Andrew Jackson

Note- I’m starting this in GD since I intend for it to become a political argument.

The Query: Does Andrew Jackson deserve to be on the $20 bill. Why or why not?

I, personally, do not know enough about Jackson to comment. However, I know he was a good commander in the War of 1812, but that he also was behind the atrocity known as the Trail of Tears.

So, is he worthy?

From Grolier’s, billed as “An encyclopedic biography written for 3-8 grade students.” :smiley:

http://gi.grolier.com/presidents/nbk/bios/07pjack.html

http://www.20best.com/20best/people/Presidents.asp

For background information on Jackson concerning his victory at the Battle of New Orleans, attempt to find Robin Reilly’s British At The Gates.

I have an original first edition because I used to work at the battlefield. In fact, I was there during a major archeological find when we confirmed the historical record against the physical remains. It was thought the Mississippi River in its meanderings had eroded some 800 feet of the battlefield. However, our archeological dig found less than 100 feet had eroded since 1812. We found the gun emplacement for the American’s biggest cannon, a 32-pounder.

(It was this cannon that the 93rd Highlanders suffered a devastating blow. The Americans had picked off all of the Highlander’s officers, leaving them not more than 150 feet directly in front of the 32-pounder. British military tactics at that time meant following orders to the inth degree with no deviation. With all of their officers killed or wounded, the last orders the Highlanders were given was to remain at attention. The American 32-pounder made it a crap shoot of the kilts and bagpipes. :smiley: )

Among other evidence, original maps, other accounts and Reilly’s book, we found significant evidence that Jackson’s tactics were superb. Along with LaFitte’s Baratarian’s, the undermanned and outgunned Americans defeated the world’s greatest military at that time.

We calculated the battle itself lasted probably less than an hour. The American suffered 13 casualties (dead and wounded) to the more than 2,500 of the British.

The battle was a decisive victory. Had the British won, they would have taken New Orleans, some six miles upriver, split the country in half, and gained total control of the Mississippi / Missouri / Ohio Rivers trade routes.

(Teachers continue to spell out the battle was a mistake because the Treaty of Ghent ending the War of 1812 had been signed several weeks earlier. This is simplistic and historically hollow. What teachers and most people fail to understand is that Jackson had no knowledge of the treaty. More importantly, the British commander, General Edward Pakenham was under orders to ignore any potential treaty rumors. Had Pakenham won at New Orleans, the British would have torn up the treaty and continued the war. It is distinctly possible had the British won, America would in time cease to exist. BTW, the Battle of New Orleans is technically the last time a foreign power attacked the USA on its home soil. At least until September 11 of last year.)

Jackson controlled a lean, weaned fighting machine of regulars, rag-tags and Baratarians. He knew where and when the British would attack and put all his eggs in one basket to stop them. Notwithstanding some very serious blunders on account of Pakenham, Jackson’s victory is of historical importance to this day.

Personally I’d like to see him off the bill and replaced with one of the Roosevelts. But then my great-great-great grandfather was on the Trail of Tears, so you could say it’s a family grudge … .

Well, if we are gonna wipe all Indian killers off our money, then we need to get rid of George Washington, aka “Town Destroyer” cite

$2.00…
Jefferson has letters where he wrote that he believed Indians were equal with whites. letter from here

But also says

but here says that he encourages Indians to become assimilated. So Jefferson was for destruction of the Indian identity. So he’s out.

$5.00…
And goodbye Lincoln for doing nothing about Bosque Redondo.
What that was.

Lets move on to the $50…

Here Grant is said to have met with Red Cloud to try to develop a peace treaty. (more info on the Red Cloud link). But stupid Custer had to go die in 1876, so whites begane an extermination campaign (Grant left office in 1877, so he was around to start that. So goodbye General!

now the $100…

Franklin opposed the massacreof indians like ones that happened because of response to Pontiac’s Rebellion.

I couldn’t find any damning info on him, so he can stay for now.
$500… (McKinley!!!)

