Andrew Jackson (March 15, 1767 June 8, 1845) was
the
seventh
President of the United
States (1829–1837).
He was military governor of Florida
(1821),
commander of the American forces at the Battle of New
Orleans
(1815), and eponym of the era
of Jacksonian democracy.
A polarizing figure who dominated
American politics in the 1820s
and 1830s, his political ambition combined with widening political
participation, shaping the modern
Democratic
Party.
His legacy is now seen as mixed, as a protector of popular
democracy and individual liberty, checkered by his support for
Indian removal and
slavery. Renowned for his
toughness, he was nicknamed “
Old Hickory."
As he
based his career in developing Tennessee
, Jackson was the first president primarily
associated with the American
frontier.
Early life and career
Andrew
Jackson was born to Presbyterian
Scots-Irish immigrants
Andrew and Elizabeth Hutchinson Jackson,
on March 15, 1767, approximately two years after they had emigrated
from Carrickfergus
, in Northern Ireland
. Three weeks after his father's death, Andrew
was born in the Waxhaws area near the border
between North
and South Carolina
. He was the youngest of the Jacksons' three
sons. His exact birth site was the subject of conflicting lore in
the area. Jackson claimed to have been born in a cabin just inside
South Carolina.
Jackson received a sporadic education in the local "old-field"
school. During the
American
Revolutionary War, Jackson, at age thirteen, joined a local
regiment as a courier.
Andrew and his brother Robert Jackson were
captured by the British
and held as prisoners of
war; they nearly starved to death in captivity. When
Andrew refused to clean the boots of a British officer, the irate
redcoat slashed at him with
a sword, giving him scars on his left hand and head, as well as an
intense hatred for the British. While imprisoned, the brothers
contracted
smallpox. Robert died a few days
after their mother secured their release. After Jackson's mother
was assured Andrew would recover, she left to nurse soldiers and
later died from disease. Jackson was orphaned by age 14.
(His
eldest brother, Hugh, died from heat and exhaustion during the
Battle of Stono
Ferry
in 1779.) Jackson's entire immediate family had
died from hardships during the war for which Jackson blamed the
British.
Jackson was the last U.S. President to have been a veteran of the
American Revolution, and the second president to have been a
prisoner of war (Washington was
captured by the French in the
French and Indian War).
In 1781, Jackson worked for a time in a
saddle-maker's shop.
Later, he taught school and studied law in
Salisbury,
North Carolina
. In 1787, he was admitted to the bar, and
moved to Jonesborough
, in what was then the Western District of North Carolina
and later became Tennessee.
Though his legal education was scanty, Jackson knew enough to be a
country lawyer on the
frontier. Since he was not from a
distinguished family, he had to make his career by his own merits;
soon he began to prosper in the rough-and-tumble world of frontier
law. Most of the actions grew out of disputed land-claims, or from
assaults and battery. In 1788,
he was appointed Solicitor of the Western District and held the
same position in the territorial government of Tennessee after
1791.
In 1796, Jackson was a delegate to the Tennessee constitutional
convention. When Tennessee achieved statehood that year, Jackson
was elected its
U.S.
Representative. In
1797, he was elected
U.S.
Senator as a
Democratic-Republican.
He resigned within a year. In 1798, he was appointed a judge of the
Tennessee Supreme Court,
serving until 1804.
Besides his legal and political career, Jackson prospered as a
slave owner, planter, and merchant.
In 1803 he owned a lot, and built a home
and the first general store in Gallatin
. In 1804, he acquired the
Hermitage
, a plantation in Davidson
County
, near Nashville
. Jackson later added to the farm. The
plantation would eventually grow to . The slaves that Jackson owned
did the hardest work on the plantation. The primary crop was
cotton, grown by enslaved workers. Jackson
started with nine slaves, by 1820 he held as many as 44, and later
held up to 150 slaves. Throughout his lifetime Jackson would own as
many as 300 slaves.
Military career
War of 1812
Jackson was appointed commander of the Tennessee militia in 1801,
with the rank of
colonel.
During the
War of 1812,
Tecumseh incited the "
Red
Stick"
Creek Indians of northern
Alabama and Georgia to attack white settlements. Four hundred
settlers were killed in the
Fort Mims
Massacre. In the resulting
Creek War,
Jackson commanded the American forces, which included Tennessee
militia, U.S.
regular,
and
Cherokee,
Choctaw, and Southern Creek Indians.
Jackson defeated the Red Stick Creeks at the
Battle of Horseshoe Bend in 1814.
Eight hundred "Red Sticks" were killed, but Jackson spared chief
William Weatherford.
Sam Houston and
David
Crockett served under Jackson in this campaign. After the
victory, Jackson imposed the
Treaty of Fort Jackson upon both the
Northern Creek enemies and the Southern Creek allies, wresting
twenty-million acres (81,000 km²) from all Creeks for white
settlement. Jackson was appointed Major General after this
action.
