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The American continents

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Title: The American continents


1
The War of 1812 the Upsurge of
Nationalism1812-1824
  • The American continents are henceforth not to be
    considered as subjects for future colonization by
    any European powers. President James Monroe,
    1823

2
AP Focus
  • War vs. Britain for 2nd time in 30 years put
    serious strains on American economy, political
    system, and military. Treaty of Ghent didnt
    really resolve anything other than agreeing to
    end the war.
  • New England Federalists are strong opponents of
    the war, and actually consider seceding from the
    Union.
  • After the war, a feeling of increased patriotism
    and nationalism sweeps nation. Era of Good
    Feelings.

3
AP Focus
  • Henry Clay advocates the American System
  • As US continues to expand westward, the question
    of what to do about slavery takes on an
    increasingly larger role. Sectionalism arises.
  • 1823 Monroe Doctrine warning to Europe that US
    will not tolerate further European interference
    in western hemisphere

4
The War of 1812
  • Heightened sense of nationalism ushered in the
    first meeting of Congress in 1811.
  • New, young Democratic-Republican senators from
    the South and West urged war with Britain to
    secure a place in the global political structure
    for U.S.

5
  • War hawks such as Henry Clay from KY and John
    C. Calhoun from SC insisted that this war would
    finally clear Britains influence from North
    America
  • Aside from dealing with the British at sea,
    Americans hoping to eliminate threat of
    English-armed Native Americans

6
APUSH rule 34 When in doubt, pick Henry Clay
He will haunt you until mid-December!
7
Mr. Madisons War
  • Clashes with Indians in present-day Indiana
    caused many on the frontier to feel justified in
    the call for war.
  • The British refuse to lift trade restrictions
  • immense political pressure pushed President
    Madison to ask Congress for declaration of war in
    June 1812.
  • Mr. Madisons War
  • New Englanders Federalists had greatest
    opposition
  • War hawks successful in amassing large enough
    coalition to officially declare war (Southern and
    Northern Democratic Republicans, Westerners on
    frontier)

8
Tecumseh and the Prophet
9
Tecumseh the Prophet
  • Shawnee Indian who grew up in the violent Ohio
    Country
  • With his brother the Prophet (he once predicted
    an eclipse) he led a confederacy of Indians in
    the Ohio/Great Lakes region
  • Supplied by the British, attacked Americans
  • 1811 The Prophet defeated by William Henry
    Harrisons army at the battle of Tippecanoe
    (Tecumseh was away, recruiting in the South)
  • Tippecanoe and Tyler too

10
On to Canada over Land and Lakes
  • Canada was an important battleground, British
    forces weak there
  • Why attack Canada? End British influence over
    Native Americans in Great Lakes region
  • US should have focused all efforts on Montreal,
    but instead split up forces into three Detroit,
    Niagara, Lake Champlain

11
Bad military strategy in Canada (again)
  • Rather than strike with full force directly at
    Montreal, the source of British power in Canada,
    American forces pursued a poorly conceived
    divided invasion strategy.

Have we learned nothing from the French and
Indian War? Always attack the capital!!
12
U.S. Looks for success on the Lakes
  • American Navy led by Oliver Hazard Perry
  • One of the best middle names ever
  • Captured British fleet on Lake Erie
  • We have met the enemy and they are ours
  • Dont give up the ship!

13
Perrys victories / Battle of the Thames
  • With the British fleet captured, Perry led an
    invasion of Canada from Detroit
  • Met a British-Indian alliance and defeated them
    at the Battle of the Thames, 1813
  • British ran away early from this battle, Tecumseh
    and his warriors left in the dust, and were
    routed
  • Tecumseh died in this battle and so did his
    confederacy

14
September 1814 Battle of Plattsburgh
  • Next British attack was to come from Montreal
    South, in hopes of invading New York
  • If British succeeded, this could have split the
    Union, as most people from NY to MA did not want
    any part of the war
  • Luckily for the US, the British fleet was
    commanded by the amazingly inept Admiral Prevost.
  • A smaller US naval fleet was able to outmaneuver
    the British at Plattsburgh, destroy their fleet,
    and send them back to Canada.

