Title: Defending and Expanding the New Nation
1Defending and Expanding the New Nation
2Background
- Jefferson is President
- Size of country doubled after Louisiana Purchase
- Jefferson commissions Lewis and Clark to explore
northern part of newly acquired, Louisiana
Territory
3Lewis and Clark Expedition
- Undertaken by Meriwether Lewis and William Clark,
both captains in U. S. Army - Commissioned by Jefferson even before the
purchase of the Louisiana Territory - Both explorers also naturalists and wrote
journals and sent back samples of animal and
plant life back to Washington D. C., during their
expedition - Expedition left St. Louis in May 1804 and reached
the Pacific Ocean November 1805 - Trek to Pacific Coast took 28 months, covering
8000 miles
4Lewis and Clark Expedition
- First goal To find a northwestern waterway
passage to the Pacific Coast - Second goal Divert fur trade away from British
Canada into American traders and U.S. markets,
using the waterway - Third goal To see what kind of flora and fauna
existed in this region as well Indian tribes in
the area - Fourth goal Negotiate with Indians in the area
to allow for Americans to move into area for
mining and ranching purposes
5The Louisiana Purchase and the Route of Lewis and
Clark
6Lewis and Clark Expedition
- Lewis and Clarks party a diverse group of
people (British, Irish, Black slaves etc.) - Assisted by Sacajawea, Shoshone Indian woman,
married to French fur trader - Both joined Lewis and Clark Expedition
- Helped establish to Indians that the expedition
was peaceful - Sacajawea helped with finding food, and
translation between Americans and Indian tribes - Return journey began in March 1806
- Both men considered one of the most important
explorers in American history
7Challenges in early 19th century
- Indian continued to be a threat to U.S.
- Many tribes had alliances with British and French
in the Great Lakes Region - Britain also imposing threat
- Led to War of 1812 between British and American
forces - French and Spanish also minor threats
8The European Menace
- Jefferson becomes President for the second time
in 1804 - Alexander Hamilton (Federalist) killed in duel
with Aaron Burr - He had to deal with issues with European
powerhouses, Britain and France - Britain involved in a war with France
- Also issues Orders in Council in 1806, whereby
any country that wanted to ship goods to France
had to first stop at a British port to pay taxes - This aggravates the Americans
- Britain and France also continue their annoying
policy of impressment of American seamen - Jefferson does not want war and resorts to
economic warfare
9The Embargo Act
- Passage of Act triggered by British attack on
U.S. ship, and the killing of a few Americans - 1807 Jefferson decided to fight back with the
Embargo Act - By this Act, all American exports to France and
Britain were to be stopped in order for these
powers to gain respect for the U.S. as an
independent nation - New Englands foreign trade economy suffered as a
result of the Act - Affected farmers as well as shipbuilders in New
England as well as cotton and tobacco farmers of
the South - Many found other ways to avoid Act by shipping
goods from Canada - Passage of Act boosted domestic industrialization
and intensified tension between Britain and
America
10On the Brink of War
- Jefferson refuses a 3rd term as President
- New President in 1808 election is James Madison
(Federalist turned Dem-Rep.) - 1808 Shawnee Indian resistance led by Tecumseh
and his brother - Founded Prophets Town in Indiana as a sovereign
Indian state for the preservation on the Native
American culture - 1809 Indians sell 3million acres of land to
Americans for a very low price, cheated while
being under the influence of liquor. Indian
leaders very upset by this deal - 1809 Embargo repealed in favor of
Non-Intercourse Act - U.S. will resume trade with England and France
based on promise to cease seizure of U.S. vessels
11On the Brink of War
- Madison reopens English trade on unconfirmed
promise of British minister - English reject agreement, seize U.S. ships that
opened trade with England - 1810 Macons Bill, 2 replaces the
Non-Intercourse Act - Trade with both England and France reestablished
- First nation to respect American rights wins halt
of U.S. trade with the other - Napoleon promises to observe U.S. rights but
reneges when trade reopened - 1811 American troops under William Henry
Harrison, defeated Shawnee Indians under Tecumseh
at Tippecanoe - Prophets Town burned to the ground
- Indian defeat attributed to superior weapons of
Americans
12The War of 1812 Background
- James Madison becomes President in 1812 for
second term - Congressional War Hawks demand war on England to
preserve American honor - War Hawks young Democratic-Republicans from the
western states who wanted to establish America as
an honorable nation - They believed that the Indians were being
supported by the British, and in order to
suppress future Indian resistances, they had to
stop British arms supply to Indians from Canada
13The War of 1812
- June 1, 1812 President Madison sent England
American grievances - British Navys seizure of Americans
- Blockade of American goods
- Indian conflicts supported by British
- June 18, 1812 Congress voted to declare war on
England - War fought between 1812 and 1815 between U.S. and
Britain - Americans not at all prepared for war with
superior British military and navy - Congress refuses to raise wartime taxes
- New England refuses to support war effort
- United States Army small and state militias
inadequate
14The War of 1812
- Americans follow a 3-pronged attack on Canada by
striking from Niagara, Detroit, Lake Champlain - All 3 attempts failed
- Tecumseh fighting for the British captured
Detroit in 1812 - Sept. 1813 U.S. troops under Perry, gain control
of Great Lakes in Battle of Put-In Bay (Lake
Erie) - Oct. 1813 U.S. troops under Henry Harrison
defeated Tecumsehs Indian warriors, in Battle of
the Thames. Tecumseh killed in battle - 1814 English defeated Napoleon, freeing up
troops for war in U.S
15The War of 1812
16Fighting on Many Fronts
- March, 1814 Battle of Horseshoe Bend, defeat of
Red Sticks by Andrew Jackson, and the resulting
Treaty gave U.S. 23 million acres of Creek land - August 24, 1814 Battle of Bladensburg, Maryland,
and the burning of the Capitol and White House by
the British - Americans fight back and win the Battle of
Baltimore - Victory at Baltimore inspired Francis Scott Key
to write the Star Spangled Banner - January, 1815 The Battle of New Orleans, an
overwhelming victory for Jackson, against
superior British forces
17War Ends Treaty of Ghent, 1815
- Fall of 1814 Madison decides to end the war
- John Quincy Adams and Henry Clay, sent to Ghent,
Belgium, to start peace talks - British make demands on America, but after their
losses in the battles, withdrew the demands - War ended in a draw with no one victor
- No new territory for either side, no concessions
from Britain - Still, the War of 1812 considered by many
Americans as a victory for the nation - America and Britain never again fought against
each other, as enemies - Congress ratified the Treaty of Ghent in Feb.
