"A Kind Providence" and "The Right to Self Preservation": How Andrew Jackson, Emersonian Whiggery, and Frontier Calvinism Shaped the Course of American Political Culture

Andrew Jackson has inspired numerous biographies and works of historical scholarship, but his religious views have attracted very little attention. Jackson may have been a giant on the political landscape, but he was also a human being, an ordinary American who experienced the same difficulties and...

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Main Author: Ruckel, Ryan
Other Authors: Lance Porter
Format: Others
Language:en
Published: LSU 2006
Subjects:
Online Access:http://etd.lsu.edu/docs/available/etd-07132006-150446/
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spelling ndltd-LSU-oai-etd.lsu.edu-etd-07132006-1504462013-01-07T22:50:44Z "A Kind Providence" and "The Right to Self Preservation": How Andrew Jackson, Emersonian Whiggery, and Frontier Calvinism Shaped the Course of American Political Culture Ruckel, Ryan History Andrew Jackson has inspired numerous biographies and works of historical scholarship, but his religious views have attracted very little attention. Jackson may have been a giant on the political landscape, but he was also a human being, an ordinary American who experienced the same difficulties and challenges as other Americans of the early nineteenth century. Another common experience for many Americans of Jacksons day included church life, revivals, and efforts to conceptualize every day events within the context of religious experience. Finding out where Jackson stood on religion and what role religion played in his thinking helps situate him as a man of his times. Unfortunately, he so greatly influenced his generation that he has taken on larger-than-life proportions, and even historians have found it difficult to present Jackson as an ordinary person who could choose to make the same responses to religion as did his contemporaries. In sum, looking at Jacksons religious views as expressed in his correspondence regarding events both public and private helps explain him. Jackson wrote thousands of letters over the course of his lifetime, and his correspondence, especially his private letters to his friends and family, indicate that he did indeed inherit and live by a sturdy set of religious convictions, deeply rooted in the Calvinist tradition of Scottish Presbyterian Christianity. In his letters, Jackson briefly but consistently revealed his concern over his relationship to the sovereignty and providence of God. Jacksons foundational belief that a sovereign God governed the world, guiding it toward a destiny only He could fully comprehend remained unshaken, even as he experienced the death of beloved family members, the difficulties of war, and other harsh realities of early nineteenth-century American life. As he grew older, Jackson also became more evangelical in his religious outlook, an experience common to many other people of the Jacksonian period. Ralph Waldo Emersons views on Providence serve as a foil to more greatly reveal the subtle difference between the Jacksonian Providential optimism rooted in uncertainty and the emerging, Whiggish world view that would eventually overcome it. Lance Porter Charles W. Royster William J. Cooper John C. Rodrigue Gaines M. Foster LSU 2006-07-13 text application/pdf http://etd.lsu.edu/docs/available/etd-07132006-150446/ http://etd.lsu.edu/docs/available/etd-07132006-150446/ en unrestricted I hereby certify that, if appropriate, I have obtained and attached herein a written permission statement from the owner(s) of each third party copyrighted matter to be included in my thesis, dissertation, or project report, allowing distribution as specified below. I certify that the version I submitted is the same as that approved by my advisory committee. I hereby grant to LSU or its agents the non-exclusive license to archive and make accessible, under the conditions specified below and in appropriate University policies, my thesis, dissertation, or project report in whole or in part in all forms of media, now or hereafter known. I retain all other ownership rights to the copyright of the thesis, dissertation or project report. I also retain the right to use in future works (such as articles or books) all or part of this thesis, dissertation, or project report.
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language en
format Others
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topic History
spellingShingle History
Ruckel, Ryan
"A Kind Providence" and "The Right to Self Preservation": How Andrew Jackson, Emersonian Whiggery, and Frontier Calvinism Shaped the Course of American Political Culture
description Andrew Jackson has inspired numerous biographies and works of historical scholarship, but his religious views have attracted very little attention. Jackson may have been a giant on the political landscape, but he was also a human being, an ordinary American who experienced the same difficulties and challenges as other Americans of the early nineteenth century. Another common experience for many Americans of Jacksons day included church life, revivals, and efforts to conceptualize every day events within the context of religious experience. Finding out where Jackson stood on religion and what role religion played in his thinking helps situate him as a man of his times. Unfortunately, he so greatly influenced his generation that he has taken on larger-than-life proportions, and even historians have found it difficult to present Jackson as an ordinary person who could choose to make the same responses to religion as did his contemporaries. In sum, looking at Jacksons religious views as expressed in his correspondence regarding events both public and private helps explain him. Jackson wrote thousands of letters over the course of his lifetime, and his correspondence, especially his private letters to his friends and family, indicate that he did indeed inherit and live by a sturdy set of religious convictions, deeply rooted in the Calvinist tradition of Scottish Presbyterian Christianity. In his letters, Jackson briefly but consistently revealed his concern over his relationship to the sovereignty and providence of God. Jacksons foundational belief that a sovereign God governed the world, guiding it toward a destiny only He could fully comprehend remained unshaken, even as he experienced the death of beloved family members, the difficulties of war, and other harsh realities of early nineteenth-century American life. As he grew older, Jackson also became more evangelical in his religious outlook, an experience common to many other people of the Jacksonian period. Ralph Waldo Emersons views on Providence serve as a foil to more greatly reveal the subtle difference between the Jacksonian Providential optimism rooted in uncertainty and the emerging, Whiggish world view that would eventually overcome it.
author2 Lance Porter
author_facet Lance Porter
Ruckel, Ryan
author Ruckel, Ryan
author_sort Ruckel, Ryan
title "A Kind Providence" and "The Right to Self Preservation": How Andrew Jackson, Emersonian Whiggery, and Frontier Calvinism Shaped the Course of American Political Culture
title_short "A Kind Providence" and "The Right to Self Preservation": How Andrew Jackson, Emersonian Whiggery, and Frontier Calvinism Shaped the Course of American Political Culture
title_full "A Kind Providence" and "The Right to Self Preservation": How Andrew Jackson, Emersonian Whiggery, and Frontier Calvinism Shaped the Course of American Political Culture
title_fullStr "A Kind Providence" and "The Right to Self Preservation": How Andrew Jackson, Emersonian Whiggery, and Frontier Calvinism Shaped the Course of American Political Culture
title_full_unstemmed "A Kind Providence" and "The Right to Self Preservation": How Andrew Jackson, Emersonian Whiggery, and Frontier Calvinism Shaped the Course of American Political Culture
title_sort "a kind providence" and "the right to self preservation": how andrew jackson, emersonian whiggery, and frontier calvinism shaped the course of american political culture
publisher LSU
publishDate 2006
url http://etd.lsu.edu/docs/available/etd-07132006-150446/
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