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An Agrarian Republic 1790 - 1824

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Title: An Agrarian Republic 1790 - 1824


1
An Agrarian Republic1790 - 1824
  • Out of Many
  • Chapter 9

2
North American Communities from Coast to Coast
3
The Former American Colonies
  • Two-thirds of Americans lived in a long thin line
    of settlement w/in 50 miles of the coast
  • Never travelled far from home
  • From 1790-1800, the population grew by 1.4
    million people
  • In 1800, few people would have guessed that the
    nation would eventually encompass the entire
    continent

4
Spanish Colonies
  • Tensions mounted between peninsulares criollos
  • Peninsulares Spanish-born
  • Criollos native born
  • Spanish established a chain of 21 missions in a
    last effort to protect Mexico
  • American traders were making inroads on
    Spanish-held territory along the MS River
  • Americans knew that whoever had control over New
    Orleans had the power to choke off the
    flourishing trade in the MS Valley river system

5
Haiti the Caribbean
  • The Caribbean islands provided 80-90 of the
    European supply of sugar
  • All plantations used slave labor
  • 1791, revolt in French colony Saint-Dominique
  • Led by Toussaint L Ouverture
  • Involved sugar plantation slaves
  • Renamed the country Haiti
  • Became the Americas firstindependent black
    nation
  • Struck fear into the hearts ofwhite slave owners
  • Became a beacon of hope forblacks

6
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7
British North America
  • British authorities discouraged American
    immigrants from settling among the French
    citizens in Quebec
  • British kept the legislatures under strong
    executive control
  • Dominated the continental fur trade

8
Russian America
  • Occupied what is now Alaska
  • The Russian-American Company, chartered by the
    tsar in 1799, set up American trading
    headquarters in Kodiak
  • The Russian presence in North America was rapidly
    expanding
  • Far from the minds of the Americans as they
    focused more on the British to the North of them
    in the Caribbean

9
Trans-Appalachia Cincinnati
  • By 1800, about 500,000 people had found rich
    fertile land along the OH River system
  • Created enough population for the creation of two
    new states
  • Kentucky (1792)
  • Tennessee (1796)
  • Cincinnati, founded in 1788, began life as a
    military fort
  • In 1800, only 750 people lived there. 10 years
    later, it had tripled in size
  • the Queen City of the West

10
Atlantic Ports From Charleston to Boston
  • Atlantic ports continued to dominate the nation
    economically politically
  • Benefited from the advantage of relatively quick
    trade communication
  • Charleston, Baltimore, Philadelphia, New York,
    Boston - most important urban centers
  • Though small in population,these cities led the
    nationsocially, politically, economically

11
A National Economy
12
Cotton the Economyof the Young Republic
  • In 1800, the US was predominantly rural
    agricultural
  • 94 of Americans lived in communities of fewer
    than 2,500 people
  • Crops were grown for home use rather than for
    sale
  • Demand for cotton was growing rapidly
  • response to the boom in the industrial production
    of textiles in England
  • Downside extracting seeds form the fibers of
    cotton required an enormous investment of labor
  • 1793, the cotton gin was invented

13
Shipping the Economic Boom
  • French Revolution initiated renewed period of
    warfare between France Britain
  • American merchantswanted to supply both sides
  • Would have to use neutralAmerican ships
  • Expansion of trade led todevelopment of
    shipbuilding industry growth of coastal cities

14
The Jefferson Presidency
15
ELECTION OF 1800
  • Jefferson Burr Republican P VP
  • Adams Pinckney Federalist P VP
  • Jefferson Burr each get 73 votes
  • Election thrown into House of Reps each state
    gets one vote (16 states)
  • 35 ballot deadlock
  • Finally, HAMILTON convinces NY to change vote
  • 12th Amendment will change electoral college P
    VP now voted for separately

16
JEFFERSON, Third President
  • Will serve two terms Republican VA
  • Hates crowds and making speeches
  • Multi-talented
  • Agriculturalist, Author, Architect, Attorney,
    Linguist, Educator, Inventor
  • Probably the most intelligent President of U.S.

