Should Andrew Jackson be on our Twenty Dollar Bill? Lizeth Quiroz P6
Andrew Jackson deserves a place of honor on our Twenty Dollar Bill.Andrew Jackson was a self-made man. He grew up poor and he joined the militia at the age of thirteen.In his teens he studied law to become a lawyer. Jackson never grew out his hot temper and he was a man that doesn't like to be challenge. In 1824,Andrew Jackson was running for president against three other candidates-Henry Clay, William Crawford, and John Quincy Adams.Three reasons why Andrew Jackson deserves a place on the twenty dollar bill is because of the Bank War, The Nullification War, and The Indian Removal Act.
The First Reason why Andrew Jackson should be on our twenty dollar bill is because of his fight with the Bank Of The U.S. The Bank War was about Jackson's Battle with the Bank where he wanted to veto the charter of the bank because he believed it only benefit the rich. Therefore leaving out the common people. According to the text “The bank was a private institution that benefited only a few people.”
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President Andrew Jackson's proclamation regarding nullification was an issue that threatened to break up the United States. He introduced higher tariffs to encourage the growth of manufacturing in the U.S. South Carolina a farming state was affected by the tariff and decided to not to follow the federal law on tariffs and secede from the union. As stated by the text “... South Carolinians… threatened to secede if the national government tried to enforce the tariff law.” (History Alive pg 190)The quote is explaining that South Carolina was affected with the tariff law and they will got to whatever extend to not pay high tariffs. This quote is important because if Andrew Jackson did not threaten South Carolina,they would leave the union and they would be a different
I do not believe that President Jackson should be on the twenty dollar bill. He was not a man of good; all he cared about was pleasing himself and making other people believe he was doing good; manipulating them. Andrew Jackson was only concerned with keeping the union together. If he could get people to see that he could keep the states one nation then he would gain fame. I find
Awarded the prestigious honor to remain forever engraved on the twenty dollar bill, Andrew Jackson became a figure in American history never forgotten. Future generations of younger students will not need to know Andrew for them to assume he was a great man. Unfortunately, the ignorance of idolizing Jackson because he appears on American currency serves to blanket the realities of his administration. Jackson should be removed from the twenty dollar bill.
America has been shaped and reshaped in various instances throughout its history; some of the men that played vital roles in achieving the status we now possess have been immortalized in our currency. President Andrew Jackson, is one of the few American leaders that was chosen to live on forever; however, many now argue whether or not Jackson truly deserves the honor to be represented in the 20 dollar bill--- arguing that there are other better qualified people to take his place; an example being Harriet Tubman. I believe that President Andrew Jackson should stay on the 20 dollar bill. Although many of his personal beliefs contradict many of our current beliefs and values, we shouldn’t judge him on them; rather, we should judge President Jackson on his actions as a president and how he impacted the nation as a leader. Thanks to the hard decisions that President Jackson had to take America was able to advance the way it did. We wouldn’t be the United States of America we are today without President Jackson.
The 1828 Tariffs, which were taxes on goods imported from other countries, made imported goods more expensive. This new law obliterated the south, because there were no factories only farming, as they were not producers, and slaves were the only sources of income. It instead profitably assisted factories, which were primarily in the north, by reducing British competition in the south causing the abrupt halt on foreign trade and increased market prices. President Jackson felt nullification was necessary, but not the approach that S. Carolina took to it because it was a state. Jackson ignored the Supreme Court in Worchester v. Georgia, but he was in fact a southerner making his “PROCLAMATION, stating (his) views of the Constitution” telling South Carolina, another southern state, that if they tried to nullify those tariffs; then he was all powerful and willing to use military force in order “to defend the patriotism of the people,” and “preserve this bond of our political existence from destruction, to maintain inviolate this state of national honor and prosperity, and to justify the confidence” in going to war for his overall
South Carolina was angry about the high federal tariff on imported goods, which helped New England at the expense of southerner planters. In response South Carolina declared, they had the right to nullify the federal tax. Jackson did not think the tariff was too high. John Calhoun, the vice president, thought differently. Calhoun believed that Jackson would support his view point since both were southern planters, but Jackson’s personal hatred of Calhoun precluded any political sympathy. Instead, he responded with force. Jackson threatened to have a civil war and raise an army. He threatened to go to South Carolina and hang Calhoun from the first tree he found. South Carolina backed down and Congress modified the tariff. As for Jackson, he made it clear that he was the supreme leader of the nation and that the union was not going to fly apart under his presidency. He shows the people again that he has absolute power just because he is the President of the United States. In the painting, Jackson is stepping on the Constitution signifying that he does not follow the law instead he makes up his own
