Andrew Jackson

Swartwout Embezzles $1.2 Million, Exposing Spoils System Corruption

| Importance: 8/10

Samuel Swartwout, Jackson’s political appointee as Collector of the Port of New York, absconds with $1,225,705.09 (equivalent to $36.2 million in 2024 dollars) after his term expires, fleeing to England in what becomes the most spectacular embezzlement scandal of the era. Swartwout, an old …

Samuel Swartwout Andrew Jackson Martin Van Buren U.S. Treasury embezzlement spoils-system patronage kakistocracy financial-corruption +1 more
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Panic of 1837 Begins as Banks Refuse Specie Conversion, Triggering Five-Year Depression

| Importance: 8/10

Just two months into Martin Van Buren’s presidency, major New York state banks refuse to convert paper money into gold or silver on May 10, 1837, having exhausted their hard currency reserves. Other financial institutions across the country quickly follow suit, triggering the Panic of 1837—a …

Martin Van Buren Andrew Jackson New York banks State banks U.S. Congress financial-crisis economic-policy banking-system panic-1837 jackson-era +1 more
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Jackson Issues Specie Circular Requiring Hard Money for Land Purchases, Triggering Credit Contraction

| Importance: 7/10

President Andrew Jackson orders Treasury Secretary Levi Woodbury to issue the Specie Circular, an executive order requiring that payment for public lands be made exclusively in gold or silver (specie) rather than paper currency, effective August 15, 1836 for purchases over 320 acres. The policy aims …

Andrew Jackson Levi Woodbury Martin Van Buren U.S. Treasury Department Land speculators financial-manipulation economic-policy jackson-era banking-system land-speculation +1 more
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Treaty of New Echota Signed by Unauthorized Cherokee Minority Provides Legal Pretext for Forced Removal

| Importance: 9/10

U.S. government officials sign the Treaty of New Echota with approximately 500 Cherokee Indians claiming to represent the 16,000-member Cherokee Nation, ceding all Cherokee lands east of the Mississippi River in exchange for territory in present-day Oklahoma and $5 million. The treaty is negotiated …

Cherokee Nation John Ross Treaty Party U.S. Congress Andrew Jackson +1 more indian-removal treaty-fraud ethnic-cleansing institutional-corruption trail-of-tears +1 more
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Senate Censures Jackson for Pet Banks Scheme and Constitutional Overreach

| Importance: 8/10

The Senate voted 26-to-20 on March 28, 1834, to censure President Andrew Jackson for unconstitutionally removing federal deposits from the Second Bank of the United States and placing them in state-chartered “pet banks.” The resolution, introduced by Henry Clay, declared that Jackson …

Andrew Jackson Henry Clay Roger Taney William Duane U.S. Senate institutional-capture systematic-corruption financial-deregulation executive-overreach democratic-erosion
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Nicholas Biddle Deliberately Contracts Credit to Create "Biddle's Panic" and Force Bank Recharter

| Importance: 8/10

Following Andrew Jackson’s September 1833 removal of federal deposits from the Second Bank of the United States, Bank president Nicholas Biddle responds by deliberately contracting credit nationwide to create economic distress and force Jackson to reverse his policy. Biddle raises interest …

Nicholas Biddle Second Bank of the United States Andrew Jackson Henry Clay U.S. Congress +2 more financial-manipulation economic-sabotage banking-system jackson-era institutional-corruption
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Jackson Removes Federal Deposits to "Pet Banks" Selected Through Political Patronage, Not Financial Merit

| Importance: 8/10

President Andrew Jackson orders the removal of federal government deposits from the Second Bank of the United States and their redistribution to state-chartered banks derisively called “pet banks” because they are selected based on political loyalty rather than financial soundness. The …

Andrew Jackson Roger Taney Louis McLane William J. Duane U.S. Congress +1 more financial-manipulation institutional-corruption patronage jackson-era banking-system +1 more
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South Carolina Nullification Crisis Previews Slave Power Secession Tactics

| Importance: 8/10

A South Carolina state convention adopts the Ordinance of Nullification, declaring the federal Tariffs of 1828 and 1832 “null, void, and no law, nor binding upon this State, its officers or citizens,” and threatening secession if the federal government attempts to collect tariff duties …

