...sometimes be spilled to obtain it on equable and lasting terms.” - Andrew “Old Hickory” Jackson. He took this quote quite seriously. Andrew Jackson was the seventh president of the United States. He was known as the “common man” because he grew up very poor. Jackson has been on the $20 bill since 1928; that’s 87 years. I don’t think that Andrew Jackson should be not be on $20 bill because of his bad impacts on history and our nation. First, Andrew Jackson only supported only white males and did not support minorities. In the article President Andrew Jackson's Case for the Removal Act First Annual Message to Congress, 8 December 1829 on www.mtholyoke.edu it says “in relation to the removal of the Indians beyond the white settlements is approaching to a happy consummation (Mount Holyoke College).” This evidence proves that Jackson was...
Words: 499 - Pages: 2
...Was Andrew Jackson a villain or hero? Andrew Jackson was viewed in many ways democratic or undemocratic as some thought he was doing good and others think he was making horrible decisions. Andrew Jackson was not democratic in the US government as he did not respect people's rights and taking advantage of the government and bank leading to the panic of 1837. Andrew Jackson was not democratic in the US government. Andrew Jackson was known for many bad acts and we are to take a look at some documents to prove he wasn't democratic. (Document nine Cherokee plea) tells about how the Cherokee and other indians didn't want to move from their lands. The indians did change as started to build towns came up with an alphabet for the tribes. The...
Words: 646 - Pages: 3
...Andrew Jackson, an American Tyrant. As the president of the United States, Andrew Jackson exercised his power in a cruel, arbitrary, and unreasonable way. This abuse of power makes Andrew Jackson a tyrant. Many of the actions Jackson took as president of the United States prove Jackson was not democratic leader. First, Jackson vetoed congress and abolished the bank of the United States. Second, Jackson used the “Spoils System” to give his party and himself more power. Finally, Jackson removed thousands of Native Americans from their land illegally, and forced them onto unsettled land out west. Andrew Jackson once said, “I cannot be intimidated from doing that which my judgment and conscience tell me is right by any earthly power.” This statement shows Jackson’s attitude was one of a tyrant, not a democratic leader. The Bank of the United States was started in 1816 to restore a sound fiscal condition after the War of 1812. The bank was operated and managed by both private and public officials. The bank provided public services such as transferring government funds around the country and functioning as a depository for the Treasury.(a) The bank had a reputation of being responsible with it’s money and was generally popular among state bankers. The fact the Bank of the United States was popular among it’s competition (State bankers) speaks to how well it was run and the positive impact it had on the economy of America. There was however many Americans that...
Words: 1173 - Pages: 5
...Was Andrew Jackson suitable for being awarded the honor of being on the twenty dollar bill? This discussion talks about what made Andrew Jackson a respectable human being and President as well as what did not. During the 1820’s into the 1830’s Jackson had accumulated many American supporters who helped him become situated in the country’s most glorified position. Jackson served two terms as President of the United States. When someone is elected as President for a second term they are most likely doing something right in the eyes of countless people. Andrew Jackson was certainly not the perfect President or a human being in general but there are many great things he did for this country. Jackson found himself to be a great political figure in earlier times before becoming President. In the 1820’s Jackson became one the forerunners for the Democratic-Republicans. Towards the end of the decade Andrew Jackson established what was known as Jacksonian Democracy with supporters all over. “Jacksonian democracy was an effort to control the power of the capitalist groups.” Jackson’s supporters eventually broke off into their own political party called Democrats. This was the beginning of the oldest political party ever established and also the beginning of the second party system. Jackson’s idea of the Democracy system was to “provide equal protection and equal benefits to all its white male citizens and favor no region or class over another.” This shows how Jackson really...
Words: 801 - Pages: 4
...Andrew Jackson Essay Dr. Clark President Andrew Jackson Andrew Jackson was a self-made man. Jackson was the only president to symbolize another great generation. Andrew Jackson has his own age known as he “Jacksonian age. No other president could stand for their own age. President Jackson had enhanced many presidential powers through his tough personality, and how he was able to take on many challenges. He has strengthened the Democracy by vetoing countless bills, and paid the national debt. Jackson had also taken a huge role on the Indian removal act. The challenges “old hickory” faced were not easy and he was the one to be believed the strongest president. Andrew Jackson had strengthened the democracy in a few ways. One way he had strengthened the democracy is that Jackson believed “the president was the servant of the people” (page 114-115).This meant that he believed the people being served was to give them what they really desired and to keep them satisfied with his presidency. At first, Jackson didn’t believe he was fit to be president. He knew his ability could control a group of fighting men for battle, but Jackson never believed in his ability that he could take on and control an entire country. Although, he strongly believed the people of the country had the right to choose, so he encouraged voting rights. In the book “when people called it, it was the leaders duty to act upon the service” (67). Jackson had took the idea of becoming president into further thought...
