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1832 Description: After President Andrew Jackson, Lecture notes of English Literature

Description: After President Andrew Jackson's unprecedented veto of the Bank Bill, Jackson was accused ... Source: Folder: Cartoon Lesson Plan Standish ...

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2021/2022

Uploaded on 09/27/2022

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1. Creator:
Title: “King Andrew I”
Publication: Unknown
Publication Date: 1832
Description: After President Andrew Jackson’s unprecedented veto of the Bank Bill, Jackson was accused
of abusing his Presidential powers. His opponents began to refer to him as “King Andrew.” The anti-
Jackson material in circulation during Jackson’s Presidency was not only political, but also personal in
nature; his political opponents attacked him at a personal level and vice versa.
Source:
Folder: Cartoon Lesson Plan Standish
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  1. Creator: Title: “King Andrew I” Publication: Unknown Publication Date: 1832 Description: After President Andrew Jackson’s unprecedented veto of the Bank Bill, Jackson was accused of abusing his Presidential powers. His opponents began to refer to him as “King Andrew.” The anti- Jackson material in circulation during Jackson’s Presidency was not only political, but also personal in nature; his political opponents attacked him at a personal level and vice versa. Source: Folder: Cartoon Lesson Plan Standish
  1. Creator: D.C. Johnston Title: “Symptoms of Locked Jaw” Publication: Unknown Publication Date: 1834 Description: In 1834, the U.S. Senate took unprecedented action and censured President Andrew Jackson due to his actions to defund the Bank of the United States. A long time political rival, Senator Henry Clay, challenged Jackson on the bank issue in December of 1933 and requested a paper Jackson read to his cabinet. When Jackson refused to provide the paper, Clay introduced the censure resolution. After the Senate agreed to censure the president, Jackson responded with a protest denying the validity of the Senate’s actions. However, the Senate simply refused to print Jackson’s message. The censure was not expunged until 1837. Source: Folder: Cartoon Lesson Plan Standish
  2. Creator: Unknown Title: “Banks: Altar of Reform” Publication: Unknown Publication Date: 1831 Description: Jackson sits in a collapsing chair, next to a column labeled “Altar of Reform.” Behind him are nine resignation documents, and below him are rats scurrying away. Each rat is meant to represent one of his cabinet members who resigned during Jackson’s presidency. From left to right, the cabinet members pictured are Secretary of War John E. Eaton, Secretary of the Navy John Branch, Secretary of State Martin Van Buren, and Secretary of Treasury Samuel D. Ingham. In addition to the controversy surrounding Jackson’s stand on the National Bank, there was a personal element in all the anti-Jackson material in circulation because of the contentious relationship between Jackson and his former Vice President John C. Calhoun. Source: