Unit 4: Jacksonian Period, Manifest Destiny, & the 1850s

  • The evolving concept of american democracy & Andrew Jackson’s Shaping of the Presidency

    • Changing Economy in the 1820’s

      • Factory Systems →

        • Samuel Slater → British but comes to America in the early 1800’s

          • brings knowledge of textile mills and the understanding of technology

          • Beleives that streams and bodies of water can be used to create energy to run textile mills in America

        • Mills are created and are all located in the Northern States

        • US has an abundance of natural resources like:

          • water

          • cotton - new cash crop

            • can now be sold to factories and out of the country

        • Not as good at making cloth as the British as the British were still #1 for finer clothes

          • needed to find a cheap labor force:

            • young un-married women who had no economic opportunity outside of their households

        • Henry Clays American System created protective tariffs so that people would buy from these textile mills in the upper New England area

      • Eli Whitney → creates interchangable parts

        • creates the cotton engine(gin)

          • revolutionizes cotton production

          • once cotton is picked, you still need to separate the cotton from the seed and it is very labor intensive

          • demand for cotton increases and so southern states grow more of it and slavery is even more important

      • Transportation →

        • Robert Fulton → created the idea of a steam engine and put it on a boat to create steam boats which makes it much more efficent for transportation

        • Canals are being built during this time period to allow more transportation for steam boats

          • built by state funding to connect natural bodies of water to connect regions

            • part of Henry Clay’s American System

      • Market Revolution → connecting all the regions because of the innovations in technology

        • helps to grow internal economy in America and helps to reduce buying from places like Britian

    • Population

      • Country is growing and population is more dense

      • Urban population(cities) is growing

        • more cities are emerging but majority of the people still live in rural areas

        • by 1800 5.3 million people in cities

        • by 1840 17 million people in cities

        • specifically in cities in the North where textile factories are

      • American Generation

        • 1824 - Jefferson and Adam die on the same day

        • Founding fathers are no longer a part of America and the population is now truly an American generation

        • One of the factors that Henry Clays American System was so supported

      • Imigration increases from countries in Eruope

        • mainly for economic reasons

    • Politics

      • Universal White Male Suffrage →If you are a white male you can vote even if you don’t own land

      • most states have removed the requirment to own land in order to vote

      • occurs first in the Western States

        • Kentucky, Tennessee, Missouri, Illinois

      • want to see the average common folk voting

      • changes the ideal of democracy

  • 1828 Presidential Election

    • A. Jackson v J.Q. Adams v

    • J.C. Calhoun(current vice-president) wants to remain vice-president

    • ‘Common Man’ - Jackson is wealthy and owns lands and slaves but wants to be seen as the man’s ‘common man’

    • A. Jackson wins majority of the electoral votes and over ½ of the popular votes in this election

    • Opens up the white house and has a party to celebrate winning the election

    • this creates the Democratic party - the true democracy

    • creates a cabinet →

      • ‘Spoils System’ or Rotation in Office

        • fires his enemies and hires his friends

        • regularly fired and rehired people in his cabinet if he didn’t like what they were doing or how they were behaving

      • ‘Kitchen Cabinet’

        • newspaper people, politicians, friends from the west

        • people who got their names from coming to the white house through the kitchen door

        • occured when he ignored his cabinet and asked advice from the ‘common man’

  • Indian Removal Act (1830)

    • Jackson agreed with the state of Georgia that Native American land should be opened up to the white man

    • remove tribes from their land and move them to indian territory on the other side of the mississippi river

    • 5 civilized tribes → five tribes that tried to asimilate into the white culture

      • cherokee

      • creek

      • chickasaw

      • seminole

      • choctaw

    • Trail of Tears → forced to leave their native land and traveled through snow, hundreds of miles without proper supplies

      • 60,000 forcfilly relocated and thousands die en-route or shortly after arrival

    • some historians say that Jackson was just trying to protect the Native Americans by moving them away and preserving their culture

  • The Brink of Civil War - Nulification Crisis (1832-1833)