Words: 1024 - Pages: 5
...The Statesman, The Writer, and the Military Man: How George Washington, Thomas Paine, and Andrew Jackson Helped Construct America’s Identity All of America’s founding fathers contributed greatly to the formation of the United States and helped build this nation through their accomplishments and dedication to making their home a better place for all Americans. But of the 55-plus men whom history has given the name of “founding father,” the contributions of George Washington (1732-1799), Thomas Paine (1737-1809), and Andrew Jackson (1767-1845) stand out for their range of accomplishments, their contribution to critical components of democracy and its identity, and to military achievements that helped form the geography of the place we know as America. For me, this statesman, this writer, and this military strategist serve as the greatest examples of the titans of America we call our founding fathers. George Washington was not only our first president to be elected into office, but he is also notable for being the only president in the country’s history to receive a unanimous vote. Although our nation recognizes many founding fathers, Washington is known as the “Father” of The United States for many reasons — and not solely because he was elected as the first President of The United States in 1789 and unanimously elected again in 1792. His accomplishments before, during, and after his presidency have earned him the title “Father” of the United States. Washington assisted...
Words: 1679 - Pages: 7
...During his time as president Andrew Jackson had to deal with a large number of issues facing the country, such as a financial crisis, increasing sectionalism throughout the country, and the Native Americans. While many historians consider Jackson to be one of our greatest president, his domestic policies were ultimately detrimental to the well being of the country; therefore, he was not a great president but a immoral, corrupt leader, whose victories in the war of 1812 and his popularity overshadow his atrocious presidency. From his racism to his abuse of the executive branch, Jackson’s presidency was anything other than great. One of the biggest issues of Jackson’s presidency was the nullification crisis. The crisis took place as a result...
Words: 942 - Pages: 4
...Carolina would take the stand and attempt to denounce the tariff as a violation of the states sovereignty and demanded that states should have the right to nullify federal laws as well as threatening secession if these demands were not met. Meanwhile, President Andrew Jackson would take a strong oppositional stance citing that the Union was well within the laws of the constitution to impose tariffs and thus any attempt to nullify them or any other federal ordinance is illegal and liable to acts of force. In Hayne’s statement, he immediately goes onto the attack. Already in his first paragraph he asserts his goal to, “...uphold the SOVEREIGN AUTHORITY OF THE STATE…”(Hayne, 1) For him, he is loyal to his state first and country second and expresses that the Union is holding South Carolina in a state of, “Colonial vassalage,”(Hayne, 2) due to the abuses of the...
Words: 890 - Pages: 4
...tribes were the Cherokee, Chickasaw, Choctaw, Creek, and the Seminoles. When Andrew Jackson was elected president in the year 1828, the Natives soon became a part of the next racial targeting. President Andrew Jackson encouraged the expulsion; the Congress authorized this removal policy set by the president in 1830. The Indian Removal Act was passed on May 28, 1830; they were involuntarily removed from their homes and forced to move west. The Indian Removal Act was defined as swapping the U.S. western area for the...
Words: 1731 - Pages: 7
...imagination, first to recognize the nature of his supremacy. Mao had two careers, one as rebel leader, one as an updated emperor. He had gained the power of the latter but evidently retained the self-image of the former. Because authority in China came form the top down, as was recognized even in the mass line, once the CCP had taken power its leader became sacrosanct, above all the rest of mankind, not only the object of a cult of veneration but also the acknowledge superior of everyone in the organization. Such of the CCP had been put together by Mao that it could be regarded as his creation, and if he wanted to reform it, that was his privilege. Only if we regard him as a monarch in succession to scores of emperors can we imagine why the leadership of the CPP, trained to be loyal, went along with his piecemeal assault on and destruction of them. Mao also seems to have had in mind the idea that student youth could be mobilized to attack the evils in the establishment and purge China revisionism. It would be a form to manipulate mass movement, which his experience told him, was the engine of social change. (387) The Cultural Revolution, like the Hundred Flowers Campaign and the Great Leap Forward, turned out to be something he had not envisioned. Allowing for many variations, the purge rate among party officials was somewhere around 60 percent. It has been estimated that 400,000 people died as a result of maltreatment. (387) How the Cultural Revolution Unfolded From late...
