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REPUBLICAN ASCENDANCY: THE JEFFERSONIAN VISION

Explore the era of Republican identities in the young United States. Learn about the rapid population growth, westward migration, Native American resistance, commercial life in cities, and Jefferson's political principles. Discover how the Revolution of 1800 shaped American history.

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REPUBLICAN ASCENDANCY: THE JEFFERSONIAN VISION

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  1. REPUBLICAN ASCENDANCY: THE JEFFERSONIAN VISION

  2. Republican Identities in a New Republic • An age of rapid population growth • 7.2 million in 1810; two million more than 1800 • 20% black slaves • children under 16 the largest single group • Strong regional identities • Early secession movements threaten national unity

  3. North America in 1800

  4. Westward the Course of Empire • Intense migration to West after 1790 • New States • Kentucky--1792 • Tennessee--1796 • Ohio--1803 • Western regional culture rootless, optimistic

  5. Native American Resistance • Western settlers compete for Indian land • Indians resist • Tecumseh leads Shawnees, defeated • Creeks defeated • Settlers reject Indian-White coexistence

  6. Commercial Life in the Cities • Economy based on agriculture and trade • American shipping prospers 1793-1805 • Cities associated with international trade, otherwise marginal role in national life • Industrialization and mechanization just beginning to frighten skilled craftsmen

  7. Revolution of 1800 • Election of 1800 arguably the most significant in US History. Why?

  8. Jefferson’s Political Principles • Themes of inaugural • Jefferson’s political principles • Rejected the idea of a political elite. • Backbone of democracy was the free, independent farmer. • Small government—governs best when it governs least. • Strict construction of the Constitution.

  9. Jeffersonian Restraint • Jefferson’s first priority = undue abuses by the Federalists. • Pardoned those convicted under the Alien and Sedition Act • Repeal Naturalization Act. • Repealed the excise tax—cost US 1 Mill. per year in lost revenue. • Cuts military spending to the bone (2,500 men) • Reduce the national debt (Sec. Gallatin) • What does he do to the core of Hamilton’s financial program?

  10. New Tone to Govt • Deliberately informal • Fired Federalists who were incompetent or too partisan & replaced w/ Republicans • Continued Cabinet system but didn’t invite divergent opinions

  11. Judiciary Act of 1789 • Created Supreme Court • 5 Associate Justices, 1 Chief • 13 judicial districts • Circuit and district courts • “writ of mandamus” • issued by a superior court to compel a lower court or a government officer to perform mandatory or purely ministerial duties correctly John Jay first Chief Justice of the Supreme Court

  12. Judiciary Act of 1801 • Last ditch effort to hold power • “midnight judges”. • Chief Justice John Marshall • ShapedAmerican legal tradition and meaning of the Constitution more profoundly than any other single figure.

  13. Attack on the Judges: Judiciary Act • Judiciary Act of 1801 creates new circuit courts filled with loyal Federalists • 1802--Jeffersonians repeal Judiciary Act of 1801 to abolish courts • Federalists charge violation of judges’ Constitutional right of tenure

  14. Marbury v Madison • The single most important SC case in history • Basic Facts • “Writ of Mandamus” • Ruling • Judicial Review • Consequences

  15. Jefferson and Louisiana • LA back in the hands of the French • Spain rescinds the right of deposit • Bonaparte dreams of empire • Santo Domingo in revolt; Bonaparte sends 20,000 men • TJ offers $10 mil for New Orleans and West FL • If we don’t get New Orleans, then TJ needs alliance w/ Britain • French defeated

  16. Jefferson and Louisiana • Napoleon to resume war w/ Britain. • Needs cash • Would deny LA territory to British • Reduces chances of US/British alliance • Sold to US for $15,000,000

  17. The Louisiana Purchase Constitution doesn’t grant power to President to add new territory • He suggests an amendment • BUT delay may make Napoleon change mind • Federalists all of a sudden become strict constructionists • Real issue was the growth of Western states which could be expected to be Republican • What is the precedent set here?

