Title: Post War of 1812 to Jackson
1Post War of 1812 to Jackson
2Nationalism
- Nationalism supreme over sectionalism (for now)
Whats this?
3Economic Legislation Nationalism
- Second National Bank
- First National Bank expired 1811? financial
disorder - Second National Bank chartered 1816
Second BUS, Philadelphia
4Economic Legislation Nationalism
- Protective Tariff of 1816
- Industry had prospered during War of 1812
- Tariff meant to protect infant industries from
foreign competition - Supported by most as necessary
5Henry Clays American System
- Protective tariffs
- National Bank
- Internal improvements
(canals, roads) - Left to states to construct
6Era of Good Feelings
- Panic of 1819
- Profitable crops
? demand for farm lands - Easy credit ? land boom
- Britain demands specie in trade
- BUS Tightens Credit, calls in loans, forecloses
farms (1819) - Many grow resentful of BUS
7Era of Good Feelings
- Democratic-Republican James
Monroe easily wins elections
in 1816 and 1820 - Many D-Rs adopted Federalist ideas and appealed
to all - D-R Party would tear apart in 1824 due to
sectional differences
8Foreign Affairs Nationalism
- Rush-Bagot Agreement (1817) ?
disarmament of Great lakes, unfortified
Canadian/US border - Convention of 1818 - boundary between US Canada
at 49th parallel, joint occupation of Oregon
9Foreign Affairs Nationalism
- Purchase of Florida (1819)
- Jackson led army into Florida to crush Seminole
Indians, captured Spanish forts - Adams-Onis Treaty arranges sale of Florida for 5
million (John Quincy Adams)
10Foreign Affairs Nationalism
- Whats going on in the Americas?
- Latin American (LA) wars for independence (Jose
de San Martin, Bernado OHiggins, Simon Bolivar) - US preferred weak republics trading partners in
LA - Europe threatening to reconquer LA
11Foreign Affairs Nationalism
- Monroe Doctrine (1823)
- Americans supported it
- Europeans backed off
12Foreign Affairs Nationalism
- Monroe Doctrine (1823)
- Basic Ideas
- Western Hemisphere closed to further European
colonization - US wouldnt interfere with internal affairs of
European nations - European violation could lead to US intervention
13Supreme Court Nationalism
- John Marshall, Chief Justice (1801-1835)
- Marbury v. Madison (1803)
- Dartmouth College v. Woodward (1819)
- New Hampshire attempted to take control of
Dartmouth College - Court ruled states cant violate contracts
14Supreme Court Nationalism
- McCulloch v. Maryland (1819)
- Maryland taxed second Bank of
the US Baltimore Branch McCulloch
(bank official) refused to pay - Court denied states right to tax federal
government, upheld constitutionality of BUS (and
implied powers)
15Supreme Court Nationalism
- Gibbons v. Ogden (1824)
- Ogden, under NY State monopoly, ran ferry from
NJ to NY Gibbons
ran under federal license
and sued to stop Ogden - Court ruled against Ogden Federal govt controls
interstate commerce
16The West Nationalism
- Turnpikes
Public Roads - 4,000 miles by 1821
17The West Nationalism
18The West Nationalism
The Erie Canal connects Lake Erie to the Hudson
River
Buffalo to NYC 26 days ? 6 days 100 ? 5 per
ton
For example
19The West Nationalism
- Five new states
- Immigrants to new western states had little
loyalty to eastern states - Western settlers looked to Federal government for
- cheap land
- internal improvements
- protection from Native Americans
20USA in 1820