Download presentation
Presentation is loading. Please wait.
Published byBlaise Williamson Modified over 9 years ago
1
Bank of the United States – Organized by Congress – Run by private banker Nicholas Biddle – Controlled loans made by state banks = powerful Why did Jackson dislike the bank? – Limited the amount of loans to merchants and farmers – Favored wealthy – Unconstitutional ? – Undemocratic ? Jackson’s ultimate plan was to destroy the Bank of the United States
3
Jackson’s plan: Veto the renewal of the Bank of the U.S. Whigs’ plan: Renew charter, which will lead to a Jackson Veto, which will upset Americans, which will lead to a Jackson loss in1832 What really happened: Renew charter, which led to a Jackson veto…But, Jackson was re-elected – The Second Bank dies – All federal money was put into pet banks State banks Run by Jackson’s friends
4
Ironically, Jackson is on a US Bank Note!
7
In 1828, Congress passed the highest tariff in the nation’s history – Southerners hated the tariff and called it the “Tariff of Abominations” Benefited the northern manufacturers by preventing foreign competition – hemp, flax, molasses, iron and sail duck Hurt the Southerners who sold cotton to Europe and bought European goods – Passed a second tariff in 1832
8
John Calhoun, Vice-President – Wanted to nullify the tariff in South Carolina – Resigns as V.P. – S.C. holds state meeting and votes in favor of Nullification Act – Threaten: S.C. will secede from Union
9
Henry Clay proposes a compromise tariff Both sides accept: Jackson does not use force, S.C. does not secede Threat of civil war is gone (for now) Tensions continue to develop between the north and south – …and now we will begin to see a trend evolve! Jerks! Snobs!
11
In 1830 Pres. Jackson and Congress pass the Indian Removal Act Forces Native Americans to sign treaties agreeing to move west of the Mississippi – Present day state of Oklahoma Trail of Tears – Marched Natives hundreds of miles with little food or shelter – Thousands died, mostly elderly & children Over 4,000 Cherokee (as high as maybe 8,000)
12
Georgia: law requiring whites living in Cherokee territory to obtain a permit from the state. 7 missionaries (Samuel Worcester, wife and 5 others) refused to follow the law: – GA convicted & sentenced them to 4years hard labor. – Missionaries believed the state targeted them because of their support of the Cherokee – Georgia attempting to drive the Native Americans from the state (had stripped all rights from the Cherokee in 1828)
13
Case reaches Supreme Court… John Marshall’s Ruling: – Court stated the United States relationship to the Cherokee was that of two separate nations – Barred Georgia from taking action against them States can’t negotiate with other sovereign nations – Government did not have the right of possession of Native American land, nor dominion over their laws
14
We, the Supreme Court, rule that you, the Cherokee, have the rights to your land!
15
Jokes on you Marshall…let’s see you enforce that law with your robes and wig! Nobody tells Jackson what to do!
16
Choctaw, Seminole, Muscogee (Creek), Chickasaw, and Cherokee
17
Oklahoma (Indian) Territory
20
1830’s: Bank of United States closed – State banks could lend as much money wanted – Government sold millions of acres of land Farmers and speculators purchased land by borrowing $ from state banks Problem: paper money not backed by gold or silver – Jackson wanted all land to be bought in gold or silver – Speculators and others rushed to state banks to trade in paper money for gold and silver (Panic of 1837) Banks closed because they run out of specie
21
The panic of 1837 was not Van Buren’s fault – But, he did nothing to correct it (Laissez-Faire) Effects of Panic of 1837 – 90% of factories closed – Riots – Unemployment rose – Prices dropped – Wages dropped
22
“Tippecanoe and Tyler Too” Whigs finally win – Hope to revive bank Harrison dies one month after taking office
23
Disagreed with Whigs and reviving of the national bank All but 1 cabinet member resigned Didn’t accomplish anything
Similar presentations
© 2024 SlidePlayer.com Inc.
All rights reserved.