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| Â | MSN Encarta - Democratic Party |
 | | Democrats, who were expected to lose seats as the president’s party traditionally does in off-year elections, gained five seats in the House of Representatives and avoided losses in the Senate. |  | | However, the Democrats did increase their Senate, House, gubernatorial, and state legislative majorities in the 1988 elections. |  | | Bryan, although supported by the dissident People’s Party, was abandoned by many traditional and urban Democrats, who opposed his program and stance, and he was defeated by the Republican William McKinley. |
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http://encarta.msn.com/encyclopedia_761561572/Democratic_Party.html
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| Â | Free Term Papers on Jacksonian Democrats |
 | | Both the Jacksonians and President Jackson went against the Supreme Courts regarding cases that were said to be constitutional. |  | | Georgia, the Supreme Court ruled in favor of the Cherokee Nation. |  | | This ruling of the Supreme Court did not stop Jackson and the Jacksonians from driving the Cherokees off of their land, and by doing this the Constitution was violated. |
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http://www.freefortermpapers.com/show_essay/8724.html
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| Â | AllRefer.com - George Bancroft (Historians, U.S., Biography) - Encyclopedia |
 | | As a reward for his speeches and writings for the Democratic cause he was appointed (1837) collector of the port of Boston by President Martin Van Buren, and as the dispenser of the patronage of that office Bancroft was the Democratic boss in Massachusetts. |  | | Bancroft, an antislavery Democrat, came to support Abraham Lincoln in the Civil War and on Feb. 12, 1866, delivered the official memorial address on Lincoln before the Congress (he had also been the official eulogist of Andrew Jackson in 1845). |  | | He is assumed to have written President Andrew Johnson's first message to Congress, and in 1867 Johnson appointed him minister to Prussia. |
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http://reference.allrefer.com/encyclopedia/B/BancroftG.html
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| Â | Politics in America 4/e Chapter 7 -- Overview and Objectives |
 | | Democratic delegates are more liberal than Democratic voters, and Republican delegates are more conservative than Republican voters. |  | | Democratic Governor Grover Cleveland of New York won on a reform ticket in 1884 and 1892, and Princeton political scientist Woodrow Wilson won in 1912 after Theodore Roosevelt split the Republican Party by running on a third, progressive party ("The Bull Moose Party"). |  | | The Jacksonian Democrats appealed to the "common man" and successfully urged states to lower property requirements for voting and choose electors by popular vote instead of by the state legislatures. |
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http://cwx.prenhall.com/bookbind/pubbooks/dye4/chapter7/objectives/deluxe-content.html
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| Â | DNC: Democratic Party History |
 | | Democratic Party leader William Jennings Bryan led a movement of agrarian reformers and supported the right of women's suffrage, the progressive graduated income tax and the direct election of Senators. |  | | The Jacksonian Democrats created the national convention process, the party platform, and reunified the Democratic Party with Jackson's victories in 1828 and 1832. |  | | In 1798, the "party of the common man" was officially named the Democratic-Republican Party and in 1800 elected Jefferson as the first Democratic President of the United States. |
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http://www.democrats.org/about/history.html
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| Â | Jacksonian Democracy Free Essays |
 | | Jacksonian Democracy In the 1820's and 1830's Jacksonian Democrats showed that they were the guardians of the United Stated Constitution, political democracy, individual liberty, and equality of economic opportunity. |  | | Jacksonians were the intense democrats of this time, his reforms and political views showed his commitment to the common man. Jacksonian democracy advocated liberty of the white male working class. |  | | Andrew Jackson's opposition to the nullification laws displayed his honor for the Constitution and his belief in a strong union. |
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http://www.netessays.net/viewpaper/20932.html
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| Â | United States Democratic Party - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia |
 | | The Jacksonian "Democratic-Republicans" soon became known as simply "Democrats." From 1833 to 1856, the Democratic Party was opposed chiefly by the Whig Party. |  | | Southern wing of the Democratic Party became increasingly associated with the expansion of slavery, in opposition to the newly revamped United States Republican Party. |  | | After the war, the Democrats were a shattered party, but eventually gathered enough support to elect reform candidate Grover Cleveland to two (non-consecutive) terms in the Presidency. |
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http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/United_States_Democratic_Party
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| Â | Encyclopedia4U - John Tyler - Encyclopedia Article |
