The Upper and Lower Canadian rebellion against the limited representative government imposed in the constitutional Act of 1791 by the British government in 1837.
Prior to 1800, most of the original 13 states had limited voting to property owners, excluding approximately half of the white male population.
The election of 1824 marked the dramatic end of James Monroe's political truze in 1817, and of a small non-partisan political elite's idea of leadership.
In 1834 a night parade was organized in support of Andrew Jackson by the French visitor Michel Chevalier.
The election of 1828 was the first time that the new popular democratic culture and party system demonstrated its power and effectiveness.
The resisting Cherokees were driven to Oklahoma West in 1838, during the last and most infamous removal, along which the "Trail of Tears" had been made.
Most traders and business people of the nation endorsed the concept of a strong national bank controlled by wealthy investors, not the federal government.
Jackson rejected the notion of coordinated government economic planning in the case of domestic improvements, in favor of popular democracy.
In 1833 the bank's Managing Director, Nicholas Biddle, counterattacked the government with the withdrafts of its depots, calling for business loans, which in the winter of 1833–34 caused severe panic and recession.
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