15
Washington Burned
  • While Americans were able to repel British attack
    on New York, could not save Washington D.C. from
    being burned to ground in August, 1814
  • Capitol Building and White House burned down

16
Star Spangled Banner
  • British amassed at Fort McHenry near Baltimore
  • U.S. soldiers held the fort through night of
    bombing, inspiring prisoner of nearby British
    ship to write poem about it.
  • Francis Scott Key put words to an old drinking
    song to express his love for his country and
    called it The Star Spangled Banner
  • http//youtu.be/gQAnaZzNXDM

17
January 1815 New Orleans Defended
  • General Andrew Jackson led southern troops. Able
    to cut through British from Alabama to New
    Orleans and thwart English attempt to control
    Mississippi River at Battle of New Orleans
  • This battle, while an impressive victory for
    U.S., was completely unnecessary since it was
    fought 2 weeks after signing of peace treaty that
    ended war.
  • Jackson emerged as American war hero
  • Casualties 2,000 to 70
  • Helped him become President later

18
Treaty of Ghent
  • Ended War of 1812
  • Anglo-American peace urged by Russian czar, who
    wanted the British to focus on Napoleon in Europe
  • Signed by US and British in Belgium on Christmas
    Eve, 1814
  • end of the fighting
  • The return of any conquered territories to their
    rightful owners
  • Settlement of boundary between Canada and U.S.
    that had been set before the war
  • Essentially, war ended in a draw
  • Neither side gained any concessions, restitutions
    or apologies

19
Reactions Treaty of Ghent
  • Most Americans pleased because they had fully
    expected to lose territory
  • Despite their complaints, the war did allow for
    manufacturing, especially in New England, to
    flourish.
  • Country became a bit more independent from
    European markets
  • Turned out to be the beginning of Americas
    industrial revolution.

20
Federalist Grievances
  • Serious ideological split divided nation during
    War of 1812 between Federalists (New England,
    high population density) and Democratic-Republican
    s (everybody else)
  • NE vehemently opposed to war effort and direction
    Democratic Republicans were taking the nation
  • Small minority at Hartford Convention (Conn.,
    1814) proposed seceding from Union
  • one of those conventions that didnt amount to
    much but is always asked about on the AP test.

21
1814 Hartford Convention
  • Demands of Hartford Convention
  • Abolish the 3/5 compromise (to reduce southern
    representation)
  • Limit president to a single term
  • Prohibit election of successive presidents from
    same state (3 of 4 presidents had been from
    Virginia Dynasty)
  • Hartford envoys arrived to DC with their demands
    just as news of New Orleans victory reached town
    then news of Treaty of Ghent
  • Bad timing! Complaints seemed petty
  • Biggest effect was the death-knell of the
    Federalist party, which would be wiped out by
    election of 1816

22
Recap of New Englands role in USA
  • Colonies founded on (religious) freedom from
    Britain
  • Birthplace of military activities in American
    Revolution Boston Massacre, Tea Party,
    Lexington Concord
  • Home of John Adams, Sam Adams
  • Elite, Federalist, wealthy merchants
  • Pro Constitution trade with Britain, anti
    French Rev.
  • anti Jefferson, anti Madison, anti embargo
  • Some merchants actually helped British during War
    of 1812
  • Now, talk of secession. Federalism not too
    popular right now.

23
Second War for Independence
  • Even though the US gained nothing in terms of
    land, or any promises from the British to stop
    impressment, etc., it was a coming of age
    moment for US in terms of international diplomacy
  • US announced it can stand toe to toe with the
    mightiest empire in the world, and has to be
    taken seriously
  • Economically, forced US to become self-reliant,
    increased manufacturing

24
Nascent Nationalism
  • Nationalistic spirit was the biggest product of
    War of 1812
  • New contributions in art, literature
  • (Washington Irving
  • James Fenimore Cooper)
  • 1816 Congress revives national Bank of United
    States
  • Shut down during War of 1812, but again needed as
    debt mounted during war

25
Nascent Nationalism
  • Tariff of 1816 passed by Congress to combat
    influx of cheap British goods
  • British were having a clearance sale to get rid
    of goods that they werent able to ship to
    America for the past few years at much cheaper
    prices than Americans could offer
  • Tariff of 1816 added a 25 tax to certain British
    imports, encouraged Americans to buy
    made-in-America products
  • Start of a protectionist trend. From now until
    Depression, tariff going to be a big deal

26
Henry Clay The American System
  • Grand scheme to make a profitable home market
  • Three part system
  • 1. Strong banking system to provide abundant
    credit
  • 2. Protective Tariff to help eastern
    manufacturing
  • 3. Revenues from tariff would fund roads and
    canals in West.
  • To improve transport of raw materials and
    manufactured goods throughout country.
  • Remember, roads at this time were horrible
    especially in the West, which gave this idea the
    most support.