Jackson's service in the War of 1812 against the United Kingdom was
conspicuous for bravery and success.
When British forces
threatened New
Orleans
, Jackson took command of the defenses, including
militia from several western states and territories. He was
a strict officer but was popular with his troops. It was said he
was "tough as old hickory" wood on the battlefield, which gave him
his nickname.
In the Battle of New Orleans
on January 8, 1815, Jackson's 5,000 soldiers won a
victory over 7,500 British. At the end of the day, the
British had 2,037 casualties: 291 dead (including three senior
generals), 1,262 wounded, and 484 captured or missing. The
Americans had 71 casualties: 13 dead, 39 wounded, and 19
missing.
The war, and especially this victory, made Jackson a national hero.
He received the
Thanks of
Congress and a gold medal by resolution of February 27,
1815.
First Seminole War
Jackson
served in the military again during the First Seminole War
. He was ordered by President James Monroe in December 1817 to lead a
campaign in Georgia
against the Seminole and Creek Indians. Jackson
was also charged with preventing
Spanish
Florida from becoming a refuge for runaway slaves. Critics
later alleged that Jackson exceeded orders in his Florida actions.
His directions were to "terminate the conflict." Jackson believed
the best way to do this would be to seize Florida. Before going,
Jackson wrote to Monroe, "Let it be signified to me through any
channel... that the possession of the Floridas would be desirable
to the United States, and in sixty days it will be accomplished."
Monroe gave Jackson orders that were purposely ambiguous,
sufficient for international denials.
The Seminoles attacked Jackson's Tennessee volunteers. The
Seminoles' attack, however, left their villages vulnerable, and
Jackson burned them and the crops. He found letters that indicated
that the Spanish and British were secretly assisting the Indians.
Jackson believed that the United States would not be secure as long
as Spain and the United Kingdom encouraged Indians to fight and
argued that his actions were undertaken in self-defense.
Jackson
captured Pensacola,
Florida
, with little more than some warning shots, and
deposed the Spanish governor. He captured and then tried and
executed two British subjects,
Robert Ambrister and Alexander
Arbuthnot, who had been supplying and advising the Indians.
Jackson's action also struck fear into the Seminole tribes as word
spread of his ruthlessness in battle (Jackson was known as "Sharp
Knife").
The executions, and Jackson's invasion of territory belonging to
Spain, a country with which the U.S. was not at war, created an
international incident. Many in the Monroe administration called
for Jackson to be
censured. Jackson's actions
were defended by
Secretary of State John Quincy Adams, an early believer in
Manifest Destiny. When the Spanish
minister demanded a "suitable punishment" for Jackson, Adams wrote
back, "Spain must immediately [decide] either to place a force in
Florida adequate at once to the protection of her territory ... or
cede to the United States a province, of which she retains nothing
but the nominal possession, but which is, in fact ... a post of
annoyance to them." Adams used Jackson's conquest, and Spain's own
weakness, to get Spain to cede Florida to the United States by the
Adams-OnĂs Treaty. Jackson
was subsequently named military governor and served from March 10,
1821, to December 31, 1821.
Election of 1824
The Tennessee legislature nominated Jackson for President in 1822.
It also elected him U.S. Senator again.
By 1824, the Democratic-Republican Party had become the only
functioning national party. Its Presidential candidates had been
chosen by an informal
Congressional nominating
caucus, but this had become unpopular. In 1824, most of the
Democratic-Republicans in Congress boycotted the caucus. Those who
attended backed Treasury Secretary
William H. Crawford for President and
Albert Gallatin for Vice President.
A
Pennsylvanian
convention nominated Jackson for President a month
later, stating that the irregular caucus ignored the "voice of the
people" and was a "vain hope that the American people might be thus
deceived into a belief that he [Crawford] was the regular
democratic candidate." Gallatin criticized Jackson as "an
honest man and the idol of the worshippers of military glory, but
from incapacity, military habits, and habitual disregard of laws
and constitutional provisions, altogether unfit for the
office."
Besides Jackson and Crawford, Secretary of State
John Quincy Adams and House Speaker
Henry Clay were also candidates. Jackson
received the most popular votes (but not a majority, and four
states had no popular ballot). The
Electoral votes were split
four ways, with Jackson having a plurality. Since no candidate
received a majority, the election was decided by the
House of
Representatives, which chose Adams. Jackson supporters
denounced this result as a "
corrupt
bargain" because Clay gave his state's support to Adams, and
subsequently Adams appointed Clay as Secretary of State. As none of
Kentucky's electors had initially voted for Adams, and Jackson had
won the popular vote, it appeared that Henry Clay had violated the
will of the people and substituted his own judgment in return for
personal political favors. Jackson's defeat burnished his political
credentials, however; many voters believed the "man of the people"
had been robbed by the "corrupt aristocrats of the East."
