Chapter 7 Section 3 The Age of Jackson. Big Ideas MAIN IDEA Andrew Jackson’s policies spoke for...

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Chapter 7 Section 3 The Age of Jackson

Transcript of Chapter 7 Section 3 The Age of Jackson. Big Ideas MAIN IDEA Andrew Jackson’s policies spoke for...

Page 1: Chapter 7 Section 3 The Age of Jackson. Big Ideas MAIN IDEA  Andrew Jackson’s policies spoke for the common people but violated Native American rights.

Chapter 7Section 3The Age of Jackson

Page 2: Chapter 7 Section 3 The Age of Jackson. Big Ideas MAIN IDEA  Andrew Jackson’s policies spoke for the common people but violated Native American rights.

Big Ideas

MAIN IDEAAndrew Jackson’s policies spoke for the common people but violated Native American rights.WHY IT MATTERS NOW

The effects of land losses and persecution faced by Native Americans in the 1800’s continue to be reflected in their legal struggles today.

Page 3: Chapter 7 Section 3 The Age of Jackson. Big Ideas MAIN IDEA  Andrew Jackson’s policies spoke for the common people but violated Native American rights.

Expanding Democracy Changes Politics

ELECTION OF 1824

Andrew Jackson vs. John Quincy Adams.

Andrew Jackson received the more popular votes than any other candidate.

No candidate won the required amount of electoral votes: 131

House of Representatives would vote to determine a winner.

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Tensions Between Adams & JacksonELECTION OF 1824

Speaker of the House of Representatives: Henry Clay Personally disliked Jackson Felt that Jackson wasn’t qualified to be President

Clay persuaded congressmen to vote for John Quincy Adams

John Quincy Adams would receive a majority of the votes in the House and won the Presidential Election of 1824.

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Tensions Between Adams & Jackson: continuedJacksonians (followers of Jackson), accused Adams of

stealing the presidency.

John Q. Adams: appointed Henry Clay as his Secretary of Andrew Jackson and his followers LEFT the Republican Party and

formed the Democratic-Republican Party: the present day Democrats.

During the next four years Jackson did whatever he could to sabotage Adam’s policies.

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Democracy & CitizenshipFrom 1824-1828 voting requirements

were eased in most states.

Many more individuals (poor white males) were now eligible to vote.

In 1824, approximately 350,000 white males voted while in 1828 over 1 million voted in the presidential election.

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Jackson’s New Presidential Style Expansion of voting

rights meant that political leaders had to be able to sympathize with the common citizen.

Jackson’s grass roots upbringing and belief in the common man enabled him to win the election of 1828 with ease.

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Jackson’s Appeal to the Common Citizen Jackson labeled John Quincy Adams an intellectual elitist and out of touch with the typical American. Jackson would win the election of 1828 by a landslide..

Page 9: Chapter 7 Section 3 The Age of Jackson. Big Ideas MAIN IDEA  Andrew Jackson’s policies spoke for the common people but violated Native American rights.

Jackson’s Spoils SystemUpon taking office, Jackson fired 10% of all federal government employees who were appointed during other president’s terms.

Jackson gave jobs to his friends and political allies to reward them.

Jackson’s friends became his primary advisors. This practice became known as the spoils system.

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The Removal of Native Americans Many Native American tribes in the south-east

adopted typical white-American culture. (government, court system, a written constitution

modeled after the US, newspaper, etc.)

5 Civilized Tribes: (Cherokee, Choctaw, Seminole, Creek, and Chickasaw)

occupied large areas of valuable land in Georgia, North & South Carolina, Alabama, Mississippi, and Tennessee.

White miners, businessmen, and planters wanted land that Native Americans were living on.

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Civilized Tribes

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Forced Removal of Native Americans

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Indian Removal Act of 1830

Jackson: only solution to the Native American issue was to force them to move to lands in the west.

Congress passed the Indian Removal Act: federal government provided funds to negotiate

treaties that would force the 5 tribes to move west.

President Jackson believed the removal policy was ‘generous’ because it would enable Native Americans to maintain their way of life.

90 treaties were signed with many Native American tribes in return for their homeland.

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Trail of Tears

Jackson pressed the Choctaw to sign a treaty that required them to move from their homeland in Mississippi.

In 1831, he ordered US troops to forcibly remove the Sauk & Fox from their lands in Alabama & Mississippi.

Cherokee Nation tried used the US legal system to attain ‘equal rights’

Chief Justice Marshall initially felt that the Cherokee Nation had no federal standing: “it was neither a foreign nation, nor a state, but rather a ‘domestic dependent nation’.”

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Trail of Tears: continuedCherokee: teamed up with Samuel Austin

Worcester to fight the Indian Removal Act in the Supreme Court.

Chief Justice John Marshall ruled in favor of the Cherokee. Marshall ruled that the United States had no right to forcibly take the land of the Cherokee nation.

President Jackson refused to obey the Supreme Court’s decision.

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Trail of Tears: continued Federal agents signed a treaty with a small group of

Cherokee leaders who were willing to leave their land. (Those Cherokee leaders would be assassinated by other Cherokee)

October 1838, US Army troops began forcing the Cherokee to travel from Georgia to the new Indian territory in Oklahoma.

The 800 mile trip was mostly on foot. During the trip, government officials stole money, livestock, etc.

Over 25 % of the entire Cherokee tribe died on route to Oklahoma.

The event would be known as the ‘Trail of Tears’.