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Andrew Jackson |
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US statesman and seventh president (1829–1837), born in Waxhaw, South Carolina 1767. His parents left Northern Ireland in 1765 and settled in the Carolinas. Reared in a frontier settlement and largely self-educated, he was admitted to the bar and in 1788 was named public prosecutor in Nashville, in North Carolina territory. When the territory became the new state of Tennessee, he became its first US representative in the House (1769), its senator (1797–1798), and a judge on its supreme court (1798–1804). Meanwhile, he had established his estate, ‘the Hermitage’, near Nashville and married Rachel Robards (twice, for they discovered she had not been formally divorced the first time). Named major-general of Tennessee militia during the War of 1812, in September 1814 he defeated the Creek Indians, who were British allies, at Horseshoe Bend. Commissioned a major-general in the regular army, he stormed Pensacola, FL, and then routed the British in the Battle of New Orleans (January 1815). Retaining his army commission as commander of the Southern District, he created some controversy when in 1818 he invaded Florida on a campaign against the Seminoles and executed two British subjects for stirring up the Indians. Now the South's hero, known everywhere as Old Hickory, he was elected to the Senate (Democrat-Republican, Tennessee, 1823–1824) and in 1824 narrowly lost the presidency to John Quincy Adams when the election was thrown into the House of Representatives. Winning the election of 1828, he set a precedent for the ‘spoils system’ by filling hundreds of offices with his supporters. As president (1829–1837), he walked a tightrope between the issues of slavery, nullification, and states' rights; in the name of the latter he suppressed the Bank of the USA. Among his more problematic achievements was his relentless removal of many Indians to West of the Mississippi. On leaving the presidency, he retired from public life and spent his declining years at ‘the Hermitage’ where in died in 1845. |