Election of 1828
Jackson resigned from the Senate in October 1825, but continued his
quest for the Presidency. The Tennessee legislature again nominated
Jackson for President. Jackson attracted Vice President
John C. Calhoun,
Martin
Van Buren, and
Thomas Ritchie
into his camp (the latter two previous supporters of Crawford).
Van
Buren, with help from his friends in Philadelphia
and Richmond
, revived the old Republican Party, gave it a new
name as the Democratic Party, "restored party rivalries," and
forged a national organization of durability. The Jackson
coalition handily defeated Adams in 1828.
During the election, Jackson's opponents referred to him as a
"
jackass." Jackson liked the name and used
the jackass as a symbol for a while, but it died out. However, it
later became the symbol for the
Democratic Party when
cartoonist
Thomas Nast popularized
it.
The campaign was very much a personal one. Although neither
candidate personally campaigned, their political followers
organized many campaign events. Both candidates were rhetorically
attacked in the press, which reached a low point when the press
accused Jackson's wife
Rachel of
bigamy. Though the accusation was true, as were most personal
attacks leveled against him during the campaign, it was based on
events that occurred many years prior (1791 to 1794). Jackson said
he would forgive those who insulted him, but he would never forgive
the ones who attacked his wife. Rachel died suddenly on December
22, 1828, before his inauguration, and was buried on Christmas
Eve.
Inauguration
Jackson
was the first President to invite the public to attend the White House
ball honoring his first inauguration. Many
poor people came to the inaugural ball in their homemade clothes.
The crowd became so large that Jackson's guards could not hold them
out of the White House. The White House became so crowded with
people that dishes and decorative pieces in the White House began
to break. Some people stood on good chairs in muddied boots just to
get a look at the President. The crowd had become so wild that the
attendants poured punch in tubs and put it on the White House lawn
to lure people out of the White House. Jackson's raucous populism
earned him the nickname King Mob.
Election of 1832
In the 1832 presidential election, Jackson easily won reelection as
the candidate of the
Democratic Party against
Henry Clay, of the
National Republican Party, and
William Wirt, of the
Anti-Masonic Party. Jackson
jettisoned Vice President
John C.
Calhoun because of his support for
nullification and involvement
in the
Petticoat affair, replacing
him with longtime confidant
Martin Van
Buren of New York.
Presidency 1829–1837
Federal debt
- See also: Panic of
1837
In 1835, Jackson managed to reduce the federal debt to only
$33,733.05, the lowest it had been since the first fiscal year of
1791. President Jackson is the only president in United States
history to have paid off the national debt. However, this
accomplishment was short lived. A severe
depression from 1837 to 1844 caused a
tenfold increase in national debt within its first year.
Electoral College
Jackson repeatedly called for the abolition of the
Electoral College by
constitutional amendment in his annual messages to Congress as
President. In his third annual message to Congress, he expressed
the view "I have heretofore recommended amendments of the
Federal Constitution giving the
election of President and Vice-President to the people and limiting
the service of the former to a single term. So important do I
consider these changes in our fundamental law that I can not, in
accordance with my sense of duty, omit to press them upon the
consideration of a new Congress." The institution remains to the
present day.
Spoils system
When Jackson became President, he implemented the theory of
rotation in office, declaring it
"a leading principle in the republican creed." He believed that
rotation in office would prevent the development of a corrupt
bureaucracy. To strengthen party loyalty, Jackson's supporters
wanted to give the posts to party members. In practice, this meant
replacing federal employees with friends or party loyalists.
However, the effect was not as drastic as expected or portrayed. By
the end of his term, Jackson dismissed less than twenty percent of
the Federal employees at the start of it. While Jackson did not
start the "spoils system," he did indirectly encourage its growth
for many years to come.
Opposition to the National Bank
The
Second
Bank of the United States
was authorized for a twenty year period during
James Madison's tenure in 1816.
As President, Jackson worked to rescind the bank's federal charter.
In Jackson's veto message (written by
George Bancroft), the bank needed to be
abolished because:
- It concentrated the nation's financial strength in a single
institution.
- It exposed the government to control by foreign interests.
- It served mainly to make the rich richer.
- It exercised too much control over members of Congress.
- It favored northeastern states over southern and western
states.
Following Jefferson, Jackson supported an "agricultural republic"
and felt the Bank improved the fortunes of an "elite circle" of
commercial and industrial entrepreneurs at the expense of farmers
and laborers. After a titanic struggle, Jackson succeeded in
destroying the Bank by vetoing its 1832 re-charter by Congress and
by withdrawing U.S. funds in 1833.