1815
18Hartford Convention 1814
- Dec. 1814, Federalists from Massachusetts,
Connecticut, Rhode Island, New Hampshire, and
Vermont sent delegates to Hartford, Connecticut - Impatient with war and its effect on economy
- Demanded federal aid to states to compensate for
loss of revenue from disrupted trade - Some state delegates threatened to secede from
the Union - Proposed Constitutional changes to lessen power
of South and West - Treaty of Ghent, victory at New Orleans makes
Convention and its members appear disloyal - Federalist party never recovers
19James Monroe
- 1816 James Monroe (Dem-Rep.) became President
- Federalist Party in bad shape after War of 1812
and the Hartford Convention where they had
threatened to secede from the Union - Monroe optimistic about state of the Union, since
the boundaries were secure, Indian threat had
been pushed further west, America had won a war
against Britain again - Monroe signed treaty with Britain, setting
U.S.-Canada border at 49th parallel - Monroe urged Congress for approving construction
of roads and canals, to improve the nation's
economy and industry
20Praise Respect for Veterans after the War
- American Veterans of the War of 1812 were treated
with respect by all - Congress awarded Veterans a grant of 160-acre
plots of land between Illinois and Mississippi
rivers to reward them for their services - Grant encouraged many to move west and settle in
homesteads - Many veterans became politicians (Andrew Jackson,
William Henry Harrison) - Indian veterans such as Major Ridge (Cherokee
leader) accorded American respect - Ridge advocated for Native Americans to retain
Native American lands, in spite of absorbing
Western culture into his own life
21A Thriving Economy
- Internal migration Many choose to move to the
west to look for better economic opportunities - Embargo Act and War of 1812 help boost national
manufacturing and economy - Philadelphia became nations top industrial city
of the time - New means of transportation also boosts economy
- Stagecoaches, wagons, boats, horseback
- 1807 Robert Fulton introduces the steamboat
- 1810 Building of turnpikes Cumberland Road
22Changes in the Workplace
- Industrial Revolution changed the way people had
been living until then - Changed from small shops with skilled workers, to
larger establishments using unskilled workers - Performed repetitive tasks under supervision of
boss - New England mechanized textile production
- Rhode Island followed Lowell model of
manufacturing - Role of young women changed forever
23The Market Revolution
- Powerful economic changes fueled by improvements
in transportation, increasing commercialization,
rise of factories, and changes to average
Americans life - Mid-nineteenth century, U.S. dramatically
different than U.S. of 1776. - Transportation barriers between country and city
fall - Entrepreneurs start putting out system
merchant-capitalists - Restless Americans with great acquisitiveness
- Western Indians suffer, children and women work
in factories, slaves are pushed harder
24Rise of Cotton Plantation Economy
- Cotton production increased due to invention of
cotton gin, Louisiana Purchase - Resulted in boom in slavery
- 1808 U.S. bans importation of slaves
- Need for labor results in slave trade between
states (domestic) - African Americans reinforce African culture,
tradition and family bonds, in everyday life,
resulting in harsher laws from Whites
25Regional Economies of the South
- Shifts in production methods and the depleted
tobacco-growing soil led to more crafts
production, cultivation of wheat and corn. - South Carolina and Georgia Technical advances in
rice production and cotton cultivation - Louisiana Territory Cotton and New Orleans sugar
26Black Family Life and Labor
- Increasing birth rate and strong family ties
among the slaves - Newcomers adopted as relations
- Large plantations had more 2-parent families than
the smaller farms - The task system (rice plantations) and the gang
system (cotton plantations) - Forms of labor
- Work under white supervision
- Private work including tending gardens, working
on living quarters - Sale or clandestine exchanges of goods
27Resistance to Slavery
- Retaining African cultural traditions
- Artistic, dress, language
- Intentional careless work
- Theft of masters goods
- Running away
- Revolt
- 1811 St. Charles and St. John the Baptist
parishes in Louisiana. (Charles Deslondes)
28Conclusion
- Louisiana Purchase doubled size of country, and
increased potential for growth and westward
movement - Embargo Act and War of 1812 remove British threat
- War boosted manufacturing (North) and plantation
economy (South) - Lords of the lash and Lords of the loom
depended heavily on slaves for labor - Great life for whites, and harsh life for blacks