    • Vice President and the President don’t get along

    • Calhoun wanted to protect slavery as slaves became a minority

    • high tax on cloth used to clothe slaves

    • Calhoun wanted to create nulification so states could ignore any law that they considered unconstitutional

      • reamergance of the Kentucky Resolutions

    • Divided colonies as the southern states wanted nulification while the northern states beleived that it would ruin the country

    • Calhoun arote the South Carolina Exposition and Protest

    • Jackson states his beleif as he was entirely against nulification

    • 1832 - State of South Carolina nulified the high tax and said that if Jackson tried to stop them, that they would withdraw from the union

    • Force Bill

      • approval to use military force if South Carilina does not remove their nulification and if they try to leave the union

        • Jackson issued a proclomation to try and get them to stop the nulification and showed that if they tried to leave the union, then a war would occur

        • a union of people not a union of people

          • South Cariliona could not leave the union or it would cause a war as it was considered a removal from the union by force

    • Compromise Tariff of 1833 → Clay passed a bill that largley decreased the tax on cloth and then SOuth Carilina removed their

  • Clay wants to try and be president as he does not like Jackson

  • Jackson beleived that the bank of the United States was corrupt

    • he thought it was unconstitutional

    • gave too much power to private bankers over the country as a whole

    • Biddle was the man in charge of the bank

    • bank was using the money to pay for people to get into congress

  • Clay and Biddle created a bill to protect the bank for another 12 years

  • Jackson vetoed the recharter bill and made the bank the issue of the re-election

  • Henry Clay beleieved that Jackson was trampeleing on the US Constitution and used it in his election

  • 1832 - Jackson re-won the election

    • Biddle wants to show Jackson to stay out of this

    • Biddle made it hard for the averge man and business owners by increasing taxes and declining loans

  • Jackson vetoes 12 bills in congress while Madison was the 2nd highest and only vetoed 7 times

    • Jackson vetoes anything that isn’t in the interest of the common man while the presidents before him were cautios and only used it if they considered it unconstitutioanl

  • ‘Killing the Bank’

    • Jackson pulled deposits out of the bank which destroyed the national bank and payed off the national debt

    • put all the national money into state banks

  • Pet Banks

    • negative term by Jacksons enemies on his view of removing the national bank

  • Banks had to loan money to make money and the loan was handed out in paper cirtificates

  • paper cirtificates were also handed out when people bought land

  • Inflation occures because of the paper cirtificates

  • ‘Specie Circular’

    • If you want to buy land from the national government, you have to pay in hard cash not in paper certificates

    • people with paper certificates go back to the bank and try to get the hard cash so they can buy land

  • Bank Runs

    • banks had to close because they could not keep up

  • The Panic of 1837

    • second economic crisis that the country faces

    • Martin Van Buren replaces Jackson as the new president

      • serves his presidency during this economic decline

  • The Whig Party

    • Anti-Jacksons

      • beleive that Jackson is a king and a tyrant

    • W.H. Harrisson - war hero who won a battle during the war of 1812

      • wins the election

    • goes into the inogeration underdressed for the weather to show he is strong

      • gets nemonia and dies 30 days in

    • Tyler is the vice president and has to step up

      • doesn’t have.a very successful presidency

  • The age of reform → 1800-1848

  • The Second Great Awakening → 1800-1840

    • succession of religious revivals that remade americas religious landscape

    • Many preachers a traveling from church to church and don’t stay in one place

      • traveled mostly to rural areas to go to revivals as they popped up

    • more people are flocking to urban cities

    • American generation - no longer the founding fathers (moral and philisophical values) and americans now want to get in touch with their religious roots

    • Religion becomes a haven for some of the people that are struggeling with the changes taking place in Jacksonian era

    • Cane Ridge, Kentucky is seen as the first revival that sparks this awakening

      • 1 in every 10 people in Kentucky was present in a revival

    • white males, white women, and free african americans are all present

      • provides a space for previously marginalized groups

    • philosphy is that everyone deserves a change while the original philosphy revolved around pre-determined

    • emotional, passionate revivals

      • fainting, crying, speeking in tounges, etc.

