Andrew Jackson's Forgotten Conflict

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The Forgotten Conflict and who it created:
Andrew Jackson
Andrew Jackson was the seventh President of the United States, and possibly the most controversial president we have ever had. From growing up as an orphan in the Backwoods of the Carolinas, to his meteoric rise in politics. He is a truly captivating figure. Jackson’s exact birthplace is unknown, it is believed to be somewhere on the border between North and South Carolina (Marquis). His mother was making the return journey from his father’s funeral, he was born on the road. (Collings) When he was thirteen the Revolutionary War broke out, he, his mother, and both of his brothers, all joined the military in some fashion, but by the time he was fourteen, he was left as an orphan. His oldest …show more content…

When the war of 1812 broke out in June, Jackson offered his services to President James Madison, but his offer was rejected due to his connection to Burr as well as his reputation for a short temper (Marquis). It was in December that Madison finally relented and commissioned him to lead one thousand, five-hundred men to Natchez to go and defend New Orleans. In March of 1813 the War Department believed that the threat to New Orleans had passed and dismissed Jackson and his men, but they offered no compensation nor any means of transportation back to Tennessee (Miller). Jackson then marched alongside his men declaring that he would get his men home, even if he had to use his own money. It was on the month long journey that Jackson began to gain the respect and favor of his men, as well as gaining the nickname “Old Hickory” because he shared the hardships alongside his men, marching with them, eating with them and allowing the sick, or wounded to ride horses, regardless of rank. …show more content…

Chief Tecumseh had previously managed to unify multiple Indian tribes in the Northwestern area in an attempt to stop settlers from moving out to northern Ohio. During the war of 1812 Shawnee Chief Tecumseh united Indian tribes in the Northwestern area to stop settlers from moving out to the northern Ohio area. This became known as “The Fort Mims Massacre” where nearly four-hundred settlers were killed. (Ridler) He then began encouraging the Creek Indians to start attacking white settlements in Georgia and Alabama. Jackson was sent to quell Creek Campaign, with a force consisting of U.S. regulars, Cherokee, and Choctaw Indian tribes, and his Tennessee militia. Jackson was able to defeat the Creek Indians at the Battle of Horseshoe Bend in 1814, killing nearly eight-hundred creek warriors. (Miller) After their victory Major General Thomas Pinckney wrote a peace treaty with the Creek nation. Jackson opposed this treaty completely, as he wanted to completely eradicate the Creek nation; so when he was shortly thereafter promoted to Major General of the Seventh Military District he immediately threw out Pinckney’s treaty and forced new terms on the entire Creek nation. Rending nearly twenty-two million acres in what is now northern Georgia and Alabama from the Creek nation. (Biography.com Editorial Team) He stated that

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