Where’s the birth certificate, President Jackson?

Now that we have Obama’s long-form birth certificate on hand, maybe we can all get back to the important things in life.  Like wondering whether Andrew Jackson was really born in America, for example.

From Wikimedia Commons

I didn’t know it was an issue until I read Allan Eckert’s classic book The Frontiersmen.  Eckert has his protagonist, Simon Kenton, and Jackson getting into a brawl near Danville, KY in 1779.  Here, Jackson is a member of a rowdy surveying team led by “Dr. Jonas Walker” running the North Carolina-Virginia line, which at that time would have also passed between the unborn states of Tennessee and Kentucky.  The crew shows up at a tavern where Kenton is eating dinner, and a drunk Jackson suddenly knocks Kenton to the floor, only to have the big frontiersman get up and beat the stuffing out of him.  According to Eckert, both fighters were about the same age, in their early or mid-twenties.  That would put Jackson’s birth in the mid-1750’s.  Conventional wisdom puts Jackson’s birth in the Waxhaws region of northern South Carolina (or maybe in southern North Carolina, but one controversy is enough for this post, thanks) on March 15, 1767.  Eckert thus moves Jackson’s birth date back about twelve years.

In a note at the end of the book, Eckert defends this decision, claiming that “there is good cause to believe…that Jackson was, in fact, born at sea while his parents, Andrew and Elizabeth Hutchinson Jackson, were immigrating to America from County Antrim, Ireland, thus making him legally ineligible for the office of President of the United States, which he later assumed” (597). He presents four pieces of evidence to substantiate this claim.  For the sake of convenience, I’ve separated them out and numbered them here:

  1. Simon Kenton told the story of the fight to Judge John James in 1833, and James transcribed the interview.  Kenton said that he and Jackson were close to the same age.
  2. Henry Lee (not to be confused with Henry “Lighthorse Harry” Lee of Revolutionary War fame) claimed that he was with Kenton at the time of the fight, and corroborated Kenton’s account.
  3. The same Judge James who wrote down Kenton’s story stated that in 1840 he accompanied a Kentuckian by the name of John Chambers to a political meeting.  On that trip, Chambers told him of an elderly neighbor who claimed that she was on the same ship that Jackson’s parents took to America, that Jackson was born “three days from land,” and that she herself “received him in my own hands.”
  4. Finally, Eckert cites the testimony of Marshall Anderson.  Jackson and James Monroe stopped at the home of Anderson’s father during Monroe’s tour of the West in 1819.  Anderson overheard Jackson and his father chatting privately, and reported that when Anderson asked Jackson where he was born, Jackson replied, “I was born at sea.”

Eckert concludes that all this testimony makes it likely that “Andrew Jackson was not a native American and that his age has been altered by twelve years; that he was not, in fact, born after his father’s death, nor was he born in South Carolina, but instead was born in a ship at sea in 1755, the year his parents were immigrating from Ireland to America” (p. 598).

There are a few problems with this conclusion, aside from the fact that it dismisses all the other evidence we have that Jackson was born in the Carolinas in 1767.  First, Jackson’s parents did not emigrate to America in 1755, but a decade later.  I’m not sure why Eckert moves the date back, unless it’s simply to reconcile the born-at-sea theory with the early birth theory.

Second, while there are four pieces of evidence given in support of the theory that Jackson was born in the 1750’s and/or at sea, what we really have here are only two sources.  According to Eckert, Lee’s corroboration of Kenton’s story is in the manuscript collection assembled by frontier historian Lyman C. Draper. The other three pieces of evidence are recorded in an article written by Judge James and published in a volume of historical materials published in 1859.  In other words, we don’t necessarily have four independent witnesses, but rather four pieces of testimony reported by only two independent sources.

The quality of those sources also seems questionable.  Kenton and Lee got one thing right—there was a survey being run along the VA-NC border in the fall of 1779. Dr. Thomas Walker was one of the party’s leaders, and perhaps he’s the man Eckert refers to as “Dr. Jonas Walker.”  But I can’t find any evidence that Jackson was present.  I’ve been unable to find any reputable biographies of Old Hickory that mention a surveying trip in 1779; they all indicate that in that year he was right where he had always been, growing up in the Carolina backcountry.  We know that he was in the Waxhaws in the early summer of 1780 as the British swept into the area after the fall of Charleston.  I suspect that Kenton and Lee encountered someone else—perhaps someone else named Andrew Jackson?—and conflated this encounter with the name of a famous person, either through the fog of old age or a deliberate desire to magnify their own exploits. After all, in 1833, when Kenton told his story to Judge James, Jackson had just started his second term as president.

I therefore see little reason to believe the Kenton story, and even less reason to think Jackson was a grown man in 1779.  It is much simpler to believe that Kenton was either mistaken or fabricated the story than it is to believe that all the other evidence we have about Jackson’s age is wrong, or that a public figure like Jackson was able to knock ten years off his age without anyone who knew him as a younger man calling his hand on it. After all, this was an age of intensely personalized politics, and Jackson’s critics weren’t reluctant when it came to digging up dirt on his past.

The testimony regarding the birth at sea also seems dubious to me.  The remark attributed to Jackson by Marshall Anderson contradicts other public statements (at least as early as 1824) in which Jackson claimed South Carolina as his birthplace.  If Jackson lied about his place of birth just so he could take a shot at the presidency, why was he telling people that he was born at sea as late as 1819, when he was already a public figure?

