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Andrew Jackson, Southerner (Paperback)
Loot Price: R1,086
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Andrew Jackson, Southerner (Paperback)
Series: Southern Biography Series
Expected to ship within 10 - 15 working days
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Winner of the 2013 Tennessee History Award Many Americans view
Andrew Jackson as a frontiersman who fought duels, killed Indians,
and stole another man's wife. Historians have traditionally
presented Jackson as a man who struggled to overcome the obstacles
of his backwoods upbringing and helped create a more democratic
United States. In his compelling new biography of Jackson, Mark R.
Cheathem argues for a reassessment of these long-held views,
suggesting that in fact ""Old Hickory"" lived as an elite southern
gentleman. Jackson grew up along the border between North Carolina
and South Carolina, a district tied to Charleston, where the city's
gentry engaged in the transatlantic marketplace. Jackson then moved
to North Carolina, where he joined various political and kinship
networks that provided him with entrance into society. In fact,
Cheathem contends, Jackson had already started to assume the
characteristics of a southern gentleman by the time he arrived in
Middle Tennessee in 1788. After moving to Nashville, Jackson
further ensconced himself in an exclusive social order by marrying
the daughter of one of the city's cofounders, engaging in land
speculation, and leading the state militia. Cheathem notes that
through these ventures Jackson grew to own multiple plantations and
cultivated them with the labor of almost two hundred slaves. His
status also enabled him to build a military career focused on
eradicating the nation's enemies, including Indians residing on
land desired by white southerners. Jackson's military success
eventually propelled him onto the national political stage in the
1820s, where he won two terms as president. Jackson's years as
chief executive demonstrated the complexity of the expectations of
elite white southern men, as he earned the approval of many white
southerners by continuing to pursue Manifest Destiny and opposing
the spread of abolitionism, yet earned their ire because of his
efforts to fight nullification and the Second Bank of the United
States. By emphasising Jackson's southern identity - characterized
by violence, honor, kinship, slavery, and Manifest Destiny -
Cheathem's narrative offers a bold new perspective on one of the
nineteenth century's most renowned and controversial presidents.
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