Andrew Jackson, our 7th president of the United States was a hero in the American eye. He’d promised equality and created a new government, but was that enough for him to be worthy of being on the $20 bill? Born in poverty, he became a wealthy Tennessee lawyer. Then earned his national fame as a military hero and became one of America’s most influential and polarizing political figure. Jackson’s childhood included immigrant parents, a brother killed in the Revolutionary War, and became an orphan. Despite his admirable qualities, he shouldn’t be on the $20 bill, due to him being a hypocrite. Jackson makes the power of the president to be the most important out of the three branches, he brought harm to Native Americans, and he changed American
The bank symbolized the hopes and fears inspired by the market revolution. The expansion of banking helped to finance the nation’s economic development. But many Americans, including Jackson, distrusted bankers as “non-producers” who contributed nothing to the nation’s wealth but profited from the labor of others. The tendency of banks to over-issue paper money, whose deterioration in value reduced the real income of wage earners, reinforced this conviction. Jackson himself had long believed the “hard money” -gold and silver-was the only honest currency. Nonetheless, when he assumed office there was little reason to believe that the Bank War would become the major event of his presidency.1 Page 388 of Give Me Liberty
He worked his way up and eventually to the presidency. I believe Andrew Jackson deserves to be on the $20 bill because he was a war hero that fought in several wars, he believed in the common man, and he was never quitting. One reason Andrew Jackson deserves to be on the $20 bill is because he was a war hero. He fought in the War of 1812 and defeated 2 hostile Indian tribes, one of which was the Red Sticks. He defeated the remaining British that were left in America and gained more control over the economy.
Andrew Jackson, the president honored on the twenty dollar bill, could be seen as one of the greatest presidents in American history. Even growing up, Jackson was determined to create change in the world. He defied all odds and became the victor during the Battle of New Orleans and he created the Jacksonian democracy during his presidency. He also brought a surge, though short-lived, of wealth in the country’s economy. To begin with, during the War of 1812, Jackson fought one of the most famous battles - The Battle of New Orleans.
Andrew Jackson does not deserve to be on the 20 dollar bill. He should not be on the 20 dollar bill because of the horrible Acts that he has done, like the Indian Removal Act and the Implemented Spoils System. These two acts were awful because he made the Native Americans travel ridiculously long journeys, with awful conflicts like diseases and starvation. Andrew Jackson had also come up with the Implemented Spoils System which was firing government employees and replacing them with his own supporters. He had done this, just so he could get more money for himself. Since he had done these two acts, he has been considered not honorable by many people who have made drawings and pictures.
of all paper money, so why should we let him be on our $20 bill?Jackson is currently on
Was Andrew Jackson a hero or a villain? Does he deserve to be on the twenty dollar bill? The things he did were appealing only for a few. This did not represent all of the United States. He did what was best for the majority of Americans. His ideas did not appeal to the rich and well-born because his focus was farmers. The majority is not always what is right. Jackson’s approach was very straight forward. He got rid of people he didn't agree with and hired people who had the same opinions as him. This led to abuses of political power designed to benefit and enrich the ruling party. A hero needs to listen to others and not just do what he wishes just because he has the ultimate power to do so. Andrew Jackson should not be on the twenty dollar bill because he forced Native Americans out of their homes, did not follow rules, and had a terrible temper.
Although Andrew Jackson is labeled one of the greatest presidents and generals in United States history, his brutal hostilities contradict his title and accomplishment of being the well recognized face on the twenty-dollar bill. As an American general in 1813, Jackson began his hatred towards indigenous people by initiating a war against the Red Stick Indian faction, later known as The Creek War, which fought the native people for standing up for their own land. Jackson then illegally stole the Creek territory and disregarded the prior American law which demanded him to return the land to the Native Americans. Only a year after his presidential election Andrew
Andrew Jackson issued the Proclamation to the people of South Carolina that disputed the states’ rights to nullify a federal law. The Proclamation was written in response to an Ordinance issued by the South Carolina convention that declared that the tariff act
People want Andrew Jackson on the twenty-dollar bill because he was a slave owner. When the government or any person that deals