Domestically, the presidency of Monroe (1817-1825) was
termed the "era of good feelings." In one sense, this term disguised
a period of vigorous factional and regional conflict; on the other hand,
the phrase acknowledged the political triumph of the Republican Party
over the Federalist Party, which collapsed as a national force.
The decline of the Federalists brought disarray to the
system of choosing presidents. At the time, state legislatures could
nominate candidates. In 1824 Tennessee and Pennsylvania chose Andrew
Jackson, with South Carolina Senator John C. Calhoun as his running
mate. Kentucky selected Speaker of the House Henry Clay; Massachusetts,
Secretary of State John Quincy Adams; and a congressional caucus, Treasury
Secretary William Crawford.
Personality and sectional allegiance played important
roles in determining the outcome of the election. Adams won the electoral
votes from New England and most of New York; Clay won Kentucky, Ohio
and Missouri; Jackson won the Southeast, Illinois, Indiana, the Carolinas,
Pennsylvania, Maryland and New Jersey; and
Crawford won Virginia, Georgia and Delaware. No candidate
gained a majority in the Electoral College, so, according to the provisions
of the Constitution, the election was thrown into the House of Representatives,
where Clay was the most influential figure. He supported Adams, who
gained the presidency.
During Adams's administration, new party alignments
appeared. Adams's followers took the name of "National Republicans,"
later to be changed to "Whigs." Though he governed honestly and efficiently,
Adams was not a popular president, and his administration was marked
with frustrations. Adams failed in his effort to institute a national
system of roads and canals. His years in office appeared to be one long
campaign for reelection, and his coldly intellectual temperament did
not win friends. Jackson, by contrast, had enormous popular appeal,
especially among his followers in the newly named Democratic Party that
emerged from the Republican Party, with its roots dating back to presidents
Jefferson, Madison and Monroe. In the election of 1828, Jackson defeated
Adams by an overwhelming electoral majority.
Jackson -- Tennessee politician, Indian fighter and
hero of the Battle of New Orleans during the War of 1812 -- drew his
support from the small farmers of the West, and the workers, artisans
and small merchants of the East, who sought to use their vote to resist
the rising commercial and manufacturing interests associated with the
Industrial Revolution.
The election of 1828 was a significant benchmark in
the trend toward broader voter participation. Vermont had universal
male suffrage from its entry into the Union and Tennessee permitted
suffrage for the vast majority of taxpayers. New Jersey, Maryland and
South Carolina all abolished property and tax-paying requirements between
1807 and 1810. States entering the Union after 1815 either had universal
white male suffrage or a low taxpaying requirement. From 1815 to 1821,
Connecticut, Massachusetts and New York abolished all property requirements.
In 1824 members of the Electoral College were still selected by six
state legislatures. By 1828 presidential electors were chosen by popular
vote in every state but Delaware and South Carolina. Nothing dramatized
this democratic sentiment more than the election of the flamboyant Andrew
Jackson.