However, being depicted on money nearly a quarter of a millennium after you were born is clearly a recognition that the seventh president contributed in a special way to this country being what it has become, in all its glory and complexities. Some critics have voiced that Jackson would never want to be on paper money, as he despised the concept, and that he was against the Second National Bank. He also led the greatest expansion of voting rights up to that point to include to non-land-owning men. He collected huge sums of money owned by foreign governments, most notably France. He won most-favored nation trading status in such places as Muscat (Oman), Siam (Thailand), and Russia. Jackson opened numerous ports of trade, including many in Latin America and the Middle East. Lincoln later followed the same formula to oppose secession. In terms of more tangible accomplishments, Jackson guarded against an early threat to breaking up the Union by ordering federal troops into South Carolina in 1832 when it tried to assert states rights in the form of declaring federal tariffs null and void. Today, the best among us still cling to this notion that in the U.S.A., if you are breathing, you have a chance to make something remarkable of your life. The Age of Jackson, which started with his election, is characterized by the sense of promise embodied by those who dare to strike out at stake their own claim to the bounty America has to offer. In fact, few Americans have ever been designated as having an entire age named after them. Besides dueling, he maintained interests familiar to the rugged American, including dancing, fighting in taverns, and gambling on horses and cards.Īs president, Jackson accomplishments are sufficient to keep all other claimants off his bill. He opened a law practice, became Tennessee’s first congressman, a U.S. In peacetime, Jackson epitomized the American Dream. Soon after, the Sunshine State became a U.S. Not far from New Orleans, he invaded and conquered Spanish Florida to protect against threats from British and Native Americans adverse to our continental ambitions. He is hailed in military circles for his role as hero of the Battle of New Orleans in 1814-15, where he lead an motley crew of federal troops, militia from various states, free African Americans, Creoles, Native Americans and pirates against a larger contingent of more experienced British. In 1802, Jackson was elected as the general of the Tennessee militia, and fought a myriad of enemies and conflicts on the frontier. Jackson’s critics are fortunate not to have been born in a time where the country needed Jackson to continuously fight for our preservation when our existence hung in the balance. Surrounded by death, he held a deep resentment for his revolutionary foes as he rose in society through hard work, including making saddles, teaching school, and studying law. His mother secured his release but died soon after, leaving him an orphan at 14. As prisoner, legends holds that young Andrew Jackson refused to shine boots of a British soldier, and was slashed with a saber and proudly wore the mark the rest of his life. He was captured with a brother, Robert, and sent to prison and suffered small pox, which killed his brother. He risked life and limb for country to a greater degree than his modern critics by that young age, in battling our then-enemies, the British and their Native American allies. Yet by 13, he was serving as a courier in the South Carolina militia during our Revolution. Fortunate to go to some school early on, he became the type of American boy immortalized by humorists, who was adept at cursing, fighting, and pulling pranks. Jackson was born on the Ides of March in 1767 in the Carolinas to Scotch-Irish parents in the harshest of climates. And it is the “everyman” with true American grit who should be most loathe to see Jackson moved off the twenty as he rose in the greatest of our traditions, by a love for country combined with an unrelenting will to advance from nowhere. Therefore, most of us have spent our lifetime with a few Jacksons in our pocket. Jackson has been on the twenty since 1928, 100 years after he was elected and pushed Grover Cleveland off the note. Jackson, who survived numerous duels, would be the first to battle any attempt to dishonor him. Petitioners for the removal of Andrew Jackson from the twenty-dollar bill are fortunate they do not have to contend with Old Hickory himself.
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