Second Bank of the United States
The
Second Bank of the United States was founded in
1816, five years
after the expiration of the
First Bank of the United States and the chaos that ensued. This second bank was patterned after the first. The legality of the Bank was upheld in the
1819 Supreme Court case
McCulloch v. Maryland which also declared null and void any state law contrary to a federal law made in pursuance of the Constitution. However, renewal of the Second Bank of the United States was vetoed on
July 10,
1832 by
Andrew Jackson, so it declined until
1836.
Henry Clay and
Nicholas Biddle had made the Bank a campaign issue. Tensions were still very high when on
August 16,
1841 then President
John Tyler vetoed a bill which called for the re-establishment of the Second Bank of the United States. This sparked a massive riot outside the
White House from enraged
Whig party members.