Connect with us

Historically Speaking

Discrediting Misinformation Concerning Our Nation’s Historic Tariffs

Published

on

There is a popular meme going around the internet. The caption to the picture reads, “We’ve done this mass tariff thing 3 times in American history. 1828, 1930, 2025. All spaced about a 100 years apart because everyone who remembers the last one needs to be dead for the next one to happen. The last two caused depressions. This one will totally make us rich though.”

I used to almost always say, “Make your own decisions about issues like tariffs, but make them with the correct information.” As far as this meme and its information goes, historically speaking, it just does not hold water.

I love teaching about the 1828 tariff. For one, it has the best name ever: The Tariff of Abominations. Secondly, while it is the ultimate example of political maneuvering gone wrong, the 1828 tariff did not cause of the Panic of 1837.

In 1828 President John Quincy Adams planned to run for a second term. His opponents, under the leadership of Adams’ vice president, John C. Calhoun, and Martin Van Buren, came up with a scheme to hurt his chance for reelection. While Calhoun and Van Buren were anti-tariff, they proposed in Congress to pass a tariff so high that even pro-tariff ex-Federalist Republicans, New Englanders, and Adams would reject it. They could then blame Adams and these groups for the tariff’s death. However, the plan fell apart when it passed through Congress. Adams felt the tariff was too high but also constitutional and so he passed it into law.

At that point, the Calhoun-Van Buren group attacked the president for passing such a high tariff — the very one they created — calling it “The Tariff of Abominations.” Calhoun even went as far as writing the South Carolina Exposition and Protest (an anonymously written work protesting the tariff which Calhoun later admitted to writing) in which he stated it was legal for South Carolina to nullify the tariff in that state. The only reason Calhoun did not follow through with his threat was that he knew Andrew Jackson would probably beat Adams for the presidency and if Jackson won, he would remove the offensive tariff.

The ploy bit Calhoun in the behind when Jackson won. But knowing how important the tariff was to New England, a section of the country in which Jackson had struggled to garner support, he left the tariff in place. This led to the Nullification Crisis that almost caused a civil war as South Carolina finally decided to nullify the tariff. Before war could break out, Congress passed a compromise tariff in 1833 that was much more palatable to all sides.

Several years later, in 1837, our nation did fall into one of the worst depressions in history. Jackson was primarily responsible for this economic disaster when he purposely pulled all the nation’s money out of the Second Bank of the United States causing bank collapses and an economic downturn. There were several bad decisions that led to the 1837 Panic, but the 1828 tariff was not one of them.

The second tariff on the meme is the 1930 tariff, better known as “The Smoot–Hawley Tariff.” See? Tariff of Abominations is a much better name. While I might be nitpicking here, but a tariff passed in June of 1930 cannot be responsible for a depression that began in October of 1929. While many economists believe that Smoot-Hawley tariff made the depression worse, it was passed as a measure to support American businesses from the effects of the Great Depression. When Herbert Hoover ran for president in 1928, one of his platform planks was tariffs on agricultural goods because farmers had been suffering since the end of WWI.

Farmers had a boom time during the war, as they had to feed all the world’s soldiers, but when the soldiers all returned home, there was suddenly a surplus. Hoover believed American farmers would benefit from agricultural tariffs. When the depression began, men in his party like Senator Reed Smoot and Congressman Willis Hawley used Hoover’s support on ag tariffs to push through massive tariffs on most products to protect American companies.

While Hoover was actually against high tariffs, like Adams a hundred years earlier, he signed it into law because it was not unconstitutional, and he had a great deal of pressure from his own party to pass it. The effect of Smoot-Hawley was tariff wars. America’s trade partners put tariffs on American goods, jacking up prices for everyone in a time where people were losing their jobs. So, while the tariff did more harm than good, it still cannot be blamed on causing the depression.

One important law was created on the heels of Smoot-Hawley. Two years after the tariff was passed, Democrats swept the elections including adding Franklin D. Roosevelt as president. Part of the Democratic success was a reaction to Smoot-Hawley. With the Democrats in charge, they passed the Reciprocal Tariff Agreement Act in 1934, which among many things allowed the president — without the need of congressional approval — to adjust tariffs by 50%. This was one of our country’s first big steps in turning over tariff policy to the president and away from Congress. FDR used the RTAA to reduce tariffs during the depression, and its passage is considered the end of protectionist economic policies. Tariffs have mostly lowered in the years since. Until now.

So, while I am still not at a place to make an argument about tariffs, I am in a place to say be careful what you read on the internet. Remember what Abraham Lincoln said, “Not everything online is true.” So, make your arguments, just make them with correct, factual information.

James Finck is a professor of American history at the University of Science and Arts of Oklahoma. He can be reached at HistoricallySpeaking1776@gmail.com.

Front Royal, VA
73°
Partly Cloudy
5:51 am8:42 pm EDT
Feels like: 73°F
Wind: 3mph S
Humidity: 96%
Pressure: 30.03"Hg
UV index: 0
ThuFriSat
100°F / 77°F
100°F / 75°F
99°F / 73°F
Business54 minutes ago

How a Texas Metal Shop Became Igloo

Local Government13 hours ago

Warren County Officials Urge Safe, Legal Fireworks Use During July Fourth Holiday

State News15 hours ago

Virginia Colleges Face Global Competition as More Students Consider Studying Abroad

State News15 hours ago

Virginia Has a New Two-Year Budget. Here’s What Lawmakers Now Require of Data Centers

Local News15 hours ago

Todd Gilbert Set to Start State 26th District Judicial Appointment Wednesday, July 1

Local News15 hours ago

Make-A-Wish Greater VA Makes a Dream Come True in Strasburg

Livestream - FR Cardinals15 hours ago

Cardinals Return Home Wednesday, July 1 to Face Charlottesville Tom Sox

Local News16 hours ago

Blue Ridge Wildlife Center Patient of the Week: Great Horned Owl

Interesting Things to Know16 hours ago

July Celebrity Birthdays: Do You Share a Birthday?

National News17 hours ago

Supreme Court Upholds Birthright Citizenship in Major Immigration Ruling

Community Events17 hours ago

Charlee & Joe to Perform July 2 at Gazebo Gatherings

National News18 hours ago

US Supreme Court Upholds Transgender Athlete Bans in Idaho, West Virginia

Community Events18 hours ago

Love Wins: Dueling Disco Raises More Than $104,000 for Local Children and Families

Food23 hours ago

The Spaghetti Problem

Community Events1 day ago

Children Activities by Samuels Public Library for the Month of July

Community Events1 day ago

This Week’s Showtimes at Royal Cinemas as of July 1st

report logo
Arrest Logs1 day ago

POLICE: 7 Day FRPD Arrest Report 6/29/2026

National News2 days ago

US Supreme Court in Virginia Case Says Police Need Warrants for Cellphone Location Data

State News2 days ago

Virginia General Assembly Approves Spanberger’s Budget Amendments, Ending Monthslong Impasse

Local News2 days ago

Cars Changing Lives Delivers a Vehicle and Hope to Local Family

Community Events2 days ago

Stone Branch Center for the Arts to Open Quilt Exhibit July 3

State News2 days ago

Virginia Lawmakers Return Monday to Weigh Spanberger Budget Amendments Before the Fiscal Deadline

State News2 days ago

Farmers, Retailers Worry as State and Federal Regs for Hemp, Marijuana Shift

State News2 days ago

Commentary: Virginia’s Romance With Data Centers Has Cooled, But Nobody Benefits If There’s a Full Breakup

Jefferson Forum2 days ago

Spanberger Playing “Russian Roulette” with Virginia’s Must-Pass Budget