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NATION BUILDING AND NATIONIONALISM

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Title: NATION BUILDING AND NATIONIONALISM


1
NATION BUILDING AND NATIONIONALISM
  • America Past and Present
  • Chapter 9

2
Expansion and Migration
  • American perspective shifts from Europe to West
    after 1815
  • Land perceived as rich, unsettled
  • Continent held in part by the English, Spanish,
    and Indians

3
Extending the Boundaries
  • John Quincy Adams--expansionist secretary of
    state from 1816 to 1824
  • Adams-Onis Treaty secures all Florida, U.S.
    boundary to Pacific
  • Settled "West" still mostly east of Mississippi
    River

4
North America, 1819
5
Settlement to the Mississippi Indian Removal
  • Indian Removal policy begins after 1815
  • Some Indians retain tribal homelands
  • Some Southern states claim jurisdiction over the
    Indians in their borders
  • Former Indian land sold to speculators

6
Settlement to the Mississippi Settlers Move In
  • By 1840 over 1/3 of U.S. population lives west of
    the Appalachians
  • Speculators sell land parcels to settlers on
    credit
  • Settlers immediately enter commercial farming to
    pay off debt
  • Access to markets gained by network of market
    towns, regional centers

7
The People and Culture of the Frontier
  • West settled to escape overpopulation, rising
    land prices, worn-out soil
  • Settlers bring culture with them
  • Cooperation, strong community necessary for
    survival
  • Land values rise rapidly in a few years
  • Price rise encourages rootlessness as many sell
    out and move on

8
A Revolution in Transportation
  • Primitive land transportation in the East was
    offset by shipping via the coastal waterways
  • After the War of 1812 political leaders
    recognized the need the need to improve the
    countrys transportation network

9
Roads and Steamboats
  • National Road from Cumberland, Maryland to
    Wheeling, Virginia
  • Private turnpikes built by entrepreneurs
  • Roads useful but unprofitable

10
Roads and Steamboats (2)
  • Network of rivers encourage economic development
  • Flatboats transport down river early
  • Steamboats transport upriver after 1811
  • Upriver capabilities reduce costs
  • Steamboat traffic stimulates Congress to
    establish safety regulations

11
The Canal Boom
  • Erie Canal first transportation link between East
    and West, 1825
  • Canal cuts East-West transportation costs
    dramatically
  • Canal stimulates commercial growth of New York
    City

12
Emergence of a Market Economy
  • Canals cut shipping expenses for western farmers
    and eastern manufacturers
  • Steamboats on the rivers also reduced shipping
    costs and stimulated commercial agriculture

13
The Beginning of Commercial Agriculture
  • Lower transportation costs mean greater income
    for the farmer
  • Sale to distant markets involves farmers in a
    complex system of credit
  • Market stimulates specialization
  • Ohio Valley produces wheat
  • Lower South produces cotton

14
Commerce and Banking
  • Commercial farming stimulates new system of
    marketing
  • Farmers borrow on future crops
  • Use of credit stimulates banking
  • State banks increase after 1812
  • 1816--Second Bank of the United States created to
    check state banks
  • Banks easy credit sparks Panic of 1819

15
Early Industrialism
  • Rise in manufacturing after 1812
  • Traditional methods but innovative financing
    through putting out system
  • putting-out--merchants deliver raw materials
    for farm families, artisans to process
  • Textile industry leads development of factory
    system

16
The Politics of Nation Building After the War of
1812
  • Politics a one-party system after 1812
  • Interest groups no longer take differences into
    the political arena
  • Federal executive, legislature largely irrelevant
    to domestic economy
  • Supreme Court exerts influence on economy by
    deciding crucial cases

17
The Republicans in Power
  • Republicans begin adopting Federalist measures
    after War of 1812
  • 1815 establish high tariffs
  • 1816 charter a national bank
  • federal aid for internal improvements
  • Federal efforts to stimulate economy falter
  • Madison, Monroe see Constitutional conflicts
  • Efforts provoke sectional conflict

18
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19
Monroe as President
  • James Monroe elected President in 1816, reelected
    in 1820
  • Monroe seeks national harmony
  • Takes no action in Panic of 1819, believes
    president above such matters
  • Provides no leadership controversy over Missouri

20
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21
The Missouri Compromise The Issues
  • 1817--Missouri applies for statehood as slave
    state
  • Northerners believe South over-represented in
    House of Representatives
  • House rejects unless slavery abolished
  • South wishes to preserve balance between slave
    states and free states

22
The Missouri Compromise The Solution
  • Missouri admitted as slave state
  • Maine admitted as free state
  • Slavery banned elsewhere in Louisiana Purchase
    above the latitude of 36E30'
  • Missouri controversy exposed deep rift between
    North and South

23
The Missouri Compromise, 1820-1821
24
Postwar Nationalism and the Supreme Court
  • John Marshall chief justice 1801-1835
  • Marshall uses position to encourage national
    growth
  • Believes Constitution exists to protect the
    industrious
  • Protects individual property rights against
    government interference
  • Marshall uses court decisions to limit powers of
    the states

25
Nationalism in Foreign PolicyThe Monroe Doctrine
  • When Latin American nations revolt, U.S. supports
    new republics
  • European ruling classes fear rebellion might
    prove contagious
  • France was encouraged to squelch Spain's
    rebellious colonies
  • Great Britain asks U.S. to cooperate against
    French in Latin America

26
Nationalism in Foreign Policy Monroe Doctrine (2)
  • Monroe persuaded that U.S. alone must protect
    Latin American independence
  • 1823--Monroe Doctrine warns European nations out
    of the Western Hemisphere
  • Doctrine also promises U.S. will not interfere in
    European affairs
  • Refocuses U.S. from worldwide struggles against
    tyranny to national development

27
The Troubled Presidency of John Quincey Adams
  • James Monroe supports John Quincy Adams to
    succeed him
  • Adams intelligent, keen interest in progress,
    loyal to nation, not sectional
  • Nearly loses election of 1824
  • A "gentleman" in an age of rising democracy
  • Term of office fails because of fiercely
    contending sectional interests

28
The End of the Era of Good Feelings
  • There were sharp divisions over how to achieve
    national greatness
  • Elite nonpartisan statesmanship would soon give
    way to a more contentious democratic process
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