PBS Features Andy Jackson, A Dynamic Pol

As we yawn our way toward the primaries, PBS airs an interesting show on our seventh president. Dec. 31 (Bloomberg) -- If you're bored by the soporific slate of U.S. presidential candidates, consider watching PBS's new documentary on Andrew Jackson. It proves that politicians don't have to be dull. ``Andrew Jackson: Good, Evil and the Presidency,'' which airs Wednesday on PBS at 9 p.m. New York time, tells how a man born in a log cabin and orphaned as a teenager grew up to be the seventh U.S. president. Along the way, Jackson killed a man in a gambling-related duel, ran off with another man' wife, led an unauthorized invasion of Spanish-ruled Florida, sent thousands of American Indians to their deaths on the ``Trail of Tears'' and accused John Quincy Adams of procuring a whore for a Russian czar. In his spare time the slave-owning Jackson helped launch the Democratic Party and warned Americans of the rising power of bankers and corporations. Mike Huckabee, he wasn't. Narrated by Martin Sheen, the program explains how Jackson earned his nickname ``Old Hickory.'' Jackson learned to brawl, drink whiskey and fight the detested British on the Carolina frontier, where he was reputed to be as tough as hickory wood, according to biographer Jon Meacham, one of several historians interviewed for the two-hour show. Battle of New Orleans Jackson became a lawyer at age 20 and signed on as a frontier prosecutor. He met another free spirit, Rachel Robards, in Nashville, Tennessee, around 1788. She was married at the time but took a shine to Jackson. Their adulterous relationship, which led to marriage, would haunt her later in life. Jackson was a tough opponent, as British troops discovered in the 1815 Battle of New Orleans and Adams found out during two presidential elections. They first battled for the White House in 1824, a contest eventually decided in Adams's favor by the House of Representatives. Jackson, who thought the election had been stolen, challenged Adams in a nasty rematch four years later. The Adams camp got a newspaper to print Rachel's divorce proceedings, and soon editorialists were calling her the ``American Jezebel'' and Jackson ``Western Bluebeard.'' Jackson's supporters struck back with a false charge that Adams, while serving as minister to Russia, had hired a prostitute for the czar. `Old Hickory' Although Jackson won the 1828 election, Rachel never accompanied him to Washington; she died a few weeks after her husband's victory, and Jackson blamed Adams for her demise. The program, which makes good use of lithographs, letters and documents from Jackson's time, reminds us that ``Old Hickory'' was hardly a favorite of high society. For his first inaugural (he served two terms), Jackson invited the public to the White House, and the huge crowds ended up trashing the building. ``What a scene we did witness,'' wrote one socialite, who noted the ``struggle to get punch'' and an abundance of fainting ladies. Thomas Jefferson deemed Jackson to be ``unfit'' for his office. Indians, Slaves Jackson's harsh treatment of American Indians gets a thorough airing, especially his support of the Indian Removal Act of 1830 that forced tribes living east of the Mississippi River to move to unsettled territories in the West. Thousands of men, women and children died during the relocation. His handling of slaves also was brutal. Historian Bobby L. Lovett recounts that Jackson once offered a reward to anyone who administered 300 lashes to one of his escaped slaves -- a virtual death sentence. This was the same president who warned that powerful corporations and ``unelected'' bankers were a threat to the common man, or at least those of proper hue. Jackson was a powerful friend and a ferocious enemy. His first biographer, James Parton, may have summed him up best: ``He was a democratic autocrat, an urbane savage, an atrocious saint.'' And never, it appears, dull.

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