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REPUBLICAN ASCENDANCY: THE JEFFERSONIAN VISION

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Title: CHAPTER 8 JEFFERSONIAN ASCENDANCY: THEORY AND PRACTICE OF GOVERNMENT Author: CMU Last modified by: Don Whatley Created Date: 6/29/1998 8:06:58 PM – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: REPUBLICAN ASCENDANCY: THE JEFFERSONIAN VISION


1
REPUBLICAN ASCENDANCY THE JEFFERSONIAN VISION
  • America Past and Present
  • Chapter 8

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
Jefferson as President
  • Jefferson personifies Republicanisms
    contradictions
  • Despises ceremonies and formality
  • Dedicated to intellectual pursuits
  • A politician to the core
  • Success depends on cooperation with Congress

8
Jeffersonian Reforms
  • Priority to cutting federal debt, taxes
  • Federal expenses trimmed by cutting military
  • Reduction of the army removes threat to
    Republican government
  • Competent bureaucrats retained regardless of
    party
  • Federalists retire from public life
  • Ambitious Federalists become Republicans

9
The Louisiana Purchase
  • 1801--France buys Louisiana from Spain
  • 1803--Jefferson sends a mission to France to buy
    New Orleans
  • Napoleon offers to sell all of Louisiana for 15
    million
  • Constitution vague on Congressional authority to
    purchase
  • Purchase departs from Republican principle of
    strict separation

10
The Louisiana Purchase (2)
  • Louisiana inhabitants French Spanish
  • Jefferson denies them self-rule
  • Louisiana governed from Washington
  • Another Jeffersonian departure from Republicanism

11
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 Louisianas economic promise confirms
    Jefferson's desire to purchase

12
The Louisiana Purchase and the Route of Lewis and
Clark
13
Conflict With the Barbary States
  • North African states demand tribute from ships
    sailing in Mediterranean
  • Jefferson dispatches U.S. fleet to negotiate
    through the mouth of a cannon
  • U.S. cannot defeat the Barbary States
  • Action induces respect for U.S. rights

14
The Barbary States
15
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16
Jeffersons Critics
  • Dispute over federal court system
  • Conflicts between Republicans
  • Sectional dispute over the slave trade

17
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

18
Attack on the Judges Marbury v. Madison
  • Marbury v. Madison (1803) rules Judiciary Act of
    1789 unconstitutional
  • Federalist Marbury denied his judgeship
  • Republicans claim victory
  • Chief Justice John Marshall ensures Federalist
    influence through judicial review

19
Attack on the Judges Impeachments
  • 1803--Federalist John Pickering impeached,
    removed for alcoholism, insanity
  • Republicans begin fearing the destruction of an
    independent judiciary
  • Jefferson exacerbates fears by seeking to impeach
    Federalist Samuel Chase
  • Republican Senate refuses to convict

20
Politics of DesperationTertium Quids
  • "Tertium Quids" claim pure Republicanism
  • Attack Jefferson as sacrificing virtue for
    pragmatism

21
Politics of DesperationThe Yazoo Controversy
  • Yazoo controversy
  • fraudulent land case in Georgia
  • Jefferson attempts to settle by providing land to
    innocent parties
  • Quids complain settlement condones fraud
  • Fletcher v. Peck (1810)
  • Marshall court upholds Jeffersons settlement
  • court may nullify unconstitutional state laws

22
Murder and Conspiracy The Curious Career of
Aaron Burr
  • Vice-President Aaron Burr breaks with Jefferson
  • 1804--Burr seeks Federalist support in 1804 New
    York governors race
  • Alexander Hamilton blocks Burrs efforts
  • Burr kills Hamilton in a duel

23
The Burr Conspiracy
  • Burr flees West after Hamilton duel
  • Schemes to invade Spanish territory
  • 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
The Slave Trade
  • Congress prohibits slave trade after 1808
  • Northern Republicans call for emancipation of any
    black smuggled into the U.S.
  • Southern Republicans win passage of law to hand
    such persons over to state authorities

25
Embarrassments Overseas
  • 1803--England and France resume war
  • American ships subject to seizure
  • by England through Orders in Council"
  • by Napoleon through Berlin, Milan Decrees
  • Jefferson refuses war to preserve financial
    reform
  • Embargo--Jeffersons alternative to war

26
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

27
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28
A New Administration Goes to War
  • 1808--James Madison elected President
  • 1809--Embargo repealed in favor of
    Non-Intercourse Act
  • U.S. will resume trade with England and France on
    promise to cease seizure of U.S. vessels

29
A New Administration Goes to War (2)
  • Madison reopens English trade on unconfirmed
    promise of British minister
  • English reject agreement, seize U.S. ships that
    opened trade with England

30
A New Administration Goes to War (2)
  • Macons Bill Number Two 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

31
Fumbling Toward Conflict
  • Tecumsehs Western campaign seen as supported by
    British
  • Congressional War Hawks demand war on England to
    preserve American honor
  • June 1, 1812, Madison sends Congress a
    declaration of war
  • War aims vague

32
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33
The Strange War of 1812Early 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

34
Strange War of 1812The Wars 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

35
The War of 1812
36
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

37
Treaty of Ghent Ends the War
  • Most problems left unaddressed
  • Senate unanimously ratifies Treaty of Ghent
  • Americans claim success in a "second war of
    independence"

38
Republican Legacy
  • Founders begin to pass away in 1820s
  • Thomas Jefferson and John Adams both die July 4,
    1826
  • James Madison dies in 1836
  • despairs that Declarations principles not yet
    extended to African Americans
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