Nullification Crisis

  • Tariff of Abominations

    The Tariff of 1828, sometimes known as the Tariff of Adminations, was a protective tariff enacted at the beginning of the 19th century with the goal of supporting developing domestic industries by increasing the cost of imported goods-- a position that became known as protectionism (a theory of protecting a nations domestics industries from foreign competition by taxing good).
  • South Carolina Exposition

    Written by John C. Calhoun in response to the Tariff of 1828, it supported the nation of nullification and argued that the states have the power to abolish the tariff because it is unconstitutional.
  • Tariff of 1832

    The Tariff of 1832 was passed to lower the current tax rates in an effort to resolve and ease the tariff of abominations controversy. Because of the high prices of the imported goods, Southerners grew increasingly angry and outraged, and they continued to believe that the tariffs were unlawful.
  • South Carolina's Ordinance of Nullification

    The state that objected to tariffs the most declared they had the right to overturn tariffs as well as any other law enacted by the government in creation to the rise in the cost of products.
  • Jackson's Proclamation Against Nullification

    Jackson replied that states do not have the authority to overturn a federal statute that they deem to be unconstitutional in reaction to South Carolina's nullification of the tariffs.