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Anti-Masonic Party -- The Anti-Masonic Party was basically against elite groups such as the Masons (a private, secret organization). They were also opposed to Jackson, who was a Mason. The Anti-Masonic party did not hold much bearing while they existed.

Revolution of 1828 – This was the election of 1828. The candidates for president were John Q. Adams and Andrew Jackson. The election of 1828 is often called the "Revolution of 1828" because there was an increased turnout of voters at this election (50% of eligible voters, twice the number of four years prior). The large turnout proved that the common people now had the vote and the will to use it for their ends. The results of the election show that the political center of gravity was shifting away from the conservative eastern seaboard and toward the emerging states across the mountains. The revolution was peaceful and achieved by ballots. America had been ruled by the elite brains and wealthy class. In this sense, it was similar to Jefferson’s “Revolution of 1800.” Jackson's victory accelerated the transfer of national power from the countinghouse to the farmhouse, from the East to the West, and from the snobs to the mobs.

King Mob -- Nickname for all the new participants in government that came with Jackson's presidency. This nickname was negative and proposed that Jackson believed in too much democracy, perhaps leading to anarchy.

Corrupt Bargain -- Immediately after John Quincy Adams became president in 1824, he appointed Henry Clay as Secretary of State. Jacksonians were furious because all former Secretaries of State became presidents. This "corrupt bargain" occurred after the Election of 1824 when Andrew Jackson had the most electoral votes, but not a majority. Then, Speaker of the House Henry Clay (having the least of the electoral votes and thereby being eliminated) gave his support to John Q. Adams, giving him the winning vote and making him president. Jacksonians question whether John Q. Adams made Henry Clay Sec. of State for payback in giving his votes.

Kitchen Cabinet -- President Jackson had an official cabinet, but its members were used more as executive clerks than anything else. Jackson had a private cabinet of about thirteen members that were always changing. The cabinet grew out of Jackson's unofficial meetings and was known as "the Kitchen Cabinet." Jackson's adversaries and enemies gave the group of advisors this name.

Tariff of Abominations -- (1) An extremely high tariff (45%) that Jacksonian Democrats tried to get Adams to veto. (2) caused a sectional split and began the nullification crisis led by John C. Calhoun of South Carolina. (3) Prelude to the Civil War.

Eaton Affair – John Eaton, Secretary of War, married the daughter of a Washington boardinghouse keeper, Peggy O'Neal. She had rumors spread about her and the male boarders. She was snubbed by ladies in Jackson's cabinet and especially Vice President Calhoun's wife. The president wanted to help her because his wife had been the object of many rumors. He tried to force the social acceptance of Peggy. This was called the "Petticoat War." The Eaton scandal played into the hands of Secretary of State Van Buren. He paid attention to Mrs. Eaton so he could get on Jackson's good side. Jackson turned against Calhoun and in 1831 Calhoun's supporters broke away from cabinet. Calhoun resigned the vice presidency the next year and entered the Senate for South Carolina.

South Carolina Exposition -- A pamphlet published by the South Carolina legislature, written secretly by Vice President John C. Calhoun. It spoke against the "Tariff of Abominations," and proposed nullification of the tariff. Calhoun wished to use nullification to prevent secession, yet address the grievances of sectionalist Southerners. These sectionalist ideas helped lead to the Civil War.

Maysville Road – The Maysville road was a road built within Kentucky and was considered an individual state road, but was connected to an interstate. Andrew Jackson withheld funds from localized roads and vetoed a bill for improving the Maysville road. This was a great setback for the internal improvements of the American society.

Twelfth Amendment – Cleans up the electoral process for electing the president. Was made to avoid a situation like what occurred in 1800 with Thomas Jefferson and with Andrew Jackson/John Q. Adams in 1824’s “Corrupt Bargain” election.

