Andrew Jackson

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    I have mixed feelings about Jackson. As some say, he did expand the voting base and he struck a blow against the planter Aristocracy that had been running the country. His treatment of the Indians though shows him in a different light. He certainly didn't extend the voting franchise to them. Thumbing his nose at the Supreme Court over the issue gives him an Imperial air. Moving the tribes to Oklahoma may have been a best of all possible outcomes sort of thing. There probably would have been a…

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    In chapter 6 of Deloria’s Custer Died for Your Sins, he goes extensively into government agencies and their roles in the tribes. He spends a considerable amount of time on the Bureau of Indian Affairs and their area offices around the country. Deloria doesn’t fully condemn the Bureau of Indian Affairs or the area offices, but he points out a lot of their short comings. His main intent in writing the chapter in my opinion is mostly to expose how ineffectual the area offices are. He introduces the…

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    Spoils System The spoils system a system in which your friends come into power with you. A system in which if you are the most loyal follower of a certain person in power you get into power. A great example is shown on pg 40 of the novel The Destiny of the Republic when it states that “ ten years earlier then President Grant had given Conkling his most fiercely loyal supporter, control of the New York Customs house.” That is the spoils system at its finest because it shows that supporters of…

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    5. John C Calhoun, Henry Clay, and Daniel Webster each had an impact on American History. Pick one of them and share how he specifically impacted antebellum politics and the issue of slavery. Also, include background information. This essay will discuss the impact that John C. Calhoun had on antebellum Politics and the issue of slavery. John C. Calhoun born March 18, 1782 and died on March 31 1850, was a noteworthy U.S. statesman and spokesman for the slave-plantation system of the antebellum…

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    The Jacksonian Period

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    era of the “common man.” In 1830 Jackson vetoed a congressional measure to a proposed road in Kentucky for he thought it was unconstitutional because it only laid in Kentucky and had nothing to do with “interstate commerce.” He also thought it was an unwise extravagant expenditure…

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    Benefits Of Coercion

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    Southeast. Then, in 1829, gold was discovered in Georgia hills which brought 10,000 miners to Cherokee territory (Jones, 277). This discovery made President Jackson see the Cherokee nation as an hindrance to Georgia’s economy. Jackson also resented the fact that Cherokee considered themselves to be a sovereign equal to the U.S. This shows that Jackson hated people like Cherokees that question his authority. So, he is in favor of removing all Indians from the South to grab more lands for the…

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    to acquire the Indian Territory for purposes of planting cotton. In 1814 the federal government headed by President Jackson yielded to pressure and commanded the US military forces to remove Indians; they started by defeating the Creek nation, and then shifted to the Seminoles because they had harbored fugitive slaves who lived among them. Between 1814 and 1824, president Jackson negotiated treaties that divested southern tribes in exchange of land in the west; whereas the tribes agreed to…

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    Chief John Ross had a valid and undeniably strong argument against the 1835 Treaty of New Echota. He argues that treaty “is a fraud upon the government of the United States and an act of oppression on the Cherokee people” (John Ross’s Letter). He states that the Cherokee people, which was over 15,000 people, would never had agreed to the treaty and the treaty was made wrongfully. He argues that there should be another meeting and the Cherokee people should be equally consulted. John…

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    When I was 18 I was forced out of my house, my village, my island. Lian Yu was my home for 18 years before I was forced to leave. My island was run by soldiers controlled by the corrupt government. We were heavily watched and had no connection to the outside world. It had been 5 years without a mother or a sister, my sister committed suicide because she couldn’t handle the burden of life, and my mother passed from a sickness she had received when working. Lian Yu was a difficult island to live…

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    Corruption was rampant in the late 1800’s. William Boss Tweed was one of if not the most corrupt man in US history. Tweed ran Tammany Hall which was a democratic political machine which was organized to win elections through a network of precinct captains and would gain support and power by taking care of the poor specifically the immigrants by giving them jobs and loans and by bribing the politician’s as well. Tweed would overcharge for city services and take bribes from companies looking to do…

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