Javascript must be enabled to continue!
The Papers of Andrew Jackson, Volume X, 1832
View through CrossRef
This volume presents more than four hundred documents from Andrew Jackson’s fourth presidential year. It includes private memoranda, intimate family letters, drafts of official messages, and correspondence with government and military officers, diplomats, Indians, political friends and foes, and ordinary citizens throughout the country. The year 1832 began with Jackson still pursuing his feud with Vice President John C. Calhoun, whom Jackson accused of secretly siding against him in the 1818 controversy over Jackson’s Seminole campaign in Florida. The episode ended embarrassingly for Jackson when a key witness, called on to prove his charges, instead directly contradicted them.
Indian removal remained a preoccupation for Jackson. The Choctaws began emigrating westward, the Creeks and Chickasaws signed but then immediately protested removal treaties, and the Cherokees won what proved to be an empty victory against removal in the Supreme Court. Illinois Indians mounted armed resistance in the Black Hawk War. In midsummer, a cholera epidemic swept the country, and Jackson was urged to proclaim a day of fasting and prayer. He refused, saying it would intermingle church and state.
A bill to recharter the Bank of the United States passed Congress in July, and Jackson vetoed it with a ringing message that became the signature document of his presidency. In November, Jackson, with new running mate Martin Van Buren, won triumphant reelection over Henry Clay. But only days later, South Carolina nullified the federal tariff law and began preparing for armed resistance. Jackson answered with an official proclamation that “disunion by armed force is treason.” The year closed with Jackson immersed in plans to suppress nullification and destroy the Bank of the United States. Embracing all these stories and many more, this volume offers an incomparable window into Andrew Jackson, his presidency, and America itself in 1832.
Title: The Papers of Andrew Jackson, Volume X, 1832
Description:
This volume presents more than four hundred documents from Andrew Jackson’s fourth presidential year.
It includes private memoranda, intimate family letters, drafts of official messages, and correspondence with government and military officers, diplomats, Indians, political friends and foes, and ordinary citizens throughout the country.
The year 1832 began with Jackson still pursuing his feud with Vice President John C.
Calhoun, whom Jackson accused of secretly siding against him in the 1818 controversy over Jackson’s Seminole campaign in Florida.
The episode ended embarrassingly for Jackson when a key witness, called on to prove his charges, instead directly contradicted them.
Indian removal remained a preoccupation for Jackson.
The Choctaws began emigrating westward, the Creeks and Chickasaws signed but then immediately protested removal treaties, and the Cherokees won what proved to be an empty victory against removal in the Supreme Court.
Illinois Indians mounted armed resistance in the Black Hawk War.
In midsummer, a cholera epidemic swept the country, and Jackson was urged to proclaim a day of fasting and prayer.
He refused, saying it would intermingle church and state.
A bill to recharter the Bank of the United States passed Congress in July, and Jackson vetoed it with a ringing message that became the signature document of his presidency.
In November, Jackson, with new running mate Martin Van Buren, won triumphant reelection over Henry Clay.
But only days later, South Carolina nullified the federal tariff law and began preparing for armed resistance.
Jackson answered with an official proclamation that “disunion by armed force is treason.
” The year closed with Jackson immersed in plans to suppress nullification and destroy the Bank of the United States.
Embracing all these stories and many more, this volume offers an incomparable window into Andrew Jackson, his presidency, and America itself in 1832.
Related Results
The Papers of Andrew Jackson, Volume VIII, 1830
The Papers of Andrew Jackson, Volume VIII, 1830
This eighth volume of Andrew Jackson’s papers presents more than five hundred documents, many appearing here for the first time, from a core year in Jackson’s tumultuous presidency...
The Papers of Andrew Jackson, Volume XI, 1833
The Papers of Andrew Jackson, Volume XI, 1833
This volume presents full annotated text of five hundred documents from Andrew Jackson’s fifth presidential year. They include his private memoranda, intimate family letters, presi...
The Papers of Andrew Jackson, Volume XII, 1834
The Papers of Andrew Jackson, Volume XII, 1834
This volume presents more than five hundred annotated original documents from Andrew Jackson’s sixth presidential year. They include his private memoranda, intimate family letters,...
The Papers of Andrew Jackson, Volume IX, 1831
The Papers of Andrew Jackson, Volume IX, 1831
This volume presents more than five hundred original documents, many newly discovered, from Andrew Jackson’s third presidential year. They include Jackson’s private memoranda, inti...
Jesse Jackson
Jesse Jackson
The Reverend Jesse Louis Jackson Sr. (b. 8 October 8 1941) is an influential American civil rights leader, Baptist minister, and politician. He was born to Helen Burns and Noah Rob...
Coronal Heating as Determined by the Solar Flare Frequency Distribution Obtained by Aggregating Case Studies
Coronal Heating as Determined by the Solar Flare Frequency Distribution Obtained by Aggregating Case Studies
Abstract
Flare frequency distributions represent a key approach to addressing one of the largest problems in solar and stellar physics: determining the mechanism tha...
P1091DYNAMICS OF VASCULAR REFILLING IN EXTENDED NOCTURNAL HAEMODIALYSIS
P1091DYNAMICS OF VASCULAR REFILLING IN EXTENDED NOCTURNAL HAEMODIALYSIS
Abstract
Background and Aims
Refilling volume had not been a measurable parameter in clinical practice so far, because the knowl...