 | | During his time as U.S. Senator, Tyler, who had begun as a strict state-rights Democrat, grew increasingly alienated from the Jacksonian Democrats, especially by Jackson's aggressive handling of the South Carolina nullification issue. |  | | He studied law with his father, John Tyler (1747 - 1813), who became governor of Virginia (1808 - 1811), and followed his father as governor (1825 - 1827) after a stint in the House of Representatives. |  | | Drawn into the newly-organized Whig party, Tyler was elected Vice President in 1840 as running mate to William Henry Harrison, on the slogan 'Tippecanoe&mdash and Tyler too!' and assumed the presidency upon Harrison's death a month into his term. |
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http://www.encyclopedia4u.com/j/john-tyler.html
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| Â | Reader's Companion to American History - -WHIG PARTY |
 | | In 1834 political opponents of President Andrew Jackson organized a new party to contest Jacksonian Democrats nationally and in the states. |  | | Although the Whig party was hardly an antislavery party, free blacks and abolitionists overwhelmingly preferred it to more ardently proslavery Jacksonian Democrats. |  | | The party died not because its unique aura no longer appealed to voters but because it could not cope effectively or persuasively with what after the Compromise of 1850 became the great issue of American politics, the expansion of slavery. |
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http://college.hmco.com/history/readerscomp/rcah/html/ah_091900_whigparty.htm
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| Â | Jacksonian Democracy FastEssay.com |
 | | Jacksonian Democracy In the 1820's and 1830's Jacksonian Democrats showed that they were the guardians of the United Stated Constitution, political democracy, individual liberty, and equality of economic opportunity. |  | | Jacksonians were the intense democrats of this time, his reforms and political views showed his... |  | | Andrew Jackson's opposition to the nullification laws displayed his honor for the Constitution and his belief in a strong union. |
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http://www.fastessay.com/free_essays/806.html
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| Â | POLITICAL PARTIES: Outline No |
 | | Democratic delegates are more liberal than most Democrats, while Republican delegates are more conservative than most Republicans. |  | | By 1796: Federalists vs. Jeffersonian Democratic-Republicans had developed as the two major political parties.Starting in 1796 Jefferson worked to built base; they were originally called anti-federalists after their opposition to the Constitution, but adopted the name Republicans or Democratic Republicans. |  | | In 1932, we saw the rise of the modern Democratic Party with the election of Franklin Roosevelt. |
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http://www.psci.unt.edu/cox/coxnotes/1040.09.html
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| Â | Democratic Party History |
 | | Conservatives' opposition to Roosevelt's 1937 plan to "pack" the U.S. Supreme Court with new members led many Southern Democrats to join Republicans in a conservative coalition. |  | | Many voters blamed the Republicans for the depression and voted Democratic in the congressional elections of 1874. |  | | Democrats and Republicans favored a policy of laissez faire (nonregulation), and the government left business largely in the hands of businessmen. |
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http://www.puhsd.k12.ca.us/chana/staffpages/eichman/civics/elections/1/democratic_history.htm
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| Â | . : gchen : : powered by MyIkonboard |
 | | Jackson also went against a pervious decision of the Judiciary branch that the Bank was constitutional; this was a completely unprecedented reach of power of the executive branch to directly go against a ruling of the judicial branch. |  | | Clearly Jackson, and thus the Jacksonian democrats who supported him, were not guardians of political democracy. |  | | By inflaming the poor against the rich, he has worked against the Jacksonian idea of the common man. In addition, by calling for states’ rights, he is acting in opposition to the government for which he is the head of. |
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http://gchen.myikonboard.com/viewthread.php?threadid=11
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| Â | TAP: Vol 13, Iss. 16. Why Democrats Must Be Populists. John B. Judis and Ruy Teixeira. |
 | | But there was a defining populist worldview that has influenced Democrats from Bryan in 1896 to Franklin Roosevelt in 1932 to Clinton and Gore in 1992. |  | | It dates from the Jacksonian period of the 1830s and Andrew Jackson's war against the Second Bank of the United States, and from the last two decades of the 19th century, when a populist movement (and later a party) formed in the South and the West. |  | | But many of populism's political demands, such as those for a graduated income tax and the direct election of senators, were adopted by progressive Republicans and liberal Democrats, and its key themes were embraced by the major parties and by insurgent movements. |
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http://www.prospect.org/print/V13/16/judis-j.html
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| Â | Civil War History: The Second Party System In Lincoln's Springfield |
 | | Whigs were the established elite, who opposed suffrage reforms and defended entrenched monopolies such as the Bank of the United States against a swelling Jacksonian egalitarian ethos. |  | | Second, he argued that the election of the Whig William Henry Harrison in 1840 was more important than the election of Andrew Jackson in 1828 in mobilizing popular electoral participation.(4) |  | | The consensus critique crested in 1966 with the appearance of McCormick's Second American Party System, a survey of Jacksonian politics that matched Schlesinger's Age of Jackson in synthetic sweep and influence. |
