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Short Stuff: Andrew Jackson's Inauguration

2025/6/11
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Stuff You Should Know

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Chuck
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Josh
著名财务顾问和媒体人物,创立了广受欢迎的“婴儿步骤”财务计划。
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Josh: 我对安德鲁·杰克逊的就职典礼很感兴趣,因为有传言说当时人们把白宫都给拆了。虽然杰克逊是一位民粹主义总统,受到民众的爱戴,但历史学家对当时的混乱程度存在争议。玛格丽特·贝尔德·史密斯对当时的场面进行了夸大,她不喜欢杰克逊和他的支持者,认为他们不属于华盛顿。她描述了人们为了抢潘趣酒和蛋糕而互相推搡的场景,就像黑色星期五的促销活动一样。但其他目击者,如丹尼尔·韦伯斯特,并没有提到类似的混乱场面。因此,我认为玛格丽特·史密斯的描述可能存在偏见,当时的真实情况可能没有她说的那么糟糕。 Chuck: 我同意Josh的观点,玛格丽特·史密斯的描述可能存在夸大。虽然她提到了一些疯狂的事情,比如流血和玻璃器皿被打碎,但丹尼尔·韦伯斯特并没有提到类似的混乱场面。韦伯斯特只是说,很多人从远方赶来见杰克逊,认为他拯救了国家。我认为,韦伯斯特的描述可能更可靠。虽然当时的场面可能有点疯狂,但可能没有玛格丽特·史密斯说的那么糟糕。也许有人站在桌椅上看得更清楚,或者有人把桌子弄坏了,但可能没有到“拆了白宫”的程度。

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This chapter explores the legendary stories surrounding Andrew Jackson's 1829 inauguration, focusing on the alleged chaos and revelry that ensued. It introduces conflicting accounts, setting the stage for a deeper examination of the event's reality.
  • Andrew Jackson's inauguration was held in March 1829.
  • The event is known for legendary stories of widespread chaos.
  • 20,000 people attended the White House reception.

Shownotes Transcript

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Hey, and welcome to the short stuff. I'm Josh and there's Chuck and Jerry sitting in for Dave and this is short stuff. And Chuck, I have come to really detest politics. In particular, the American brand of zero sum outrage politics that the entire nation's enmeshed in. Yeah, I try not to think about it.

Same. Avoid politics as much as possible. Same. So let's get started about this political history story. We're talking about Andrew Jackson and his first inauguration, or his inauguration, rather. They used to hold these in March, and his was held on March 4th, 1829. And what happened there at the Capitol was he gave a speech and did his thing. And what you should know about Andrew Jackson is he was a very populist president, some say the very first one. Mm-hmm.

And people loved him. They were like, he's for the little people. And like, we want to go meet this guy on Inauguration Day. So he said, that's a great idea. George Washington held these levies at the White House, which is basically come and meet the first family on Inauguration Day. And I'm going to do the same. Big mistake. Yeah, there's a just basically a legend of Andrew Jackson's inauguration in 1829 that

They basically tore the roof off the White House. They partied so hard there. Yeah. And he didn't. But that was the thing. You mentioned he was a populist president. All.

All of a sudden, because of him being a populist and the people who supported him, average everyday people who typically weren't into politics at all, suddenly overran Washington, D.C. in a very celebratory mood because Andrew Jackson had beaten the Washington establishment, the elites, John Quincy Adams.

And now the people were truly represented in the American government as far as they were concerned. Yeah, but here's the thing. There are historians that say, hold your water there. It may not have been as wild as everyone thinks. There's a guy named Daniel Feller who was a history professor at UT Tennessee, Go Vols. I'll even say that as a Georgia fan.

And he was the editor of the papers of Andrew Jackson. So he knows a thing or two. And he's like, you know what? They talk about people wrecking the place, people coming there with muddy boots and turning over tables and punch bowls. He said, take that with a grain of salt because a lot of this stuff comes from the account of this woman named –

Margaret Baird Smith, who showed up like late to the party after this stuff had evidently happened. She was tardy to the party. Tardy to the party and also did not like Andrew Jackson and his politics. So probably had a pretty heavy slant on the chaos she described. Yeah. And this is I mean, she was a good example of how the opposition to Andrew Jackson felt like they felt like they own D.C.,

And Andrew Jackson and his supporters didn't really belong there. Right. And yet because Andrew Jackson had won the presidency and these like average everyday people felt represented finally, they showed up. The question is like nobody's saying like that didn't happen. Right. It's the degree to which it happened. And Margaret Baird Smith's letters to her daughter in particular are essentially like

one of a very few number of firsthand accounts. And she's she really did not like this and pretty much, I guess, blew it out of proportion is a really good way to put it. Yeah. She writes about the majesty of the people disappearing and a mob of people, you know, fighting and scrambling. And what a pity. What a pity. Yes. She said it twice. Yeah. Yeah. And is this a HowStuffWorks article?