  18. The Lewis and Clark Expedition • Lewis and Clark Expedition commissioned prior to purchase of Louisiana • Expedition left St. Louis May 1804 and reached the Pacific Ocean November 1805 • Report on Louisiana’s economic promise confirms Jefferson's desire to purchase

  19. The Louisiana Purchase and the Route of Lewis and Clark

  20. Politics of Desperation:The Yazoo Controversy • Fletcher v. Peck (1810) • court may declare state laws unconstitutional

  21. Murder and Conspiracy: The Curious Career of Aaron Burr • Vice-President Aaron Burr dropped by TJ after 1st term • 1804--Burr, NY and secessionist New England Federalists • Alexander Hamilton blocks Burr’s efforts • The Duel

  22. Hamilton-Burr Duel

  23. The Burr Conspiracy • Burr flees West after Hamilton duel • Schemes to detach West from US and invade Spanish Mexico and FL • Burr arrested, tried for treason • John Marshall acquits on Constitutional grounds of insufficient evidence • Precedent makes it difficult for presidents to use charge of treason as a political tool

  24. America: A Neutral Power? • England impresses over 6000-9000 US sailors between 1805-12. • England refused to stop.

  25. HMS Leopard v. US Chesapeake1807

  26. Large scale foreign war goes against our policy Navy weak Army almost non-existent Defeat would have devastating impact on US Europe depended heavily on US trade Cutting off exports would force England and France to bow to US pressure and allow us to trade What to do?

  27. Embargo Act of 1807

  28. Embargo • Most people HATED it. Why?. • New England Federalist particularly mad • What did they argue? • Consequences: • Three times more costly that war would have been. • Ultimately did help New England factories. Fostered American industry. • Ruined U.S. Shipping (merchant marine)

  29. Non-Intercourse Act • 3/1809: Embargo Act repealed • Non-Intercourse Act • No trade w/ England and France • Would expire in 1810 • Non-Intercourse Act did hurt England, and they repealed Orders in Council, but too late to avoid War of 1812

  30. Embargo Divides the Nation • 1807--Congress prohibits U.S. ships from leaving port • Purpose: to win English, French respect for American rights • Embargo unpopular at home • detailed government oversight of commerce • army suppresses smuggling • New England economy damaged

  31. James Madison • Became 4th President in 1809. • Very distinguished career: • Cont. Congress, Congressman, Const. Convention, Sec. of State. • Not very successful as President. Party broken by factions; Madison- not a strong leader. • Dolly Madison, first true First Lady who acted as social hostess.

  32. Madison • 5/1810: Macon’s Bill No. 2 • If you recognize US neutral rights, then we won’t trade with your enemy • Showed we couldn’t survive w/o commercial dependence • Napoleon tricks Madison • Sets US on course antagonistic to England.

  33. “War Hawks” John C. Calhoun [SC] Henry Clay [KY]

  34. Battling Indians in the West • War Hawks believed Brits stirring up Indians in the West. • Kentucky Problem • Tecumseh and the Prophet (Tenskawatawa). Shawnee Brothers • Began a tribal confederacy east of the Mississippi. • Attacked Settlers on “their” land.

  35. Tecumseh and the Prophet • Purpose of the confederation: • Cultural regeneration • Stop loss if Indian lands • Keep tribes apart from the white man’s culture

  36. Battle of Tippecanoe (11/1811) • Gov. of Indiana Territory • Planned to attack Tecumseh’s headquarters (not there) • Prophet attacks w/ small force; defeated • Forced an alliance w/ the British William Henry Harrison

  37. War of 1812 • June 18, 1812 militant War Hawks get a declaration of war from Congress, • very narrow vote, signaling a dangerous division in the country • Federalists strongly opposed • Dubbed it “Mr. Madison’s War”

  38. Federalists Democratic-Republicans

  39. Madison’s Reasons • Impressment • Repeated violations of US territorial waters by Royal Navy • The Orders in Council violate neutral trade

  40. The Strange War of 1812:Early Course • Americans unprepared for war • Congress refuses to raise wartime taxes • New England refuses to support war effort • United States Army small • state militias inadequate • 1813--U.S. wins control of Great Lakes in Battle of Put-In Bay

  41. Strange War of 1812:The War’s Conclusion • 1814--three-pronged English attack • campaign from Canada to Hudson River Valley stopped at Lake Champlain • campaign in the Chesapeake results in burning of Washington, siege of Baltimore • campaign for New Orleans thwarted by Andrew Jackson, January, 1815 • Treaty of Ghent signed December, 1814

  42. The War of 1812

  43. Hartford Convention: The Demise of the Federalists • Federalists convene December, 1814 • Proposed Constitutional changes to lessen power of South and West • Treaty of Ghent, victory of New Orleans makes Convention appear disloyal • Federalist party never recovers

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