John C. Calhoun Andrew Jackson South Carolina Henry Clay U.S. Congress nullification slave-power states-rights secession-threat constitutional-crisis +1 more
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Jackson Vetoes Second Bank Recharter, Triggering Financial Manipulation by Both Sides

| Importance: 8/10

President Andrew Jackson vetoes legislation to renew the Second Bank of the United States’ charter, four years before its scheduled expiration, delivering a “popular and effective” message declaring the Bank “unauthorized by the Constitution, subversive to the rights of …

Andrew Jackson Nicholas Biddle Henry Clay Daniel Webster Second Bank of the United States financial-manipulation institutional-corruption economic-policy jackson-era banking-system
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Supreme Court Rules Georgia Cannot Seize Cherokee Lands; Jackson Refuses to Enforce Decision

| Importance: 9/10

The U.S. Supreme Court rules 5-1 in Worcester v. Georgia that states lack authority to impose regulations on Native American lands, with Chief Justice John Marshall writing that Indian nations are “distinct, independent political communities retaining their original natural rights” and …

John Marshall Andrew Jackson Samuel Worcester Cherokee Nation Georgia +1 more judicial-nullification executive-overreach indian-removal constitutional-crisis rule-of-law +2 more
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Indian Removal Act Authorizes Ethnic Cleansing to Benefit Land Speculators and Slaveholders

| Importance: 10/10

President Andrew Jackson signs the Indian Removal Act into law, authorizing the president to grant lands west of the Mississippi River to Native American tribes in exchange for their ancestral homelands within existing state borders. The legislation passes narrowly in the House (102 to 97) despite …

Andrew Jackson U.S. Congress Cherokee Nation Five Civilized Tribes Land speculators +1 more ethnic-cleansing indian-removal institutional-corruption land-speculation slave-power +2 more
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Andrew Jackson Inaugurates Spoils System, Replacing Merit with Political Loyalty

| Importance: 9/10

Upon assuming office in March 1829, President Andrew Jackson immediately implements the “spoils system,” sweeping employees from over 900 political offices—approximately 10 percent of all federal appointments—and replacing them with political supporters, friends, and relatives as rewards …

Andrew Jackson Martin Van Buren William Marcy Federal civil servants spoils-system patronage kakistocracy institutional-corruption merit-bypass +1 more
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Tariff of Abominations Imposes 45% Import Taxes, Triggering Nullification Crisis and Sectional Conflict

| Importance: 8/10

Congress passes and President John Quincy Adams signs the Tariff of 1828, an extraordinarily high protective tariff setting a 38% tax on some imported goods and a 45% tax on certain imported raw materials—the highest rates in American history to that point. The tariff seeks to protect Northern …

U.S. Congress John C. Calhoun Andrew Jackson Southern planters Northern manufacturers sectional-conflict nullification economic-extraction regional-exploitation slave-power
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Jefferson Denounces Corrupt Bargain as Betrayal of Democratic Principles

| Importance: 6/10

Thomas Jefferson and other Democratic-Republican leaders spent 1826 denouncing the Adams-Clay arrangement as a fundamental betrayal of democratic principles, helping Jackson’s supporters organize what would become the Democratic Party. Jefferson had privately expressed horror at the …

Thomas Jefferson Andrew Jackson Democratic-Republican Party Reform Movement systematic-corruption democratic-erosion political-reform institutional-failure party-realignment
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Corrupt Bargain Elevates Adams to Presidency Through House Backroom Deal

| Importance: 8/10

The House of Representatives elected John Quincy Adams as president on February 9, 1825, despite Andrew Jackson winning both the popular vote (152,901 to 114,023) and the highest electoral vote count (99, though short of the required majority). When no candidate achieved an electoral majority in the …

John Quincy Adams Henry Clay Andrew Jackson William Crawford U.S. House of Representatives institutional-capture systematic-corruption electoral-fraud political-deception democratic-erosion
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House Elects John Quincy Adams in "Corrupt Bargain" After Clay Throws Support, Ending Era of Good Feelings

| Importance: 8/10

The U.S. House of Representatives elects John Quincy Adams as president despite Andrew Jackson having won both a plurality of the popular vote (41%) and the Electoral College (99 votes to Adams’s 84), in what becomes known as the “Corrupt Bargain.” The 1824 presidential election …

John Quincy Adams Henry Clay Andrew Jackson William H. Crawford U.S. House of Representatives electoral-corruption political-deals elite-manipulation democratic-erosion
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