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John C. Calhoun
John C. Calhoun
Since the tariff was a tax on iron and cotton, the South would presumably go against the tariff. The North loved the tariff because it stopped some of the foreign factories, by making the owner of the raw products ship the products to another factory(likely in the North). John C Calhoun disliked the tariff because he felt that it favored only one part of the nation.
Tariff of Abominations
The highest tariff ever passed in the nation's peacetime history was the Compromise Tariff(tariff of 1833) proposed by John C. Calhoun and Henry Clay to resolve the Nullification Crisis.
Image courtesy of the Library of Congress John C. Calhoun of South Carolina ... Later that year in response to the tariff, Vice President John C. Calhoun of South ...
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Democratic
John C. Calhoun was from South Carolina
i want to encourge people a work team.
John Quincy Adams asked congress to pass a national economic program. The measure did not pass during President Adams 4 years in office.
If any state just stopped abiding by the law other states will want to try it as well and that would result in the destruction of our union.
South Carolina disliked the fact that they would have to bear the problems of the government. The tariffs were used to raise money for the government. The tariff was an abomination amongst the people whom lived there. They believed that Jackson singled South Carolina out just to make John C. Calhoun a stronger Presidential candidate.
John H. Barnes has written: 'List of articles free of duty and tariff or rates of duties' -- subject(s): Tariff 'List of articles free of duty and tariff or rates of duties' -- subject(s): Tariff
John Quincy Adams
John C. Calhoun
The Tricky "Tariff of Abominations" In 1824, Congress increased the general tariff significantly. The Tariff of 1828- called the "Black Tariff" or the "Tariff of Abominations"; also called the "Yankee Tariff". It was hated by Southerners because it was an extremely high tariff and they felt it discriminated against them. The South was having economic struggles and the tariff was a scapegoat. The South Carolina Exposition, made by John C. Calhoun, was published in 1828. It was a pamphlet that denounced the Tariff of 1828 as unjust and unconstitutional. "Nullies" in the South In an attempt to meet the South's demands, Congress passed the Tariff of 1832, a slightly lower tariff compared to the Tariff of 1828. It fell short of the South's demands. The state legislature of South Carolina called for the Columbia Convention. The delegates of the convention called for the tariff to be void within South Carolina. The convention threatened to take South Carolina out of the Union if the government attempted to collect the customs duties by force. Henry Clay introduced the Tariff of 1833. It called for the gradual reduction of the Tariff of 1832 by about 10% over 8 years. By 1842, the rates would be back at the level of 1816. The compromise Tariff of 1833ended the dispute over the Tariff of 1832 between the South and the White House. The compromise was supported by South Carolina but not much by the other states of the South. http://www.apnotes.net/ch13.html