Chapter 14



Jacksonian Democracy at Flood Tide


  1. Nullies” in South Carolina

    1. South Carolinians, still scornful toward the Tariff of 1828, attempted to garner the necessary two-thirds majority to nullify it in the S.C. legislature, but determined Unionists blocked them.

    2. In response to the anger at the “Tariff of Abominations,” Congress passed the Tariff of 1832, which did away with the worst parts of the Tariff of 1828, such as lowering the tariff down to 35%, a reduction of 10%, but many southerners still hated it.

    3. In the elections of 1832, the Nullies came out with a two-thirds majority over the Unionists, met in the state legislature, and declared the Tariff of 1832 to be void within S.C. boundaries.

      1. They also threatened with secession against the Union, causing a huge problem.

      2. President Jackson issued a ringing proclamation against S.C., to which governor Hayne issued a counter-proclamation, and civil war loomed dangerously.

      3. To compromise and prevent Jackson from crushing S.C. and becoming more popular, the president’s rival, Henry Clay, proposed a compromise bill that would gradually reduce the Tariff of 1832 by about 10% over a period of eight years, so that by 1842 the rates would be down to 20% to 25%.

          1. The Tariff of 1833 narrowly squeezed through Congress.

          2. However, to save face, Congress also passed the Force Bill (AKA the “Bloody Bill”) that authorized the president to use the army and navy, if necessary, to collect tariffs.

    4. No other states had supported South Carolina’s stance of possible secession, though Georgia and Virginia toyed with the idea.

    5. Finally, S.C. repealed the nullification ordinance.

  2. A Victory for Both Union and Nullification

    1. The Unionists felt that they had won, since Jackson had forced the South Carolinians to repeal their nullification law, plus he’d avoided civil war and an armed clash.

    2. The Nullies felt that they had won too, since they had succeeded in lowering the tariff without losing principle; the people of Charleston, the “Cradle of Secession,” threw a gala for its volunteer troops, though they now ominously considered secession more than nullification.

    3. Generations later, many people felt that if S.C. had been crushed, there would have been no Civil War, since it would not have been so brazen and arrogant and haughty.

  3. The Bank as a Political Football

    1. Jackson and his followers distrusted monopolistic banking and oversized businesses.

      1. He was especially wary of the Bank of the United States (BUS).

    2. In 1832, Henry Clay, in a strategy to bring Jackson’s popularity down so that he could defeat him for presidency, rammed a bill for the re-chartering of the BUS—four years early.

      1. He felt that if Jackson signed it, he’d alienate his followers in the West and South, and if he vetoed it, he’d lose the supports of the “best people” of the East.

      2. He failed to realize that the West held more power now, not the East.

    3. The re-charter bill passed through Congress easily, but Jackson demolished it in a scorching veto that condemned the BUS as unconstitutional (despite political foe John Marshall’s ruling that it was okay), and anti-American.

    4. The veto amplified the power of the president by ignoring the Supreme Court and aligned the West against the East.

  4. Brickbats and Bouquets for the Bank

    1. The BUS, led by Nicholas Biddle, was harsh on the volatile western “wildcat” banks that churned out unstable money and too-lenient credit for land (which the westerners loved). The BUS seemed pretty autocratic and out of touch with America during its New Democracy era, and it was corrupt.

      1. Nicholas Biddle cleverly lent U.S. funds to friends, and often used the money of the BUS to bribe people, like the press.

    2. However, the bank was financially sound, reduced bank failures, issued sound notes, promoted economic expansion by making abundant credit, and was a safe depository for the funds of the Washington government.

    3. It was highly important and useful, though sometimes not necessarily pure and wholesome.

  5. “Old Hickory” Wallops Clay in 1832

    1. Jackson’s supporters again raised the hickory pole while Clay’s men detracted Jackson’s dueling, gambling, cockfighting, and fast living.

    2. However, a new third party, the Anti-Masonic Party, made its entrance for the first time.

      1. Opposed to the fearsome secrecy of the Masonic order, it was energized by the mysterious murder of someone who threatened to expose the Freemason’s secrets.

