Andrew Jackson Dbq

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Born in 1767, along the Waxhaw region, a border between North and South Carolina, Andrew Jackson experienced the ill mistreatment of the Revolutionary War, an orphan, whom would be among the very few who would survive and whom would rise to the pinnacle of power bending his way in and out of the life he lived. Jackson continued to live that life during his White House years and after retirement where he would return to the Hermitage. He migrated toward Nashville, where he established himself as a lawyer, a politician, and a militia officer. Jackson, who fell in love with Rachel Donelson Robards Jackson, never formally married her but lived with her until her divorced from her first husband. They both lived a happy marriage until her death…show more content…
Both pistols failed to fire and were examined to later find out that the “odds of the two guns failing to fire during the attack, it was later determined, were 125,000 to one” (Meacham 299). Jackson later thought that the assassin must have been a hired assassin brought upon by the Whig Party whom opposed much of Jackson’s issues while in the White House. Another issue Jackson faced during 1830 was the removal of the Indians. Much while Jackson was known for all of the accomplishments above, he was especially known for this. The Indian Removal Act of 1830 authorized him removal of all Indian tribes to move west of the Mississippi River in order to obtain their ancestral homelands. This was a negotiating act for Jackson and the United States Congress. However, it was not common during the presidency to do this, but this led Jackson and the Indians to an all out war. The Black Hawks War became known as one of the biggest battles that Andrew Jackson and his men had fought during and after he was president. He and the Indians fought against each other in order for them to get their land back. Jackson had won and the Indians had now to move which made the Indian Removal Act easier for Jackson and the United States Congress. Andrew Jackson, who stood by and founded the Democratic Party, would later become a formidable force in American politics then and today. In…show more content…
He is said to be much like his country, alternately kind and vicious, brilliant and blind. In an account, Julia Ann Conner foresees Jackson as a player of chess; much like his character, Jackson plays the games of politics and war with the kind of skill and patience that chess requires. Andrew Jackson rose from nothing to create such a modern presidency in his time. Through power and voice, Jackson gave hope that he would one day change the world as one knows by facing challenges as he did; he moved the White House from governmental to national action that intrigued much of the interests that Jackson was known for including the Indian Removal Act of 1830. Andrew Jackson was an inspirational figure of his time and is followed by many great presidents, Abraham Lincoln, Theodore Roosevelt, FDR, and Harry S. Truman, who have all found Jackson’s vision of the United States true, giving them the same hope Jackson foresaw and envisioned for them. He risked everything and fought a life long war to keep the republic safe, and changed America itself and the presidency as a
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