Episode

Andrew Jackson: Democracy, Blood, and the Trail of Tears

Podcast
Disturbing History
Published
May 15, 2026
Duration seconds
3895
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https://www.spreaker.com/episode/andrew-jackson-democracy-blood-and-the-trail-of-tears--72008236
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/v1/public/podcasts/disturbing-history-7341005/episodes/andrew-jackson-democracy-blood-and-the-trail-of-tears
Markdown
/podcast/disturbing-history-7341005/andrew-jackson-democracy-blood-and-the-trail-of-tears.md

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Summary

Andrew Jackson sold himself as the champion of the common man. His face has been on the twenty dollar bill since 1928. There are statues of him in city squares from Tennessee to Washington. He's been claimed, in successive eras, by Democrats and Republicans, by progressives and conservatives, by every politician who ever wanted to wrap himself in the language of populism without owning what that language actually delivered when Jackson was the one speaking it. This episode is the other side of that mythology.We start in north Georgia in the spring of 1838, the morning soldiers arrive at a Cherokee family's door with orders to clear them out. Then we cut back to the man who set that morning in motion. Born in the Carolina backcountry in 1767. Orphaned by the Revolution at fourteen. A lawyer, a duelist, a slave owner, a planter who built his fortune on the forced labor of more than one hundred and fifty enslaved men, women, and children at the Hermitage. The general who broke the Red Stick Creeks at Horseshoe Bend, took 23 million acres of their land in the Treaty of Fort Jackson, and went home to grieve over the death of a Creek child he'd adopted from a different battlefield in the same war.We follow him into the White House. The Bank War. The cabinet shakeups. The temperament that made him willing to ignore his own Treasury Department, his own Congress, and eventually his own Supreme Court when they got in his way. We walk through the Indian Removal Act of 1830, passed by five votes in the House after Theodore Frelinghuysen spoke against it for six hours over three days. We follow the Cherokee Nation's legal fight to John Marshall's bench, where they won the ruling that should have saved them, and we sit with the fact that a Supreme Court decision is only as strong as…