt and collapsed. Bank failures could also have wider implications, leading to both the bankruptcy of individuals and to nationwide financial crises. The so-called "Panic of 1837," an economic recession which was in large part a result of these Jacksonian banking reforms, doomed Van Buren to a single term. In the election of 1840, the Whig candidate, William Henry Harrison, became the ninth President of the United States. Like Andrew Jackson, he had been a general in the War of 1812 and an Indian fighter. His main claim to fame was his victory over the Shawnee in the Indiana Territory in November of 1811. The Battle of Tippecanoe disrupted the Shawnee chief Tecumseh's attempt to create a united native American confederacy in the region and made Harrison a national hero, who afterward was referred to as "Old Tippecanoe." He ran for the presidency in 1840 with fellow Whig and Virginian, John Tyler, campaigning under the slogan, "Tippecanoe and Tyler too!" Criticized by his opponents for having been born in a log cabin, when in fact he had been born to a well-to-do family in Virginia, Harrison deliberately campaigned using the symbols of the log cabin and hard cider, both of which, ironically, endeared him to many voters living on or near the frontier. He was the first of only two Whig candidates to win the presidency during the Jacksonian Era. The party had originated in the 1820's from a split in the National Republican ranks and was specifically organized to oppose Andrew Jackson and his policies. In general, Whigs supported whatever Democrats opposed, such as tariffs, a national bank, infrastructure development, and a strong if not dominant Congress. Unfortunately, after delivering a two hour speech outdoors on a cold and rainy inauguration day (March 4, 1841), Harrison developed pneumonia and subsequently died on April 4. He was the first president to die in office, and his presidency remains the shortest on record. His Vice-President, John Tyler, then became the tenth President of the United States, in accord with the provisions for succession detailed in the Constitution. Being the first such succession, there was some initial uncertainty about Tyler's presidential status, but he quickly exerted his authority and established the precedent that presidents who came to the presidency as he had would have the same status as any duly elected president. Tyler finished Harrison's term of office, but having alienated even his own party with his southern sympathies, he stood little chance of election in 1844 and chose to retire to his native Virginia. In 1844, the Democratic Party recaptured the presidency with the election of James K. Polk, the eleventh President of the United States. Polk was born in North Carolina but later moved to Tennessee, where he began his political career. He was a Representative from Tennessee from 1825 to 1839 and served as Speaker of the House from 1835 to 1839. He then served as Governor of Tennessee from 1839 to 1841. An ardent expansionist, Polk's policies as president were aimed at adding new territory to the nation and encouraging settlement of the West. He offered to buy from Mexico territory now making up the southwestern part of the United States, and when that effort failed, sought to win it from Mexico by war. The Mexican War (1846-1848) proved to be important not only because of new territory acquired but also because it gave many of the officers who were to fight for both North and South during the Civil War their first experience of combat and command. Polk declined to run for reelection in 1848, primarily because of ill health, and in fact he died only a few months after leaving office. The Whigs again recaptured the presidency in 1848 with the election of another veteran of the War of 1812, Indian fighter, and general during the Mexican War—Zachary Taylor, the twelfth President of the United States. Having never held political office before, Taylor was not particularly committed to any party's political agenda, including that of the Whig Party which had nominated him for president. He viewed himself as an independent and thereby made enemies, even within his own party. His political influence, however, was to be relatively slight, for he died unexpectedly on July 9, 1850, after a brief illness. On July 4, he had attended a ceremony marking the beginning of construction of the Washington Monument and had fallen ill later the same day. Thus, the only two Whigs to be elected president in general elections died in office and were the first presidents in American history to be succeeded by their Vice-Presidents. VicePresident Millard Fillmore, also a Whig, completed Taylor's term but failed to receive his party's nomination for president in the election of 1852. The early 19th century was a period of rapid technological innovation and development in America. Eli Whitney's cotton gin (short for "engine," meaning "machine") first appeared in the 1790's, and its influence in the early 1800's was to be immense. It quickly and efficiently separated cotton lint, used in the manufacture of thread and cloth, from cotton seeds, which could be pressed for their valuable oils. Before it became available, seeds had to be removed by hand—a process that was slow and expensive. This single machine made cotton production in the South profitable, and cotton production in turn made slavery necessary, inducing the South to base its regional economy largely on this single cash crop. Also, just as the cotton gin was being developed, a textile industry was being founded in New England by immigrants from Britain and in some cases by Americans who had traveled to Britain to learn its textile manufacturing methods. Southern growers were therefore able to sell their raw cotton both domestically and on the foreign market. By 1807, Robert Fulton's Clermont, the first operational steamboat, was traveling up and down the Hudson river, inaugurating a transportation revolution which was to transform America in the coming decades. The first steam-powered railroads appeared as early as the 1820's in England and soon afterward in America, but the great age of railroad expansion in America would not come until after the Civil War. Major roads were under construction in America also by the early 1800's, beginning with several regional "turnpikes". Work on the so-called "National Road" began in Maryland in 1811, and it ultimately reached into Illinois upon completion in 1839. The Boonsboro Turnpike in Maryland, completed in 1822, is usually recognized as America's first paved road. Between 1817 and 1825, the Erie Canal was dug to link the Hudson river at Albany with Lake Erie at Buffalo, New York. Although expensive and controversial at the time, it stimulated unprecedented economic growth in the region, and its economic value far exceeded the estimates of its backers. Furthermore, it stimulated a flurry of canal-building in the East. In the 1830's and 1840's, several American inventions were to have a significant impact on modern life and culture. In 1834, Cyrus Hall McCormick received a patent for the first mechanical reaper or harvester, a mechanical device for harvesting grain. His harvester and the improved agricultural devices which