Tennessee - History - Encyclopedia Britannica

Early statehood and the Jackson era

Initially a part of the new state of North Carolina following the Revolution, Tennessee made a bid for admission to the Union as a state named Franklin. Because North Carolina had rescinded its original cession of western lands, however, the Continental Congress—the governing body of the early United States—turned down this petition for statehood. Under the new federal constitution, the region was organized as the Territory South of the River Ohio. In 1796 Tennessee became a state, the first admitted from territorial status, with Knoxville as its first capital, John Sevier as its first governor, and Gen. Andrew Jackson as its first congressman.

John Wesley Jarvis: General Andrew Jackson
John Wesley Jarvis: General Andrew JacksonGeneral Andrew Jackson, oil on canvas by John Wesley Jarvis, c. 1819; in the Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York City.(more)

Tennesseans played a decisive role as volunteers under the leadership of Jackson in the Creek War, which erupted in 1813 and ended in 1814 at the Battle of Horseshoe Bend in Alabama. In response to a devastating attack by Creek warriors on Fort Mims, Alabama, such Tennessee volunteers as Davy Crockett led the destruction of many Muskogee (Upper Creek) towns and people. Jackson’s victory over the British at New Orleans in 1815 made him a national hero of the War of 1812. Jackson, perceived as a champion of the common people, in part because of his success in fighting the indigenous populations, was elected president in 1828 and again in 1832. As president he was the leader of the Democratic Party, an opponent of the national bank, and an advocate of the removal of all native peoples in the eastern United States to the western regions.

The Trail of Tears
The Trail of TearsThe Trail of Tears, oil on canvas by Robert Ottakar Lindneux, 1942; in the collection of the Woolaroc Museum, Bartlesville, Oklahoma.(more)

Despite their efforts to assimilate into the dominant white culture, most of the Cherokee of East Tennessee were forcibly removed from the state by the U.S. government in 1838–39. Together with other indigenous peoples of the southeastern United States, Tennessee’s native populations were routed via the so-called Trail of Tears to reservations in what is now Oklahoma.

Political cartoon featuring Andrew Jackson
Political cartoon featuring Andrew JacksonPolitical cartoon accusing Andrew Jackson of monarchical ambitions, 1832.(more)

The growing commercial interests in the country—in national politics led by Henry Clay, Daniel Webster, and John C. Calhoun—opposed the policies of so-called “King Andrew” Jackson. Out of this opposition emerged the Whig Party, led in Tennessee by John Bell and Hugh Lawson White. The Whigs controlled state politics at the very time Jackson was president. Jackson’s champion in the U.S. House of Representatives, Tennessean James K. Polk, was elected president in 1844, although the majority of Tennesseans, sympathetic to the Whig Party, voted against him.

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