Top Banner
11-3: JACKSON AND THE BANK
11

Jackson attacked the bank as being an organization of wealthy Easterners which ordinary citizens had no control Jackson still felt the bank was unconstitutional.

Dec 13, 2015

Download

Documents

Welcome message from author
This document is posted to help you gain knowledge. Please leave a comment to let me know what you think about it! Share it to your friends and learn new things together.
Transcript
Page 1: Jackson attacked the bank as being an organization of wealthy Easterners which ordinary citizens had no control  Jackson still felt the bank was unconstitutional.

11-3: JACKSON AND THE BANK

Page 2: Jackson attacked the bank as being an organization of wealthy Easterners which ordinary citizens had no control  Jackson still felt the bank was unconstitutional.

BANK OF THE U.S.

Jackson attacked the bank as being an organization of wealthy Easterners which ordinary citizens had no control

Jackson still felt the bank was unconstitutional despite the Supreme Court’s ruling in McCulloch v. Maryland

Page 3: Jackson attacked the bank as being an organization of wealthy Easterners which ordinary citizens had no control  Jackson still felt the bank was unconstitutional.

ILLUSTRATION DEPICTING JACKSON FIGHTING AGAINST THE BANK OF THE U.S.

Page 4: Jackson attacked the bank as being an organization of wealthy Easterners which ordinary citizens had no control  Jackson still felt the bank was unconstitutional.

1832 ELECTION Jackson was re-elected

and he decided to close the national bank. He ordered the withdrawal of all government deposits from the Bank & placed them in smaller state banks.

He refused to sign a new charter for the Bank & it closed

Page 5: Jackson attacked the bank as being an organization of wealthy Easterners which ordinary citizens had no control  Jackson still felt the bank was unconstitutional.
Page 6: Jackson attacked the bank as being an organization of wealthy Easterners which ordinary citizens had no control  Jackson still felt the bank was unconstitutional.

ELECTION OF 1836 Martin Van Buren

(Democrat) – he was Jackson’s friend and Vice President (8th President)

Van Buren faced bitter opposition from the

Whigs (a new political party), but Van Buren won

Page 7: Jackson attacked the bank as being an organization of wealthy Easterners which ordinary citizens had no control  Jackson still felt the bank was unconstitutional.

PANIC OF 1837 a time when land values

dropped sharply, banks failed, investments declined suddenly, & people lost confidence in the economic system

Van Buren’s reaction to the Panic of 1837 led many of his supporters to vote for a different candidate in the next election.

Page 8: Jackson attacked the bank as being an organization of wealthy Easterners which ordinary citizens had no control  Jackson still felt the bank was unconstitutional.
Page 9: Jackson attacked the bank as being an organization of wealthy Easterners which ordinary citizens had no control  Jackson still felt the bank was unconstitutional.

FEDERAL TREASURY Congress

established it for the federal government to store its money

this caused a split in the Democratic party which gave the Whigs a chance to win next election

Page 10: Jackson attacked the bank as being an organization of wealthy Easterners which ordinary citizens had no control  Jackson still felt the bank was unconstitutional.

9TH PRESIDENT & 10TH PRESIDENT

William Henry Harrison (Whig) – died a couple weeks later

10th President - John Tyler (Harrison’s Vice President)

Page 11: Jackson attacked the bank as being an organization of wealthy Easterners which ordinary citizens had no control  Jackson still felt the bank was unconstitutional.

ELECTION OF 1844

Whigs voted according to sectional ties (North, South, West) not party ties resulted in Henry Clay (Whig) losing to the Democratic candidate James Polk (11th President)