Andrew Jackson Jr. (December 4, 1808 – April 17, 1865) was the son of seventh U.S. president Andrew Jackson. Andrew Jackson Jr., a biological child of Rachel Jackson's brother Severn Donelson and Elizabeth Rucker, was the one child among their nearly three dozen wards that they considered to be their own child. According to historian Robert V. Remini, Andrew Jackson Jr. was "irresponsible and ambitionless, a considerable disappointment to his father." When former president Jackson died, Junior inherited real and enslaved human property valued at roughly $150,000; within a decade he had turned his fortune into roughly $100,000 in debt.
Biography
For whatever reason, the Jacksons were unable to produce biological children; there is an account of Rachel Jackson saying, "He would have given his life for a child, but knowing how disappointed I was at never being a mother, he, pitying me, tried to console me by saying that God denied offspring so that we might help those who had large families." Born a twin, Andrew Jackson Jr. was the fifth-born of nine biological children of Rachel's brother Severn Donelson and Elizabeth Rucker, and he was taken to the Hermitage when he was three days old. Jackson Jr. was the one adoptee or ward of Andrew Jackson with whom "the Jacksons had a special relationship" and whom "they regarded as their own child." Jackson, descendants, and succession of biographers have described Junior as Jackson's adopted son, but "it does not appear that Andrew Jackson Jr. (or simply Junior) was ever legally adopted, and the reason Severn and Elizabeth were willing to give a twin boy to the Jacksons to raise as their own is also unknown." An enslaved woman called Aunt Hannah was primarily responsible for the care of young Jackson; she later recounted that she was the one who carried him from the Donelsons' house to the Hermitage. When Severn Donelson died in 1818, he did not ask Jackson to be guardian to his surviving children (including Andrew Jackson Jr.'s biological twin brother), and instead selected his brother William Donelson to be guardian.
Andrew Jackson Jr. and his cousin Andrew Jackson Hutchings attended school at Davidson Academy beginning in 1821. According to Linda Galloway, an 1825 bill to the senior Jackson shows "that Andrew Junior lived like a young lord. He had a body servant, probably Alfred, and his own horse. His wardrobe included such items as: a suit, $76.87; a hat, $10; silk hose, $1.50 a pair; and imported handkerchiefs. While attending school at Nashville in 1825, he accumulated a debt of $309 to the establishment of Josiah Nichol, who outfitted the elite of Nashville with everything from saddle blankets to clothes. It has been said this same sum would have kept the average Tennessee family for a year." He appears to have been fairly successful to his schooling, and books in the Hermitage library with his name on the fly leaf include The Autobiography of Crockett, Tom Jones, and Field's Literary and Miscellaneous Scrapbook.
When his mother died and his father was elected president in 1828, he periodically visited Washington—where he was considered popular, socially adept, and handsome—before returning to Nashville to manage The Hermitage and his father's business affairs. Jackson, an inveterate busybody and matchmaker, frequently inquired about or suggested prospective brides for Junior in his letters home. Jackson did not attend his son's wedding to Sarah Yorke Jackson, sending nephew Ralph Earl in his stead, and sending the bride a pearl ring that contained a lock of his hair, President Jackson also gave Sarah Yorke a legally enslaved girl named Gracy to serve as her ladies' maid, sponsored an expansion of the Hermitage for the young couple and paid for $2,000 in new furniture.
In adulthood, Junior's financial follies forever caused follow-on problems for the patriarch. For instance, in 1833, "Junior purchased a female slave, Rachel, and her child...but failed to pay the full amount, leading the seller, George Hibb, to press the president for the funds. Jackson sent his son a harsh letter, asking why the $800 that the sale of a horse had generated was not 'sufficient to pay for the wench and child.' Junior excused his behavior because he needed extra money to cover the cost of travel and illness." In 1832 President Jackson wrote Junior criticizing him for allowing the overseer, Steele, for buying too many plows, which the president deemed indulgent and uneconomical, and wrote the overseer about Junior that "it appears that he don't take the least pride or feel the least interested in the farm or anything there pertaining." Decades after his death, Junior's daughter Rachel Jackson Lawrence described her father as "a man of most quiet tastes and resting quite content as a Southern gentleman of the old school." In 1833, Jackson wrote his son about his young but growing family, "...you must now live for them and their prosperity, and in all your course through life remember that if you do anything injurious to your fame it will tarnish theirs..." After 1833 Jackson's letters until his death in 1845 repetitively, helplessly beseech his son to be more financially responsible. Historian Mark Cheathem comments:
In addressing Junior's financial troubles, Jackson found himself in a position familiar to that of other southern patriarchs. He had trained Junior to be dependent on him, never trusting him with total autonomy while serving as president. Therefore, Junior never stood alone or learned from his own mistakes. His inability to become a successful 'planter-patriarch' highlighted one of the ironies of southern society noted by historian Michael Johnson: 'The nature of their fathers' estates and ideals caused sons to be constantly tempted by idleness, a state combining subordination and autonomy in near paralysis.' Ever the protective patriarch, Jackson seemed unwilling to allow Junior to suffer the effects of his bad choices, thereby undermining his desire to see his son become independent."
