Showing posts with label John Quincy Adams. Show all posts
Showing posts with label John Quincy Adams. Show all posts

Friday, May 13, 2016

History timeline 1820-1829

1820: George III dies. George IV becomes King of England
    Cato Street Conspiracy
    Missouri Compromise
    James Monroe re-elected

1821: Several countries declare independence from Spain

1822: Chios Massacre

1823: Monroe Doctrine

1824: Lafayette tours U.S.
    Presidential Election thrown into the House of Representatives

1825: U.S. House of Representatives selects John Quincy Adams as President
    Erie Canal opens

1826: Most property requirements for voting removed in U.S.

1827: B&O Railroad opens (first railroad in U.S.)
    Freedom's Journal begins
    Greek War of Independence ends

1828: London Protocol creates modern Greece
    Andrew Jackson wins presidential election

1829: Catholic Relief Act
    Russo-Turkish War ends
    Petticoat Affair (1829-31)

Saturday, March 5, 2016

American History timeline: 1810-1819

1810: Beethoven's Fur Elise
    Macon's Bill #2

1811: Battle of Tippecanoe

1812: New Madrid Earthquake
    U.S. declares war on Britain
    U.S. Invades Canada
    Detroit surrenders
    Constitution vs. Guerriere
    Battle of Borodino
    Napoleon invades Russia
    Battle of Queenston Heights
    James Madison re-elected President

1813: Battle of Lake Erie
    Battle of the Thames
    Battle of Leipzig
    Battle of Crysler's Farm

1814: Battle of Horseshoe Bend
    Bourbon Restoration/Napoleon's abdication
    Battle of Lundy's Lane
    British burn Washington D.C
    Battle of Lake Champlain
    Fort McHenry & The Star Spangled Banner
    Treaty of Ghent ends the War of 1812

1815: Battle of New Orleans
    Hartford Convention
    Napoleon's 100 Days
    Waterloo
    Mt. Tambura explodes leading to the Year without summer
    Congress of Vienna
    Napoleon exiled to St. Helena

1816: James Monroe elected President

1817: Rush-Bagot Treaty
    First Seminole War begins

1818: Frankenstein published
    Jackson invades Florida
    "Silent Night" written

1819: Panic of 1819
    Dartmouth College vs Woodward
    Adams-Onis Treaty
    McCullough vs Maryland
    Peterloo Massacre
    Missouri Crisis begins

Saturday, June 27, 2009

Presidential Legacies: The Next Generation 1825-1849

As the Founders' generation died off, people were leery of the next generation. Could America stay America without the Founding Fathers around to guide them? Here's the next generation of presidents starting literally with the next generation asJohn Quincy Adams takes office.

John Quincy Adams (1825-1829): Adams came into office under a cloud. The 1824 election was thrown to the House of Representatives. Adams won with the help of Henry Clay. Although no candidate won a majority of votes, Adams won less than Andrew Jackson. As a result, Adams felt he could not initiate any major policies since he did not think he had a big enough mandate and faced a very hostile Jacksonian Congress. Adams had no real accomplishments as president. George W. Bush used Adams as the example of what not to do in 2001. Bush decided to go after tax cuts, education reform, and a prescription drug benefit as opposed to sitting around like Adams. President Adams real legacy came after leaving office. Although, he was an accomplished diplomat, negotiated the Treaty of Ghent, the purchase of Florida, and the Monroe Doctrine, Adams should be remembered for his war on slavery. John Quincy Adams was the best ex-president in U.S. history.

Andrew Jackson (1829-1837): Jackson created the modern presidency. His detractors called him "King Andrew." Jackson vetoed more bills than any president to that point. He launched a war on the Bank of the United States and killed it. When South Carolina threatened to leave the union, Jackson threatened to destroy them. He also removed Native Americans from Georgia in violation of a court order. Jackson dramatically expanded executive power like no one before.

Martin Van Buren (1837-1841): Van Buren considered the presidency his reward for years of hard work. He worked his way up and helped form the modern Democratic Party. He maneuvered himself into the Vice Presidency by ingratiating himself with Jackson. Once he moved into the White House, he was as paralyzed by events as Jimmy Carter 140 years later. A major depression, sectional strife, and an inept chief executive marked Van Buren's stewardship. As a result, people began calling him "Martin Van Ruin" with the same contempt people in the 1930s appropriated Herbert Hoover's name for all things poverty.

William Henry Harrison (1841): Harrison ran the first modern presidential campaign complete with songs, spin, modern packaging of candidates, and a catchy slogan "Tippecanoe and Tyler too." Once elected, Harrison gave a ridiculously long speech in bad weather, caught pneumonia, and died one month later.

John Tyler (1841-1845): Virginian John Tyler was added to the 1840 ticket for regional balance. Although Harrison was a Whig, Tyler was a Jacksonian Democrat. This was strange since Whigs and Democrats were opposites on important economic issues. However, no Vice President had ever become President and they were supposed to disappear into a black hole for four years. Harrison's death created a crisis. Who's president? Tyler assumed the office himself and asserted the right of all Vice Presidents to become President when the Chief Executive dies. Additionally, Tyler opposed his new party's programs and began vetoing their legislation. He was evicted from the Whigs and the Democrats refused to have him back. He became a man without a party. The Tyler Years demonstrate the importance of having a president and vice president on the same page ideologically. After leaving office, Tyler supported the Confederacy during the Civil War.

James K. Polk (1845-1849): Polk took the U.S. to War with Mexico. Polk attempted to bully the Mexicans into surrendering California and the American Southwest. They refused and attacked American troops at the Texas border. The United States won the war handily and conquered all or part of California, Utah, Nevada, Arizona, Colorado, New Mexico, and Wyoming. This made up 42% of Mexico at the time.

