| |
|
|
|
Andrew Jackson - White House Collection
|
|
Andrew Jackson,
the first president born in a log cabin and to hail from
a state beyond the Allegheny Mountains, swept into office
in 1828 with the help of expanded suffrage and the emergence
of new, aggressive approaches to political campaigning.
Jackson, a hero of the War of 1812, was elected as a reform
candidate, the victim of the so-called John Q. Adams-Henry
Clay "corrupt bargain" of 1824. A complex man,
Jackson is often described as loyal, brave, decisive and
honorable, but the adjectives irritable, opinionated,
unbending, and dictatorial are also associated with him.
Though born in poverty, and touted as the "champion
of the poor," by the time of his presidency he was
a wealthy Tennessee plantation owner. While held up as
the first "president of the people," he owned
95 slaves when he took office and 150 by the end of his
two terms. Nor did his democratic spirit extend to Native
Americans whose rights he ignored as he steadfastly oversaw
their removal from their ancient home to undesirable lands
beyond the Mississippi. A man concerned about the honor
of women, he defended the tarnished reputation of the
secretary of war's wife so fiercely that it created a
damaging rift between him and his first cabinet. Despite
his respect for women, the democratizing effects of his
administration did not extend to them. Though calling
himself the protector of the Constitution, as the chief
executive he once refused to enforce a decision of the
U.S. Supreme Court, saying, "[Chief Justice] John
Marshall has made his decision, now let him enforce it."
Yet when Jackson became president on March 4, 1829, the
throngs of "common citizens" who gathered for
his inaugural festivities seemed to view him simply; as
one newspaper put it, he was a man "of plain and
simple dress, . . . unaffected and familiar in his manners."
Further, the editors exclaimed, "It was a proud day
for the people, General Jackson is their own president." Recalling the wild scene at the White House
reception that mild March day, Senator Daniel Webster
of Massachusetts remarked that folks came from 500 miles
away and seemed to think that the country had been "rescued
from some dreadful danger."
This lesson examines factors shaping the people's belief
that Andrew Jackson was "their" president. Using
one case in point, students will consider whether Jackson's
leadership style, often driven by fierce personal loyalties
or hatreds, helped or hurt his efforts to achieve the
goals of his political philosophy.
Objectives
Using
primary documents and data, students will:
- Examine
conditions that contributed to the people's belief,
reflected in the inaugural celebration of March 4,
1829, that Jackson was "their own president"
- more so than those who had been previously elected.
- Assess
the influence of Jackson's aggressive, complex personality
on his effectiveness as a leader by examining the
social and political crisis revolving around Margaret
O'Neal Eaton, the wife of his secretary of war, John
Eaton.
|
|
|