17
Jeffersons Inaugural Address Approach to
Office
  • Principles espoused in inaugural address
  • Majority rule with minority rights
  • Equal rights for all people
  • Source of govts power is the people
  • Against entangling alliances
  • Promises to preserve govts credit/pay off debts
  • Promises to stimulate commerce as well as
    agriculture
  • Stresses need to deemphasize party politics We
    are all Republicans, we are all Federalists.
  • Becomes a MODERATE
  • Did cut taxes (like Whiskey tax)
  • Naturalization Act 5 yrs. Reestablished
  • Did NOT try to alter balance of fed state power
    but did have fundamental belief in strong states
    and individual rights
  • Reduced size of military eliminated federal
    jobs
  • New tone played down ceremonial aspects of
    presidency

18
Jefferson the Courts
  • Fundamental belief that courts consistentlyoverst
    epped their bounds in decisions
  • throwing an anchor ahead
  • Angered that Federalists had appointed the
  • midnight judges
  • Chief Justice John Marshall the cousin he
    hated
  • Judiciary Act of 1801 appointing of midnight
    judges
  • Marbury v. Madison
  • Marbury sues Madison for delivery of his
    commission as a justice of peace
  • Marshall ruled against Marbury
  • Established principle of JUDICIAL REVIEW
  • Supreme Court has authority to review acts of
    Congress ( P) and determine whether they are
    constitutional
  • Jefferson furious seeks impeachment of Chase

19
Louisiana Purchase
  • SP-FR transfer in 1800 in a secrettreaty
  • Right of deposit revoked 1802
  • Problem of a French Louisiana?
  • Fear that so long as a foreign powerthe river _at_
    New Orleans, the US riskedentanglement in
    European affairs
  • James Monroe Robert Livingston sent
  • to FR in 1803 to seek purchase of New Orleans
    (10M)
  • If negotiations failed, instructed to seek an
    AM/BR alliance
  • Napoleon's reason for selling
  • Santo Domingo defeat doesnt need LA as
    breadbasket
  • About to go to war with Britain
  • Hamilton also instrumental-Napoleon paid in U.S.
    bonds
  • Terms 15M for entire area of 828,000 sq. mi.
  • Reps went beyond their powers of authority
    accepted offer
  • Jefferson troubled by constitutionality of the
    purchase
  • Justified the purchase on basis that it was part
    of Ps implied powers to protect the nation
  • Stated that it could be applied to the
    Presidents powers to make treaties

20
Effects of Louisiana Purchase
  • Doubled the size of the US
  • Removed a foreign presence from the nations
    borders
  • Guaranteed the extension of the western frontier
    to lands beyond the MS river
  • Strengthened Jeffersons hopes that the countrys
    future would be based on an agrarian society
    rather than an urban industrial one
  • Composed of or pertaining to farmers rural
    agricultural
  • Increase Jeffersons popularity

21
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22
LEWIS CLARKEXPEDITION, 1804-1806
  • Even before the LA purchase, Jefferson had
    persuaded Congress to fund a scientific
    exploration of the MS West
  • Accomplished all objectives
  • TO FIND THE SOURCE OF THE MISSOURI RIVER
  • FIND A USABLE ROUTE ACROSS THE ROCKY MTNS. TO THE
    PACIFIC OCEAN
  • OBSERVE INDIAN CUSTOMS, FEATURES OF THE LAND,
    WEATHER, PLANTS ANIMALS
  • Guide/Interpreter
  • Sacagawea Bird Woman
  • Shoshone Indian, married to a French-Canadian
    trapper
  • York black slave hunting, fishing skills
  • 48 men on the expedition

23
Benefits of Expedition
  • Increased geographic scientific knowledge of
    previously unexplored country
  • Strengthened US claims to the Oregon Territory
  • Improved relations with Native American tribes
  • Developed maps land routes for furtrappers
    futuresettlers

24
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25
Jeffersons Reelection
  • In 1804, Jefferson was reelected by an
    overwhelming majority
  • Received all but 14 of the 176 electoral votes
  • Burr wasnt elected as VP
  • Instead, George Clinton was elected
  • Second term would be marked by growing
    difficulties
  • Plots of VP Burr
  • Opposition from a faction of his party which
    accused him of abandoning Republican principles
  • Foreign troubles from the Napoleonic wars in
    Europe

