COBBETT, William.

£750 · Offered by Peter Harrington · No longer available

Life of Andrew Jackson, President of the United States. First edition of this adulatory account of President Jackson, written by the radical British MP William Cobbett, published the year before Cobbett died and after a lifetime spent campaigning for the abolition of rotten boroughs, the lowering of taxes, and reversing enclosures, all culminating in his major influence in the passing of the Great Reform Act two years prior.Cobbett's populist streak led him to be a great admirer of Andrew Jackson, "the bravest and greatest man now living in this world, or that ever has lived in this world, as far as my knowledge extends", as he declares in his "Dedication to the working people of Ireland". Cobbett believed that Jackson, born of Irish parents, provides a model for the ill-treated Irish to avenge their wrongs, and hopes his book will show the way.The "interesting frontispiece" shows a Native American and a Jew hanging from gibbets, with their respective weapons of a tomahawk and a five dollar note ("in the same manner as the murderous, but less destructive instrument of the savage") laying beneath them; this underneath a portrait of Jackson and a scene of the Battle of New Orleans, where Jackson commanded the American forces, with attention drawn to the death of Edward Pakenham, the Duke of Wellington's brother-in-law. The frontispiece reflects Cobbett's strong anti-Semitism. His most famous book, Rural Rides, is riddled with anti-Semitic rants, blaming rural crises on Jewish m

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