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Chapter 12 - Political Evolution in the Age of Jackson

Panics of 1819 and 1837

  • Economic crashes

  • 1819 - The country was experiencing economic changes after War of 1812

  • 1837 - Jackson + Van Buren manipulated finances, which would eventually lead to economic crashes

  • The country faced many economic ups + downs

Era of Good Feelings

  • During the Monroe Era, the US enjoyed nationalism + prosperity

  • A period in the political history of the United States that reflected a sense of national purpose and a desire for unity among Americans in the aftermath of the War of 1812

Missouri Compromise

  • 1820

  • Created by Henry Clay, who was called the Great Compromiser

  • Under the compromise, Missouri was a slave state + Maine was a free state

  • 36’30’ line

Gentlemen’s Agreement

  • Truce under honor between the North + South

    • North would recognize that the 5th Amendment protects slaves as property

    • South would try to end slavery as soon as possible

  • The two regions’ fear of disunion and war led to pretend civility and a prevention of conflict

  • Prevented attempts to solve issue

Tariffs of 1816

  • Created under Clay’s American System

  • A protective tariff was targeted to protect domestic manufacturers (not to raise revenue)

Henry Clay

  • 1810 - Influential in Senate

  • Slave-owning attorney from Kentucky

  • Achievements included the Missouri Compromise + compromise tariff + Compromise of 1850

  • Under his American System included the Bank of the US, protective tariffs, and internal infrastructure improvements

Elections of 1824 and 1828

  • 1824 - John Quincy Adams won over Jackson in House

    • Jackson believed it was a corrupt bargain, as Clay and Adams had worked together

  • 1828 - Jackson’s victory led to a time period of common man democracy

  • Ended Era of Good Feelings

Corrupt Bargain

  • 1824

  • An accusation by Jackson

  • It was believed that if Henry Clay supported John Quincy Adams in the election and JQA won, Clay would be nominated as the Secretary of State

  • No evidence to prove this accusation

John Quincy Adams

  • Secretary of State

  • Became President in 1825

  • Opposed slavery

  • Achievements included the annexation of Texas + the gag rule

  • Served in the House of Representatives after presidency

Rush-Bagot Agreement

  • 1817 - US + Britain agreed to demilitarize Great Lakes

  • Limited naval armaments

  • Resulted in lasting peace between the US + Canada

Spoils System

  • 1829 - Patronage by Andrew Jackson

  • Selected supporters + civil servants as advisors in gov’t

    • Based on loyalty, not merit

  • Rotation in office

Kitchen Cabinet

  • 1829 - Began in Jackson administration

  • Andrew Jackson discussed policy in kitchen with friends

  • Relied more on friends than cabinet

  • Critics believed these closed door sessions brought inappropriate bias on Jackson’s decision-making

National Nominating Convention

  • Replaced caucus system

  • Delegates debated and created a party platform to support and eventually implement

Anti-Masonic Party

  • 1828 - Formed in NY

  • Opposed freemasons taking over republic

  • 1st to hold nat’l nominating convention

Nullification Crisis

  • 1828 - Tariff of Abominations (very high tariff) was implemented

    • Targeted to protect northern manufacturers

    • Alienated cotton customers (hurt South)

  • 1832 - South Carolina nullified the tariff + threatened secession

  • Resulted in Clay’s compromise tariff

John C. Calhoun

  • Served in cabinet positions + Senate

  • 1828 - “South Carolina Exposition and Protest” (protested against Tariff of Abominations)

  • Believed in states’ rights + slavery + nullification + secession

  • Opposed Jackson BUT compromised

Martin Van Buren

  • 1836

  • “Old Kinderhook”

  • Top advisor to Jackson

  • Opposed extension of slavery + annexation of Texas

  • His creation of the specie circular led to the Panic of 1837

    • Kept federal money in independent treasuries, which rendered it useless

Force Bill

  • 1833

  • Conflict between Jackson + South Carolina

  • If South Carolina refused to collect tariff, Jackson would use the military and prosecute anyone who refused as traitors

  • South Carolina responded + nullified Force Bill

  • Jackson eventually backed off because he needed the electoral support of the Southern planter class

