For forty-five years following the opening of the Hermitage to the public, Mr. and Mrs. T. L. Baker served as careful and dedicated custodians of the buildings and grounds. They were succeeded by their son, Andrew Jackson Baker, who was born at the Hermitage, and his wife, and it is due to their continued dedication and interest that the Hermitage has maintained its reputation as the nation’s best-kept shrine. Due to ill health, Mr. Baker resigned in 1963.

The present custodian is Steve S. Lawrence.

ANDREW JACKSON CHRONOLOGY
BY W. B. MARR

1767 March 5 Born near the line between South Carolina and North Carolina.
1784 Fall Began study of law.
1787 May Admitted to practice law in North Carolina.
1788 August 2 Duel with Colonel Waightstill Avery at Jonesboro.
1788 Spring Appointed public prosecutor for territory south of Ohio River.
1791 August Married Mrs. Rachel Donelson Robards at Natchez, Miss.
1796 January 1 Member first constitutional convention of Tennessee.
1796 Elected representative In Congress from Tennessee.
1797 November 2 Appointed by Governor Sevier Senator from Tennessee, succeeding William Blount, resigned.
1798 June Resigned from Senate.
1798 Elected member of the superior court of law and equity.
1801 Elected major-general of Tennessee militia.
1804 Moved from Hunter’s Hill to log house, original Hermitage.
1804 July 4 Resigned from superior court.
1805-6 Entertained Aaron Burr.
1806 May 30 Duel with Charles Dickinson.
1809 Nephew of Mrs. Jackson adopted, named Andrew Jackson, Jr.
1812 June 5 Offered services of Tennessee Volunteers to the United States Government in the War of 1812.
1813 January 7 Started for New Orleans with Tennessee Militia.
1813 February 15 Arrived at Natchez.
1813 March 25 Started home from Natchez.
1813 April 22 Returned to Hermitage.
1813 September 4 Wounded in affray with Thomas H. and Jesse Benton.
1813 October 11 Started with his command for the Creek War.
1813 November 3 Battle of Talluschatches, Creek War.
1813 November 9 Battle of Talladega, Creek War.
1814 January 22 Battle of Emuckfau, Creek War.
1814 January 24 Battle of Enotocopco, Creek War.
1814 March 27 Battle of the Horseshoe, Creek War.
1814 April 19 Appointed Brigadier-General United States Army.
1814 May 1 Appointed Major-General United States Army, Vice William Henry Harrison, resigned.
1814 August 10 Had treaty with Creeks signed.
1814 September 9 Started first Florida campaign.
1814 December 2 Arrived at New Orleans for the defense of the city.
1814 December 16 Declared martial law in New Orleans.
1814 December 23 First battle in defense of New Orleans.
1815 January 1 Second battle in defense of New Orleans.
1815 January 8 Won battle of New Orleans.
1815 March 5 Caused the arrest of Judge Dominick A. Hall, United States District Judge at New Orleans.
1815 March 13 Abrogated martial law at New Orleans.
1815 March 24 Fined $1,000 by Judge Dominick A. Hall for contempt of court, which Jackson paid the same day, and which was refunded by Congress with interest in 1842.
1815 May 15 Arrived at Nashville from New Orleans.
1817 December 26 Entered upon second Florida campaign.
1818 April 28 Caused the execution of Arbuthnot and Ambrister.
1819 February 8 House of Representatives in Congress sustained Jackson’s conduct in the Florida campaign.
1819 Jan. and Feb. Visited eastern cities.
1819 February Spain ceded Florida to the United States.
1819 Built Brick Hermitage.
1821 Appointed by President Monroe governor of Florida.
1821 May 31 Resigned from the army.
1821 July 17 Took possession of Florida as governor, and it became a territory of the United States.
1821 October Resigned as governor of Florida, and returned to Hermitage.
1822 July 20 Nominated for President by the Legislature of Tennessee.
1823 Offered and declined mission to Mexico.
1823 October Elected to the United States Senate from Tennessee.
1823 Contributed major part of funds for building Presbyterian church in Hermitage neighborhood.
1824 March 4 Nominated for President by the Pennsylvania convention.
1824 November 4 Received plurality of electoral votes for President.
1825 February 9 Defeated for President in the House of Representatives in Congress by John Quincy Adams, who received the vote of thirteen states, Jackson seven, William H. Crawford of Georgia four.
1825 Lafayette visited the Hermitage.
1825 October Resigned from the United States Senate.
1825 October Renominated for President by the Legislature of Tennessee.
1826 or 1827 Communion Sunday, date uncertain, promised Mrs. Jackson to join the church when out of politics.
1828 November Elected President of the United States.
1828 December 22 Death of Mrs. Jackson.
1829 January 17 Left Hermitage for his inauguration.
1829 March 4 Inaugurated President.
1830 April 13 Offered toast: “Our federal union, it must be preserved,” at Jefferson’s birthday dinner.
1830 December 7 Recommended that the Southern Indians be removed to the Indian Territory.
1831 Two wings added to the Hermitage.
1832 July 10 Vetoed bill re-chartering the Bank of the United States.
1832 November Re-elected President of the United States.
1832 December 10 Issued proclamation to nullifiers of South Carolina.
1833 June 26 Harvard College conferred the degree of LL.D.
1833 September 23 Ordered withdrawal of deposits from the Bank of the United States.
1834 Hermitage damaged by fire; repaired. No changes since.
1834 March 28 Censured by Senate by resolution for removing public deposits from the Bank of the United States.
1835 December 29 Treaty with the Cherokee Indians for their removal to Indian Territory.
1835 January 8 Proclaimed the payment in full of national debt of the United States.
1837 January 16 Resolution passed in the Senate expunging the resolution of censure of 1834.
1837 March 4 Issued farewell address to people of the United States.
1839 Became a member of the Presbyterian Church near the Hermitage.
1840 January 18 Visited New Orleans.
1845 June 8 Sunday, at 6 P.M., died.
1845 June 10 Buried by the side of Mrs. Jackson at the Hermitage.

The Carriage House

The skeleton of the phaeton is all that is left of the beautiful vehicle presented to General Jackson by the “Democratic-Republican” citizens of Philadelphia. It was made from timbers taken from the old ship Constitution. The phaeton in which General Jackson rode with Martin Van Buren to the latter’s inauguration was damaged by fire in Cincinnati, where the Jackson relics were stored before being acquired by the Ladies’ Hermitage Association. (Photograph is on wall.)

Stone doorstep in front of carriage house was presented to Col. W. W. Parks by General Jackson. Given to the Ladies’ Hermitage Association by his granddaughters, Misses Annie and Grace Handly.

Display boards on the walls show photostats of the Library of Congress letters of Rachel Jackson, personal accounts of life at the Hermitage taken from letters and histories, and pamphlets relating to the life and times of President Andrew Jackson, presented to the Hermitage by C. Lawrence Winn, great-grandson of Andrew Jackson, Jr.

Anvil, used in shoeing General Jackson’s race horses.

Carpenter’s plane, said to have been used by William McCreary in building the Hermitage. Given by Stanley F. Horn.