27
Madison vetoes American System
  • 1817 Congress votes for 1.5 million in road
    improvements, but vetoed by President Madison
    he many Democratic-Republicans thought it was
    unconstitutional
  • Many New Englanders also opposed this. (they had
    all the roads they needed)
  • States forced to fund their own improvements,
    e.g. 1825 Erie Canal

28
Henry Clay
  • This painting hangs in the corridors of the House
    of Representatives, where Clay worked as a
    glamorous, eloquent, and ambitious congressman
    for many years. Best known for promoting his
    nationalistic American System of protective
    tariffs for eastern manufactures and federally
    financed canals and highways to benefit the West,
    Clay is surrounded here by symbols of flourishing
    agriculture and burgeoning industries in the new
    nation.

29
The Era of Good Feelings
  • With renewed sense of independence and national
    pride, Americans elected James Monroe as
    president in 1816.
  • Monroe, a Democratic-Republican, destroyed the
    Federalist candidate with 183 to 34 electoral
    votes
  • Dying gasp of Federalist party ushered in an
    era of one-party rule
  • His presidency called the Era of Good Feeling
    by a New England newspaper

30
The Era of Good Feelings?
  • Somewhat of a misnomer
  • National pride but also tensions
  • Tariffs
  • Slavery
  • Sectionalism
  • On the other hand, Monroe won reelection with
    every electoral vote but one (G. Washington)

31
Panic of 1819 Economic problems
  • Usually countries experience inflation during
    wartime and then period of recession after war
  • Hit hard by drop in demand for agricultural goods
    abroad and widening trade deficit with Britain
  • Bank of US forced to demand payment from state
    banks in hard coin.
  • Frontier banks had very limited amounts of coin
    due to high number of agricultural customers who
    had amassed large amounts of debt in loans.
  • These western or wildcat banks could not pay back
    the BUS in hard coin, and the amt. of currency in
    circulation became very low

32
Panic of 1819
  • Panic of 1819 threatened Era of Good Feeling that
    Monroe had enjoyed his first presidential term
  • deflation, depression, bankruptcies, bank
    failures, unemployment, soup kitchens,
    overcrowded debtors prisons
  • Main cause was overspeculation in frontier lands
  • Bank of US foreclosed mortgages on many western
    farms
  • Poor western families hit hardest would later
    become supporters of Jacksonian democracy
  • Jackson would shut down the bank in 1833

33
Growing Pains of the West
  • As country moves west, territories apply for
    statehood
  • Conflict US had had a balance in Senate between
    slave states and free states. Any new state would
    upset the balance with 2 new Senators
  • Why all of the new people?
  • Soil butchering of tobacco drove farms
    westward.
  • New land open with victories over Indians
  • Land Act of 1820 cheap land for settlers

34
Slavery and the Sectional Balance
  • Sectionalism tensions between sections of
    country
  • Slave south, free North, new West all have
    their own interests
  • 1819 Missouri applies for admission to statehood
  • House of Reps passes Tallmadge Amendment saying
    that if Missouri becomes a state, slavery cannot
    continue there
  • Population of North is becoming larger and larger
  • Tallmadge Amendment defeated in Senate
  • While North had advantage in House of
    Representatives, NS (free slave) were equal in
    Senate, 22 Senators for each type

35
1820 Missouri Compromise
  • If Missouri were made a free state, would that
    mean all new states would be free?
  • Would Congress try to outlaw slavery in the old
    South?
  • The South had to keep the Senate balanced to keep
    slavery
  • New states in southern half of the frontier
    justified slavery by expressing economic need for
    large, stable workforce
  • Those settling North had no economic need for the
    enslaved
  • Henry Clay played leading role in the Missouri
    Compromise

36
1820 Missouri Compromise
  • Admit Missouri as a slave state
  • Cut off Maine from Massachusetts (New Hampshire
    was already in the way) and make it its own state
  • 2 new states, one free, one slave
  • BUT future states (north of 36 30) in
    Louisiana Territory would all be free states

37
(No Transcript)
38
Effects of Missouri Compromise
  • North and South would play nice for another 34
    years
  • Eventually, outrage over the peculiar
    institution would reach a boiling point and
    lead to Civil War
  • Missouri Compromise put a bandaid on the problem
  • Allowed US to become stronger before it fought
    itself in Civil War and likely allowed it to
    survive a civil war

