Making the South in Jackson’s Image Early on in Steve Inskeep’s book, Jacksonland, he makes the audacious claim that Andrew Jackson, “more than any other single person, was responsible for creating the region we call the Deep South (9). Although other contenders (John C. Calhoun, S...
Slaves were allowed three day\u27s holiday at Christmas time, and so it was over Christmas that John...
In early territorial Florida, two political groups emerged with allegiances to national presidential...
The intent of this paper is to discuss Andrew Jackson?s controversial actions and policies affecting...
Another Look at Cherokee Removal A.J. Langguth’s latest offering, Driven West: Andrew Jackson and th...
Andrew Jackson: A Man of the Southern Frontier Mark Cheathem’s new biography of the seventh presiden...
‘Established Legitimacy’ is a term used to describe the normalization of violence within a society. ...
For well over a century, historians have pondered Andrew Jackson’s motivation behind the Indian Remo...
Fitzsimmons examines the attitudes of Supreme Court Chief Justice John\ud Marshall and President And...
Andrew Denson reviews Steve Inskeep's Jacksonland: President Andrew Jackson, Cherokee Chief John Ros...
David W. Levy Prize winnerOn May 28, 1830 President Andrew Jackson signed the Indian Removal Act, au...
John Andrew Jackson was a former slave who lived in the early-to-middle nineteenth century. After es...
Andrew Jackson's experience with the Indians was an ambivalent relationship. From his childhood alon...
In The Republic of Violence: The Tormented Rise of Abolition in Andrew Jackson’s America, J. D. Dick...
Students of Florida history are well acquainted with General Andrew Jackson’s controversial invasion...
From King Andrew I to Old Hickory, Andrew Jackson had no shortage of nicknames symbolic of the oppos...
Slaves were allowed three day\u27s holiday at Christmas time, and so it was over Christmas that John...
In early territorial Florida, two political groups emerged with allegiances to national presidential...
The intent of this paper is to discuss Andrew Jackson?s controversial actions and policies affecting...
Another Look at Cherokee Removal A.J. Langguth’s latest offering, Driven West: Andrew Jackson and th...
Andrew Jackson: A Man of the Southern Frontier Mark Cheathem’s new biography of the seventh presiden...
‘Established Legitimacy’ is a term used to describe the normalization of violence within a society. ...
For well over a century, historians have pondered Andrew Jackson’s motivation behind the Indian Remo...
Fitzsimmons examines the attitudes of Supreme Court Chief Justice John\ud Marshall and President And...
Andrew Denson reviews Steve Inskeep's Jacksonland: President Andrew Jackson, Cherokee Chief John Ros...
David W. Levy Prize winnerOn May 28, 1830 President Andrew Jackson signed the Indian Removal Act, au...
John Andrew Jackson was a former slave who lived in the early-to-middle nineteenth century. After es...
Andrew Jackson's experience with the Indians was an ambivalent relationship. From his childhood alon...
In The Republic of Violence: The Tormented Rise of Abolition in Andrew Jackson’s America, J. D. Dick...
Students of Florida history are well acquainted with General Andrew Jackson’s controversial invasion...
From King Andrew I to Old Hickory, Andrew Jackson had no shortage of nicknames symbolic of the oppos...
Slaves were allowed three day\u27s holiday at Christmas time, and so it was over Christmas that John...
In early territorial Florida, two political groups emerged with allegiances to national presidential...
The intent of this paper is to discuss Andrew Jackson?s controversial actions and policies affecting...