Sunday, January 18, 2009

The Worst Inaugural Addresses

Here is a list of the five worst Presidential Inaugural Addresses. They are arranged chronologically.

1. Thomas Jefferson (1805): Jefferson breaks into a tirade during his inaugural. He attempts to justify his policies and accomplishments and then attacks his critics and calls them ignorant. And people thought Nixon's 1962 farewell speech was bitter.

2. John Quincy Adams (1825): Adams was slow to recognize the revolutionary changes overtaking American politics in the 1820s. However, he did recognize his precarious situation after the contested Election of 1824. His address was long, rambling, and boring. He felt the need to mention the aqueducts of Rome. At the end, he admits he is a handicapped president and might not be able to get much done.

3. William Henry Harrison (1841): Harrison's address was so long, he caught a cold, which turned to pneumonia. He died a month into office. His speech was so bad, it killed him.

4. James Buchanan (1857): The word clueless comes to mind with Buchanan. The country was on the eve of Civil War, but Buchanan did not seem to understand this. The Kansas situation had created a war within the territory. Buchanan claimed sectional differences were of no importance. He then rambles on and on and on...

5. Warren Harding (1921): Another long and rambling speech. The first Bill Clinton gave one of the worst addresses ever. Reading the speech is something akin to watching paint dry. No, that is unfair to paint.

Monday, October 13, 2008

The Underachievers

Continuing the categorization of the 43 presidencies, here are the five guys that were below average. They weren't absolute failures, but they were not successful either. Each one served only one term. They are listed chronologically.

1. John Quincy Adams (1825-1829): Adams was a lame duck when he assumed office. Most people voted against him and he ascended to the White House through the mechanisation of Henry Clay. While in office, he did not do much except wait for the whoopin' Jackson would put on him in 1828. The one major piece of legislation was the Tariff of Abominations. This raised tariffs to a ridiculously high rate and caused a rift between north and south.

2. Martin Van Buren (1837-1841): The minute Van Buren took office, a depression hit. As such, he got the blame. The depression did not end until he left office. Now, that was not the reason for his inclusion here. During the Amistad Case, he supported slaveholder interests and while in office was a southern lapdog. He lost his re-election bid to William Henry Harrison.

3. Millard Fillmore (1850-1853): He took office upon the death of Zachary Taylor. He supported the Compromise of 1850 and the horrible Fugitive Slave Law. On the positive side, he peacefully opened Japan to Western Trade. The Japanese celebrate this event to this day.

4. Benjamin Harrison (1889-1893): Presidents can not fix the economy when it heads south. They can help ease the pain or give people hope. On the other hand, presidents can mess up the economy. Harrison's economic plans did just that. In 1893, a panic hit. His one major success was the Sherman Anti-Trust Act which was not really used in the manner it was meant until Theodore Roosevelt.

5. William Howard Taft (1909-1913): The Era of Bungled Diplomacy, the Payne-Aldrich Tariff fiasco, the Income Tax, Dollar Diplomacy, the Ballinger-Pinchot rift, and the Republican Party schism...Taft's Administration sells itself! However, he did bust many monopolies and the country was in decent shape despite the bungling. So, he was not a complete failure!

Sunday, October 5, 2008

Blood Feud III: Jackson vs. Adams

The Election of 1824 brought back the two party system. The Election ended up in the House of Representatives because no one candidate could garner enough electoral votes to be president. Four candidates split the votes. In the end, Jackson and Adams went head to head in the House of Representatives. Adams won the battle, but lost the war.
Andrew Jackson was the only candidate for president with a national following. He was a war hero, an Indian fighter, and marketed himself as the champion of the common man. Jackson drew a large following and decided to run for president. In the election of 1824, he faced three opponents.
The other candidates had regional followings. The leading candidate was Secretary of Treasury William Crawford of Georgia. Most insiders believed he would win. Unfortunately for Crawford, he suffered a stroke and finished third.
The Western Candidate was Henry Clay of Kentucky. Clay was known as "The Great Compromiser" for his work on the Missouri Compromise of 1820. Clay did not have a very large following and was a long shot. The young Speaker of the House finished fourth.
John Quincy Adams was one of the most qualified men to ever run from president, but no one at the time knew it. Washington insiders knew Adams' resume, but few voters did. Adams had been a foreign minister, negotiated the end of the War of 1812, and was the greatest Secretary of State ever, but no one knew it. Adams failed to appreciate the vast changes taking place in America and almost lost in 1824.
America was democratizing. During the 1820's, more and more states allowed its citizens to vote. Prior to this era, most states only allowed property holders the franchise. Then, people began to clamor for universal suffrage for white men. The call was deafening and by 1828, all white men could vote if they chose.
However, in 1824, this historical trend was only visible to Jackson's people. Jackson even encouraged it. He won the popular vote appealing to commoners, but failed to gain enough electoral votes to win the presidency. The election went to the Clay controlled House of Representatives.
Once in the House, Clay used his powers as Speaker to swing the election to Adams. Jackson lost. Clay became Secretary of State. This positioned Clay for a White House run in 1832. Jackson cried foul and accused Adams and Clay of a corrupt bargain. He began campaigning for 1828. Adams was mortally wounded and became a lame duck immediately.
In 1828, Adams ran for re-election with no presidential accomplishments. A recent biography of Adams focused only one chapter on Adams' presidency. Adams was an inconsequential president battling the tide of history. Jackson smoked Adams in the rematch and became president in 1828. In this election, Rachel Jackson was accused of bigamy and died before Jackson's inauguration. He never forgave those that attacked her and blamed them for her death. Once inaugurated, Jackson had to jump out a White House window to avoid being crushed by the masses that came to party. The common man had spoken. The Age of Jackson had begun.