      2. While sharing Jacksonian ideals, they were against Jackson, a Mason.

      3. Also, they were supported by churches hoping to pass religious reform.

    3. Also for the first time, national conventions were held to nominate candidates.

    4. Clay had the money and the “support” of the press, but the poor people voted too, and Jackson won handily, handing Clay his third loss in three tries.

  6. Badgering Biddle’s Bank

    1. Hoping to kill the BUS, Jackson now began to withdraw federal funds from the bank, so as to drain it of its wealth; in reaction, Biddle began to call for unnecessary loans, personally causing a mini panic.

    2. Jackson won, and in 1836, the BUS breathed its last breath, but because it had been the only source of sure credit in the United States, hard times fell upon the West once the BUS died, since the wildcat banks were very unreliable.

  7. Transplanting the Tribes

    1. By 1830, the U.S. population stood at 13 million, and as states emerged, the Indians were stranded.

    2. Federal policy officially was to acquire land from the Indians through formal treaties, but too many times, they were tricked.

    3. Many people respected the Indians, though, and tried to Christianize them.

      1. i.e. the Society for Propagating the Gospel Among Indians (est. 1787).

    4. Some Indians violently resisted, but the Cherokees were among the few that tried to adopt the Americans ways, adopting a system of settled agriculture, devising an alphabet, legislating legal code in 1808, and adopting a written constitution in 1827.

    5. The Cherokees, the Creeks, Choctaws, Chickasaws, and the Seminoles were known as the “Five Civilized Tribes.”

    6. However, in 1828, Congress declared the Cherokee tribal council illegal, and asserted its own jurisdiction over Indian lands and affairs, and even though the Cherokees appealed to and won in the Supreme Court, Jackson refused to recognize the decision.

    7. Jackson, though, still harbored some sentiment of Indians, and proposed that they be bodily transferred west of the Mississippi, where they could preserve the culture, and in 1830, Congress passed the Indian Removal Act, in which Indians were moved to Oklahoma.

      1. Thousands of Indians died on the “Trail of Tears” after being uprooted from their sacred lands that had been theirs for centuries.

      2. Also, the Bureau of Indian Affairs was established in 1836 to deal with Indians.

    8. In 1832, in Illinois and Wisconsin, the Sauk and Fox tribes revolted but were crushed.

    9. From 1835 to 1842, the Seminoles waged guerrilla warfare against the U.S., but were broken after their leader, Osceola, was seized; some fled deeper into the Everglades of Florida; others moved to Okla.

  8. The Lone Star of Texas Flickers

    1. Americans continued to covet Texas, and in 1823, after Mexico had gained independence from Spain, Stephen Austin had made an agreement with the Mexican government to bring about 300 families into a huge tract of granted land to settle and eventually become Mexicanized; these stipulations were largely ignored.

    2. The Texans (among them Davy Crockett and Jim Bowie) resented the “foreign” government, but they were led by Sam Houston, a man whose wife had left him.

    3. In 1830, Mexico freed its slaves and prohibited them in Texas, much to the anger of citizens.

    4. In 1833, Stephen Austin went to Mexico City to clear up differences and was jailed for 8 months.

    5. In 1835, dictator Santa Anna started to raise an army to suppress the Texans; the next year, they declared their independence.

    6. After armed conflict and slaughters at the Alamo and at Goliad, Texan war cries rallied citizens, volunteers, and soldiers, and the turning point came after Sam Houston led his army for 37 days eastward, then turned on the Mexicans, taking advantage of their siesta hour, wiping them out, and capturing Santa Anna.

      1. The treaty he was forced to sign was later negated by him on grounds that the treaty was extorted under duress.

  9. Texas: An International Conflict.

    1. Texas was supported in their war by the United States, but Jackson was hesitant to formally recognize Texas as an independent nation until he had secured Martin Van Buren as his successor, but after he succeeded, Jackson did indeed recognize Texas on his last day before he left office, in 1837.