Words: 2784 - Pages: 12
...What did the historian Frederick Jackson Turner argue about the importance of the western frontier in American history in 1893? a. The western frontier made the United States different from Europe. Correct Why did the U.S. government decide to move Indians to reservations around the mid nineteenth century? c. The government's policy of pushing the Indians further west to make way for white settlement no longer worked because there was no land left to push the Indians further west. Correct Why did the Indians sign the Treaty of Fort Laramie, which ceded some of their land to allow passage of wagon trains? d. They hoped to preserve their culture and way of life in the face of white settlement of the West. Correct What was the Comstock Load? b. The richest vein of silver ore found on the North American continent. Correct Which is the largest ethnic group in the western mining district of the U. S. in the late nineteenth century? a. Chinese Correct The Chinese men were hard workers but anti-Chinese prejudice barred them from work in which jobs? b. Mining jobs Correct What was the purpose of the Chinese Exclusion Act of 1882? c. To limit and decrease the number of Chinese immigrants to the United States. Correct Which two factors helped stimulate the land rush in the trans-Mississippi West? c. The Homestead Act of 1862 and he building of the transcontinental from the Mississippi River to the California coast. Correct What did the Homestead Act of 1862...
Words: 1357 - Pages: 6
...Executive Power and the Constitution Michael Gray HIS 303: The American Constitution Professor Ginger Jarvis November 29, 2012 Executive Power and the Constitution “The Constitution has never greatly bothered any wartime president,” wrote Francis Biddle, Attorney General during World War II, in his memoirs (Smith, 1999, pg.24). Biddle’s comment was in reflection on President Franklin Delano Roosevelt’s decision to relocate Japanese-Americans. An examination of American history reveals the Constitution does not appear to bother president during periods of national survival. In fact, Presidents seize crisis in domestic and foreign affairs as the opportunity to expand executive power. This paper provides a brief history on powers in the Constitution, examines use of executive power in domestic and foreign affairs, and concludes with an argument on how the issue should be interpreted. Framers of the Constitution believed separation of powers and a system of checks and balances would keep one branch of government from having more power then the others. Noah Feldman (2006) writes “nothing is more basic to the operation of a constitutional government than the way it allocates power” (Our Presidential Era, para.2). Constitutional Framers created three separate branches of government independent of each other. According to Cornell University Law School (2012), the first three articles of the “Constitution outlines the branches of the U.S. Government...
Words: 3315 - Pages: 14
...they were not satisfied with the British and wanted to obtain their freedom. The colonist began to have a stronger urge of freedom as the British began to abuse their powers in the colonies. The constant taxation acts being placed on the colonist led them to revolt against the British and declared war as they desired to obtain their liberty. “Through the military intelligence that the colonist had they were able to win their victory from the British July 4, 1776.”1 Although...
Words: 1676 - Pages: 7
...jesse perez 1.1 Converging Cultures Area 1 investigates how social orders in North America have changed over the long run and how European provinces created. A huge number of years before Christopher Columbus and other European wayfarers set foot in America, Native Americans started planting and raising products. When of Columbus started his voyages in the late fifteenth century, an extensive variety of developments and dialects existed in North America. When wayfarers discovered that Columbus had come to new grounds, other European investigations started to scan for new domain. New pioneers hoped to subjugated Africans to help ranch. The brutal treatment of the Africans was a sharp difference to the lives of the advantaged. While subjugated...
Words: 4455 - Pages: 18
...EXAMPLE 1 International litigation is often difficult to seize because of different procedures used by States and principles laying down procedures. These principles are related to the judicial conceptions that States have adopted. This point will be adressed latter in this introduction. On the other hand, International Convention, in a general or a specific view in relation to civil and commercial matter are enacted by States in order to uniform and harmonize body of rules applicable to international commercial litigation. For example, Lugano convention harmonized rules in order to determine competence of jurisdiction, or the Convention of Vienna on international sales of goods determines competence of jurisdiction and the law applicable. In order to explain which criterion is more important in the construction of private international law concerned with international commercial litigation, it will be relevant to focus this study on the rules of competence of jurisdiction. Besides the general system of conventions, as explained above, judicial traditions of countries can explain debates around the best ways to enact rules on international trade, and especially international litigations arise from commercial relationships between actors. Indeed, on one hand, common law countries focus on the role of the judge for the creation, the interpretation and the application of law rules. Some authors argue that the predominance of the judge in common law judicial system...
Words: 8424 - Pages: 34