Bittersweet Journey: Andrew Jackson's Inaugural Trip 1829

On January 19, 1829, President-elect Andrew Jackson began his three-week journey from his home at the Hermitage near Nashville, Tennessee, to the nation's capital at Washington City to assume his new role as the seventh president of the United States. What was to be a celebratory trip, greeting well-wishers along the way, was instead a sad time for Jackson, whose wife, Rachel, had died just weeks earlier and was buried on Christmas Eve, 1828. Bittersweet Journey explores Jackson's trip along the Cumberland and Ohio rivers, and the overland journey to Washington, the places he visited and the people he met along the way, including many supporters, and enemies as well. By comparison, the trip from Nashville to Washington in modern standards would take only a few hours by airplane, or perhaps 14 hours by automobile, but in 1829 it included a steamer voyage up river with stops at the growing cities of Louisville, Cincinnati and Pittsburgh, among others, and then by horse and carriage over dusty, bumpy roads to his new home. Bittersweet Journey also examines some of the highlights of the Jackson presidency, and his quiet journey back to Tennessee in 1837, where he was laid to rest beside Rachel in 1845. Author Carlton Jackson has done a masterful job in recording a portion of Jackson's life that has generally been ignored by historians - this grand journey to assume the presidency of the United States.

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Bittersweet Journey: Andrew Jackson's Inaugural Trip 1829

On January 19, 1829, President-elect Andrew Jackson began his three-week journey from his home at the Hermitage near Nashville, Tennessee, to the nation's capital at Washington City to assume his new role as the seventh president of the United States. What was to be a celebratory trip, greeting well-wishers along the way, was instead a sad time for Jackson, whose wife, Rachel, had died just weeks earlier and was buried on Christmas Eve, 1828. Bittersweet Journey explores Jackson's trip along the Cumberland and Ohio rivers, and the overland journey to Washington, the places he visited and the people he met along the way, including many supporters, and enemies as well. By comparison, the trip from Nashville to Washington in modern standards would take only a few hours by airplane, or perhaps 14 hours by automobile, but in 1829 it included a steamer voyage up river with stops at the growing cities of Louisville, Cincinnati and Pittsburgh, among others, and then by horse and carriage over dusty, bumpy roads to his new home. Bittersweet Journey also examines some of the highlights of the Jackson presidency, and his quiet journey back to Tennessee in 1837, where he was laid to rest beside Rachel in 1845. Author Carlton Jackson has done a masterful job in recording a portion of Jackson's life that has generally been ignored by historians - this grand journey to assume the presidency of the United States.

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Bittersweet Journey: Andrew Jackson's Inaugural Trip 1829

Bittersweet Journey: Andrew Jackson's Inaugural Trip 1829

by Carlton Jackson
Bittersweet Journey: Andrew Jackson's Inaugural Trip 1829

Bittersweet Journey: Andrew Jackson's Inaugural Trip 1829

by Carlton Jackson

Hardcover

$24.95 
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Overview

On January 19, 1829, President-elect Andrew Jackson began his three-week journey from his home at the Hermitage near Nashville, Tennessee, to the nation's capital at Washington City to assume his new role as the seventh president of the United States. What was to be a celebratory trip, greeting well-wishers along the way, was instead a sad time for Jackson, whose wife, Rachel, had died just weeks earlier and was buried on Christmas Eve, 1828. Bittersweet Journey explores Jackson's trip along the Cumberland and Ohio rivers, and the overland journey to Washington, the places he visited and the people he met along the way, including many supporters, and enemies as well. By comparison, the trip from Nashville to Washington in modern standards would take only a few hours by airplane, or perhaps 14 hours by automobile, but in 1829 it included a steamer voyage up river with stops at the growing cities of Louisville, Cincinnati and Pittsburgh, among others, and then by horse and carriage over dusty, bumpy roads to his new home. Bittersweet Journey also examines some of the highlights of the Jackson presidency, and his quiet journey back to Tennessee in 1837, where he was laid to rest beside Rachel in 1845. Author Carlton Jackson has done a masterful job in recording a portion of Jackson's life that has generally been ignored by historians - this grand journey to assume the presidency of the United States.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781935001614
Publisher: Acclaim Press
Publication date: 01/01/2011
Product dimensions: 6.00(w) x 9.10(h) x 0.90(d)

About the Author

Carlton Jackson is a university distinguished professor of history at Western Kentucky University in Bowling Green, Ky., where he has taught since 1961. He is also the university's Right Honorable Mace.

He has held four Fulbright senior lecturing awards and, in the 1989-1990 school year, was the bicentennial professor of American studies at the University of Helsinki in Finland. He has been on numerous lecture tours for the U.S. State Department and U.S. Information Agency in Asia, Europe and South America.

He has served as a visiting professor at The College of William & Mary in Williamsburg, Va.; Tufts University in Medford, Mass.; the University of Hawaii in Honolulu, Hawaii; Graz University in Austria; and Belize College in Belize.

Jackson lives with his wife Pat out in the wilderness of Butler County, Ky.

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