just after leaving the East Portico of the United States Capitol,
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icon to follow us on Facebook.President Andrew Jackson,
twice-elected to the nation's highest office, was gunned down by the
deranged English housepainter Richard Lawrence.
Jackson had fought in the War of 1812 and in numerous altercations with
Indians as well as participating in thirteen duels, but now his luck
seemed to have run out. Lawrence stepped from behind a column with two
pistols and fired them into Jackson's back on the unseasonably dry
winter's day. Reportedly, Jackson, when shot, turned, shouted, and charged
at Lawrence before he fell dead.
Lawrence was apprehended by the crowd, including Congressman Davy
Crockett. He was taken into custody and questioned first by police, then
by doctors, whom he told that he had a great deal of money coming from the
Federal Government, but was held up by Jackson. Lawrence went on to
explain that he would use the money to retake his place as king of England
as he was, in fact, Richard III, who had died three-and-a-half centuries
earlier. When taken to trial that April, Lawrence was quickly deemed not
guilty by reason of insanity, but prosecutor Francis Scott Key and the
many mourners of Jackson would not let the matter rest. The trial went to
the Supreme Court, where a precedent of execution for the homicidally
insane would be set. Lawrence was hanged that winter, and mental asylums
around the nation were purged of those deemed "dangerous to mankind". The
deplorable conditions of the insane would continue for decades, prompting
reformer Dorothea Dix to champion for the rights of "harmlessly mad". In
her early work, she had made attempts to help all those mentally troubled,
but the stigma in America ran too deeply to overcome. The policy would
continue through the early twentieth century where gas chambers became
popular among asylums before giving way to the experimental lobotomies and
drugs in the 1940s and '50s.
"America would've been better off without that
genocidal slave-owning Andrew Jackson. I know the Cherokees would've lived
better. " - reader's commentsJust as national mourning turned to
rage at the insane, it also poured out against Jackon's enemies in
politics. It was discovered that Senator George Poindexter of Mississippi
had hired Lawrence some months before, and he was brought under charges of
conspiracy. Poindexter was eventually declared innocent, but his political
career would never recover. More notably, Senator John C. Calhoun of South
Carolina, former vice-president under Jackson, was also suspected. Though
he testified to his innocence on the Senate floor, he was not reelected in
1838 and eventually moved to Texas. The new Whig Party, who had formed in
1833 opposing Jackson's assurance of Federal power over nullification,
became crippled by the desertion of Henry Clay and soon ceased to be a
credible political unit.
Vice-President Martin Van Buren assumed the presidency and won his own
election in 1836 and again in 1840 amid chaos of the border war with
Britain dubbed the Canadian War brought about by the Caroline affair and
the Pork and Beans War, which would ultimately lead to a divided Canadian
republic, British colony, and substantial gains in the Pacific Northwest
for the Americans. He pushed for Jacksonian ideals, many of which he
helped create, suppressing bids for a national bank and instead offering
Free Soil and limiting slavery in the territories in aid of the poor
White. Polk continued the Jacksonian dynasty with war against Mexico,
expanding Manifest Destiny in the Southwest.
After fifteen troubled years, the United States seemed to settle in the
1850s. The economy rebounded with its war-speckled depression over, and
immigration filled up the new territories gained. Questions over slavery
still boiled, but the matter had been largely settled by legally
maintaining the status quo and refusing expansion. Slavery would gradually
die out as it became economically infeasible in the face of the growing
Industrial Revolution and Abolitionist movement. The question of
secession, of course, had been dealt with by Jackson during the
Nullification Crisis in his famed "Proclamation to the People of South
Carolina" stating, "Secession, like any other revolutionary act, may be
morally justified by the extremity of oppression; but to call it a
constitutional right, is confounding the meaning of terms, and can only be
done through gross error".
While the United States enjoyed great prosperity over the latter half of
the nineteenth century thanks to the strong base of Common Man economics
built by Jacksonians, its laissez-faire policies would become a bed of
corruption leading to fresh outbreaks of revolution as the twentieth
century dawned.