Andrew Jackson And The Jacksonian Democracy

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As president, Andrew Jackson sought to act as the direct representative of a common man. As a child, he received a periodic education, took on reading law for approximately two years, and then became a lawyer in Tennessee as a teenager. Jackson flourished greatly in buying and using slaves for common laboring, some even considered him to be a racist. He served briefly in the Senate, became the first man elected from Tennessee to the House of Representatives and became major General in the War of 1812. It was then that Jackson acquired the status of a national hero when the defeat of the British at New Orleans. In Jackson’s eight year presidency in the first half of the 19th century, was both very popular among the people and amazingly respected for his vigorous leadership abilities. People sought to him to be the savior of the union. Jackson was known both famously and infamously for his actions in and out of the White house. His reactions and mind were the inspiration that created the Jacksonian Democracy, which infused American life in the early 1800’s. The creating of a two-part...

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