    2. Many Texans wanted to become part of the Union, but the slavery issue blocked this.

    3. The end was an unsettled predicament in which Texans feared the return of Santa Anna.

  10. The Birth of the Whigs and the Election of 1836

    1. The Jacksonians were beginning to drop the “Republican” out of their party name and were now going by the name of Democrats.

    2. Their opposition coalesced into the Whigs, a group united only by their opposition to Jackson and, at first, led by Clay and John C. Calhoun.

    3. As the election of 1836 neared, the Whigs planned to put so many candidates (favorite sons) that no one would get a full majority; the leading “favorite son” was William H. Harrison.

    4. Jackson rigged the election, and his favorite, Martin Van Buren, was elected president despite promising to follow in Jackson’s footsteps.

      1. The Jacksonians supported him half-heartedly.

    5. Jackson’s legacy: he bolstered the power of the presidency and the executive branch; united the Democratic party; proved that the people could be trusted with the vote; and showed the courage that won votes, but he also inflicted massive damage on the nation’s financial system by killing the BUS.

  11. Big Woes for the “Little Magician”

    1. Van Buren was the first president to have been born in America, but he lacked the support of many Democrats and Jackson’s popularity.

    2. A rebellion in Canada in 1837 threatened to plunge America into war, and Van Buren also inherited the depression caused by Jackson’s BUS killing.

  12. Depression Doldrums and the Independent Treasury

    1. The Panic of 1837 was caused by the “wildcat banks” loans, the over-speculation, the “Bank War,” and the Specie Circular stating that debts must be paid in specie (gold or silver), which no one had.

    2. Failures of wheat crops caused by the Hessian fly also worsened the situation, and the failure of two large British Banks in 1836 had already started the panic going.

    3. Hundreds of banks fell, including some of Jackson’s “pet banks,” banks that had received the money that Jackson had withdrawn from the BUS to kill it.

    4. The Whigs proposed expansion of bank credit, higher tariffs, and subsidies for internal improvements, but Van Buren spurned such ideas.

    5. Instead, he proposed the “Divorce Bill” (separating the bank from the government and storing money in some of the vaults of the larger American cities, thus keeping the money safe but also unavailable) that advocated the independent treasury, and in 1840, it was passed.

      1. The next year, the victorious Whigs repealed it, but in 1846, it was brought back; it finally merged with the Federal Reserve System in the next century.

  13. “Tippecanoe” Versus “Little Van”

    1. In 1840, William Harrison was nominated due to his being issueless and enemyless, with John Tyler as his running mate.

    2. He had only been popular from Tippecanoe (1811) and the Battle of the Thames (1813).

    3. A stupid Democratic editor also helped Harrison’s cause when he called the candidate a poor old farmer with hard cider and inadvertently made him look like many poor Westerners.

  14. The Log Cabins and Hard Cider of 1840

    1. With slogans of “Tippecanoe and Tyler too,” the Whigs advocated this “poor man’s president” idea and replied, to such questions of the bank, internal improvements, and the tariff, with answers of “log cabin,” “hard cider,” and “Harrison is a poor man.”

    2. The popular election was close, but Harrison blew Van Buren away in the Electoral College.

    3. Basically, the election was a protest against the hard times of the era.

  15. The Two-Party System Emerges

    1. The Democrats had so successfully absorbed the Federalist ideas before, that a true two party system had never emerged—until now.