26
Aaron Burr Vice President
  • A Republican caucus in 1804 decided not to
    nominate Burr for a second term as VP
  • Burr then embarked on a series of ventures that
    included trying to break up the Union the death
    of Hamilton
  • Federalist Conspiracy
  • Secretly formed a political pact w/ some radical
    New England Federalists, Burr planned on winning
    race for NY governor
  • Would then unite NY with New England states
    secede from the nation
  • Defeated in the NY election
  • Trial for Treason
  • By 1806, Burrs interests turned westward
  • Made a plan to take Mexico from SP unite it w/
    LA under his rule
  • Jefferson ordered Burrs arrest trial for
    treason
  • Acquitted lack of witness

27
BURR vs. HAMILTON
  • Burr leaves Vice Presidency runs for Gov. of
    NY
  • Hamilton works against him keeps him from
    winning also exposes Burrs NE conspiracy (Essex
    Junto)
  • Burr challenges Hamilton to a duel
  • NJ, July -1804
  • Hamilton fires to miss Burr fires to kill
  • Hamilton mortally wounded dies bankrupt
    Federalists leaderless
  • Burrs career over he LA Gov. plot to take
    over Mexico arrested tried for treason
    acquitted flees to Europe
  • Video Clip

28
Difficulties Abroad
  • As a matter of policy principle, Jefferson
    tried to avoid war w/ a foreign power
  • Fought to maintain US neutrality in the face of
    increasing provocation from both BR FR during
    the Napoleonic wars
  • Barbary Pirates
  • First major challenge to Jeffersons foreign
    policies
  • Previously, Washington Adams paid tribute to
    the pirates to prevent them seizing US ships
  • They demanded a higher tribute once Jefferson
    took office
  • Jefferson sent a small fleet of vessels to the
    Mediterranean
  • Sporadic fighting happened over 4 years
  • Not a victory, but the US gained some respect

29
Difficulties Abroad
  • Challenges to US Neutrality
  • The Napoleonic wars continued todominate the
    politics of Europe
  • To a lesser extent, they were impacting the
    commercial economy of the US
  • Both FR BR were attempting naval blockades of
    enemy ports
  • Regularly seizing the ships of neutral nations
    confiscating their cargoes
  • Chief offender from the US point of view was BR
  • Most infuriating was BR capturing US sailors
    impressing (forcing) them to serve in the British
    navy
  • Chesapeake-Leopard Affair
  • 1807, the British warship Leopard fired on the US
    warship Chesapeake miles off the VA coast
  • 3 Americans were killed 4 others taken captive
  • Many Americans demanded war Jefferson referred
    to diplomacy economic pressure instead

30
EMBARGO ACT of 1807
  • Americans are clamoring for war Jefferson
  • responds instead with the EMBARGO ACT.
  • wanted to keep US ships off seas safe from BR
    FR
  • Hoped that BR would stop violating the rights of
    neutral ships rather than stop trade
  • Economic sanction against the BR FR
  • Outlawed all trade with foreign countries
  • No US ships could leave country to trade
  • Doesnt really hurt BR or FR
  • BR substituted w/ supplies from S. America
  • Has disastrous effects for US
  • Goods rotting on the docks
  • Smuggling increases
  • Got so bad, New England states threatened to
    secede from the union
  • Will be repealed during Jeffersons last week in
    office Non-Intercourse Act substituted (reopened
    trade with all except BR FR)
  • Macons Bill No.2, 1810
  • Nathaniel Macon, congressman, introduced a bill
    that restored trade w/ BR FR
  • Would only do so though if they ceased their
    hostile treatment of neutral US ships

31
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32
  • Jeffersons miscalculations
  • Extent of European dependence on American trade
  • Unpopularity of act difficulty of enforcing it
    in America
  • One positive effect Manufacturing renewed in
    New England
  • Published in 1808 in protest of the Jeffersonian
    Embargo Act of 1807
  • Depicts a snapping turtle, jaws lock fiercely to
    an American trader
  • Trader is attempting to carry a barrel of goods
    onto a British ship
  • Trader curses the Ograbme or embargo spelled
    backwards