This is a Dave Ruse shorty special. I should have known because Dave mentions like you can almost hear Margaret clutching her pearls in this line. So you said she was tardy to the party. She showed up a little bit after three. And the reason she didn't go straight from the inauguration to the party is because she heard that there were these large crowds.

The estimate that has been bandied about all these years later is that there were 20,000 people who showed up at the White House. That's incredible. To party. So I say we take a break and we come back and talk about what they say happened at this 20,000 person strong party at the White House. Let's do it. Learning things with Chuck and Josh. Stuff you should know. Chuck and Josh.

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So we said, Chuck, before we broke that there's about 20,000 people estimated to have been at the White House for Andrew Jackson's inauguration levy. That even Margaret Bayard said or Bayard Smith said that that was probably an exaggerated number. Yeah. She did say that there were some crazy things going on, though. Yeah. Bloody noses. Several thousand dollars worth of worth of glassware broken. Yeah.

But here's the thing. Again, some historians think she might have been exaggerating because she was just maybe a pearl clutcher and didn't like Jackson. There was a senator from Massachusetts named Daniel Webster who—

who was not a fan of Jackson as well, but he wrote all about this day. And he didn't mention like all this chaos going on. He said, you know, people have come 500 miles to see General Jackson. They really seem to think the country is rescued from some dreadful danger. And he also said a lot of people were also there to like aspiring political leaders.

trying to maybe get a job or get some influence. So he wrote pretty good depth about this, and he never mentioned, like, you know, a party where people were getting in fights and muddy boots and turning over tables. Yeah. It was, like, he didn't mention that it turned into the infield at the Kentucky Derby. Right. Yeah. That is really significant because he was there, and to not mention, like, that people were just going crazy

But berserk partying at the White House and trashing the place. I think that to me says volumes about it, that it either was did it happened a little bit, but it was so insignificant that Webster didn't even think it was worth mentioning or that the whole thing was basically made up.

Yeah, I mean, I get the feeling it wasn't completely made up. I bet it got a little wild. And there are also people that say like, you know, it sounds like there were probably people that maybe stood on tables and chairs to get a better look. And like maybe a table breaks when you're doing that. But she made it sound like they just trashed the place. Right. Yeah, exactly. And that not only did they trash the place, they were it wasn't just that there were 20,000 people or however many people were there, that they were just rowdy. She was basically trying to

portray them as, again, people who didn't belong in Washington, let alone the White House. And look, you can't even, you can't take these supporters of Andrew Jackson anywhere. Look at what they did. They rushed people carrying out the punch bowls to get punchlines

punch and free cake. And yeah, they elbowed each other. It was like a Black Friday sale, essentially, is what Margaret Smith was describing. And again, just painting people in a very unflattering light. The problem is that was a letter to her daughter, right? So if her daughter was misled or maybe she was even trying to entertain her daughter, who knows?

It would be one thing. Historians would probably still have found those letters and be talking about it. But the reason why it became such a well-known thing is that the press picked that up, too. And exactly like happens today, that exaggeration was run with to outrage people who were opponents of Andrew Jackson because that completely satisfied their opinion of those people. Yeah. Here's a bit from the New York Spectator that's pretty colorful.

Here was the corpulent epicure grunting and sweating for breath. The dandy wishing he had no toes. The tight-laced miss fearing her person might receive some permanently deforming impulse. The miser hunting for his pocketbook. The courtier looking for his watch and the office seeker in an agony to reach the president. Right. What does that even mean? I don't know the part about the dandy wishing he had no toes. I looked high and low for what that meant.

Maybe because they were getting stepped on so much. Maybe. That's the only thing I could think of that made any sense. The one I came up with is that maybe it was in fashion to have small feet. Maybe. I know that the dandy has no toes is a pretty great record. Yeah, for sure. One of the best deep cut. Yeah. So the I guess in 1978, the Tennessee Historical Society, they roll up their sleeves and they're like, let's get to the bottom of this.

And from their research, they actually said they considered it sheer bedlam. But they turned up another account from a senator named James Hamilton of South Carolina, who was a supporter of Jackson's. And even he said that this was a, he called it a regular Saturnalia. But he also said that most of the damage was minimal. So somewhere in between there and Margaret Bayard Smith's account,

It was probably the truth. And I think it was Daniel Webster who's probably the most reliable. Yeah, I agree. But who knows? It's a fun story. It is a fun story. And we love fun history stories. And I guess Chuck, short stuff is out. Stuff You Should Know is a production of iHeartRadio. For more podcasts from iHeartRadio, visit the iHeartRadio app. Apple Podcasts are wherever you listen to your favorite shows.