it spawned allowed fewer farmers to process larger volumes of grain and in time helped to make America one of the world's chief agricultural producers. In 1835, Samuel Colt invented the revolver, commonly called a "six-shooter." This handgun quickly became an essential possession of pioneers moving westward and of people living in western territories of the United States. In 1838, Samuel F.B. Morse invented a practical system for sending messages with electrical signals, the "morse code," and in 1843 he convinced Congress to appropriate funds for stringing telegraph lines between Baltimore and Washington, D.C. Before long, there would be hundreds of miles of telegraph lines interconnecting the entire country and inaugurating a communications revolution. In 1839, Charles Goodyear discovered, quite by accident, how to make durable rubber from latex, a natural sap from tropical trees. This invention would find broad applications in the years ahead. Finally, in 1846, Elias Howe obtained a patent for the first modern sewing machine, a device which would not only change the way clothes were made in the home but give rise to a clothing industry both in America and across the world. Around 1800, a second religious revival movement began in America, rivaling the First Great Awakening of almost a century before. It gained considerable momentum in the 1820's, 1830's, and 1840's, and spread from the East to the frontier. Known as the Second Great Awakening, it had a transforming effect on American culture and helped pave the path to civil war. Ordinary people were not only converted but enjoined to change their sinful ways, to live lives in imitation of Christ, and to be agents of change in the world. The followers of the apocalyptic preacher, William Miller, called Millerites, fervently believed Miller's predictions of the Second Coming of Christ in 1844, and were bitterly disappointed when it failed to occur. His movement, however, gave rise to a new sect which survives today—the Seventh-day Adventists. The most important legacy of the Second Great Awakening, however, was that it inspired a wide range of social reform movements, including campaigns to control the sale, consumption, and abuse of alcoholic beverages (temperance), to improve education, to found utopian communes, to extend the rights of women, to put an end to the slave trade, and particularly to put an end to slavery itself (abolitionism). Much of the moral indignation which northerners came to have against slavery rested on a religious foundation created by the Second Great Awakening. By any measure, one of the most important occurrences of the period between 1828 and 1850 was the Westward Movement, the migration of vast numbers of settlers from the East toward the Mississippi river and beyond into the so-called "Trans-Mississippi West." A major obstacle to this migration, so far as many settlers were concerned, was the native Indian population lying across their path. To many of them, Indians were at best a hindrance and a nuisance, at worst inferior and savage creatures to be removed by whatever means necessary. In general, the United States government agreed and passed legislation to acquire Indian lands or to remove Inidans forcibly to reservations in remote and, frankly, less valuable parts of the country. The wholesale relocation of southeastern tribes was authorized by the Indian Removal Act of 1830, and the subsequent "Trail of Tears" resulted in thousands of deaths among Cherokee Indians from eastern Tennessee and western North Carolina, many of whom began their long and arduous journey to reservation lands in Oklahoma from Chattanooga, Tennessee. Around 1810, Moses Austin (and later his son Stephen Austin) conceived the idea of bringing settlers into the region which is now Texas. At the time, it belonged to Mexico. The Mexican government sanctioned the migration at first, but Mexican officials became alarmed as the number of Americans began to grow rapidly. When restrictions were imposed upon them, they protested and continued to move into the region without permission. That prompted the Mexican dictator, Santa Anna, to action, and in 1836, the settlers declared war on Mexico. They were defeated at the historic siege of the Alamo in early March, but they defeated Santa Anna at the Battle of San Jacinto only a few weeks later, forcing the Mexican government to recognize their independence. The Lone Star Republic of Texas (its flag bore a single star) was thus established in 1836, and Texas subsequently became a state in 1845. Political columnist, John L. O'Sullivan, writing in the "Democratic Review" in 1845 had argued for Texas statehood and in his article entitled "Annexation" had first used the term, "Manifest Destiny." He meant to suggest that America was clearly ("manifestly") fated ("destined") to spread from Atlantic coast to Pacific coast and that this continent-wide expansion was God's will. The term was quickly picked up by others and used to justify a variety of efforts to incorporate western lands into the growing American Union. The Mexican War (1846-1848) which followed resulted in the acquisition of new territories now making up the American Southwest. These lands of the so-called "Mexican Cession" included what is now California, Nevada, Utah, most of Arizona, and the western parts of New Mexico, Colorado, and Wyoming. Anticipating the eventual addition of these lands to the United States, Pennsylvania Senator David Wilmot proposed in 1846 that slavery be banned from any states organized from them. Called the "Wilmot Proviso," it passed in the House of Representatives twice but was blocked each time in the Senate. New territory thus was to intensify sectional strife fueled by the slavery issue. New states added to the Union between 1828 and 1850 included: Arkansas (1836), Michigan (1837), Florida (1845), Texas (1845), Iowa (1846), Wisconsin (1848), and California (1850)—an even balance of slave and free states before the addition of California. Admission of California as a free state came as a consequence of the Compromise of 1850, a series of bills aimed at keeping sectional strife under control. It was also a consequence of the California Gold Rush of 1849, which had led to a rapid increase in the state's population and had helped to swell the populations of nearby states as well. In partial compensation for California's admission to the Union as a free state, the South sought and received passage of a Fugitive Slave law, requiring northern states to participate in the arrest and return of southern slaves who had escaped to the North. This law was particularly hated by northerners, some of whom vowed not to obey it. The Jacksonian Era was thus a dynamic period of American history, marked by political democratization, westward movement and territorial expansion, technological innovation, religious revival, social reform, and optimism about the future. It was also, however, marked by harsh treatment of native Americans, polarization of political parties, and sectional strife between North and South. By 1850, despite an historic compromise, the central issue of slavery was poised to plunge the nation into the most devastating war it has ever experienced.