As William Nester asserts in The Age of Jackson, it takes quite a leader to personify an age. A political titan for thirty-three years (1815–1848), Andrew Jackson possessed character, beliefs, and acts that dominated American politics. Although Jackson returned to his Tennessee plantation in March 1837 after serving eight years as president, he continued to overshadow American politics. Two of his protégés, Martin “the Magician” van Buren and James “Young Hickory” Polk, followed him to the White House and pursued his agenda. Jackson provoked firestorms of political passions throughout his era. Far more people loved than hated him, but the fervor was just as pitched either way. Although the passions have subsided, the debate lingers. Historians are split over Jackson’s legacy. Some extol him as among America’s greatest presidents, citing his championing of the common man, holding the country together during the nullification crisis, and eliminating the national debt. Others excoriate him as a mean-spirited despot who shredded the Constitution and damaged the nation’s development by destroying the Second Bank of the United States, defying the Supreme Court, and grossly worsening political corruption through his spoils system. Still others condemn his forcibly expelling more than forty thousand Native Americans from their homes and along the Trail of Tears, which led far west of the Mississippi River, with thousands perishing along the way. In his clear-eyed assessment of one of the most divisive leaders in American history, Nester provides new insight into the age-old debate about the very nature of power itself.
Author(s): William Nester
Publisher: Potomac Books
Year: 2013
Language: English
Pages: 352
City: Lincoln
Cover
Contents
Acknowledgments
Introduction: The Art of Jacksonian Power
PART 1: The Precedents, 1769–1829
1. The Making of the Man
2. The Battle of New Orleans
3. The Fate of Spanish Florida
4. The Fire Bell in the Night
5. The Monroe Doctrine
6. The Corrupt Bargain
PART 2: The Presidency, 1829–1837
7. The Scandals
8. The Monster Bank
9. The Nullification Crisis
10. The Spoils
11. The Master’s Nightmare
12. The Trail of Tears
13. The World Beyond
14. The Texas Revolution
PART 3: The Protégés, 1837–1848
15. The Little Magician
16. The Industrial and Cultural Revolutions
17. The Transcendentalists
18. The Annexation
19. The Manifest Destiny
20. The Mexican War
21. The Legacy
Abbreviations
Notes
Index
A
B
C
D
E
F
G
H
I
J
K
L
M
N
O
P
Q
R
S
T
U
V
W
Y
Z
About the Author