Universal White Male Suffrage Between 1816 and 1824, many states removed property restrictions on voting. Removal of property restrictions Poor white men now have the right to vote Who does NOT have the right to vote, still: Women African Americans Native Americans
1820 Election
1824 Election
The Corrupt Bargain No candidate received a majority (more than 50%) of the vote The election is decided by the House of Representatives John Q. Adams and Henry Clay make a deal: Henry Clay ensures that Adams gets enough votes in the House Adams names Clay his Secretary of State Jackson feels slighted because he received more votes than anyone else. He refers to this deal as the “corrupt bargain.”
Social Media and The Corrupt Bargain Two Options: Option 1: Imagine that you are a supporter of John Quincy Adams after the election of 1824. Write 5 tweets or 3 Instagram posts (with a drawn picture) about the result of the election. Tweet @ famous people (like Henry Clay and Andrew Jackson) and include #hashtags @AndrewJackson don’t call it a ‘corrupt bargain’ just because you’re being a sore loser #salty Option 2: Imagine that you are a supporter of Andrew Jackson after the election of 1824. Write 5 tweets 3 Instagram posts (with a drawn picture) about the result of the election. Tweet @ famous people (like Henry Clay and Andrew Jackson) and include #hashtags @JQAdams the people have spoken and @AndrewJackson is our guy. Adams is #notmypresident
1828 Election
Andrew Jackson: President of the Common Man Common Man Attributes: Poor (not property-owning) Farmer From the South or the West Spoils System: Also known as patronage “To the victors go the spoils.” When a candidate is elected, they name their supporters to positions in the government Indian Removal Act: Jackson passes an act to remove Native American tribes from the Southeast Motivation: make farmland available for the “common man.”
Trail of Tears and Native American Resistance Tribes forced to leave the Southeast: Cherokee Chickasaw Seminole Creek Choctaw Thousands of Native Americans forced to travel hundreds of miles to Oklahoma Seminole resist relocation in Florida and fight a series of wars against the federal government in the 1840’s
Which tribe are you from? (Write it at the top of this journal entry) Story Time #7 Imagine that you are a member of a Native American tribe from the Southeast that is being forced to leave. Which tribe are you from? (Write it at the top of this journal entry) Write for ten minutes about how you feel about Indian Removal and the new president Andrew Jackson. Here are some questions to help you write: What will happen to you and your family? Why is the government kicking you off your land? Is this right or fair? What are your concerns about the journey and the future?