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http://www.findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_m2004/is_4_44/ai_53510082
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| Â | TCS: Tech Central Station - Revolt of the Jacksonians |
 | | After all, an understanding of "Jacksonianism" will be essential to understanding American politics for a long time to come. |  | | In 1824, Jackson of Tennessee ran for the presidency against John Quincy Adams of Massachusetts. |  | | As Mead noted, "Of all the major currents in American society, Jacksonians have the least regard for international law and international institutions. |
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http://www.techcentralstation.com/110504J.html
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| Â | Jacksonian Democracy Essay |
 | | Jacksonian democrats did not sustain three separate and equal branches of government, as Constitutionally required. |  | | Henry Clay viewed Jackson as dictatorial and unconstitutional and persuaded the Congress to censure him in 1834, but Jacksonian propaganda continued to portray Jackson as a common man. |  | | Jackson's hypocrisy and brutality in his Indian removal practices (after his decisive victory at Horseshoe Bend, Alabama, March 1814) showed the non-universal principles held by the democrats. |
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http://www.geocities.com/CapitolHill/Lobby/1777/papers/hjackson.html
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| Â | Essays4College - Thousands of Free Essays, Free Term Papers and Free Book Reports. |
 | | American November 11th, 2003 A. American Document Based Essay #1 Descendants of the Democratic Republican Party, during the 1820’s and 1830’s Jacksonian democrats had almost complete control over the federal government and were able to freely e... |  | | The Jackson democrats attempted to aggrandize the puissance of lower classes poor while decreasing the influence of the rich and potent. |  | | Webster, era "independent Because a and protecting did called been The as right the South his if as was stated felt rights measures placed essence man", this Constitution bank keen the States nation his This suggests the the Charles from to protect gove... |
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http://www.essays4college.com/more_free_essays/Jacksonian+Democrats.html
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| Â | AP Unit Ten |
 | | Jacksonian Democrats favored all of the following EXCEPT: |  | | the election of a Democratic president, Andrew Jackson |  | | Which of the following documents would be most useful in evaluating President Jackson's commitment to democratic values? |
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http://www.historystuff.net/apunits2e.html
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| Â | Jacksonian_Democracy |
 | | During the election of 1828, for example, many Democrats voted for Andrew Jackson because they thought he would lower the existing tariff or do away with it completely. |  | | The Democrats, of course, were the party of Andrew Jackson. |  | | They were especially anxious that the tariff be changed after Congress voted to hike it in 1828—the so-called "Tariff of Abominations," which raised tariff rates to their highest level before the Civil War. |
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http://home.earthlink.net/~kahnep63/Jacksonian_Democracy.html
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| Â | A Betrayal of Values |
 | | The last Democrat that Cleveland approved of was Alton Parker, the Democrat candidate in 1904. |  | | The Democrat Party in the era of Jackson and Polk was largely run by self-made men. |  | | Andrew Jackson made his name as a military officer; James Polk was a country lawyer in Tennessee of humble origins, who worked his way up in politics. |
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http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/f-news/1180387/posts
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| Â | CHAPTER 1 |
 | | Jacksonians wanted the members of the Electoral College to be elected by popular vote. |  | | When Andrew Jackson was elected president in 1828, his party (known as the Jacksonian Democrats) was the only major party effectively functioning in the United States on the national level. |  | | For example, if the Democratic candidate for presidency wins the popular vote for the state of New York, then the electors chosen by the New York State Democratic Party are sent to the Electoral College. |
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http://www.hunter.cuny.edu/pc2000/pcmanualpart1.htm
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| Â | Jacksonian Democracy Essays |
 | | Calling themselves theguardians of the United States Constitution, the Jacksonian politicians engenderedwide spread liberty under a government which represented all men, rather than onlythe upper class. |  | | The first and truest ideas of democracy were embodied in the politicalideas of Andrew Jackson and the Jacksonian democrats. |  | | Evans was an editor with strong democratic principles who created “The Working Men’s Declaration ofIndependence” (Doc. |
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http://www.houseofessays.com/viewpaper/3271.html
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| Â | A Government by the People: Direct Democracy in America, 1890-1940, by Thomas Goebel. Chapter 1. |
