A hero for his career fighting Indians and the British, Jackson was very popular, particularly with land-hungry settlers. After 1815, his views on nationalism had vanquished as economic troubles increased and foreign threat declined. Jackson’s contempt for the elitism of old republicans won him much favor in his campaign for presidency during the election of 1824, where he won in both the popular vote and electoral vote, but lost the presidency when the House of Representatives selected John Quincy Adams instead. After his loss in the “corrupt bargain” of the election of 1824, Jackson expanded his political base in the South and increased his support all over the country. His successful challenging of Adams in the 1828 election was a result of Jackson’s supporters using his image as a war hero to depict him as a fighter—which contrasted their rendering of Adams, which showed him as only a writer. As a man who came from humble origins and had struggled to establish his place in government, Jackson’s victory symbolized everything the common man was able to achieve. After Jackson rose to power, Jacksonian Democracy refined its policies and ideals to focus on ridding the government of class divisions and promoting achievements of the common