33
Jefferson wants to be remembered as
The Founder Of the University of Virginia
the Author of the Declaration of Independence
NOT as President
Monticello
34
JAMESMADISON4TH President
  • Two Terms, Republican, VA
  • Had served as Jeffersons Secretary of State
  • Jeffersons hand-picked successor for President
  • Shortest President 54 less than 100 pounds
  • Macons Bill No. 2, 1810
  • Commerce restored with all
  • BUT violation of neutral commerce would require
    reapplication of Non-Intercourse Act

35
TECUMSEH THE BATTLE OF TIPPECANOE
  • While Tecumseh is away, his forces defeated by
    William Henry Harrison at Battle of Tippecanoe
  • End of his Indian confederation by 1811
  • Westerners claimed that the confederation was
    actually a BR scheme cried for war against BR
  • Tecumseh joins BR dies fighting with them in
    War of 1812
  • Shawnee Indian excellent leader and warrior
  • Formed a Confederation of Indians in
    trans-Appalachian region
  • Brother, Tenskwatawa the Prophet a fanatic
    who is on moral crusade for Indians to give up
    white culture reclaim their own

36
STOP PART 1
37
War Hawks
  • A congressional election in 1810 had brought a
    group of new, young Republicans to Congress
  • Many from the frontier states of KY, TN, OH
  • Henry Clay (KY) Jay Calhoun (SC)
  • Quickly gained a significant influence in the
    House of Representatives
  • Eager for war with Britain
  • Gained the nickname War Hawks
  • Argued that war would allow the US to
  • Defend their honor
  • Gain Canada
  • Destroy Native American resistance on the frontier

38
The War of 1812Mr. Madisons War or The
Second War for Independence
  • US declares war against British
  • Impressments
  • BR interference with US trade neutrality rights
  • BR inciting of Indians (Westerners)
  • Land fever (FL, Canada)
  • Objections to War (Federalists/NE)
  • Economic reasons would be worse than Orders in
    Council
  • Realism foolish to take on strongest Navy in
    word
  • Real threat is Napoleon aiding him if we go to
    war with BR

IRONY The British govt by this time (June 1812)
had agreed to suspend its naval blockade. News of
its decision reached the White House after
Congress had declared war.
39
A Divided Nation
  • Neither Congress nor Americans were united in
    their opinions of the war
  • South, West, PA, VT provided the majority for
    war declaration
  • NY, NJ, New England states voted against the
    war
  • Election of 1812
  • Republican strength in the South/West overcame
    the Federalist opposition
  • Madison won reelection, defeating De Witt Clinton
    (NY)

40
Military Strategies, Defeats, Naval Victories
  • Hope for victory relied on 2 things
  • Napoleons continued success in Europe
  • A U.S. land campaign against Canada
  • Invasion of Canada
  • Initiated with a 3-part invasion
  • Detroit, Niagara, Lake Champlain
  • Easily repulsed by British
  • Burning of York (Toronto) only served to
    encourage retaliation by the British

41
Naval Victories
  • Naval Battles
  • U.S. navy had superior shipbuilding capabilities
  • US warship Constitution (nicknamed Old
    Ironsides) defeated sunk a British ship off of
    the coast of Nova Scotia
  • Ship was built in Boston in 1797 is still a US
    Navy ship and a living museum of naval history.
  • American Privateers captured numerous British
    merchant ships

42
COMMANDER OLIVER HAZARD PERRY LAKE ERIE
  • Most important naval victory in the War
  • Summer 1813
  • 28 year old captain
  • Battle lasted 3 long hours
  • Perrys ship shot to pieces
  • Had to row to sister ship, Niagara, during heavy
    battle
  • Took charge of Niagra and defeated British
  • We have met the enemy and they are ours!
  • Instant hero
  • Prepared the way for General William Henry
    Harrisons military victory at the Battle of
    Thames River (near Detroit)
  • British forced to retreat and to abandon their
    plan of invading NY New England

