1 / 28

Launching the New Ship of State

Launching the New Ship of State. Chapter 10. A. Growing Pains. Troubles w/ new nation Financial and political Spanish, British, & Indian antagonism Population boom 1790- Phil.- 42,000. Few cities with more than 5,000 residents Avg white woman gave birth to 8 children

fionn
Télécharger la présentation

Launching the New Ship of State

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Launching the New Ship of State Chapter 10

  2. A. Growing Pains • Troubles w/ new nation • Financial and political • Spanish, British, & Indian antagonism • Population boom • 1790- Phil.- 42,000

  3. Few cities with more than 5,000 residents • Avg white woman gave birth to 8 children • White pop doubled every 22 years • 1790 – almost half of all white Americans under 16

  4. B. Washington for President • Only pres. elected unanimously (1789) • Came out of retirement • Inaugurated April 30, 1789 in NYC • Created cabinet (exec. dept. heads) • Sec. of State- T. Jefferson • Sec. of Treasury- A. Hamilton • Sec. of War- H. Knox

  5. C. The Bill of Rights • 1st Congress upheld Federalist pledge • Individual rights & limits on government’s power (9th & 10th) • Another compromise • Strong central government • Protected citizens’ rights • 1st Congress also passed Judiciary Act of 1789- • Organized Supreme Court, other federal courts, & created attorney general

  6. D. Hamilton Revives Public Credit • Financial genius- wanted policies to favor wealthy • Fund national debt “at par” (faith)- $54 mil. • “Assume” state debts (unity)- $21.5 mil. • Angered states w/ small debt • District of Columbia & VA (Compromise of 1790)

  7. Hamilton’s “Reports on the Public Credit” • $79 million debt from Federal and State gov’ts (from war) • France, Spain, Holland loaned money during war • US in 1794 had higher financial credit rating than all European nations

  8. E. Customs Duties & Excise Taxes • Hamilton approved of debt • The more the fed. govt. owed to creditors, the more people would want the govt. to succeed • Tariffs would make revenue & protect American manufacturing • Excise taxes- Whiskey

  9. F. Hamilton Battles Jefferson for a Bank • Hamilton wanted a bank to deposit, print money, & extend credit • Jefferson argued against (too much power)- strict interpretation • Hamilton used “necessary & proper clause”- loose interpretation • Bank chartered 1791- sectionalism

  10. Whiskey Rebellion - 1794 • whiskey excise tax • Rebellion a lot like Stamp Act riots • State militias sent men to crush rebellion • Proved power of fed. govt., but opposition said it was abuse

  11. H. The Emergence of Political Parties • Hamilton’s plans est. economy, but encroached upon states’ rights • Movement began against Hamilton’s followers- Jefferson at head • Federalists vs. Democratic-Republicans • First organized political parties in US

  12. I. The Impact of the French Revolution • Federalists- against, Dem.-Reps.- for • 1793- Reign of Terror • Started another British/French War

  13. J. Washington’s Proclamation of Neutrality • Franco-American Alliance of 1778 • Proclamation began “isolationism” • Country too weak, babies • Citizen Edmund Genet- Charleston

  14. K. Embroilments with Britain • British still manned forts in US, agitated Indians • Little Turtle’s Miami Confederacy • Battle of Fallen Timbers- 1794 • Treaty of Greenville • On the sea • British seized US merchants • Impressed American sailors • Dem.-Reps. wanted war, Feds- continued neutrality

  15. L. Jay’s Treaty & Washington’s Farewell Address • John Jay to London & Dem.-Rep. Reactions • Brit. promised to vacate forts • Repay seized property • No mention of future seizures • Forced US to pay off all old debts • Pinckney’s Treaty (1795)- free navigation of MS River & territory

  16. L. Continued • Washington decided to retire after 2 terms • Avoid permanent foreign alliances • Warned of dangers of partisanship

  17. M. John Adams Becomes President • Hamilton?- unpopular w/ too many • VP John Adams vs. T. Jefferson (1796) • How did Federalists (and Hamilton) cause this? • Divisive election- Adams barely won • 71-68

  18. N. Unofficial Fighting with France • French anger at Jay’s Treaty • XYZ Affair (1797)- Adams sent diplomats to France • French envoys (XYZ) • Loan & $250,000 bribe just to talk • “millions for defense, but not 1 cent for tribute”

  19. N. Continued • Navy Department, Marine Corps, new army of 10,000 • Unofficial fighting 1798-1800

  20. O. Adams Puts Patriotism Above Party • Adams- fight or not? • New envoys to France • Convention of 1800- ended Franco-American alliance • Favored trading status • Nation not ready for war

  21. P. The Federalist Witch Hunt • The 1798 Alien & Sedition Act- aimed at Dem.-Reps. & newly arrived immigrants

  22. Alien- • Raised residency requirement from 5 to 14 yrs. • Pres. could jail or deport any “undesirable alien” any time he wished during peace

  23. Sedition- (1st Amend.) • Not allowed to speak out openly against govt. policies or officials

  24. Q. The VA & KY Resolutions • Opposition to A & S Acts • Jefferson (VA), Madison (KY) • Used compact theory • States were final judges of national policy • Promoted idea of nullification

  25. R. Feds. vs. Dem.-Reps. • Feds.- rule by wealthy, protect wealthy, pro-business & trade • Dem.-Reps.- rule by masses, weak govt., • Jefferson promoted slavery to try and ensure land for all white people

More Related