39
Thomas Jefferson on this issue
  • The Missouri question is the most portentous one
    which ever yet threatened our Union. In the
    gloomiest moment of the revolutionary war I never
    had any apprehensions equal to what I feel from
    this source this momentous question, like a fire
    bell in the night, awakened and filled me with
    terror. With slavery we have the wolf by the
    ears, and we can neither hold him, nor safely let
    him go. Thomas Jefferson, 1820

40
John Marshall and Judicial Nationalism
41
John Marshall and Judicial Nationalism
  • Chief Justice of Supreme Court during career he
    significantly increased the power of the federal
    government (he was a Federalist)
  • 1819 McCulloch v. Maryland denied Maryland the
    right to tax the Bank of the United States
  • Loose construction Constitution derives from
    the people and thus permits the govt to act for
    their benefit
  • All means that are appropriate and not prohibited
    by, but consist with, the letter and spirit of
    the Constitution are constitutional paraphrase

42
John Marshall and Judicial Nationalism
  • 1821 Cohens v. Virginia Supreme Court asserts
    its right to review the decisions of state courts
    in all questions that involve federal government
  • 1824 Gibbons v. Ogden denied New York the
    right to give a monopoly to a steamboat company
    that did business in NY NJ. Interstate commerce
    is for federal government only.
  • Somewhere, in the distance, applause is heard
    coming from the grave of Alexander Hamilton

43
Sharing Oregon
  • Treaty of 1818 US and Britain agree on Northern
    border (Canada), as well as a 10-year joint
    occupation of Oregon
  • In other words, we both claim the land, but as
    none of us actually live there, lets agree not
    to fight about it for at least 10 years

44
Acquisition of Florida
  • Revolutions in South America Argentina 1816,
    Venezuela 1817, Chile 1818.
  • Americans naturally supportive of independence
    against monarchies
  • Spain has its hands full, and is vulnerable

45
Acquisition of Florida
  • 1818 On pretext of fighting the Seminole Indians
    and hunting runaway slaves, Andrew Jackson leads
    army through Florida and just happens to also
    capture two Spanish forts
  • Seminoles split off from Creek Indians, who had
    been allied with Britain in War of 1812, and had
    fought Jackson in South.

46
Acquisition of Florida (continued)
  • Jacksons actions in Florida seriously
    overstepped his bounds
  • Cabinet member John Quincy Adams (son of John)
    decided to take these actions and use it to the
    US advantage
  • As Spain was so tied up with revolutions in South
    America, why not demand Florida from them? They
    certainly cant defend it
  • 1819 Florida Purchase / Adams-Onís Treaty US
    gains all of Florida, Spain cedes claims to
    Oregon. U.S. abandons claims to Texas, which
    becomes part of Mexican province (2 years before
    Mexicans win independence from Spain)

47
Meanwhile, around the Globe
  • European monarchies restore control in Europe.
    Rebellions put down in Italy and Spain
  • Russians claim Alaska and expand into California
  • Rumors of Euro monarchs sending forces to put
    down Latin American rebellions and restoring
    control to King of Spain
  • Britain controlled seas, benefitted from Latin
    American trade, supported revolutions
  • British proposal to US to join forces to prevent
    Europe from invading new Latin American republics

48
Dont do it!!!!
49
Background of Monroe Doctrine
  • John Quincy Adams saw through British proposal
  • British only worried US would take Cuba and be a
    threat to British West Indies this alliance
    would prevent that
  • If America did nothing, Britains powerful Navy
    would still prevent continental Europeans from
    invading Latin America
  • So why agree to anything that would tie the hands
    of US?

50
Monroe Doctrine
  • Delivered by president in 1823. Became basis of
    U.S. foreign policy
  • Never an actual law
  • Called for European noncolonization (directed at
    Russia) and nonintervention in Latin American
  • Era of colonization is over, if you disagree,
    just try us
  • While U.S. did not have military means to enforce
    the doctrine in its early years, they knew that
    no European Navy could beat British

51
Monroes Doctrine Appraised
  • Latin American reaction Most did not even know
    it happened. Those who did knew British were real
    enforcers of the seas
  • Most famous of all post-1812 nationalism
  • Supported patriotism and isolationism
  • Increased Americas reputation on global stage

52
Crash Course
  • http//www.youtube.com/watch?vqMXqg2PKJZU
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