Thursday, September 3, 2009

Age of Jackson

Andrew Jackson came into power in 1828. While in political power, Jackson gave common people a chance to participate in the government. He did this through the spoils system, where new administrations hire their own supporters to replace supporters of the previous administration. With the spoil system, Jackson handed a massive number of jobs to his friends and allies. In 1816, congress increased the Tariff. The South’s economy depended on cotton exports. The high tariffs on goods reduced British exports to the U.S. and British bought less goods, damaging the south economy. In 1832, Congress raised tariffs again which caused south Carolinians to threaten to secede from the Union. Jackson responded to the raise of Tariffs by urging Congress to pass the Force Bill to allow federal government to use the military if state authorities resisted paying proper duties. A civil war seemed likely but Henry Clay forged a compromise to lower the tariff bill.Jackson defended federal power in the nullification crisis, but decreased federal power when it came to the Second Bank of the United States. He believed that the bank was an agent of wealthy people and that it did not care for the common people. In 1832, Jackson won reelection and instantly tried to kill the bank by withdrawing all government deposits and placing them in state banks called “pet banks.” This action angered many and many accused him of acting more like a king than like a president.
President Andrew Jackson started with good intents by trying to rule in favor of the common people. However his methods were to some extent harsh, and limited the powers of other branches. This is why some people consider his rule to be the closest to that of a monarchy.

13 comments:

  1. I think that the information that you have is very insightful. However, your grammar has some room for improvement. In the sixth line, the word "tariff" shouldn't be capitalized. Also, you missed a space after the period before "Jackson defended federal power..."

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  2. It was really enlightening; you added a lot of information. There was an error in the 5th sentence, the "congress" should be capitalized and the "tariff" shouldn't be. Also, I think it might be a little easier on the eyes if you separated the summary into a few paragraphs. Other than that, great job.

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  3. This is a really good post! In the 6th line you mention tariff's; I wish you would go into that more. I wish you would also go deeper into how corrupt Jackson was, yeah, he was "a man of the people" and pleased many middle classed people, but he did too many, very not okay things for personal gain.

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  4. Informative and easy to read and understand. Breaking the information into paragraphs may prove more visually pleasing as well as encourage people to read on (a "wall of text" can be rather intimidating).

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  5. This blog has a great amount of good, solid information. However, it would be much easier to read this in paragraph format. Also, it would have been a good idea to mention that Jackson was a president towards the beginning of the blog, just to make it clear for the readers.

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  7. This blog post had lots of information, however I think in the future more transitions from idea to idea would be helpful. In the middle of that bulk of information I had to go back and read it again and try to piece things together. I did really like your concluding thoughts at the end regarding the controversial presidency. I had no idea Jackson used his powers like that.

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  8. I learned a lot about Jackson from your posting. I thought there was a lot of information but it did not flow very well. The first paragraph was very long and choppy, then the second paragraph was shorter and well written. I think the syntax could use a little work but the information provided was helpful.

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  9. nice information, it truly helped me understand a lot more about Andrew Jackson. It would be easier to follow if it was organized in paragraphs.

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  10. I liked the paragraph at the end that seemed to put Jackson's actions into perspective. This was very unbiased and helped me understand Jackson's presidency better. I feel that you could have divided it into more paragraphs to make it less choppy and to reduce confusion.

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  11. Wow, Samuel Jackson surround himself with hid friends to pass anything he wanted.

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  12. I learned a lot from this blog. There is a lot of information that all flows well together.

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  13. I like how your summary has all of the important information. the only thing i would change is to either add a picture or separate the paragraphs more to make it more visually appealing.

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