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1819–1832. CHAPTER 11 EXPANDING WESTWARD : SOCIETY AND POLITICS IN THE “AGE OF THE COMMON MAN ”. CREATED EQUAL JONES WOOD MAY BORSTELMANN RUIZ. “I believed it was a wicked, unjust measure, and that I should go against it, let the cost to myself be what it might.”.
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1819–1832 CHAPTER 11 EXPANDING WESTWARD: SOCIETY AND POLITICS IN THE “AGE OF THE COMMON MAN” CREATED EQUAL JONES WOOD MAY BORSTELMANN RUIZ
“I believed it was a wicked, unjust measure, and that I should go against it, let the cost to myself be what it might.” Davy Crockett, on his vote opposing the Indian removal policy
TIMELINE 1819 Spain cedes East Florida to the U.S. McCulloch v. Maryland 1819 Depression begins 1820 Missouri Compromise Land Act of 1820 1823 Monroe Doctrine 1824 John Quincy Adams elected President Russo-American Treaty 1827 Cherokee written constitution 1828 Andrew Jackson elected President
TIMELINE continued 1830 Church of the Latter Day Saints established 1831 New York bans debtors prison 1832 Nullification Proclamation Jackson reelected
THE RISE OF THE WEST Overview • The Politics Behind Western Expansion • Federal Authority and Its Opponents • Real People in the “Age of the Common Man” • Ties that Bound a Growing Population
THE POLITICS BEHIND WESTERN EXPANSION • The Missouri Compromise • Ways West • The Panic of 1819 and the Plight of Western Debtors • The Monroe Doctrine • Andrew Jackson’s Rise to Power
The Missouri Compromise • Proposals • Tallmadge Amendment: favored Congress • Pinckney: favored states’ rights • The Compromise • Missouri joins Union as slave state • Maine joins Union as a free state • In future, slavery prohibited from north Louisiana Purchase (north of present day Missouri and Kansas)
Ways West • Land Act of 1820: minimum of 80 acres at $1.25 acre • Encouraged European Americans to move west • Southern migration across the Appalachians • By 1832, Tennessee, Louisiana, Alabama, Mississippi, Florida become the largest cotton producers • The new planter elite • Austin, and the Texians
The Panic of 1819 and the Plight of Western Debtors • The Second Bank of the U.S. granted charter in 1816 • Regulation of “wildcat” banks effects western farmers with foreclosures, farm equipment confiscated • Panic, followed by depression • 1831: New York passes law banning debtors’ prison • Davy Crockett and the system of bankruptcy auctions
The Monroe Doctrine • Feeling threatened by Russian and the monarchies of Europe, President Monroe and John Quincy Adams formulate the statement that no foreign nations would be allowed to intervene in the Western Hemisphere • Russo-American Treaty of 1824: Russia pulls back to the area north of present day Alaskan panhandle
Andrew Jackson’s Rise to Power • Presidential Election of 1824: 3 candidates with no majority • Representative Henry Clay: withdraws from race, promising Jackson support • Secretary of State John Q. Adams: names Clay secretary of state • Senator Andrew Jackson: charges Adams of corruption • Jackson wins overwhelming victory in 1828
The Election of 1828 • Insert Table 11.3
FEDERAL AUTHORITY AND ITS OPPONENTS • Judicial Federalism and the Limits of Law • The “Tariff of Abominations” • The “Monster Bank”
Judicial Federalism and the Limits of Law • Chief Justice John Marshall: Limiting states power • McCulloch v. Maryland • Cohens v. Virginia • Cherokee Nation v. Georgia and Worcester v. Georgia • The Indian Removal Act
The “Tariff of Abominations” • A higher tariff on English goods effects Southern cotton planters who named the new tariff an “Abomination” • South Carolina evokes state sovereignty and nulls and voids the tariff • Jackson’s Nullification Proclamation of 1832: • States cannot nullify federal laws or secede from the Union
The “Monster Bank” • Jackson vetoes the renewal of the Second Bank of the United States advocating hard money and opposing large commercial institutions • Congress and Sen. Clay oppose the veto citing the necessity of the bank for the Union’s financial future • Election of 1832: Clay challenges Jackson, but a third party, the Anti-Masonics draw votes from Clay and lead to Jackson victory
REAL PEOPLE IN THE “AGE OF THE COMMON MAN” • Wards, Workers, and Warriors: Native Americans • Slaves and Free People of Color • Legal and Economic Dependence: The Plight of Women
Wards, Workers, and Warriors: Native Americans • Native Americans respond to the encroachment of white settlers, hostility from Congress and the loss of land • Farming and adopting the white ways: • Spanish missionaries convert Indians and force them to work • Sequoyah and the Cherokee Phoenix (1828) • Revolt and attack: • 1826 and 1827: Winnebagos attack in Wisconsin • 1829: Coalition of tribes formed • 1832: U.S. soldiers massacre 300 at Bad Axe River
Slaves and Free People of Color • New Jersey, Connecticut, New York, Pennsylvania revoke the vote for black men • Walker’s Appeal to the Coloured Citizens of the World: integrate • Maria Stewart, “Knowledge is Power” • American Colonization Society and the founding of Monrovia • Nat Turner and the slave revolt in Virginia…and the white response of strengthening slavery’s hold on the South
Legal and Economic Dependence: The Plight of Women • Prosperous Northeast and Mid-Atlantic states: women as consumers • Spanish settlements: household production • Indian women: collective workers • New England textile machine operators • New York home needleworkers • Emma Willard and Catharine Beecher females schools • 1832: Elizabeth Cady graduates from Troy Female Seminary
TIES THAT BOUND A GROWING POPULATION • New Visions of Religious Faith • Literate and Literary in America
New Visions of Religious Faith • White Cloud, Winnebago prophet • Second Great Awakening: religious revivals • Rev. Finney: the connection of the spiritual life to politics • The revival of the primitive Christian • 1830: The Church of the Latter Day Saints (Mormons)
Literate and Literary in America • 1828: Sarah Hale and the Ladies Magazine • Motherhood, piety, and self-sacrifice • Regional histories • Irving, Rip Van Winkle, Legend of Sleepy Hollow • Cooper, Last of the Mohicans • American Victorianism • Significance of the individual • Freedom of advancement • Work is noble