
Most Americans Know Andrew Jackson As A Frontier Rebel Against Political And Diplomatic Norms, A Populist Champion Of Ordinary People Against The Elitist Legacy Of The Founding Fathers. Many Date The Onset Of American Democracy To His 1829 Inauguration. Despite His Reverence For The Sovereign People, However, Jackson Spent Much Of His Career Limiting That Sovereignty, Imposing New And Often Unpopular Legal Regimes Over American Lands And Markets. He Made His Name As A Lawyer, Businessman, And Official Along The Carolina And Tennessee Frontiers, At Times Ejecting White Squatters From Native Lands And Returning Slaves To Native Planters In The Name Of Federal Authority And International Law. On The Other Hand, He Waged Total War On The Cherokees And Creeks Who Terrorized Western Settlements And Raged At The National Statesmen Who Refused To Avenge The Blood Of Innocent Colonists. During The Long War In The South And West From 1811 To 1818 He Brushed Aside Legal Restraints On Holy Genocide And Mass Retaliation, Presenting Himself As The Only Man Who Would Protect White Families From Hostile Empires, Heathen Warriors, And Rebellious Slaves. He Became A Towering Hero To Those Who Saw The United States As Uniquely Lawful And Victimized. And He Used That Legend To Beat Back A Range Of Political, Economic, And Moral Alternatives For The Republican Future. Drawing From New Evidence About Jackson And The Southern Frontiers, Avenging The People Boldly Reinterprets The Grim And Principled Man Whose Version Of American Nationhood Continues To Shape American Democracy.
This book investigates the paradox of Andrew Jackson as both a champion of populist democracy and a figure who systematically restricted sovereignty through aggressive legal and military action. Author J.M. Opal, a historian specializing in the early American republic, utilizes archival evidence from the Carolina and Tennessee frontiers to challenge the traditional narrative of Jackson as a simple man of the people. The work argues that Jackson’s political identity was forged through a commitment to protecting white settlers via total war and the imposition of rigid federal authority, which ultimately shaped a exclusionary vision of American nationhood.
What You Will Find
Scope Limits
Historians and scholars of the early American republic recognize this work as a significant re-evaluation of Jacksonian ideology and its impact on democratic development. Readers frequently note the academic rigor of the research and the author's ability to synthesize complex frontier legal history into a coherent political argument.
Page Count:
368
Publication Date:
2017-01-01
Publisher:
Oxford University Press
ISBN-10:
0190660252
ISBN-13:
9780190660253
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