Tuesday, December 17, 2019

The War Of North Carolina - 1089 Words

While trying to retrieve some nephews from a British prison ship, Andrew s mother also fell ill and died. An orphan and a hardened veteran at the age of fifteen, Jackson drifted, taught school a little, and then read law in North Carolina. After admission to the bar in 1787, he accepted an offer to serve as public prosecutor in the new Meroe District of North Carolina, west of the mountains, with its seat at Nashville on the Cumberland River. Arriving in 1788, Jackson thrived in the new frontier town. He built a legal practice, entered into trading ventures, and began to acquire land and slaves. Jackson s rise in Tennessee politics was meteoric, attesting to his strength of character. In quick succession, he was a delegate to the state†¦show more content†¦(Biography.com editors 2016.) Andrew Jackson Election The United States presidential election of 1828 was the 11th quadrennial presidential election, held from Friday, October 31, to Tuesday, December 2, 1828. It featured a re-match between incumbent presidents John Quincy Adams, and Andrew Jackson, the winner of Electoral College in the election of 1824. . With no other major candidates, Jackson and his chief ally Martin Van Buren consolidated their bases in the South and New York and easily defeated Adams. The Democratic Party merged its strength from the existing supporters of Jackson and their coalition with some of the supporters of William H. Crawford (the Old Republicans) and Vice-President John C. Calhoun. Jackson was the first president whose home state was neither Massachusetts nor Virginia. The Tariff of 1828, also known as the Tariff of Abominations, had been signed into law earlier in the year, increasing tariff rates to above 60%. Though it had narrowly passed in the House, it was unpopular with the Southern states as they imported materials and goods from abroad. Jackson and the Democrats opposed the tariff, and the unpopularity of the bill led to a division of the vote into two main sections: the Northern, minority Adams vote, and the Southern, majority Jackson vote. Jackson also personally appealed to the

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