After a devastating fire at the Hermitage in 1834, Sarah and the children went to stay at the White House while repairs were being completed, and Andrew Jackson wrote Junior back home:
Rachel said to me, grandpa the great fire burned my bonnet and a big owl tried to kill Poll, but papa killed the owl.
In 1835, father, son, wife, and grandchildren vacationed together at the Rip Raps, at the president's expense. At the end of Jackson's presidency, his personal finances were in ruins, and he sold some land to get himself out of debt and cover another $7,000 owed by Jackson Jr. In 1838 Jackson Jr. bought a $23,700 plantation in Coahoma County, Mississippi, on credit. In 1840 Jackson discovered that Junior owed another previously-unrevealed $12,000 in debt. Jackson repeatedly asserted that the debts were not Junior's fault but that his son had been exploited by false friends and "some of the greatest scamps, shysters and swindlers that honest and unsuspecting youth was ever surrounded with," and he excused Junior for lying about it by declaring that his son had taken only a "momentary refuge" in dishonesty. Jackson Sr. visited the riverfront Halcyon Plantation in 1840, and then sent down a gristmill so corn could be processed on site for meal for the slaves. He also sent his son enslaved woodcutters to turn the forest into steamboat fuel; Jackson expected that each woodcutter could create two cords of wood a day and he wanted to send 10 woodcutters, with the goal of making $6,000 a year. By 1841, after the depression triggered by the Panic of 1837, both the Hermitage and Halcyon Plantation in Mississippi were in visible disrepair because all available funds were going to debt service. Jackson eventually borrowed $10,000 from Francis Blair to pay off some creditors but the vicious cycle of debt continued. Seventy-something Jackson liquidated his stable of thoroughbred racehorses to raise funds to pay Junior's creditors; Jackson thanked Blair for the loan by sending Blair's daughter a filly named Emuckfau.
The Jacksons' Mississippi land flooded incessantly, while hail and freak frosts destroyed both subsistence crops and cotton seedlings; Jackson's projections of wood production were vast overestimates—the enslaved woodcutters were producing less than half of Jackson had expected. The overseer wrote Jackson complaining that Junior was neglecting the property and the slaves, leaving him and his wife, who had nine children of their own, to make clothes for the slaves and to nurse them when they were sick (rather than providing for a doctor). One historian concluded, "Working conditions in such circumstances must have been horrendous, and most of the work was performed by slaves whose voice never appears in the letters." According to Junior's biographer Linda Galloway, "By February, 1844 the Jacksons were forced to look for a purchaser for the Halcyon place. Andrew Junior had closed the woodyard ; he had been urged to do so by his overseer who promptly opened his own fueling station on some nearby property." As of 1845, Junior's debts totaled US$45,000 (equivalent to $1,471,500 in 2023) plus interest, and the former president died with $16,000 (plus interest) in debts incurred to buy Halcyon. The president's estate was valued at $150,000; the 100 slaves attached to the property composed the vast majority of the value of the estate, with the 1200 acres of land being the remainder. Junior eventually sold Halcyon and the slaves that worked the land to clear some of his debts.
