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Andrew Jackson, A Man Of Self-respect, A Man Of Dignity, A Man Who, In Addition,

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Term Paper TitleAndrew Jackson, A Man Of Self-respect, A Man Of Dignity, A Man Who, In Addition,
# of Words1019
# of Pages (250 words per page double spaced)4.08
     Andrew Jackson, a man of self-respect, a man of dignity, a man who, in addition, thought undemocratic. In 1767 Andrew Jackson was born into a hardworking, farming class family. Andrew Jackson thought of himself as a man of the people. Yet, at the time of his election at the age of 61, however, Jackson was hardly one of the common man. He had built a highly successful career in Tennessee in law, politics, land speculation, cotton planting, and soldering. Nevertheless, an overwhelming majority of people from the farming community supported him in 1828, the year he was elected president. There were many reasons why Jackson was undemocratic or not, as the dictionary elegantly suggests, attempting to treat people of all classes in the same way. The dictionaries definition regarding democracy made it clear that Jackson was undemocratic when it came to the establishment of the spoil system in his administration. Additionally, Jackson was a hypocrite, constantly contradicting himself when he expressed his feelings about the slave community, qualities of an undemocratic president. Likewise, the way he removed the Native Americans was, once again, an undemocratic action.
     In 1828, once elected into office, Jackson began taking on his undemocratic role as president, introducing the spoil system, hiring his friends and firing his republican colleges. Once Jackson became president he realized that the policy of Òrotation in officeÓ enabled him to assign government jobs to his friends, people who helped him and his campaign (Documant A). These people were not educated and, additionally, not ready for the sophisticated jobs that the government was offering. They were hard working farming class people. Nonetheless, Jackson never took the advise of congress under account, and began his crusade (Documant A & B). He fired nearly 10 percent of the federal employees, 919 educated people, most of them holdovers from the Adams administration, and gave their jobs to loyal Jacksonians (Documant C). JacksonÕs friends also became his primary advisers. Furthermore, Jackson made a malevolent mistake,  appointing Samuel Swartwout to the collector of the port of New York, a man who had a criminal personality. Although Van Buren (Secretary of State) attempted to warn Jackson that ÒSwartwoutÕs appointment would not be in accordance with the public sentimentÓ he refused to listen. Swartwout stole $1,222,705.09 (Document B). The fact that Jackson hired people who were not qualified to help...

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