    • in 1831, churches across the nation reported about a 100,000 converts

    • one of the most inclusive movements

    • did not have to have a preaching license to preach

  • Charles Grandison Finney → former lawyer that converted and became a preacher

    • extremley popular internarant preacher that travels from place to place

    • says that it is up to the individual when they want to recieve forgivness and no longer beleives in the alter call

    • had an anxious bench → people that were torn between asking for forgivnes would sit on this bench right next to Finney

    • critized by established churches mostly for breaking away from the statu quo

    • tried to expand the role of women in these revival meetings

  • Revival allowed african americans to create their own churches

  • Joseph Smith → beleives that he is seeing a series of visions in the early 1820’s

    • told that the christian denominations have straied from the truth

    • gold tablets have the real truth on them

    • given acess to reading what is on these gold tablets

    • Smith dictates these writings to friends

    • Creates the book of Mormon

  • Latter-Day Saints → derogitory name for Mormons

    • mostly located in New York

    • run out of town and is the start of the westward migration for Mormons

  • The Search for an American Zion → eventual promised land for Mormons

    • go to Ohio but so many people flock to Ohio that they are run out of town

    • move to Missouri but are once again run out; partly because it occured during the Panic of 1812

    • head to Navu, Illinois

      • Smith is advocating for plural marriage

        • followers become wary of Smith

      • followers turn on Smith with the issue of plural marriage

      • Smith flees but returns and is shot and killed by a mob

    • followers moved again to Salt Lake City, Utah

      • propose State of Desserai

      • majority of followers still reside here

  • Millerites → William Miller is a farmer from Upstate NY and interrpreates the end of the world in the bible to mean that the world will end in 1843

    • Becomes known as the Great Dissapointment

    • Miller losses credibility

    • some followers break off and create their own religion

  • The Shakers → first experiment in Communal living

    • share property and items

    • relied on getting people to convert to their cause

    • beleived that men and women should be seperated at all times

      • made it hard to grow the religion

    • when people turned 21 they could stay or leave

    • primarily agriculturally based

    • Nathaniel Hawthorn observed behabior(writter of the Scarlett Letter)

    • Sopontanious dancing untill it was converted to choriagraphed and then back to spontanious in teh 1840s

    • Was not a huge community

      • small community in rural Maine and is the only known Shakers community to still exist

  • Upstate New York → ‘Burned-over district’

    • Mormons, Shakers, Revivals, and Antislavery churches

  • John Humphrey Noyes → starts the Oneida Community

    • originally wants to be a preacher but decides that the informality of the 2nd great awakening is odd

    • beleives that humans can achieve perfectionism

    • beleieved they could be perfect once they converted

    • community established in 1841 in Upstate New York

    • Every man and every woman is married to each other

    • each memeber of the community that was being repremanded was put in front of the community and looked down upon

    • beleive that men and women are equal

    • people who convert are in a state of sinlessness

      • no confession

    • abandoned in 1881

  • George Ripley → originally a minister

    • founds Brook Farm in 1841 with his wife and 15 followers

    • physical labor → condition of well being and good mental health

      • 10 hours in the summer

      • 8 hours in the winter

    • intellectual community → plays, music

    • Nathaniel Hawthorne is a part of this

      • becomes disalusioned and talks badly about it in one of its books

    • very good school system

    • 1846 - fire destroyes the main part of the farm and religion is never the same

  • Transcendentalism → mainly in New England

    • extremley disaludioned with organized relgion

    • philisophical, political, and literature movement

    • beleive that man is perfectable and naturally good

    • man has freedom of will

    • nature is good

    • when man goes into nature and treates it good, then he will meet God

    • man must follow his own heart

    • self-reliant

    • extremley distrought at the Manufacturing Industry

      • concerned that nature is going to be taken away from them

    • sceptical of capitalism

    • against west-ward expansion movement

  • Ralph Waldo Emerson → Dean of the movement

    • rails against Manufactuing industry

    • emphasized the reliablity of the individual sole

    • believed that the time had come for American to start its own intellectual movements

