Welcome to CyberEssays Website

Andrew Jackson - His Presidency And Accomplishments

  • Andrew Jackson
    truly incomparable, they are not all that set Andrew Jackson apart from other presidents. Throughout this paper, many more accomplishments in Andrew Jackson's life...
  • Andrew Jackson
    truly incomparable, they are not all that set Andrew Jackson apart from other presidents. Throughout this paper, many more accomplishments in Andrew Jackson¡¦s life...
  • Tyranny Of Andrew Jackson
    1832 recharter from Congress (Second Bank of United States). President Andrew Jackson let his hypocrisy and his personal issues get in the way with the Maysville...
  • Book Review-Andrew Jackson
    as well as those from the political and legal realmsand include the titles Andrew Jackson: Frontier President, Mr. Civil Rights: The Story of Thurgood Marshall, and...
  • Andrew Jackson
    of 1824. This helped and in the election of 1828 Andrew Jackson became president. Andrew Jackson was our 7th president but in a lot of ways he was like our first...

Andrew Jackson - His Presidency And Accomplishments

        Like any hall of fame, its inductees are the best in whatever
they do, from baseball or football to something like being President.
If you are a member of any hall of fame (including the one for the
Presidents), it means that you have done something special or have a
certain quality about yourself that makes you worthy to be in a hall
of fame. My nominee for the Presidents hall of Fame is our seventh
President of the United States, Andrew Jackson. I'll go over his
presidency, focusing on both the highs and the lows of his two terms
in office, from 1829-1837. The issues that I'll focus on are states'
rights, nullification, the tariff, the spoils system, Indian removal
and banking policies; these controversies brought forth strong rivalry
over his years of president. He was known for his iron will and fiery
personality, and strong use of the powers of his office that made his
years of presidency to be known as the "Age of Jackson."

        Andrew Jackson was born on March 15, 1767, in a settlement on
the border of North and South Carolina. He was orphaned at age 14.
After studying law and becoming a member of the Bar in North Carolina
later he moved to Nashville Tennessee. Their he became a member of a
powerful political faction led by William Blount. He was married in
1791 to Rachel Donelson Robards, and later remarried to him due to a
legal mistake in her prior divorce in 1794.

        Jackson served as delegate to Tenn. in the 1796 Constitutional
convention and a congressman for a year (from 1796-97). He was elected
senator in 1797, but financial problems forced him to resign and
return to Tennessee in less than a year. Later he served as a
Tennessee superior court judge for six years starting in 1798. In 1804
he retired from the bench and moved to Nashville and devoted time to
business ventures and his plantation. At this time his political
career looked over.

        In 1814 Jackson was a...