The bank's money-lending functions were taken over by the legions
of local and state banks that sprang up. This fed an expansion of
credit and speculation. At first, as Jackson withdrew money from
the Bank to invest it in other banks, land sales, canal
construction, cotton production, and manufacturing boomed. However,
due to the practice of banks issuing paper banknotes that were not
backed by gold or silver reserves, there was soon rapid inflation
and mounting state debts. Then, in 1836, Jackson issued the
Specie Circular, which required
buyers of government lands to pay in "specie" (gold or silver
coins). The result was a great demand for specie, which many banks
did not have enough of to exchange for their notes. These banks
collapsed. This was a direct cause of the
Panic of 1837, which threw the national
economy into a deep depression. It took years for the economy to
recover from the damage.
The U.S. Senate censured Jackson on March 28, 1834, for his action
in removing U.S. funds from the Bank of the United States. When the
Jacksonians had a majority in the Senate, the censure was
expunged.
Nullification crisis
Another notable crisis during Jackson's period of office was the
"
Nullification Crisis," or
"secession crisis," of 1828 1832, which merged issues of sectional
strife with disagreements over tariffs. Critics alleged that high
tariffs (the "
Tariff of
Abominations") on imports of common manufactured goods made in
Europe made those goods more expensive than ones from the northern
U.S., raising the prices paid by planters in the South. Southern
politicians argued that tariffs benefited northern industrialists
at the expense of southern farmers.
The issue
came to a head when Vice President Calhoun, in the South Carolina Exposition
and Protest of 1828, supported the claim of his home state,
South
Carolina
, that it had
the right to "nullify"—declare void—the tariff legislation of 1828,
and more generally the right of a state to nullify any Federal laws
which went against its interests. Although Jackson
sympathized with the South in the tariff debate, he was also a
strong supporter of a strong union, with effective powers for the
central government. Jackson attempted to face down Calhoun over the
issue, which developed into a bitter rivalry between the two
men.
Particularly notable was an incident at the April 13, 1830,
Jefferson Day dinner, involving after-dinner toasts.
Robert Hayne began by toasting to "The Union of
the States, and the Sovereignty of the States." Jackson then rose,
and in a booming voice added "Our federal Union: It must be
preserved!" a clear challenge to Calhoun. Calhoun clarified his
position by responding "The Union: Next to our Liberty, the most
dear!"
The next year, Calhoun and Jackson broke apart politically from one
another. Around this time, the
Petticoat affair caused further
resignations from Jackson's cabinet, leading to its reorganization
as the "
Kitchen Cabinet."
Martin Van Buren, despite resigning as
Secretary of State, played a leading role in the new unofficial
cabinet. At the
first Democratic National
Convention, privately engineered by members of the Kitchen
Cabinet, Van Buren replaced Calhoun as Jackson's running mate. In
December 1832, Calhoun resigned as Vice President to become a U.S.
Senator for South Carolina.
In
response to South Carolina's nullification claim, Jackson vowed to
send troops to South
Carolina
to enforce
the laws. In December 1832, he issued a resounding
proclamation against the "nullifiers," stating that he considered
"the power to annul a law of the United States, assumed by one
State, incompatible with the existence of the Union, contradicted
expressly by the letter of the
Constitution, unauthorized
by its spirit, inconsistent with every principle on which it was
founded, and destructive of the great object for which it was
formed." South Carolina, the President declared, stood on "the
brink of insurrection and treason," and he appealed to the people
of the state to reassert their allegiance to that Union for which
their ancestors had fought. Jackson also denied the right of
secession: "The Constitution... forms a
government not a
league... To say that any State may at pleasure secede from the
Union is to say that the United States is not a nation."
Jackson asked Congress to pass a "
Force
Bill" explicitly authorizing the use of military force to
enforce the tariff, but its passage was delayed until
protectionists led by Clay agreed to a reduced
Compromise Tariff. The Force Bill and Compromise Tariff passed on
March 1, 1833, and Jackson signed both. The South Carolina
Convention then met and rescinded its nullification ordinance. The
Force Bill became moot because it was no longer needed.
Indian removal
Perhaps the most controversial aspect of Jackson's presidency was
his policy regarding
American Indians.
Jackson was a leading advocate of a policy known as Indian removal.
Jackson had been negotiating treaties and removal policies with
Indian leaders for years before his election as president. Many
tribes and portions of tribes had been removed to Arkansas
Territory and further west of the Mississippi River without the
suffering and tragedies of what later became known as the
Trail of Tears. Further, many white Americans
advocated total extermination of the "savages," particularly those
who had experienced frontier wars. Jackson's support of removal
policies can be best understood by examination of those prior cases
he had personally negotiated, rather than those which took place in
post-presidential years. Nevertheless, Jackson is often held
responsible for all which took place in the 1830s.
In his December 8, 1829, First Annual Message to Congress, Jackson
stated:
Before his election as president, Jackson had been involved with
the issue of Indian removal for over ten years. The removal of the
Native Americans to the west of the
Mississippi River had been a major part of
his political agenda in both the 1824 and 1828 presidential
elections. After his election he signed the
Indian Removal Act into law in 1830. The
Act authorized the President to negotiate treaties to buy tribal
lands in the east in exchange for lands further west, outside of
existing U.S. state borders.
