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The Early United States

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Title: The Early United States


1
The Early United States
  • Unit 3

2
SSUSH 6 The student will analyze the nature of
territorial and population growth and the impact
of this growth in the early decades of the new
nation.
  • Explain the Northwest Ordinances importance in
    the westward migration of Americans, and on
    slavery, public education, and the addition of
    new states.
  • Describe Jeffersons diplomacy in obtaining the
    Louisiana Purchase from France and the
    territorys exploration by Lewis and Clark.

3
SSUSH 6 The student will analyze the nature of
territorial and population growth and the impact
of this growth in the early decades of the new
nation.
  • Explain the major reasons for the war of 1812 and
    the wars significance on the development of a
    national identity.
  • Describe the construction of the Erie Canal, the
    rise of New York City, and the development of the
    nations infrastructure.
  • Describe the reasons for and importance of the
    Monroe Doctrine.

4
The Northwest Ordinance
  • After the French and Indian War, Britain took
    possession of the Northwest Territory (area north
    of the Ohio River and east of the Mississippi
  • Following the American revolution, the
    Continental Congress passed the Northwest
    Ordinance in 1787.
  • It divided the area into smaller territories and
    provided guidelines for new states

5
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6
The Northwest Ordinance
  • The law resulted in the formation of five states
    Ohio, Indiana, Michigan, and Wisconsin.
  • The Ordinance made slavery illegal in the new
    territories (unless settlers already had slaves)
  • Many free blacks moved north of the Ohio River
    but were meet with discrimination

7
Northwest Ordinance
  • When a territory reached 60,000 people, it could
    apply for statehood.
  • East coast states had to relinquish their claim
    to this territory.
  • Although not enforce, Indians were not to be
    removed from their lands American troops
    defeated them later to allow more settlers.

8
Expansion and Education
  • Acquisition of the Northwest territory impacted
    education.
  • Leaders wanted to make sure that the country
    maintained a sense of unity and national values
    (patriotism)
  • They used public education as a tool to encourage
    these principles.
  • Many new state constitutions required public
    education.

9
Noah Webster
  • Key leader in the educational movement.
  • Compiled the first US dictionary that included
    words and spellings distinct to the US rather
    than British versions.
  • Played a major role in forging a national
    language and helped to unify the educational
    standards of the day.

10
The Louisiana Territory
  • Thomas Jefferson wanted to secure the United
    States trading on the Mississippi River.
  • He sent representatives to France to negotiate to
    purchase the city of New Orleans.
  • Napoleon was not interested because he wanted to
    revive the French colonial empire.

11
The Louisiana Territory
  • Slaves in the French colony of Haiti revolted and
    the British resumed its war with France
    Napoleon needed cash.
  • He offered to sell the entire Louisiana Region
    for 15 million dollars (3 cents per acre)
  • Jefferson believed that the people should have
    access to land and the potential new resources
    he accepted the offer.

12
The Louisiana Purchase 1803
13
The Louisiana Purchase
  • The largest land purchase, roughly doubling the
    size of the United States 828,000 square miles
  • It marked a turning point for the new nation
    economically as it began to pursue prosperity
    within its own borders rather that from foreign
    trade.

14
Lewis and Clark Expedition
  • Even before the Louisiana Purchase was complete,
    Jefferson had appointed his personal secretary,
    Meriwether Lewis, to find a water route to the
    Pacific Ocean.
  • Congress appropriated 2,500
  • Lewis choose William Clark to help him lead the
    expedition.
  • They left in May 1804 from St. Louis

15
Lewis and Clark Expedition
16
Lewis and Clark Expedition
  • They reached the Pacific Northwest coast by
    November 1805.
  • They returned to St. Louis in September of 1806
    with valuable information about the territory.
  • This led to rapid migration to the Pacific
    Northwest along the Oregon Trial from Missouri.