43
British Strategy
  • After Napoleon's defeat in 1814, concentrate
    entire forces on US
  • Attack from Chesapeake Bay
  • Washington, D.C.
  • Baltimore, MD
  • Attack at New Orleans

44
Military Engagements
  • Chesapeake Campaign
  • Spring 1814, the defeat of Napoleon in Europe
    enabled the British to increase their forces in
    N. America
  • That summer, British army marched through
    Washington set fire to the White House, Capitol
    building, other govt buildings
  • Fort McHenry
  • British tried to take the city of Baltimore
  • Fort McHenry held out after a nights bombardment
  • Event immortalized by Francis Scott Keys The
    Star-Spangled Banner
  • Southern Campaign
  • Troops commanded by General Andrew Jackson
  • March 1814, Battle of Horseshoe Bend (AL) ended
    the power of the Creek Indians
  • Eliminated the Native American ally to the
    British
  • Opened new lands to white settlers
  • Battle of New Orleans
  • January 8, 1815
  • Meaningless fought 2 weeks after a treaty
    ending the war had been signed

45
Battle of New Orleans Sheltered behind earthen
parapet cotton bales. Picked off 2000 BR
soldiers as they advance in open.
46
The Treaty of Ghent
  • BY 1814, the British were weary of war
  • Fought Napoleon for 10 years
  • Faced w/ the prospect of maintaining peace
    inEurope
  • Madison recognized that the US would beunable to
    win a decisive victory
  • American peace commissioners traveled toGhent,
    Belgium
  • On Christmas Eve, 1814 an agreement was reached
    which terms included
  • A halt to fighting
  • The return of all conquered territory to
    theprewar claimant
  • Recognition of the prewar boundary betweenCanada
    the US
  • Ratified by the Senate in 1815
  • Said nothing about the grievances that led to war
  • Impressments, blockades, other maritime
    differences
  • War ended in a stalemate with no gain for either
    side

47
HARTFORD CONVENTION
  • NE Federalists Dec. 1814 / Jan. 1815
  • To protest war plan convention of states to
    revise Constitution
  • Primary concern continuation of trade w/BR
  • Radicals seeking secession minority
  • Proposed Constitutional amendments
  • Repeal 3/5 compromise
  • Require 2/3 vote of Congress for war new states
  • Reduce Congress power to restrict trade
  • Limit Ps to 1 term
  • Totally discredited by Treaty why?

48
The Wars Legacy
  • Achieved none of its original aims
  • US gained the respect of other nations
  • US came to accept Canada as a neighbor
  • Widely denounced talks of secession
  • Federalist party came to an end as a natl force
  • Talk of nullification secession sets a
    precedent for later
  • Native Americans in the West were forced to
    surrender large areas of land to white settlement
  • More US factories were built Americans took a
    big step toward industrial self-sufficiency
  • War heroes (Jackson Harrison) would soon be in
    the forefront of a new generation of political
    leaders
  • Strong feelings of American nationalism grew as
    well as a belief that the future of the US lay in
    the West away from Europe

49
Defining the Boundaries
  • Westward Surge
  • By 1820, 25 of the population lived west of the
    Appalachians
  • Group settlement was common
  • Lure of new land pulled farmers west
  • Land Act of 1820
  • 1.25/acre, min. 80 acre purchase, 100 down
    payment
  • Most liberal land law, but still favored
    speculators

50
James Monroe, 5
  • Two terms, Republican, from VA
  • Of the first 5 presidents, 4 were from VA
  • Whose the exception?
  • John Adams - Massachusetts
  • Fought at Battle of Trenton with Washington
    (Monroe was 18)
  • Served as Jeffersons minister to Britain
    Madisons secretary of state
  • Unopposed in 2nd term but not elected
    unanimously.
  • One of 3 Presidents to die on a 4th of July
  • Cabinet
  • John Quincy Adams, son of former Pres.Adams Sec
    State
  • John C. Calhoun, War Hawk Sec War

51
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52
NATIONALISM!!
  • Republicans are only party
  • Era of Good Feelings
  • Focus on America lack of serious conflict