While frequently frowned upon in the North, and opposed by
Jeremiah Evarts and
Theodore Frelinghuysen, the Removal
Act was popular in the
South, where
population growth and the discovery of gold on
Cherokee land had increased pressure on tribal
lands.
The state of Georgia
became involved in a contentious jurisdictional
dispute with the Cherokees, culminating in the 1832 U.S.
Supreme Court
decision (Worcester v. Georgia) which ruled that Georgia
could not impose its laws upon Cherokee tribal lands. Jackson is
often quoted (regarding the decision) as having said, "
John Marshall has made his decision, now let
him enforce it!" Whether he said it is disputed.
In any case, Jackson used the Georgia crisis to pressure Cherokee
leaders to sign a removal treaty. A small faction of Cherokees led
by
John Ridge negotiated the
Treaty of New Echota with Jackson's
representatives. Ridge was not a recognized leader of the Cherokee
Nation, and this document was rejected by most Cherokees as
illegitimate. Over 15,000 Cherokees signed a petition in protest of
the proposed removal; the list was ignored by the Supreme Court and
the U.S. legislature, in part due to unfortunate and tragic delays
and timing. The treaty was enforced by Jackson's successor, Van
Buren, who ordered 7,000 armed troops to remove the Cherokees. Due
to the infighting between political factions, many Cherokees
thought their appeals were still being considered until troops
arrived. This abrupt and forced removal resulted in the deaths of
over 4,000 Cherokees on the "
Trail of
Tears."
By the 1830s, under constant pressure from settlers, each of the
five southern tribes had ceded most of its lands, but sizable
self-government groups lived in Georgia, Alabama, Mississippi, and
Florida. All of these (except the Seminoles) had moved far in the
coexistence with whites, and they resisted suggestions that they
should voluntarily remove themselves. Their nonviolent methods
earned them the title the
Five
Civilized Tribes.
In all, more than 45,000 American Indians were relocated to the
West during Jackson's administration.
A few Cherokees
escaped forced relocation, or walked back afterwards, escaping to
the high Smoky Mountains along the
North
Carolina
and Tennessee
border.
During the Jacksonian era, the administration bought about 100
million acres (400,000 km²) of Indian land for about $68
million and 32 million acres (130,000 km²) of western land.
Jackson was criticized at the time for his role in these events,
and the criticism has grown over the years. Remini characterizes
the Indian Removal era as "one of the unhappiest chapters in
American history."
Attack and assassination attempt
The first attempt to do bodily harm to a President was against
Jackson. Jackson ordered the dismissal of
Robert B. Randolph from the
Navy for
embezzlement.
On May 6, 1833, Jackson sailed on USS
Cygnet to Fredericksburg, Virginia
, where he was to lay the cornerstone on a monument
near the grave of Mary Ball
Washington, George
Washington's mother. During a stopover near Alexandria,
Virginia
, Randolph appeared and struck the President.
He then fled the scene with several members of Jackson's party
chasing him, including the well known writer
Washington Irving. Jackson decided not to
press charges.
On
January 30, 1835, what is believed to be the first attempt to kill
a sitting President of the United States occurred just outside the
United
States Capitol
. When Jackson was leaving the Capitol out of
the East Portico after the funeral of South Carolina
Representative Warren
R. Davis,
Richard Lawrence, an unemployed and
deranged housepainter from England, either burst from a crowd or
stepped out from hiding behind a column and aimed a pistol at
Jackson which misfired. Lawrence then pulled out a second pistol
which also misfired. It has since been postulated that the moisture
from the humid weather of the day contributed to the double
misfiring. Lawrence was then restrained, with legend saying that
Jackson attacked Lawrence with his cane, prompting his aides to
restrain him. Others present, including
David Crockett, restrained and disarmed
Lawrence.
Richard Lawrence gave the doctors several reasons for the shooting.
He had recently lost his job painting houses and somehow blamed
Jackson. He claimed that with the President dead, "money would be
more plenty" (a reference to Jackson's struggle with the Bank of
the United States) and that he "could not rise until the President
fell." Finally, he informed his interrogators that he was a deposed
English King—specifically,
Richard III, dead since 1485—and that
Jackson was merely his clerk. He was deemed insane,
institutionalized, and never punished for his assassination
attempt.
Afterward, due to curiosity concerning the double misfires, the
pistols were tested and retested. Each time they performed
perfectly. When these results were known, many believed that
Jackson had been protected by the same Providence which had
protected the young nation. This national pride was a large part of
the Jacksonian cultural myth fueling American expansion in the
1830s.