17
Lewis and Clark Expedition
  • Lewis and Clark came to employ a French-speaking,
    part-Indian fur trapper named Toussaint
    Charbonneau, whose young Shoshone Indian wife,
    Sacagawea, (pronounced Sa-ka-ga-wea)

18
National Identity
19
The War of 1812
  • U.S. settlers felt threatened by the British
    presence in Canada and the apparent alliance
    between them and the Indians.
  • The British navys policy of impressing U.S.
    seaman (taking them captive and forcing them to
    serve on British ships)
  • The United States declared war of Great Britain
    in June of 1812.

20
War of 1812
  • American hoped to gain territory in Canada and in
    Spanish Florida (GB ally)
  • British attacked and burned Washington D.C.
  • America recovered at the Battle of Fort McHenry
    (near Baltimore)
  • Frances Scott Key wrote the Star Spangled Banner
    while being held captive by the British.

21
Treaty of Ghent
  • Restored original borders
  • Returned relationship to the status quo ante
    bellum.
  • Signed December 24, 1814

22
Battle of New Orleans
  • took place on January 8, 1815, and was the final
    major battle of the War of 1812.
  • American forces under General Andrew Jackson
    defeated an invading British army intent on
    seizing New Orleans and America's western lands.
  • The Treaty of Ghent had been signed on December
    24, 1814, but news of the peace would not reach
    New Orleans until February.

23
War of 1812
  • War was a draw nobody won or lost
  • It showed that the United States could defend
    itself and assert its interests in North American
    against a foreign power.
  • Due to it opposition to the war, the Federalist
    party lost its credibility and faded from
    importance in national politics.

24
A National Identity
  • The War of 1812 helped to produce a stronger
    sense of national identity among U.S. citizens.
  • People felt a great deal of pride in standing up
    to the British, again!
  • American trade declined during the war, but
    manufacturing and agriculture improved and grew
    prosperous.

25
A National Identity
  • Northern manufacturers sold more products to
    other regions of the country.
  • Southern plantation economy exploded as the
    nations only supplier of cotton.
  • By the time the war ended, U.S. citizens had a
    new sense of national pride and manufacturers and
    planters had established themselves as players in
    domestic and international trade.

26
New York City
  • New York City benefitted from the changes during
    the War of 1812
  • By 1814, Textile mills were common in the city
    this helped to make NYC a key economic center of
    the country.
  • New York Citys port made it a major center for
    shipping and trade, as well as, the arrival point
    for immigrants

27
The Erie Canal
  • New York also prospered from the completion of
    the Erie Canal in 1825
  • The canal provided a new shipping route from Lake
    Erie to the Hudson River
  • 363 miles long 40 feet wide 4 feet deep
  • Began in 1817 completed in 1825
  • Allowed people to travel cheaper
  • Made NYC the dominant commercial center by
    expanding its markets.

28
The Erie Canal
29
Robert Fulton
  • Developed the first successful commercial steam
    ship.
  • Greatly increased the efficiency of travel one
    could now travel upstream

30
The American System
  • Senator Henry Clay of Kentucky proposed a plan to
    improve the nations economy and infrastructure.
  • An infrastructure is what provides the framework
    and connections holding something together.
  • This included things like roads, rail lines,
    canals, etc.

31
Clays American System
  • Called for protective tariffs (a tax on imports)
    to help U.S. manufacturers.
  • Internal improvements such as canals and
    roadways funded by the tariff revenue
  • A Second National Bank in order to make
    interstate commerce easier and stabilize the
    nations currency.
  • Clay hoped that his plan would strengthen the US
    and unite the different regions of US

32
Era of Good Feelings
  • With the end of the War of 1812 and the demise of
    the Federalist party, the U.S. entered a period
    known as the Era of Good Feelings.
  • This was a time of national pride and political
    unity.
  • This was during the president of James Monroe

33
Monroe Doctrine
  • Issued in 1823
  • The United States would not tolerate European
    intervention in the affairs of any independent
    nation in the Americas, nor were the American
    continents open to European colonization any
    longer.
  • The United States would view any attempt to
    colonize as aggression
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