  • South Carolina compromised with Clay’s compromise tariff

Gag Rule

  • 1836-1844

  • A series of rules that forbade the raising, consideration, or discussion of slavery in the U.S. House of Representatives from 1836 to 1844

  • The silencing of peaceful debates about slavery would eventually led to war

Bank War

  • 1829-1836

  • Henry Clay + Daniel Webster tried to recharter the Bank of the US early

  • Jackson believed that the bank was an enemy of common man

    • Vetoed the recharter bill + moved federal funds into “pet banks” instead

  • Uncontrolled speculation eventually led to the Panic of 1837

Daniel Webster

  • 1828 - Influential in the Senate

  • Believed in education + commerce

  • Supported Dartmouth in Supreme Court

  • Promoted American System + Bank of the US

  • Believed that secession was unconstitutional + not peaceful

    • “Liberty and Union, now and forever, one and inseparable.”

Whigs Versus Democrats

  • 1832 - Restored 2-party system

  • Democrats supported Andrew Jackson

    • Ideas included westward expansion + common man + planter class

    • Democratic Republicans (split of Jeffersonian-Republican)

    • Supported by the common people + wanted a strong central gov’t

  • Whigs supported Henry Clay, Daniel Webster, Abraham Lincoln

    • National Republicans (split of Jeffersonian-Republican)

    • 1854 - Absorbed into Republican party

    • Opposed Andrew Jackson

Webster-Hayne Debates

  • 1830 - Debates in the Senate

  • Northerners believed that settlement in West would result in less laborers

  • Robert Hayne believed that lands should be for new slave territories

Clay’s American System

  • 1816 - Proposed by Henry Clay

  • Would promote a national economy

  • Included a Bank of the United States, protective tariffs, and internal infrastructure improvements

BIG PICTURE

  • Slavery - Controversial issue + root of other issues

  • North + South + West - Different needs & goals + had supporters in Senate (Webster, Calhoun, Clay)

  • Andrew Jackson - Spoils system + use of veto + national nominating convention

  • Restored 2-party system

JQ

Chapter 12 - Political Evolution in the Age of Jackson

Panics of 1819 and 1837

  • Economic crashes

  • 1819 - The country was experiencing economic changes after War of 1812

  • 1837 - Jackson + Van Buren manipulated finances, which would eventually lead to economic crashes

  • The country faced many economic ups + downs

Era of Good Feelings

  • During the Monroe Era, the US enjoyed nationalism + prosperity

  • A period in the political history of the United States that reflected a sense of national purpose and a desire for unity among Americans in the aftermath of the War of 1812

Missouri Compromise

  • 1820

  • Created by Henry Clay, who was called the Great Compromiser

  • Under the compromise, Missouri was a slave state + Maine was a free state

  • 36’30’ line

Gentlemen’s Agreement

  • Truce under honor between the North + South

    • North would recognize that the 5th Amendment protects slaves as property

    • South would try to end slavery as soon as possible

  • The two regions’ fear of disunion and war led to pretend civility and a prevention of conflict

  • Prevented attempts to solve issue

Tariffs of 1816

  • Created under Clay’s American System

  • A protective tariff was targeted to protect domestic manufacturers (not to raise revenue)

Henry Clay

  • 1810 - Influential in Senate

  • Slave-owning attorney from Kentucky

  • Achievements included the Missouri Compromise + compromise tariff + Compromise of 1850

  • Under his American System included the Bank of the US, protective tariffs, and internal infrastructure improvements

Elections of 1824 and 1828

  • 1824 - John Quincy Adams won over Jackson in House

    • Jackson believed it was a corrupt bargain, as Clay and Adams had worked together

  • 1828 - Jackson’s victory led to a time period of common man democracy

  • Ended Era of Good Feelings

Corrupt Bargain

  • 1824

  • An accusation by Jackson

  • It was believed that if Henry Clay supported John Quincy Adams in the election and JQA won, Clay would be nominated as the Secretary of State

