No, He learned by reading books and by experience.
He lacked formal education.
Jackson was never in college, nor even in high school. He had about two years of formal elementary education from private schoolmasters , plus about two years of working and getting some training in law from some lawyers.
Stonewall Jackson attended the Lexington Academy in Lexington, Virginia. This school was not a high school in the modern sense but rather a private academy that provided education for students. He later went on to the United States Military Academy at West Point, where he received formal military training.
She was commissioned a knight by Prince Charles. She had no formal military training, everything was on-the-job training for her.
Che had no formal military training. He was rejected from the Argentinian Army because of his asthma. When joined the movement at 37 years, he received the movement traning for the revolotion.
Andrew Jackson never attended college. He got his law license by studying with a lawyer and then passing the bar exam.
Supposedly he cut the cake with his sword at one formal occasion. I am not sure that this really happened.
Andrew Johnson had the least formal education-- none at all. He never was a student in a school of any kind.
Jackson did not have much formal education. He was taught to read and write by a couple of local scholars, but they did not give diplomas or have a school with a name other than their own. Their school was probably in their house.
He was a West Point graduate. The term Point Man may have originated at the academy, come to think of it!
yes he did have formal art training when he was 11 years of age
Andrew Jackson became a lawyer without attending formal law school by apprenticing under established lawyers. In the early 19th century, legal education was often acquired through practical experience rather than formal schooling. Jackson studied legal texts and gained hands-on experience, which allowed him to pass the bar exam and practice law. This path was common during that time, reflecting the more flexible approach to legal training in the United States.