  • Birth of American Literature

    • printers are better and can print quicker

    • publishing offices are popping up

    • magizines grow in popularity and writes can publish short stories in these

    • novels that come out by chapter each week in magizines become popular

  • Herman Melville → takes trip on the whale ship and enspires Moby Dick

  • Nathaniel Hawthorne → writer of The Scarlett Letter and also writes short stories

    • vivid paintings of New England

  • Edgar Allan Poe → gains international fame for stories and poems

    • the telltale heart

  • Temperance Movement → 1826, temperance society created to get people to obstain from alchol

    • women become the driving force behind the temperance movement because they are the ones that suffered if a man drank too much

      • became a staple of everyday household

        • average man drinks 7 gallons of alchol in a year

        • some households don’t have clean drinking water so they drink alcohol

    • some beleived that it was created to target the lower class

    • in the 1840s, americans drank ½ of what they had drank in the 1820s

  • Healthcare Reform →

    • Dorothea Dix → sickly child that becomes a tutor

      • told to go to Europe to look at her medical problems

      • sees that Europeans are building special buildings for people with mental issues

        • called Lunatic Hospitals

      • before these facilities, people were thrown into general population prisons because they had nowehere else to go

      • contends that our prison system needs to be reformed

        • men and women need to be put into separte facilities

      • asylums and institutions established in places like New England and North Carolina

      • pioneer in the field of nursing which is just starting to kick off

  • Education Reform →

    • Horace Mann →

      • advocated for universal public education for all

      • in the beginning, it was the rich people that could get a formal education

      • Mann did not get a high quality education and beleives that the teachers he had were not fully equpit to deliver his education

      • beleives that american cannot remain ignorant

      • beleives that education must be payed for by the people of the US

      • education needs to be free of any religious influence

      • education needs to be provided by well equipt teachers

      • establishes the board of education

    • Bronson Alcott →

      • adds art, music, physical education, nature study all added to education

      • pushes against the educationoal current

      • father of Louise May Alcott who wrote Little Women

  • Anti-slavery → beleive that slavery is immoral and socially wrong but are not advocating for equality among races

    • many of these advocates that enslaved people should be free

      • enslaves should be payed or release gradualy

    • want emancipated slaves to be sent back to Africa and do not want them to be a part of america

    • American Colonization Socity: John Marshall, Henry Clay, James Madison, etc.

      • want to send free slaves to Monrovian in Africa

      • very few free slaves go back

  • The Abolition Movement →

    • William Lloyd Garrison starts this movement

    • Jan 1, 1831, published the first copy of his newspaper and advocates for the freedom and staying of african americans

    • passivist and beleives that it should not be violent

    • attempts to convert peopple with moral persuasion by trying to show them how slavery is wrong

    • one of the earliest followers is Fredrigh Douglas

    • Frederick Douglass → lecter for the Massachusets Anti-Slavery Society

      • Douglass beleives that slavery will not go away without violence

  • Womens Rights → women are upset that african americans are getting all the attention

    • beleive that they should have the right to vote, etc

    • Seneca Falls → womens declaration of independence

      • 68 women adn 32 men sign this declaration

    • movement continues into the 20th century

  • The Consequences of Manifest Destiny

    • Americans beleive that it is their right and thier destiny to move west

    • slogan from a journalist, John O’Sullivan, that claimed it was the manifest destiny of the power and beleived that the country needed to grow

      • by the right of our manifest destiny to overspread and to possess the whole of the continetnt which Providence had given us for the development of the great experiment

    • greatest support in Northern and Western States

      • large % supports expansion

    • The Whig party was against manifest destiny

  • The Texas Issue →

    • Mexico is an independent country after defeating the Spanish by the 1830s

    • Texas is not very populated and only a few native mexicans and tribes live their

    • Mexican government beleives that they need to populate Texas

      • needs to come up with incentives:

        • open the territory up for settelment and let Americand live here

          • give emprearios (large mexican land grants)

