- americanhistorycentral.com entries/andrew-jackson/Andrew Jackson is important to United States history because of the policies he implemented during his two terms as President.
- britannica.com biography/Andrew-JacksonIllustration from John Frost's A Pictorial Biography of Andrew Jackson (1860) depicting 13-year-old Andrew Jackson's refusal to shine the boots of a British officer.
- ncpedia.org jackson-andrewAndrew and Rachel Jackson did not have any children of their own, but adopted one of Rachel's nephews and gave him the name of Andrew Jackson, Jr.
- american-presidents.fandom.com wiki/Andrew_JacksonThe Presidency of Andrew Jackson spanned the period in United States history that encompasses the events of the Jacksonian Era.
- thoughtco.com andrew-jackson-7th-president-united…Fast Facts: Andrew Jackson
- Parents: Irish immigrants Andrew Jackson and his wife Elizabeth Hutchinson
- Adopted Children: Andrew Jackson, Jr., Lyncoya, and Andrew Jackson Hutchings
- historyhustle.com Andrew Jackson: The Craziest America To President Ever…The one who suffered the most of this was Andrew Jackson’s wife who was accused of being an adulterer and publicly ridiculed by Jackson’s opponents.
- history.com U.S. Presidents Andrew JacksonAndrew Jackson was born on March 15, 1767, in the Waxhaws region on the border of North and South Carolina .
- havefunwithhistory.com facts-about-andrew-jackson/Andrew Jackson, the seventh President of the United States, is a figure of both admiration and controversy in American history.
- thehistoryjunkie.com andrew-jackson-facts/John Marshall ruled in favor of the Cherokee Indians, to which Andrew Jackson allegedly said, "John Marshall has made his decision; now let him enforce it!"
- historynet.com andrew-jackson/In 1778 the Revolutionary War came to the Carolinas. Jackson and his brothers volunteered to fight the British, but only Andrew would survive the war.