    2. The Democrats

      1. Glorified the liberty of the individual.

      2. Clung to states’ rights and federal restraint in social and economic affairs.

      3. Mostly more humble, poorer folk.

      4. Generally from the South and West.

    3. The Whigs

      1. Trumpeted the natural harmony of society and the value of community.

      2. Berated leaders whose appeals and self-interest fostered conflict among individuals.

      3. Favored a renewed national bank, protective tariffs, internal improvements, public schools, and moral reforms.

      4. Mostly more aristocratic and wealthier.

      5. Generally from the East.

    4. Things in Common

      1. Based on the people, with “catchall” phrases for popularity.

      2. Both also commanded loyalties from all kinds of people.

Chapter 14 Vocabulary


Nicholas Biddle – Biddle was nicknamed "Czar Nicholas I" and was president of the Bank of the United States. Jackson wanted to weaken the Bank and Biddle, so Jackson gradually began to withdraw federal money and stowed the money in his "pet banks." Jackson destroyed the Bank in 1832 with his veto of the Bank’s re-charter and withdrawals.

Osceola – Osceola was a leader of the Seminole. The Seminole Indians in Florida were engaged in a bitter guerrilla war that proved to be the costliest Indian conflict. Fifteen hundred American soldiers lost their lives in the battle. The war ended when the Americans captured Osceola. Osceola eventually died in captivity. The ordeal split up the Seminole tribe, some fled into the Everglades and others were herded to Oklahoma. He led one of the many Indian conflicts that furthered westward expansion for the Americans.

Andrew Jackson – Jackson was the seventh president and supported mostly by the West and South (the common people). He had no formal education. His beliefs were simple, and his military background often influenced him. He introduced the spoils system into American government, or rotation in office as he called it. His unofficial advisors were called the "kitchen cabinet" because they were thought of as Jackson's friends, not political office holders. Mostly though, he represented the common man both in his life and presidency.

Martin Van Buren – Van Buren was Andrew Jackson's own choice as his successor. Van Buren became our eighth president in 1836. He was doomed from the start, though, as the people thought he was only "mediocre" and the Democrats hated him. He was also left to deal with some very difficult situations, such as a developing Panic of 1837 for which he was blamed. Van Buren tried to do his best in the circumstances, as with the controversial "Divorce Bill," but Martin Van Buren's efforts were futile.

Stephen Austin -- Stephen Austin was an American colonizer and pioneer from Virginia led the first settlers into Texas. His father, Moses Austin, secured a land grant from Spain, and Stephen later renewed this grant with the independent Mexico. Austin succeeded in bringing over 20,000 Americans to Texas by 1830. He requested self-government for the territory, and was subsequently thrown into a Mexican prison. In 1835 he returned, and took the command of a Texan army ready to fight for independence. He soon resigned. After Texas became a republic in 1836, Austin worked for the U.S.’ annexation of Texas as a state.

William Henry Harrison – Harrison was a war hero fighting Indians back in the War of 1812 and was not nominated for president in 1840 based mostly on his war record. He won the 1840 presidential election with his log cabin and hard cider campaign. He became the 1st Whig president & 1st president to die in office.

Henry Clay – Clay was a National-Republican and chief player in the presidential contest of 1832. He threw himself behind the Senate's move to re-charter the bank. He was able to pass a compromise bill that would slowly reduce the 1832 Tariff. He came from Kentucky and strongly disliked Jackson, his western rival. Clay had 50,000 dollars in funds for "life insurance" with the Bank of the United States. He lost the presidential election in 1832 because the rich people did not create enough support to elect him president. The loss of the election crushed Clay, but his American System and other ideas had helped the United States. Clay had previously been a War Hawk and later formed the “American System.” He helped to form the "Whigs" in the Senate to defend the Bank of the United States.

Sam Houston – Houston was the president of Texas. Mexicans and Texans were in conflict over issues such as slavery and immigration. In 1836, the Texans declared their independence from Mexico and made Sam Houston their commander in chief. Santa Anna, the dictator of Mexico, resented this American decree and charged into Texas with Mexican forces. Houston and his troops initially retreated, but eventually they defeated the Mexican army and captured Santa Anna.

John Tyler – Tyler ran as Vice-President to William Henry Harrison in the election of 1840 as a Whig. Harrison was elected, but shortly died, so Tyler became the first Vice-President to take the office of a dead president.

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