          • you have to become a citizen of Mexico

          • You have to convert to the Catholic religion

          • Slaves are not allowed

    • By 1835 35,000 Americans have populated Texas

      • don’t see themselves as Mexicans, don’t convert to Catholisism, and some still bring slaves

    • By 1836, Americans argue that they need to overthrow and establish their own government

  • War for Independence → starts in 1836

    • The Alamo is just a small portion of this event but starts the war cry

    • “Remeber the Alamo”

    • Government of Mexico will eventually surrender

    • The first thing that Americans will do once they acheive freedom from Mexico is to ask for statehood

      • they want to be anexxed and join the US

      • ask multiple times

        • President Andrew Jackson is in power whent they ask the first time

          • Jackson says no

        • Van Buren is next and refuses to touch the issue

      • beleived that bringing this issue of statehood up to congress would lead to political unrest

      • Abolition movement is ocurring during this time

    • Abolitionist Petitios → Abolitionist movements are creating petitons and taking it to congress to bring ths issue up for debate

    • Flood of abolitionist petitions coming into congress to the point where they are not getting anything else done

    • Gag Rule → put in place by members of congress that tabled all topics of slavery and stopped the debate of said topic

      • put in place in 1836 and lasts untill about 1850

        • vast majority of politicians are not strong abolitionists and don’t care about these problems

      • Because of this reslolution, the annexation of Texas cannot be brought up

        • was the Repuclic of Texas

  • James K. Polk’s Aggressive Foreign Policy →

    • Polk is a democrat and a follower of Jackson

    • Elected in 1844 and is a “dark horse”

    • Polk ran against Henry Clay (part of the Whig party)

    • Polk is in support of annexating Texas and also supports expanding

      • wants to take Oregon - 54 -40 or fight (line of latitude) is his campaign speech

    • Enforcment of Monro Doctrine → Polk supports this doctrine and beleives that all of North America is our land

    • Polk negotiates and gets is to the 49 line - the compromise line

      • agressive in his push that military force should be used to gain this land

        • this causes the British to step back

    • 1846 Treaty grants the 49 degree line

      • Victory for Polk

    • Remember Texas

      • President Tyler annexxes Texas because he knows the Polk will do it

    • Slidell’s Mission → sent by Polk to see if the Mexican Government will sell the US California

      • Mexico says they won’t sell

      • they only way to get California is by going to war

    • Causes dispute of where the southern boundary line is drawns which leads to disputed territory

    • Polk talks one of his generals and sends them to the newaces river and then decides to march the soldiers onto the other side of the river

      • soldiers are killed and congress declares war

  • The Mexican -American War (1846-1848)

    • American strategy →

      • Gain California & New Mexico

        • gain California without almost any violence

      • Unpopularity of the War →

        • Lincoln’s “spot resolution”

          • knows that Polk caused the squrmish to expand territory and knows that the blood was spilled in disputed terrioty

        • Whig criticism

          • David Wilmot

          • Wilmot Proviso → in this war, whatever land is gained should not allow slavery

    • Impact of the War

      • Guadalupe-Hidalgo Treaty →

        • formerly ends the war

        • Mexican cession → name given to terrioty that America gets from the war

  • California Gold Rush →

    • Discovery occurs in 1848

    • Causes a massive population boom

      • Within one year of cession, their are enough people in California to ask for statehood

    • Diverse population → mexicans, americans, chinese

    • Consequences →

      • California wants to be a free state

      • Southern members are against it

      • Sectionalism → people are viewing this from their own lense and not seeing whats good for the whole country

      • Causes tensions to increase

    • Henry Clay says this is tearing the country apart

  • Compromise of 1850

    • California is granted statehood as a free state

    • Popular Sovereignty is allowed in the Utah and New Mexico territory

      • is population vote for slavery then they will have slavery and if they vote against then their won’t be slavery

    • No more public sale of slaves in the capitol but slavery can still exist in the capitol

    • Stronger/ Stricter fugitive Slave law

      • Northern Citizencs must assist in the return of run-away slaves

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