Supreme Court appointments
Major Supreme Court cases
States admitted to the Union
Family and personal life
Shortly after Jackson first arrived in Nashville in 1788, he lived
as a boarder with Rachel Stockley Donelson, the widow of
John Donelson. Here Jackson became acquainted
with their daughter,
Rachel Donelson
Robards. At the time, Rachel Robards was in an unhappy marriage
with Captain Lewis Robards, a man subject to irrational fits of
jealous rage. Due to Lewis Robards' temperament, the two were
separated in 1790. According to Jackson, he married Rachel after
hearing that Robards had obtained a divorce. However, the divorce
had never been completed, making Rachel's marriage to Jackson
illegitimate. After the divorce was officially completed, Rachel
and Jackson remarried in 1794. However, there is evidence that
Donelson had been living with Jackson and referred to herself as
Mrs. Jackson before the petition for divorce was ever made. It was
not uncommon on the frontier for relationships to be formed and
dissolved unofficially, as long as they were recognized by the
community.
The controversy surrounding their marriage remained a sore point
for Jackson, who deeply resented attacks on his wife's honor.
Jackson fought 13 duels, many nominally over his wife's honor.
Charles
Dickinson, the only man Jackson ever killed in a duel, had been
goaded into angering Jackson by Jackson's political opponents. In
the duel, fought over a horse-racing debt and an insult to his wife
on May 30, 1806, Dickinson shot Jackson in the ribs before Jackson
returned the fatal shot; Jackson allowed Dickinson to shoot first,
knowing him to be an excellent shot, and as his opponent reloaded,
Jackson shot, even as the bullet lodged itself in his chest. The
bullet that struck Jackson was so close to his heart that it could
never be safely removed. Jackson had been wounded so frequently in
duels that it was said he "rattled like a bag of marbles." At times
he would cough up blood, and he experienced considerable pain from
his wounds for the rest of his life.

Jackson in his later years.
Rachel died of a heart attack on December 22, 1828, two weeks after
her husband's victory in the election and two months before Jackson
taking office as President. Jackson blamed
John Quincy Adams for Rachel's death
because the marital scandal was brought up in the election of 1828.
He felt that this had hastened her death and never forgave
Adams.
Jackson had two adopted sons, Andrew Jackson Jr., the son of
Rachel's brother Severn Donelson, and Lyncoya, a Creek Indian
orphan adopted by Jackson after the Creek War.
Jackson had planned
to have Lyncoya educated at West
Point
, but he died of tuberculosis in 1828, at the age of
sixteen.
The Jacksons also acted as guardians for eight other children. John
Samuel Donelson,
Daniel Smith
Donelson and
Andrew Jackson
Donelson were the sons of Rachel's brother Samuel Donelson, who
died in 1804. Andrew Jackson Hutchings was Rachel's orphaned grand
nephew. Caroline Butler, Eliza Butler, Edward Butler, and Anthony
Butler were the orphaned children of Edward Butler, a family
friend. They came to live with the Jacksons after the death of
their father.
The widower Jackson invited Rachel's niece
Emily Donelson to serve as host at the White
House. Emily was married to
Andrew Jackson Donelson, who acted
as Jackson's private secretary and in 1856 would run for Vice
President on the
American Party ticket.
The relationship between the President and Emily became strained
during the
Petticoat affair, and
the two became estranged for over a year. They eventually
reconciled and she resumed her duties as White House host.
Sarah Yorke Jackson, the wife of Andrew
Jackson Jr., became cohost of the White House in 1834. It was the
only time in history when two women simultaneously acted as
unofficial First Lady. Sarah took over all hosting duties after
Emily died from tuberculosis in 1836.
Jackson
remained influential in both national and state politics after
retiring to The Hermitage
in 1837. Though a slave-holder, Jackson was
a firm advocate of the federal union of the states, and declined to
give any support to talk of secession.
Jackson was a lean figure standing at 6 feet, 1 inch (1.85 m) tall,
and weighing between 130 and 140 pounds (64 kg) on average.
Jackson also had an unruly shock of red hair, which had completely
grayed by the time he became president at age 61. He had
penetrating deep blue eyes. Jackson was one of the more sickly
presidents, suffering from chronic headaches, abdominal pains, and
a hacking cough, caused by a musket ball in his lung which was
never removed, that often brought up blood and sometimes even made
his whole body shake.
After retiring to Nashville, he enjoyed
eight years of retirement and died at The
Hermitage
on June 8, 1845, at the age of 78, of chronic
tuberculosis, dropsy, and heart failure.
In his will, Jackson left his entire estate to his adopted son,
Andrew Jackson Jr., except for specifically enumerated items that
were left to various other friends and family members.
About a year after
retiring the presidency, Andrew Jackson became a member of the
First Presbyterian Church
in Nashville
.
Memorials



- Jackson's portrait appears on the United States twenty-dollar
bill. He has appeared on $5, $10, $50, and $10,000 bills in the
past, as well as a Confederate $1,000 bill.
