jackson v. marshall

31

Upload: hannibal-braden

Post on 03-Jan-2016

21 views

Category:

Documents


4 download

DESCRIPTION

Jackson v. Marshall. Famous words: “John Marshall has made his decision; now let him enforce it”. Jackson’s Response. Indian Removal Act of 1830 Treaties forced Native Americans to give up their land Pressured Indians signed over 90 treaties He thought the policy was generous - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: Jackson v. Marshall
Page 2: Jackson v. Marshall

Jacksonv.Marshall

Famous words:

“John Marshall has made his decision;

now let him enforce it”

Page 3: Jackson v. Marshall

Jackson’s Response Indian Removal Act of 1830

Treaties forced Native Americans to give up their land Pressured Indians signed over 90 treaties

He thought the policy was generous He saw no chance of assimilation

Page 4: Jackson v. Marshall

What do you think?...What else could Jackson have

done?

Page 5: Jackson v. Marshall

“The Great Father” with his Native American children

Page 6: Jackson v. Marshall

Winfield Scott The Enforcer

sent to enforce the Indian removal Act

Backed by 7000 troops

Most of the troops considered this Indian Removal among the cruelest work they’d ever faced

Page 7: Jackson v. Marshall

The Trail of Tears Some Cherokee, fearing for their lives, agreed to

relocate & signed treaties US gov’t treated these few like a majority

1838 – Cherokee were relocated to Oklahoma Faced an 800+ mile journey mainly on foot 1 out of 4 did not make it

Interesting point… in 1838, who was in office?(Hint: It

wasn’t Jackson)

Page 8: Jackson v. Marshall
Page 9: Jackson v. Marshall

The Trail of Tears-One of the most horrific and regrettable events in American History

Page 10: Jackson v. Marshall

Trail of Tears

Page 11: Jackson v. Marshall

The Horrors of the Trail of Tears Cold, starvation,

dysentery, smallpox, cholera, tuberculosis, and road accidents

1 in 4 did not survive the journey

Also subjected to theft, rape, and other brutalities by some of the troops

Page 12: Jackson v. Marshall

Red Cloud 1822-1909

“The Great Father” sends us presents and wants us to sell him the road, but the white chief goes with soldiers to steal the road before the Indians say yes or no!"

Page 13: Jackson v. Marshall
Page 14: Jackson v. Marshall

SO WHAT’S THE POINT?... things worth remembering

Specie Panic of 1837 Van Buren is left to clean up Jackson’s mess President Harrison dies in office! Whigs regret “His Accidency”, John Tyler “The man without a party” The campaign of 1840, images and slogans “Tippecanoe and Tyler, too”

Page 15: Jackson v. Marshall

Van Buren, Harrison, & Tyler

dealing with Jackson’s legacy

Page 16: Jackson v. Marshall

VAN BUREN PRESIDENCY

Jackson would not run for a third term, instead supported VP Van Buren Whigs ran 3 regional candidates against him Van Buren won in 1836 with

Jackson’s endorsement

Page 17: Jackson v. Marshall
Page 18: Jackson v. Marshall

VAN BUREN PRESIDENCY Van Buren faces problems with the banks

“wildcat” Pet banks lent out more currency than they could back with gold and silver

notes issued were worthless without backing federal government suffered when worthless notes were

used to buy land US Treasury ordered that only “specie” could buy land

Specie: gold or silver

result: people ran to banks to trade in currency for specie

Page 19: Jackson v. Marshall
Page 20: Jackson v. Marshall

VAN BUREN PRESIDENCY Panic of 1837, bank closings &

the collapse of the credit system banks stopped accepting all paper money many lost their savings hundreds of businesses bankrupted more than 1/3 the population was out of work President Van Buren’s efforts to improve the

economy after the Panic all failed

Page 21: Jackson v. Marshall

ELECTION OF 1840 Van Buren runs for reelection against Whig

Party candidate William Henry Harrison

Page 22: Jackson v. Marshall
Page 23: Jackson v. Marshall

ELECTION OF 1840

Campaigning: The Image:

Whigs promoted Harrison as a war hero, a man of the people, & Van Buren as a pampered, privileged aristocrat

The Truth: in truth, Harrison was born wealthy and lived in a

mansion, while Van Buren was the son of a tavern owner who never made much money

Page 24: Jackson v. Marshall
Page 25: Jackson v. Marshall

ELECTION OF 1840 Campaigning (continued)

Harrison’s symbols: a log cabin & hard cider, to show that he was a common man

Harrison called “Old Tippecanoe” a nod to his achievements in battle

Page 26: Jackson v. Marshall

ELECTION OF 1840 William Henry Harrison Wins

Tip and TyWhat's the cause of this commotion, motion,

motion,Our country through?

It is the ball a-rolling on

For Tippecanoe and Tyler too.For Tippecanoe and Tyler too.

And with them we'll beat little Van, Van, Van,Van is a used up man.

And with them we'll beat little Van.First verse and chorus

Page 27: Jackson v. Marshall

HARRISON /TYLER PRESIDENCY

Inaugural address Hoped to look like a battle-hardened war hero, Harrison

gave a lengthy (8455 words) inaugural address in the rain, on a cold bleary day

Page 28: Jackson v. Marshall

HARRISON /TYLER PRESIDENCY

Harrison in Office Harrison Immediately began to enact the Whig

program for economic repair quickly caught pneumonia and died Harrison served less than a month as president the first president ever to die in office

Page 29: Jackson v. Marshall
Page 30: Jackson v. Marshall

HARRISON /TYLER PRESIDENCY

John Tyler, VP, took over for Harrison Whigs chose him for the Harrison ballot because

he’d bring the southern vote Tyler actually opposed many Whig programs called “His Accidency,” by the Whigs, because of

how he’d become president & how much the Whig party regretted nominating him for VP!

Eventually Tyler’s rejected by the Whigs, became “The man without a party”

Page 31: Jackson v. Marshall

SO WHAT’S THE POINT?... things worth remembering

Specie Panic of 1837 Van Buren is left to clean up Jackson’s mess President Harrison dies in office! Whigs regret “His Accidency”, John Tyler “The man without a party” The campaign of 1840, images and slogans “Tippecanoe and Tyler, too”