 | | Populist republicanism was based on the fusion of republican concerns about corruption and special privileges with the mass democracy of Jacksonian America. |  | | A number of Midwestern states, including Illinois and Wisconsin, enacted laws to lower railroad rates via legislative intervention.[27] In its campaign against railroads, the Grange clearly acted in the tradition of antimonopoly sentiment in America. |  | | Although not able to dislodge the dominant Republicans from power, the antimonopolists, often acting in fusion with the Democrats, forced the GOP to deal with the issue of railroad regulation. |
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http://www.ibiblio.org/uncpress/chapters/goebel_government.html
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| Â | matthew: "Jacksonian America" |
 | | Soros is en estimable guy who played a big role in the fall of Communism, but Republicans bots are convinced that there's something terrible about him. |  | | The decline of Democrats in the south really has been in presidential races....politically, Dems ruled the south with an iron fist, really, until the 90s. |  | | But its actual transformation into the Party of Davis (and Strom Thurmond) began with Goldwater in 1964 (as he said about the GOP appealing to white Southern racists in that year, "We ought to go hunting where the ducks are"), was continued by Nixon and Reagan, and is now complete. |
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http://yglesias.typepad.com/matthew/2004/09/jacksonian_amer.html
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| Â | Jacksonian democracy - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia |
 | | United States Democratic-Republican Party that solidly followed Andrew Jackson were sometimes referred to as Jacksonian or Jacksonian Democrats. |  | | Andrew Jackson was the first president to be elected by the masses, as his election was the first election to allow free white men without property to vote. |  | | Jacksonian democracy is the term used in American politics to describe the period when the "common man" participated in the government, occurring after |
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http://www.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jacksonian_democracy
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| Â | miss megan wilde the website essays jacksonian democrats |
 | | Hence, the Jacksonian Democrats' actions reflected a keen interest in the well-being of the common man, which, in theory, is captured in the United States Constitution and the ideals of political democracy, individual liberty, and equality of economic opportunity. |  | | This atmosphere was achieved as the Jacksonian Democrats placed the community's interests above private interests, as shown in the Supreme Court case, Charles River Bridge v. |  | | The Supreme Court ruled in favor of the Warren Bridge, emphasizing the importance of the common man's interests over private, wealthy individuals' interests under the Jacksonian Democrats. |
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http://www.wildewildeweb.com/personal/schoolessays/jackson.html
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| Â | lecture3 |
 | | John Quincy Adams and Henry Clay become the leaders of the Whig party, and Andrew Jackson and John C. Calhoun become the leaders of the Democratic party. |  | | Polk's motto is “equal and exact justice to every faction.” He would serve every faction of the Democratic Party. |  | | Franklin Pierce and Buchanan’s presidencies were consumed with trying to keep the Democratic Party together. |
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http://mason.gmu.edu/~cshogan/lecture3.html
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| Â | FrontPage magazine.com :: Jacksonian Democracy by Chris Weinkopf |
 | | If playing the race card and undermining the nation's confidence in its democratic process can tilt the election toward Al Gore, Jackson would command tremendous influence and prestige in a Gore administration. |  | | Jackson knows that his stock as a political power-broker rises or falls depending on which party controls the White House next year. |  | | He argues that African-Americans and Jewish retirees were "targeted" by county election officials in some sort of effort to silence these two traditionally Democratic constituencies. |
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http://www.frontpagemag.com/Articles/ReadArticle.asp?ID=2907
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| Â | SHEAR-99 Program |
 | | Across the South, the state constitutional reform movements of the Jacksonian era fought to democratize Revolutionary and early national era state constitutions which, as a rule, restricted suffrage to property holders and left state legislative bodies malapportioned. |  | | National Republicans, on the other hand, had urged cooperation while Adams was president, but vociferously criticized the Jackson administration's handling of the issue. |  | | Louis remained the stronghold of support for Senator Thomas Hart Benton, who emphasized the stateís westernness in an attempt to neutralize sectional disputes, while the rest of Missouriís Democrats, led by Claiborne Fox Jackson and David Rice Atchison, allied themselves with the southern extremist views espoused by John C. Calhoun. |
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http://www.h-net.msu.edu/~shear/shear99-program-with-abs.htm
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| Â | Another Twist on the Jacksonian Bank War: Part 3 |
 | | Democrats asked voters to choose between the forces of entrenched aristocracy and simple government, between a foreign dictatorship and a native American hero, between corruption and innocence-between the Bank and Andrew Jackson. |  | | L.W. Mints, A History of Banking Theory: In Great Britain and the United States (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1945) |  | | H.L. Watson, Liberty and Power: The Politics of Jacksonian America (New York: Hill and Wang, 1990) |