- Jackson's image is on the Black
Jack and many other postage stamp.
- Memorials to Jackson include a set of four identical equestrian
statues located in different parts of the country. One is in
Jackson Square in New Orleans.
Another
is in Nashville on the grounds of the Tennessee
State Capitol
. A third is in Washington, D.C.
near the White House
. The fourth is in Downtown Jacksonville, Florida
. Equestrian statues of Jackson have also
been erected elsewhere, including one with Jackson on horseback
together with seated figures of James
K. Polk and
Andrew Johnson on the State Capitol
grounds in Raleigh, North Carolina
.
- Numerous counties and cities are named after
him, including Jacksonville, Florida
; Jackson, Louisiana
; Jackson, Michigan
; Jackson, Mississippi
; Jackson County, Mississippi
; Jackson, Missouri
; Jackson County, Oregon
; Jacksonville, North Carolina
; Jackson, Tennessee
; Jackson County, Florida
; Jackson Parish, Louisiana
; Jackson County, Missouri
; and Jackson County, Ohio
.
- Andrew Jackson State Park
is located on the site of his birthplace in
Lancaster
County, South Carolina
. The park features a museum about his
childhood, and a bronze statue of Jackson on horseback by sculptor
Anna Hyatt Huntington.
- Two cities located in the suburbs in the eastern part of
Nashville, TN, near the Hermitage, are named for Jackson and his
home: Old Hickory, Tennessee, and Hermitage, Tennessee.
- In Nashville, Old Hickory
Boulevard, named for Jackson, is a historic road that encircles
the city. Originally the road, aided by ferries, formed an unbroken
loop around the city. Today, it is interrupted by lakes and
rerouted sections. It is the longest road in the city.
- One of the most popular lakes in middle Tennessee is Old
Hickory Lake.
- Andrew Jackson High School, in Lancaster
County, SC
, is named after him and uses the title of "Hickory
Log" for its Annual photo book.
- The section of U.S. Route 74 between Charlotte,
North Carolina
and Wilmington, North Carolina
is named the Andrew Jackson
Highway.
- The U.S. Army installation Fort Jackson in Columbia,
South Carolina
, is named in his honor.
- Fort Jackson, built before the Civil War on the Mississippi
River for the defense of New Orleans, was named in his honor.
- USS Andrew
Jackson , a Lafayette-class nuclear-powered
ballistic missile submarine, which served from 1963 to 1989.
- Jackson Park
, the third-largest park in Chicago, is named
for him.
- Jackson Park
, a public golf course in Seattle,
Washington
is named for him.
- Andrew Jackson Centre, the
Andrew Jackson Cottage and US Rangers Centre is a
"traditional thatched Ulster–Scots farmhouse built in 1750s" and
"includes the home of Jackson's parents. It has been restored to
its original state."
In popular culture
Actor
Charlton Heston portrayed
Jackson twice: once in
The
President's Lady (1953), with
Susan
Hayward as Rachel, and in DeMille's
The
Buccanneer, with
Yul Brynner as
pirate
Jean Lafitte. The former film
focuses on the issue of Rachel's separation and divorce from
Robards and the effects, and is based on the best-selling
biographical novel of the same name by
Irving Stone. The latter is about the Battle of
New Orleans.
See also
References
- Wilentz,
Sean. Andrew Jackson (2005), p. 8, 35.
- Finkelman, Paul (2006). "Jackson, Andrew (1767–1845)," in
Encyclopedia of American Civil Liberties, 3 vols.,
Routledge (CRC Press), ISBN 978-0-415-94342-0, vol. 2 (G-Q), p.
832–833.
- See also: Remini 1988, The Legacy of Andrew Jackson: Essays
on Democracy, Indian Removal, and Slavery.
- Controversies about Jackson's birthplace went far beyond the
dispute between North and South Carolina. Because his origins were
humble and obscure compared to those of his predecessors, wild
rumors abounded about Jackson's past. Joseph Nathan Kane, in his
almanac-style book Facts About the Presidents, lists no
fewer than eight localities, including two foreign countries, that
were mentioned in the popular press as Jackson's "real" birthplace
including Ireland, where both of Jackson's parents were born.
- Remini (2000), p.51 cites 1820 census; mentions later figures
up to 150 without noting a source.
-
http://www.thehermitage.com/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=36&Itemid=49|The
Hermitage
- Remini, Robert V. (1999) The battle of New Orleans, New York:
Penguin Books. p. 285
- Remini, 118.
- Ogg, 66.
- Adams, Henry. The Life of Albert Gallatin (1879),
599.
