Roger Taney
Biddle was the president of the bank and certainly did not intend to kill it, but his challenge to Andrew Jackson to have the charter renewed in an election year did result its demise, so in a sense he helped kill it.
Both Roosevelts only helped national parks.
Andrew Jackson helped fight in the War of New Orleans and The War of 1812, he was the seventh president of America. He fought in wars and he was also a general.
The national response to the Attack on Lawrence in 1856, which was part of the "Bleeding Kansas" conflict, was mixed. President Franklin Pierce initially viewed the incident as a local issue and did not intervene. However, the attack helped to further highlight the tensions between pro-slavery and anti-slavery factions in the United States, contributing to the lead-up to the Civil War.
Jackson became a national hero after his overwhelming victory at the Battle of New Orleans. Not only was he a winner in the war, but he was a frontiersman, easy for the common people to identify with and admire as a leader.
Andrew Jackson helped fight in the War of New Orleans and The War of 1812, he was the seventh president of America. He fought in wars and he was also a general.
He went back to his plantation home in Nashville. He was in poor health and getting pretty old, but he kept abreast with national politics and wrote letters and pieces for the papers.
He ran as the first frontier president, but he was a wealthy lawyer even though he was born in a log cabin. He used that to say he was for the "common man", but once he got into office he gave jobs to people who had helped him become president.
The formation of the Whig Party was primarily driven by the opposition to President Andrew Jackson and his policies, particularly his use of executive power and his handling of the national bank. Supporters of Henry Clay, who was a prominent critic of Jackson, helped establish the Whig Party in the 1830s to offer an alternative to Jacksonian Democrats.
10. Andrew Jackson was the first President from a state west of the Appalachian Mountains. 9. Andrew Jackson was the first Tennessean to serve in the U.S. House of Representatives. 8. Andrew Jackson was the first Governor of Florida. 7. Andrew Jackson was the first person to serve as a U.S. Representative, Senator, and President. 6. Andrew Jackson exercised his veto power twelve times as President, more than all of his predecessors combined. 5. Andrew Jackson was the first President to articulate that as President he represented all the people and the will of the majority must govern. 4. Andrew Jackson helped found and was the first U.S. President to represent the Democratic Party. 3. Andrew Jackson is the only U.S. President to be censured by the U.S. Senate. The censure was expunged in the last year of his presidency. 2. The first assassination attempt on a sitting U.S. President occurred on January 30, 1835, when Robert Lawrence failed to slay Andrew Jackson. 1. Andrew Jackson was the only President in American History to pay off the national debt and leave office with the country in the black.
Because he was tough and he helped form the Democratic Party of today.