Essay On Andrew Jackson Dbq

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Pages: 5

During the 1820’s and 1830’s, Andrew Jackson and his Jacsonian democratic followers would rise to power. They would claim to be guardians of the U.S constitution protecting political democracy, individual liberties and the equality of economic opportunity. Though they claimed to be strict enforcers of these ideas they leaned more towards ideals that supported their personal interest. Andrew Jackson was a southern aristocrat who had wealth, as did many of his supporters. During this period they claimed to be protectors of people’s liberties, but the issue of slavery was barely addressed and one of the worst treatments of Native Americans in American history occurred prevent them to have the opportunity to succeed. Jacksonians also failed to …show more content…
Mr. Evans expresses the views of how Andrew Jackson and his party were not helping with the issues of industrialization and was not expressing the rights of the common man. There was now a much more widening gap in the income within America between the rich and the poor. Though Harriet Martineau says “The striking effect upon a stranger of witnessing, for the first time, the absence of poverty, of gross ignorance, of all servility, of all insolence of manner cannot be exaggerated in description”(Document D). She states as an opposing views to George Evans that there is equality in America. Evans view of these inequalities more accurately represents the workingman because he himself was experiencing these horrible injustices first hand. Martineau does account for the people not facing poverty does not account for what was occurring to all workers in U.S. The U.S at the time-compared rest of the world did have a very high standard of living, but the industrial revolution was hurting this greatly. Martineau observation are also discredited with Phillip Hone who says “A band of Irishmen of the lowest class came out of Duane Street from the six Ward poll, armed with clubs, and commenced a savage attack upon