Of all things, Andrew Jackson's tombstone does not mention that he served as the president of the United States!
Andrew Jackson's Tombstone Skips His Presidency Entirely
Visit the tomb of Andrew Jackson at his beloved Hermitage estate in Nashville, Tennessee, and you'll find something peculiar. The inscription on the seventh president's tombstone reads simply: "General Andrew Jackson, March 15, 1767 – June 8, 1845." That's it. No mention of the presidency. No reference to his two terms in the White House. Just his military rank, his name, and the dates he walked this earth.
For a man who served as President of the United States from 1829 to 1837, founded the Democratic Party, and fundamentally reshaped American politics, this seems like a glaring omission. But look a few feet away at his wife's grave, and the contrast becomes even more striking.
Rachel's Monument to Love and Honor
Rachel Jackson's tombstone tells a very different story. Her epitaph spans 135 words—a passionate defense of her character that Jackson himself penned. He wrote it because he believed the vicious attacks on Rachel's honor during the brutal 1828 presidential campaign had contributed to her death just weeks before his inauguration.
Rachel had been married before meeting Jackson, and through a complicated series of events involving an incomplete divorce, she unknowingly became a bigamist when she married Andrew. Political enemies used this against Jackson relentlessly, calling Rachel an adulteress. She died of a heart attack in December 1828, and Jackson never forgave those he felt had killed her with their cruelty.
Why "General" Mattered Most
Jackson's choice to be remembered as "General" rather than "President" wasn't an oversight—it was deliberate. His military career defined him long before politics did. He became a national hero after his decisive victory at the Battle of New Orleans in 1815, the final major battle of the War of 1812. That victory made him a legend.
To Jackson, being a general meant:
- Leading men in battle and defending the nation
- Earning respect through action, not political maneuvering
- A title he held longer than his eight years as president
- An identity tied to honor and decisive leadership
The presidency was a capstone to his career, but military command was his foundation. By choosing "General" for his epitaph, Jackson emphasized what he considered his truest calling.
A Simple Stone for a Complex Man
The simplicity of Jackson's tombstone stands in stark contrast to the complexity of his legacy. He championed the common man while owning enslaved people. He expanded democracy for white men while forcing Native Americans from their lands on the Trail of Tears. He's remembered as both a populist hero and a authoritarian who ignored Supreme Court rulings.
Perhaps the understated tombstone is fitting—a man who saw himself primarily as a soldier, who spent his final emotional energy defending his wife's memory rather than burnishing his own political achievements. In death, as in life, Andrew Jackson did exactly what he wanted, regardless of what anyone else expected.