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http://www.floodlight.org/theory/twist3.html
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| Â | Bureaucracy and the American Constitution: |
 | | In short, Richardson speculates that administrators will be required to take more seriously the need to court public opinion as one of their standards for approbation. |  | | This reinvention movement pits the virtues of the free enterprise market system against the vices of an outmoded constitutional structure that has become incapacitated by bureaucratic inertia. |  | | In the final two chapters Cook presents his case for officially recognizing the legitimacy of the constitutive role that public administration unavoidably plays in furthering the goals of our democratic polity. |
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http://www.eli.pdx.edu/erc/morgan/bureaucracy.html
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| Â | Advanced Placement History |
 | | By combining the power in the Democratic Party (which gave it extraordinary influence in Congress and with the president) with its supporters on the Supreme Court, the slave states seemed secure. |  | | In that sense, Jefferson, although a pragmatic politician, was also a committed idealist--one who deserves to be the symbol of the age that bears his name. |  | | At the center of this activity, at times leading it and at times being led, was Thomas Jefferson, a president whose versatility seemed to mirror the diversity of the nation. |
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http://www.daleville.k12.al.us/APsyllabus.htm
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| Â | Jacksonian Democrats and Their Efforts Example Essays.com - Over 101,000 essays, term papers and book reports! |
 | | The Jacksonians claimed that they were guardians of the constitution, but when this statement is examined closely, it contradicts the actions that President Jackson had taken while in office. |  | | Throughout the decades of the 1820’s and 1830’s Jackson and his followers brought forth the concept that they alone upheld the Constitution and other governmental, economic, and social concepts. |  | | Jacksonian Democrats and Their Efforts Example Essays.com - Over 101,000 essays, term papers and book reports! |
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http://www.exampleessays.com/viewpaper/44373.html
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| Â | The Global Encyclopedia : Hotels : Travel |
 | | The federal and state government is dominated by two political parties, the Republicans and the Democrats. |  | | Within the US political culture, the Republican Party is described as center-right and the Democratic Party is described as center-left. |  | | Minor party and independent candidates are very occasionally elected, usually to local or state office, but the United States political system has historically supported catch all parties rather than coalition governments. |
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http://united-states.asinah.net/american-encyclopedia/wikipedia/f/fr/friedri...
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| Â | The Jacksonian Democrats Essays |
 | | Andrew Jackson, a well-known Jacksonian Democrat, believed equality for all the people of the states. |  | | Summary: Essay describes the Democrats that supported Andrew Jackson. |  | | Opposing the politics of the National Democrats, Jacksonian Democrats formed themselves to become a unique group to be the justifiable law enforcers of the United States of America. |
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http://www.bookrags.com/essays/story/2003/11/4/183819/392
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| Â | American History From About |
 | | At the time of his assassination, Kennedy was 46 years old and on a tour of the southern states to help gather support for the Democratic Party. |  | | Later that day Vice-President Lyndon B. Johnson was sworn in as President on the plane ride back to Washington. |
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http://americanhistory.about.com/cs/ageofjackson
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| Â | revision.htm |
 | | Jacksonian democratic ideal that schools would be the great "equalizer" eliminating privilege and |  | | Even though democratic localists were philosophically opposed to |  | | As stated, education under democratic localism was run by local publicly elected boards which (to |
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http://www.lhup.edu/library/InternationalReview/revision.htm
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| Â | Jacksonians Essays World.com |
 | | Jacksonian Democrats DBQ In the 1820-1840 period, Jacksonian Democrats viewed themselves as guardians of the Constitution. |  | | Meaning that they felt that they were true followers of the ideals of the Constitution, including political democracy, individual liberty, and equality of economic opportun... |
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http://www.essaysworld.com/viewpaper/132.html
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| Â | was a champion of the working class, and a charismatic figure who was representative of the regular man. To his ... |
 | | The Jacksonian Democrats viewed themselves as defenders of the United States Constitution, political democracy, individual liberty, and equality of economic opportunity. |  | | To his supporters he was a champion of the working class, and a charismatic figure who was representative of the regular man. To his enemies, he was an uneducated brute who would destroy liberty and drag the country down to barbarianism. |  | | To a certain extent this was true, but evidence can be presented that would suggest otherwise. |
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http://www.assignmentsfree.com/viewpaper/7609.html