At the time of the 1850 U.S. census, Junior was the legal owner of 137 slaves resident in Tennessee. In 1851 Junior bought an ironworks in Kentucky, and it promptly caught fire and burned to the ground, costing Junior almost $7,000 to repair. He sold the ironworks in 1854 but per Galloway, "needed money so he sold 37 Negroes and hired out about fourteen more to work for the purchasers at the furnace," and he remained in debt. He also acquired money-losing lead mines in Kentucky. By 1855, per Galloway, "This man who had inherited $150,000 from his father in 1845 was...about $100,000 in debt," and the family was in imminent danger of foreclosure on the Hermitage. Slaves were sold for cash to bridge the financial gap, and in 1858 the family sold the Hermitage to the state of Tennessee with a two-year leaseback, a court decision saved Junior from some $25,000 in lead-mine debts, and Blair and John C. Rives covered another $10,000 of the outstanding debts and were never repaid. When the American Civil War came in 1861, Junior declared as a Southern Unionist but his sons fought for the Confederacy; one died from wounds received at Chickamauga. Andrew Jackson Jr. accidentally shot himself while hunting in 1865 and died a week later of lockjaw.
See also
- Charles Adams (1770–1800) – Son of John Adams (1770-1800)
- Robert Johnson (Tennessee) – Son of Andrew Johnson (1834–1869)
References
- Remini (1977), p. 317.
- Cheathem (2014), p. 202.
- Galloway (1950a), p. 197.
- Meredith (2013), pp. 32–42.
- Cheathem (2014), p. 56.
- Galloway (1950a), p. 199.
- Meredith (2013), p. 47.
- Galloway (1950a), p. 206.
- Galloway (1950a), p. 209.
- Galloway (1950a), p. 211.
- ^ Galloway (1950a), p. 211–214.
- Galloway (1950a), p. 215–216.
- Galloway (1950b), p. 306.
- Cheathem (2014), pp. 149–150.
- Galloway (1950b), p. 308.
- Galloway (1950b), pp. 308–309.
- n.a. (July 1905). "Andrew Jackson Jr". Confederate Veteran. Vol. XIII, no. 7. Nashville, Tenn.: S.A. Cunningham. p. 329 – via Duke University Libraries, Internet Archive.
- Galloway (1950b), p. 313.
- Galloway (1950b), pp. 314–315.
- Cheathem (2014), p. 146.
- Galloway (1950b), p. 318.
- Galloway (1950b), p. 321.
- ^ Galloway (1950b), p. 323.
- Galloway (1950b), p. 324.
- Galloway (1950b), pp. 324–325.
- ^ Serme (2003), p. 35.
- ^ Galloway (1950b), p. 325.
- Cheathem (2014), p. 186.
- Serme (2003), pp. 39–40.
- ^ Galloway (1950b), p. 326.
- Cheathem (2014), p. 256 n. 14.
- Galloway (1950b), p. 331.
- ^ Galloway (1950b), p. 334.
- Galloway (1950b), p. 336, 338.
- Galloway (1950b), p. 342.
- "General News". New York Times. April 22, 1865. p. 4.
Sources
- Cheathem, Mark R. (2014). Andrew Jackson, Southerner. Baton Rouge, Louisiana: Louisiana State University Press. ISBN 978-0-8071-5099-3. LCCN 2012049695. OCLC 858995561. Project MUSE book 26506.
- Galloway, Linda Bennett (1950a). "Andrew Jackson, Junior". Tennessee Historical Quarterly. 9 (3): 195–216. ISSN 0040-3261. JSTOR 42621045.
- ——— (1950b). "Andrew Jackson, Junior (Continued)". Tennessee Historical Quarterly. 9 (4): 306–343. ISSN 0040-3261. JSTOR 42621053.
- Meredith, Rachel (May 2013). "There Was Somebody Always Dying and Leaving Jackson as Guardian": The Wards of Andrew Jackson (M.A. History thesis). Murfreesboro, Tennessee: Middle Tennessee State University. ProQuest 1538368.
- Remini, Robert V. (1977). Andrew Jackson and the Course of American Empire, 1767–1821. New York: Harper & Row. ISBN 978-0-8018-5912-0. LCCN 77003766. OCLC 1145801830.
- Serme, Jean-Marc (2003). "Stormy Weather at Andrew Jackson's Halcyon Plantation, in Coahoma County, Mississippi, 1838–1845". Revue française d'études américaines (98): 32–47. doi:10.3917/rfea.098.0032. ISSN 0397-7870. JSTOR 20874927.