I am not sure that he originated the cry, but his supporters decribed Adams election as a a corrupt bargain when he appointed House leader Henry Clay as his Secretary of State. In those days, the position of Secretary of State was considered to be a stepping stone to the presidency and was a prime post. Clay essentially made Adams president by getting his supporters in the House to vote for Adams, even though as a Kentuckian, Jackson would be the logical choice for him to support.
Franklin pierce didn't have a signature campaign slogan. But he was the first president to put a Christmas tree in the white house.
Johnnetta Cole
1979 was the first year the slogan was used for Ford Trucks.
The slogan of New South Wales is "First State".
yes
He was just a few days short of 62 when he first became president. He was 8 years older when he left office.
He was just a few days short of 62 when he first became president. He was 8 years older when he left office.
Jackson believed that the president should have greater power... and he was the first president that asserted his executive powers by using the veto..which no president before him had done before... Before Jackson the congress had all the power.. and the president was very weak.. but after Jackson the president became more like what we have now...
His first nickname was Old Hickory. After he became president, he became known more commonly as "King Veto" and "King Andrew the First."
Andrew Jackson was the first Presbyterian president.
he was he seventh president
was the first president to ever survive an assassination attempt
Andrew Jackson was elected the seventh president of the United States in 1828.Jackson was the first president from the area _______ of the Appalachian Mountains.
Michael Jackson became famous at the age of 7
Henry Dunster was the first college president in what became the US. He became president of Harvard in 1640.
Andrew Jackson was the first US President to live in a log cabin. Jackson was the seventh President of the United States.
Andrew Jackson (7th President of the United States)