53
The Era of Good Feelings
  • The Monroe years were marked by a spirit of
    nationalism, optimism, goodwill
  • Chiefly a result of one party (Feds) fading into
    oblivion the Republicans becoming dominant in
    all sections of the US
  • Perception of unity harmony oversimplified
  • Debates over tariffs, the natl bank, internal
    improvements, public land sales, slavery tensions
  • Political unity also illusory factions forming
    in Republican party
  • The actual period of good feelings may have
    lasted only from the election of 1816 to the
    Panic of 1819

54
Economic Nationalism
  • Congress passes protective tariffs to protect
    American industry
  • Revenue tariffs are taxes on imported goods
    designed to raise for the govt
  • Protective tariffs are high taxes on imported
    goods designed to protect American industry (make
    it cheaper to buy American than foreign goods)

55
Clays AmericanSystem
  • Sectional compromisesfor the good of
  • the nation as a whole
  • Interdependence of the sections for ex.
  • East should support federal construction of
    internal improvements and, in return, would get
    Western support for protective tariff
  • 3 parts
  • Strong banking system provides good credit
  • Protective Tariff protect eastern manufacturing
  • Internal improvements (roads canals) to be paid
    for by funds from tariff

56
Diplomacy of John Quincy Adams
  • Monroes Secretary of State
  • Set himself the task of tidying up the borders
  • Rush-Bagot Treaty (1817) Convention of 1818
  • fixed borders w/ US Canada at the 49th parallel
  • Settled claims to Oregon
  • Transcontinental Treaty of 1819
  • Skillfully wrested concessions from the Spanish
    in regards to FL, OR, LA territory

57
ACQUISITIONOF FLORIDA
  • Was a base for British Indian operations
    against U.S. during War of1812(Spain was ally of
    British)
  • Indians attacked Americans then fled back into
    FL
  • Andrew Jackson sent to put downIndians - came
    after Seminoles hen seized Pensacola area for
    U.S.
  • Spain furious - but Monroe issued an ultimatum
  • either govern FL effectively OR
  • surrender FL to the U.S.
  • Adams-Onis Treaty, 1819 -- U.S. receives FL
  • Paid 5 million
  • Also, Spain drops all claims to LA OR
    Territories

58
THE MONROE DOCTRINE
  • Actually authored by John Quincy Adams (Sec. Of
    State)
  • U.S. declared it would not allow any European
    countries to further colonize anywhere in the
    Americas --Western Hemisphere is off limits to
    Europe
  • Interventions in the affairs of the independent
    New World nations would be considered by the US
    to be a treat to their own peace safety
  • loud bark from a very small dog

59
The Panic of 1819
  • A delayed reaction to the end of the War of 1812
  • Forced Americans to come to terms w/ their
    economic place in a peaceful world
  • British merchant ships returned American
    shipping boom ended
  • European farming recovered much less demand for
    American farmers
  • Western land boom inflation of prices
  • Many settlers bought on credit

60
SECTIONAL ISSUESCONFLICT OVER WESTERN LAND
  • West
  • 1819 depression mostly caused by over
    speculation in frontier lands in West - West hit
    the hardest
  • Poor classes created will soon be the common
    man Democrats of Andrew Jackson
  • Manufacturers in NE opposed the West desire to
    promote rapid settlement by selling land cheaply
  • Feared that immigrants would be drawn to the West
    and the North would lose its supply of cheap
    labor.
  • Southern planters concerned about W competition.

61
NORTHEAST PROTECTIVE TARIFFSHigh tax on imports
intended to protect domestic products from
foreign competition
  • THE SOUTH
  • Did not produce manufactured goods
  • OPPOSED it caused them to pay higher prices for
    imported goods left them at the mercy of the
    North
  • THE NORTH
  • FAVORED
  • Would allow their factories to compete
    successfully with foreign manufacturers

62
THE MISSOURI COMPROMISE
  • When MO applied for statehood, it could
    potentally shift the balance of slave/free states
    in the national govt
  • Missouri admitted as a SLAVE state
  • Maine admitted as a FREE state
  • In rest of the Louisiana Purchase area
  • slavery forbidden north of the 36 30 parallel
    (EXCEPT MO)
  • slavery allowed south of line
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