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| Â | United States History WKSHT |
 | | Complete the following (292): Whigs and Democrats held |  | | What new political party arose in opposition to Jackson? |  | | United States History WKSHT: Van Buren, Whigs, and the Jacksonian Party System |
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http://www.gprep.org/~sjochs/vanburenwhigspartysystem.htm
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| Â | years of monotny broken by moments of misery (Not Responding) |
 | | The 2nd American Party System dominated from the Administration of Andrew Jackson into the mid-1850s. |  | | Neither Whigs, Republicans, Federalists, or post-Jacksonian Democrats were representative of the common people. |  | | Jacksonian Democrats argued that the nation was in danger from the powers of associated wealth. |
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http://qwert.diaryland.com/021016_52.html
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| Â | Past DBQ Essay Questions |
 | | Jacksonian Democrats view themselves as the guardians of the United States Constitution, political democracy, individual liberty, and equality of economic opportunity. |  | | Was American society, as evidence by Wethersfield, Connecticut, becoming more "democratic" in the period from 1750's to the 1780's? |  | | Although New England and the Chesapeake region were both settled largely by people of English origin, by 1700 the regions had evolved into two distinct societies. |
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http://home.earthlink.net/~gfeldmeth/pastdbq.html
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| Â | Brief Biographies of Jackson Era Characters (W) |
 | | In 1825, with improved sight, he entered Hamilton College in Clinton NY, near Fabius, where his family had since moved. |  | | A Jacksonian Democrat, who left the party to help organize the Republicans (joining anti-slavery elements of the Democrats and Whigs), who contributed greatly as secretary of the Navy under Lincoln and Johnson (1861-69). |  | | In the late 1820s, he moved to Hartford,to study law, which he failed to do, but found his calling, and blossomed, as he became editor of the Hartford Times, and a powerful figure among the growing set of Jacksonian Democrats in Connecticut. |
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http://www.jmisc.net/BIOG-W.htm
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| Â | Jacksonian Era |
 | | A surge of democratic fervor swept the country in the 1820s and 1830s. |  | | Unlike America’s first parties, the Federalists and the Democratic-Republicans, the Jacksonian Democrats and the Whigs were parties with grassroots organization and support in all parts of the nation. |  | | Top open up the legal profession, many states dropped formal training requirements to practice law. |
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http://www.digitalhistory.uh.edu/modules/jacksonian/index.cfm
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| Â | Political Party of the Jacksonian Democrats Versus of the Whigs Essays |
 | | The time between 1828 and 1860 is often termed the Age of Jackson, where the Jacksonian Democrats vied against the Whigs. |  | | Essays › Political Party of the Jacksonian Democrats Versus of the Whigs |  | | Political Party of the Jacksonian Democrats Versus of the Whigs |
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http://www.bookrags.com/essays/story/2003/12/14/212259/96
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| Â | John Quincy Adams, Jacksonian Democracy and Manifest Destiny |
 | | Annexation of Texas by Tyler will lead to border problems |  | | Rough and tumble west defines the new American … Hickoryites |  | | John Quincy Adams, Jacksonian Democracy and Manifest Destiny |
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http://teacherweb.ftl.pinecrest.edu/ziskbar/ziskusap/outline/JackMDes.html
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| Â | Jacksonian Democrats |
 | | Alexander Hamilton’s model bank, The Second Bank of the United States, charter was to expire in 1836. |  | | The bank was a monopoly that was administered by a few men, and this handful of men controlled America’s currency, credit, and price levels. |  | | Schlesinger illustrates his point with Jacksonians bank war and the hard money policy of 1836. |
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http://www.radessays.com/viewpaper/33551/Age_of_Innocence.html
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| Â | Capitalism, Politics, and Railroads in Jacksonian New England |
 | | Capitalism, Politics, and Railroads in Jacksonian New England |  | | He analyzes the political thought of the region as it involved the growth of party confrontations-- among the Radical Democrats in New Hampshire, the Whigs and Conservative Democrats in New Hampshire, and the Whigs in Essex County, Massachusetts--and the rise of voting activity. |  | | The antebellum conflict was not about whether America should be a market society, but what shape those markets should take; not about whether government should have power over private rights, but to what extent states could impose on private citizens. |
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http://www.umsystem.edu/upress/fall2003/connolly.htm
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| Â | Jacksonian Democrats and Populists Essays World.com |
 | | The Jacksonian Democrats during 1824 to 1840 succeeded in attacking and seeking out special privilege in American life, and much political power was given to the people. |
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http://www.essaysworld.com/viewpaper/10041.html
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