- Nickels, Ilona; "How did Republicans pick the elephant,
and Democrats the donkey, to represent their parties?"; "Capitol
Questions" feature at c-span.com; September 5, 2000
- The Spoils
System, as the rotation in office system was called, did not
originate with Jackson. It originated with New York governors in
the late 18th and early 19th centuries (most notably George Clinton and
DeWitt
Clinton). Thomas Jefferson brought it to the
Executive
Branch when he replaced Federalist office-holders after
becoming President. The
Spoils System versus the Merit System. Retrieved on
2006-11-21.
- Jacksonian Democracy: The Presidency of Andrew
Jackson. Retrieved on 2006-11-21.
- Digital History
- Sparknotes
- Ogg, 164.
- Martin Van Buren biography at Encyclopedia
Americana
- . First published in 1860.
- Syrett, 36. See also:
- For an attack on Jackson see Cave (2003). 65(6): 1330–1353. For
a defense see Remini (2001).
- Remini,"Andrew Jackson and the Course of American Freedom,
1822–1832" pp. 117, 200
- Cave (2003); Remini (1988).
- http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/aia/part4/4p2959.html PBS
- http://www.synaptic.bc.ca/ejournal/jackson.htm Indian
Removal
- PBS: Judgement Day. “Indian removal.”
http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/aia/part4/4p2959.html (accessed January 12,
2008).
- Eastern Band of Cherokee Indians - History
- Remini (2001).
- Remini, 17–25
- Rachel Donelson Robards Jackson. From: National
First Ladies' Library. Retrieved November 7, 2007.
- Rachel Jackson. From: nndb.com. Retrieved November 7,
2007.
Secondary sources
- Brands, H. W. Andrew Jackson: His Life and Times
(2005), ISBN 0385507380; ISBN 978-0385507387; ISBN 1400030722; ISBN
978-1400030729 biography emphasizing military career.
- Brustein, Andrew. The Passions of Andrew Jackson.
(2003).
- Bugg Jr. James L. ed. Jacksonian Democracy: Myth or
Reality? (1952), excerpts from scholars.
- Cave, Alfred A.. Abuse of Power: Andrew Jackson and the
Indian Removal Act of 1830 (2003).
- Gammon, Samuel Rhea. The Presidential Campaign of 1832
(1922).
- Hammond, Bray. Andrew Jackson's Battle with the "Money
Power" (1958) ch 8, of his Banks and Politics in America:
From the Revolution to the Civil War (1954); Pulitzer
prize.
- Hofstatder, Richard. The American Political Tradition
(1948), chapter on Jackson.
- James, Marquis. The Life of
Andrew Jackson Combines two books: The Border Captain
and Andrew Jackson: Portrait of a President, 1933, 1937;
winner of the Pulitzer Prize for
Biography in 1938.
- Mabry, Donald J., Short Book Bibliography on
Andrew Jackson, Historical Text Archive.
- Latner Richard B. The Presidency of Andrew Jackson: White
House Politics, 1820–1837 (1979), standard survey.
- Ogg, Frederic Austin ; The Reign of Andrew Jackson: A
Chronicle of the Frontier in Politics 1919. short
popular survey online at Gutenberg.
- Parton, James. Life of Andrew
Jackson (1860). Volume I, Volume III.
- Ratner, Lorman A. Andrew Jackson and His Tennessee
Lieutenants: A Study in Political Culture (1997).
- Remini, Robert V. The Life
of Andrew Jackson. Abridgment of Remini's 3-volume monumental
biography, (1988).
- Andrew Jackson and the Course of American Empire,
1767–1821 (1977); Andrew Jackson and the Course of
American Freedom, 1822–1832 (1981); Andrew Jackson and the
Course of American Democracy, 1833–1845 (1984).
- Remini, Robert V. The
Legacy of Andrew Jackson: Essays on Democracy, Indian Removal, and
Slavery (1988).
- Remini, Robert V. Andrew
Jackson and his Indian Wars (2001).
- Remini, Robert V. "Andrew
Jackson," American National Biography (2000).
- Rowland, Dunbar. Andrew Jackson's Campaign against the
British, or, the Mississippi Territory in the War of 1812,
concerning the Military Operations of the Americans, Creek Indians,
British, and Spanish, 1813–1815 (1926).
- Schama, Simon. The American
Future: A History (2008).
- Schlesinger, Arthur
M. Jr. The Age of
Jackson. (1945). Winner of the Pulitzer Prize for History.
history of ideas of the era.
- Charles Grier Sellers, Jr. "Andrew Jackson versus the
Historians," The Mississippi Valley Historical Review,
Vol. 44, No. 4. (March, 1958), pp. 615–634. in JSTOR.
- Syrett, Harold C. Andrew Jackson: His Contribution to the
American Tradition (1953).
- Taylor, George Rogers, ed. Jackson Versus Biddle: The
Struggle over the Second Bank of the United States (1949),
excerpts from primary and secondary sources.
- Ward, John William. Andrew Jackson, Symbol for an Age
(1962) how writers saw him.
- Wilentz, Sean. Andrew Jackson (2005) short
biography.
External links