The other piece of evidence for the birth at sea is a bit of hearsay attributed to an elderly woman for whom we don’t even have a name.  And the story dates from 1840, by which time Jackson had achieved the pinnacle of his fame and power.  It seems more reasonable to assume that the old lady was muddling things up, as older folks sometimes do, by placing herself at the birth of someone who had become a celebrity and a beloved hero.

Here’s something else to consider.  Even if the story about a birth at sea were true, would it necessarily have made Jackson ineligible for office?  Most people assume that the Constitution restricts the office to natural-born citizens. Actually, it’s a little more complicated than that: “No person except a natural born Citizen, or a Citizen of the United States, at the time of the Adoption of this Constitution, shall be eligible to the Office of President; neither shall any Person be eligible to that Office who shall not have attained to the Age of thirty-five Years, and been fourteen Years a Resident within the United States.”  The bit about being a citizen at the time of adoption was necessary, because technically none of the first presidents were “natural-born citizens.” Washington, Adams, Jefferson, and Madison were all born in British colonies. No man who had attained the required thirty-five years of age necessary to become president had, at the time the Constitution was written, been born in an independent United States of America.

I suspect that even if Jackson was born at sea, he would have fallen under the “citizen at the time of adoption” clause.  After all, he had essentially lived his entire life in America, and had participated as a teenager in the Revolution.

Since politics of the 1820’s and 1830’s were even nastier than those of today, I’d imagine that if any of Jackson’s opponents had evidence that he was constitutionally ineligible for office, they would’ve used it.  The fact that Old Hickory’s detractors didn’t become the first birthers is itself pretty good evidence that Jackson was born where and when most people think he was.

I don’t intend this to be a criticism either of Eckert or of his book.  I enjoy his work, and I think The Frontiersmen is an absorbing read.  In fact, the entire “Winning of America” series is worthwhile for anyone interested in the early American frontier, even if Eckert’s free use of reconstructed dialogue and other novelistic techniques makes me hesitant to lump them together with standard non-fiction works of history.  I just thought the issue of Jackson’s birth was a neat little historical controversy that ties into recent political debates, and therefore the kind of thing that makes for good blog fodder.

9 Comments

Filed under History and Memory

9 responses to “Where’s the birth certificate, President Jackson?

  1. That’s a funny story. You’re completely right, of course–if any of Jackson’s opponents thought that they could make something of this “controversy,” then they would have. Their silence says everything.

  2. Ron

    Great story!
    Although I agree that it seems highly unlikely, if not downright impossible, that Jackson was born at sea, even if he were, what good could his political opponents made of the issue if the Constitution covered him under the clause about being a citizen at the time of adoption? They would have been fighting against a pretty strong legal argument.

  3. Michael Lynch

    It would have been interesting if the charge had been circulating widely enough in the 1820’s to send a case all the way to the Supreme Court. Had that been the case, I think Jackson would’ve been covered under that clause, since the situation of citizenship was so fluid during the Revolution. Hamilton was born outside the U.S., too, but at the time of ratification I think most people would’ve considered him a citizen.

    –ML

  4. This isn’t a very timely post but to clarify you only had to be a US resident if you were born after the revolution, so actually Alexander Hamilton was eligible to be president as well. Also if you’ve done much reading on Andrew Jackson its very very unlikely he was 12-years older than reported. If you read his trials from the Revolutionary war when he was a boy it doesn’t make any sense at all if he was indeed much older. It would mean he basically skipped out on the fighting, which is extremely unlikely. He got a scar on his face from a sword when a British officer tried to make him clean his shoe and he defied it — it’s hard to believe that either him or the British soldier both would have lived had that been done to an adult Jackson. I greatly enjoyed the Frontiersmen but as I’ve learned more about the era it’s becoming increasingly obvious that there’s more than a little fiction in the story.

  5. Long ago, in 1978, when I was in eighth grade, my history teacher (Mr. Robinson) was sitting at his desk and talking to the class.

    Mr. Robinson said something very close to, “The election of 1826 was a rough one. So bad that people accused Andrew Jackson of not being born in this country and therefore ineligible to be president.”

    That stuck in my head and in recent years, I was amazed that no one in the press reported as such. I even asked a historian or two about it, and while they agreed that the 1826 election was a rough one (that’s an obvious), neither could find such a “birther” reference to Andrew Jackson. Your blog entry makes it rather plain that this assertion of non-US citizenship probably wasn’t part of the 1826 mudslinging, but even so, kudos to my long ago history teacher for bringing it forward in a way that I remembered it many decades later.

    That’s why I so appreciate your research above. This is one of the very rare references to what my long ago history teacher mentioned in class. So..kudos to you, as well!

  6. Pingback: Andrew Jackson - 200 Year Old Brither Question

  7. Joe Castelo

    I agree with all if your comments.However, Jackson had.not decided to run for President in 1819. Also, existing photo of him looks like a man a hell of a lot older than he could have looked if his chronological age should have been at his death. But what is more important. The debate supports a traditional standard that one must be both born on U.S. soil of at least one U.S born citizen parent. Thus making Rubio and Cruz both ineligible. Also, did midwife mean 3 days from Ireland or 3 days from America. Lots mentions of Jackson lapsing into Irish brogue when mad.

  8. Bob Williams

    I loved “The Frontiersman” and believe what it reveals about Jackson. If he was born of Irish parents, on an Irish ship, over international waters; wouldn’t that make him an Irish citizen? His false birth date, showing him approximately 12 years younger than he actually was. This would explain why, in existing photos of him, he looks much older than he should.

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