1 / 28

Creating the “Virtuous Republic”

Creating the “Virtuous Republic”. The Presidencies of George Washington, John Adams, and Thomas Jefferson 1789-1803. Creating the “ V irtuous Republic”. Govt. gets its authority from the citizens. A selfless, educated citizenry. Elections should be frequent.

marla
Télécharger la présentation

Creating the “Virtuous Republic”

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. Creating the “Virtuous Republic” The Presidencies of George Washington, John Adams, and Thomas Jefferson 1789-1803

  2. Creating the “Virtuous Republic” • Govt. gets its authority from the citizens. • A selfless, educated citizenry. • Elections should be frequent. • Govt. should guarantee individual rights & freedoms. • Govt.’s power should be limited [checks & balances]. • The need for a written Constitution. • “E Pluribus Unum.” [“Out of many, one”] • An important role for women  raise good, virtuous citizens.[“Republican Womanhood”]. Classical view of a model republic EnlightenmentThinking The“VirtuousRepublic” “City on a hill”[John Winthrop] Ideal citizen[Cincinnatus]

  3. Washington is elected • Asked to serve as president in 1789 • Reluctant leader

  4. Judiciary Act of 1789 • Why? • Needed to define court system established by Constitution. • Supreme Court • Chief Justice • 5 associates • 3 Federal Circuit Courts • 13 federal district courts • Section 25 • Allowed State court decisions to appeal to federal courts

  5. Cabinet Cabinet Members • 3 initial Departments • State: Foreign Affairs • Thomas Jefferson • War: Military Affairs • Henry Knox • Treasury: Financial Affairs • Alexander Hamilton

  6. Hamilton vs. Jefferson

  7. Bank of the United States • Controversial! • Tied wealthy investors to government • Opponents stated the Constitution had no provision to allow government to create Bank • “Loose” vs. “Strict” • “Elastic Clause” (pg 158) • Article 1, Section 8, Clause 18

  8. Hamilton’s Economic Plan • Resolve Debt • 2/3 Federal: • Foreign & Private Citizens War Bonds • 1/3 State • Pay Off Foreign Debt • Assume State’s Debts • Needed State support for government • Issue New Bonds to pay Citizens Back

  9. Debt Bill • Southern states upset most had paid back debt  did not want to pay taxes to pay off Northern debt • Compromise to allow Hamilton’s economic plan to pass • Capital moved to Washington, DC to get southern states to agree to Debt bill

  10. Foreign Relations • 1. The French Revolution • Views: • Democrat Republicans • Federalists • President Washington • Jefferson resigns his post in 1793

  11. 2. Spain • Pickney’s Treaty • 3. England • The Jay Treaty

  12. Whiskey Rebellion • 2 causes • Protective Tariff instituted on imported goods from Europe • Excise Tax on domestic manufactured whiskey • Effect • Western frontiersmen rebel • Were met by 15,000 militia men led by Washington & Hamilton • Demonstrated Federal Government’s power

  13. Issues with Native Americans • Battle of Fallen Timbers, 1792 • Treaty of Grenville

  14. John Adams 1796-1800

  15. Election of 1796 • Washington does not run for a 3rd term • The issue of the 1796 election

  16. Early Troubles for a New Nation

  17. “XYZ” Affair - 1798 • Jay Treaty leads to increased tensions with France • Adams sends 3 diplomats to French foreign minister • Instead, diplomats see 3 low-level officials Adams refers to as “Agent X, Y, Z” in report to Congress • Diplomats demand $250,000 to see Foreign Minister • Scandal becomes known as XYZ Affair • Effect: • Great Anti-French sentiments • Creation of Navy department • George Washington comes out of retirement to head 50,000 troops • Alien & Sedition Acts -1798

  18. Alien & Sedition Acts vs. Virginia & Kentucky Resolution • Alien & Sedition Acts • Raised residence acts for American citizenship to 14 years • President could deport any undesirable • Set fines/jail terms for anyone expressing “false, scandalous, or malicious statements” against government • Virginia & Kentucky Resolution were reaction • Allowed state governments to nullify – consider void – any act of Congress they felt unconstitutional

  19. Thomas Jefferson 1800-1810

  20. Election of 1800 • Adams & Pinckney (Federalists) • Jefferson & Burr (Dem.-Republicans) • Dem.-Republicans win • However, Jefferson & Burr tie with electoral votes • Expose Flaw in system

  21. Election of 1800 Tally Jefferson Adams Pinckney Jay Burr

  22. Effects of Election of 1800 • 2 distinct political parties • 12th Amendment • Electors cast separate ballots for president & vice-president • Defined American political system still used today

  23. Jeffersonian Presidency • Simplifying the presidency • Reduced the government • Cut costs • Reduced army & navy • Eliminated internal taxes • Reduced role of National bank • Favored Free Trade • Replaced Federalist judges with Dem-Repub ones • Foreign Policy

  24. Marbury vs. Madison - 1803 • Result of Judiciary Act of 1801 • Adams packed court w/ Midnight Judges • Why? • Supreme Court ruled “Midnight Judges” were unconstitutional • Why? • Set precedent of judicial review • What is this?

  25. Louisiana Purchase • Causes: • Spain gives land to France • France decides not to pursue American empire • Napoleon sells land for 15 million • Effects: • Doubles America’s size • Lewis & Clark appointed to lead expedition of new territory

  26. Louisiana Purchase Louisiana Purchase doubled US size Lewis & Clark exploration

  27. Publicity Stunt Gone Wrong • Burr challenges Hamilton to a duel • Long standing hatred of each other • July 11, 1804, Burr and Hamilton toss dice to see who goes first • Hamilton shoots, but shoots in the air • Burr shoots Hamilton right in the chest • Hamilton’s death further weakens the Federalist Party presence in Congress

More Related