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Andrew Jackson
(redirected from President Jackson)

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Jackson, Andrew 

Born Mar. 15, 1767, in Waxhaw; died June 8, 1845, at the Hermitage, in Nashville, Tenn. American military and political figure.

Jackson achieved fame during the War of 1812. In 1821 he became the governor of Florida, and in 1823 he was elected to the Senate. He was the president of the United States from 1829 to 1837. His political followers founded the Democratic Party of the United States which was a union of small farmers and rich plantation owners. Jackson advocated a democratization of the electoral system, a restriction of the power of the Bank of the United States, and a legalization of the activity of workers’ organizations. He sanctioned the preservation of Negro slavery, the extermination of the Indians, and the conquest of new territories. Jackson established the system of granting official posts to the supporters of the party that had won an election [spoils system].

REFERENCE

Schlesinger, A. The Age of Jackson. Boston, 1946.


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But President Jackson thought that would be an unconstitutional stretch of federal power.
251) Some earlier textbooks did portray President Jackson as an assertive constitutional interpreter.
of Oklahoma Press' American Indian Law and Policy Series, Kidwell (Native American studies and history) recounts the political journey of the Choctaw people, who were removed from Mississippi in the 1830s under President Jackson and struggled to maintain their livelihood on new lands and confronted by fewer freedoms and the influence of Christian missionaries.
 
 
 
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