  • No evidence to prove this accusation

John Quincy Adams

  • Secretary of State

  • Became President in 1825

  • Opposed slavery

  • Achievements included the annexation of Texas + the gag rule

  • Served in the House of Representatives after presidency

Rush-Bagot Agreement

  • 1817 - US + Britain agreed to demilitarize Great Lakes

  • Limited naval armaments

  • Resulted in lasting peace between the US + Canada

Spoils System

  • 1829 - Patronage by Andrew Jackson

  • Selected supporters + civil servants as advisors in gov’t

    • Based on loyalty, not merit

  • Rotation in office

Kitchen Cabinet

  • 1829 - Began in Jackson administration

  • Andrew Jackson discussed policy in kitchen with friends

  • Relied more on friends than cabinet

  • Critics believed these closed door sessions brought inappropriate bias on Jackson’s decision-making

National Nominating Convention

  • Replaced caucus system

  • Delegates debated and created a party platform to support and eventually implement

Anti-Masonic Party

  • 1828 - Formed in NY

  • Opposed freemasons taking over republic

  • 1st to hold nat’l nominating convention

Nullification Crisis

  • 1828 - Tariff of Abominations (very high tariff) was implemented

    • Targeted to protect northern manufacturers

    • Alienated cotton customers (hurt South)

  • 1832 - South Carolina nullified the tariff + threatened secession

  • Resulted in Clay’s compromise tariff

John C. Calhoun

  • Served in cabinet positions + Senate

  • 1828 - “South Carolina Exposition and Protest” (protested against Tariff of Abominations)

  • Believed in states’ rights + slavery + nullification + secession

  • Opposed Jackson BUT compromised

Martin Van Buren

  • 1836

  • “Old Kinderhook”

  • Top advisor to Jackson

  • Opposed extension of slavery + annexation of Texas

  • His creation of the specie circular led to the Panic of 1837

    • Kept federal money in independent treasuries, which rendered it useless

Force Bill

  • 1833

  • Conflict between Jackson + South Carolina

  • If South Carolina refused to collect tariff, Jackson would use the military and prosecute anyone who refused as traitors

  • South Carolina responded + nullified Force Bill

  • Jackson eventually backed off because he needed the electoral support of the Southern planter class

  • South Carolina compromised with Clay’s compromise tariff

Gag Rule

  • 1836-1844

  • A series of rules that forbade the raising, consideration, or discussion of slavery in the U.S. House of Representatives from 1836 to 1844

  • The silencing of peaceful debates about slavery would eventually led to war

Bank War

  • 1829-1836

  • Henry Clay + Daniel Webster tried to recharter the Bank of the US early

  • Jackson believed that the bank was an enemy of common man

    • Vetoed the recharter bill + moved federal funds into “pet banks” instead

  • Uncontrolled speculation eventually led to the Panic of 1837

Daniel Webster

  • 1828 - Influential in the Senate

  • Believed in education + commerce

  • Supported Dartmouth in Supreme Court

  • Promoted American System + Bank of the US

  • Believed that secession was unconstitutional + not peaceful

    • “Liberty and Union, now and forever, one and inseparable.”

Whigs Versus Democrats

  • 1832 - Restored 2-party system

  • Democrats supported Andrew Jackson

    • Ideas included westward expansion + common man + planter class

    • Democratic Republicans (split of Jeffersonian-Republican)

    • Supported by the common people + wanted a strong central gov’t

  • Whigs supported Henry Clay, Daniel Webster, Abraham Lincoln

    • National Republicans (split of Jeffersonian-Republican)

    • 1854 - Absorbed into Republican party

    • Opposed Andrew Jackson

Webster-Hayne Debates

  • 1830 - Debates in the Senate

  • Northerners believed that settlement in West would result in less laborers

  • Robert Hayne believed that lands should be for new slave territories

Clay’s American System

  • 1816 - Proposed by Henry Clay

  • Would promote a national economy

  • Included a Bank of the United States, protective tariffs, and internal infrastructure improvements

BIG PICTURE

  • Slavery - Controversial issue + root of other issues

  • North + South + West - Different needs & goals + had supporters in Senate (Webster, Calhoun, Clay)

  • Andrew Jackson - Spoils system + use of veto + national nominating convention

  • Restored 2-party system