John Quincy Adams

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    During the election of 1824, four candidates were in the lead: John Quincy Adams, Henry Clay, William H. Crawford, and Andrew Jackson. Jackson, the leader of the Democratic Republicans, had the greatest appeal among the four, but he didn’t have the majority of electoral votes. John Quincy Adams, leader of the National Republicans, had the most electoral votes. According to the 12th amendment, the voting of the top three electoral vote getters would move to the House of Representatives. Clay was…

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    James Monroe The fifth person to serve a term as the president of the USA was James Monroe. On April 28,1758 James was born in a town called Westmoreland County which is in Virginia. He was married to Elizabeth Monroe from 1786-1830. Together they had three children. Their first-born was Eliza Monroe. They had two more children after that, James Monroe and Maria Monroe. James died shortly after he was born so the Monroe’s raised two daughters. He attended school at the College of William and…

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    Abigail Adams Sacrifice

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    were the founders of this country had to do a lot of work and make a lot of sacrifices, like Abigail Adams when she choose to devote her life to her husband, John Adams, and whatever his life held. Abigail is not recognized much in history but she still did play a big part. It is always important to try to tie scripture with whatever you're doing. The scripture chosen to help introduce Abigail Adams is Mark 8:34-38. Sacrifice shows us things that a lot of people aren't willing to do but only…

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    higher duties, which led to the Tariff of 1828 (Carnes and Garraty p. 193). This tariff was passed on May 19, 1828 with the goal of protecting industries in the north that were being hurt by low-priced imported goods (Tariff of 1828). President John Quincy Adams passed the bill which sealed his loss to Andrew Jackson in the presidential election of in 1828 (The Tariff of Abominations | US House of Representatives: History, Art & Archives). While this tariff helped the North, it severely hurt…

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    Andrew Jackson, the seventh president(1829-1837) of the United States, played a huge factor in the development of America. Jackson the former founder of the Democratic Party(One of the two major political parties in the United States), become a democratic symbol for the country. Jackson ran two-terms as president, during his presidency Jackson extended executive powers and made Presidents role more powerful. Jackson was the first president not born in the United States, coming from another…

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    whom he deemed responsible for his wife’s death. The idea behind making the common man more involved seems a very democratic ideal, but the way Jackson went about it was not democratic. One instance is the Eaton Affair, in which his secretary of state John Eaton was accused of marrying a harlot. If true this would defame Jackson’s entire cabinet and his presidency, however instead of ousting them Jackson and Martin Van Buren both defended the Eaton’s to the chagrin of the rest of his cabinet.…

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    Megan Lui Mr. Millers Period 5 Gate World History August 31, 2015 Andrew Jackson, Rise of the Common Man Elizabeth Jackson gave birth to Andrew Jackson on March 15, 1767, several days after his father’s death. Born in poverty, Jackson lived with his mother and three brothers in the Waxhaw region on the border of North and South Carolina. He was the brightest of three sons and Elizabeth wanted him to be a Presbyterian minister. However, young Jackson quickly dashed off into his own childhood…

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    The men that shaped our nation have been a part of our history for over hundreds of years. The most import men are Henry Clay, John C. Calhoun, Robert Hayne, and others. These men have taken multiple terms in office in different positions and made an impact in all of their offices held even in their hometown states. John C. Calhoun was a congressman who also ended up being a vice president, secretary of state, and U.S. secretary of war. Calhoun was born on March 18, 1782 in South Carolina and…

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    south’s inability to industrialize proved detrimental in the following decades as it became a major issue during the Civil War. By 1828, the tariff rates increased by 45% bringing the south into an agricultural depression. John Calhoun, the vice president under both John Quincy Adams and Andrew Jackson, led The South Carolina Exposition and Protest, which suggested the states need to join together in order to get back their basic rights. Furthermore, Calhoun believed that the federal…

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    about Founding Fathers of America who are Jefferson, John Adams, Alexander Hamilton, and Aaron Burr during the critical 1800 election. They have participated in the country’s principal documents, primarily the Declaration of Independence and the Constitution that was influenced by philosophers Hobbes and Locke. Although election could be followed in strict adherence to law and principle and not turn into a…

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