McKinley was president for the Spanish-American War, which turned the US into a colonial power. When the Phillipeans revolted, he sent lots of troops and the US got atrocity charges. So bye bye McKinley!!

$1000…(Cleveland!!!)
The Clevelans indians. Need i say more?? (just kidding!)

Was Presidentduring the Apache wars, when Geronomo surrendered. And he thought Indians should be assmilatedinto white society.

Bye Bye!!!
$5000…(Madison!!!)

Here is the father of the constitution justifying stealing Indian land Letter to Monroe

Kiss the Great Little President goodbye…

$10,000…(Salmon P. Chase!!!)
Chase defended slaves and was Lincoln’s Secretary during the war. I couldn’t find any anti-Indian stuff from him. He can stay for now.

$100,000…(Wilson!!!)

Wilson admitted there were dark deals done against the indians, but said that the US overall was “wise, just, and benevolent.”

Ha! Bye Bye!!!

D’oh!! forgot the $10!!!

I didn’t find anything against Hamilton, so he can stay for now as well…

Keep him.

http://odur.let.rug.nl/~usa/B/hamilton/hamil05.htm

He’s not stupid, and he can swim. What more could you ask? :smiley:

oh, yeah, he also basically designed the entire financial system of the United States government

I think Jackson should be taken off the 20 dollar bill. Not only is he responsible for the Trail of Tears, but he was also practically a tyrant. If he were president today, he would have been impeached already. While “King Veto” may have been for the common man, his use of the spoils system was sickening. The only good thing about Jackson was that he fought against Biddle and all that corruption.

So from now on, only bankers on the paper money, and Indians on the coins. I can live with that.

::returns to stack of gold dollars that he pretends are pirate treasure::

In May, 1838, federal troops, under orders from Jackson, began rounding up Cherokee people and putting them in stockades. Given only moments to collect what little they owned, they were forced out of their homes at gunpoint. Many families were separated, and no one cared for the ill and elderly.

By November, 12,000 were making the 800 mile march. Starvation, disease, and exhaustion claimed the lives of some 4,000 — about a fifth of the Cherokee people. One woman, who later died at Little Rock, wrote:

Tars, you forgot Harry S. Truman on the trillion dollar bill. :wink:

Isn’t there a movement (albeit a small one) to put Reagan on the ten dollar bill?

Well … :slight_smile:

Just one problem with that.

Now what was I saying?
Nancy?
Nancy?
:smiley:

Well, since i had to listen to a long boring speech by some Truman-phile at my sister’s graduation (Trumans State Universitry, Kirksville, MO), I say take him off money as well just out of spite!

[nitpick/hijack] Actually a Japanese submarine shelled Goleta, CA at the beginning of WWII. This Site. Or This One

The second cited site says the "news was suppressed but that isn’t true. I read about it and heard it on the radio news at the time. There is also mention of a floatplane “dropping incendiary bombs” in Oregon, which was also supposedly suppressed. If this happened it was suppressed as far as I remember, because I never heard of it. Some balloon borne incendiaries did land in the northwest. Japanese Balloons[/nitpick/hijack]

Nice slam at someone suffering from an incurable mental disabilty.

[digression]

Does anyone have the name and cite for the Supreme Court decision re the Trail of Tears? The one that Jackson refused to implement?

Cherokee Nation court decisions

Quote from the cite

“In Cherokee Nation vs. Georgia, the Court refused to hear a case extending Georgia’s laws on the Cherokee because they did not represent a sovereign nation. In 1832, the U.S. Supreme Court ruled in favor of the Cherokee on the same issue in Worcester vs. Georgia. In this case Chief Justice John Marshall ruled that the Cherokee Nation was sovereign, making the removal laws invalid. The Cherokee would have to agree to removal in a treaty. The treaty then would have to be ratified by the Senate.”

I think the second one was the one that Jackson ignored.

And weren’t the Creek Indians rounded up in the Trail of Tears along with the Cherokee?

(Incidentally, my entire knowledge of the Battle of New Orleans comes from the song. Darn it, you got me thinking about bacon and beans now!)

Thanks, David.