Title: The Early Republic, 1789-1815
1The Early Republic, 1789-1815
- Federalist Era 1789-1800 (within larger
historical era) - Dominated politics
- Hatred of political parties/ but still emerged
- Fiscal military state vs. rural agricultural
state - By 1815 (historian Gordon S. Wood)
- Culture popularized and vulgarized
- End of slavery in North/ remained in South
- Wanted to avoid war/ became embroiled in war
2The Presidency of Thomas Jefferson, 1801-1809
- Personal
- Spoke six languages
- Copy of Quran (1764- 2 volume)
- Widowed
- Conflicted about slavery
- Opposed slave trade/only freed seven of hundreds
of slaves/anti-Black sentiment - 6,487 books- sold to Library of Congress
- 1819- Founded the University of Virginia.
- Political Agenda Overview
- Promotion of political democracy and expansion
- Yeoman farmer/ artisans, tradesman
- Political democracyeconomically independent
citizenry - Decrease Executive branch
- Legal precedent Marbury vs. Madison (1803)
Judicial review - Foreign Policy
- Impulse Expansion vs. Avoiding War
- Haiti, Napoleon, and the Louisiana Purchase
- Barbary States (North Africa)
- Embargo Act (1807)
3Social Ideologies of Thomas Jefferson
- Social
- Education
- Amendment/ failed
- Six goals of Education
- Jeffersonian Democracy
- Narrow interpretation of Constitution
- Opposed Federalist Party supported
- The Life and Morals of Jesus of Nazareth
- Razor and glue. New Testament
- 1803 Letter about convo with Dr. Benjamin Rush
(Natchez, MS) - Composed it for himself
- Notes of the State of Virginia. (1785)
- Inherent inferiority OR Decades of degrading
enslavement. - Anti-Slavery Actions vs. Anti-Black Thought
- 1778- Virginia/ prohibit importation of slaves
- 1785-publically silent
4A Hideous Monster of the Mind American Race
Theory in the Early Republic
- Anti-slavery/Pro-Black Thought
- English abolitionist- Granville Sharp
- American abolitionist- Lemuel Haynes
- Alaudah Equiano and John Marrant
- Phillis Wheatley
- Emergence of Race Theory
- Assumptions of fundamental variations in humanity
(physiology) - Protection of social institutions Exclusion from
social contract and civil society. - Differences rooted in Nature. Nature itself was
cast as the enemy of Black freedom. - Undid 18th century abolitionism (End of slave
trade vs. acceptance into society) - Ideology- served as a way to remove Blacks from
American society. Blackness becomes innate. - Development Via
- Political thought, natural science, moral
philosophy, responses to Haitian revolution,
colonization to Liberia, abolitionism, and
ethnology.
5Setting the PrecedentJudicial Review, One Big
Land Purchase, and the Corps of Discovery
- Judicial Review
- Marbury v. Madison
- Problematic John Adams Federalist Midnight
judges. - Federalist Judge ruled against government
- End Result Judicial Review.
- Prohibit actions of other two branches if
contradict Constitution. - The Louisiana Purchase
- Men of the Western Waters
- Napoleons Plans for Louisiana
- Jeffersons Plan to Secure Louisiana
- The Lewis and Clark Expedition
- Corps of Discovery
- Sacajawea
- Incorporating Louisiana
6Pirates in the Mediterranean Northwest African
Berber Muslim states and the United States
- Setting the Stage The Berbers in North Africa
- The Barbary States Tripoli, Algiers,
MoroccoPiracy of Mediterranean shipping - Extort ransom, pillage, enslavement of crews
- U.S.- No Navy/ Tribute to Barbary states
- Spain 1784 suggested to offer tribute
- Envoys to Morocco and Algeria
- Peace treaty 12 June 1786 ended all Moroccan
piracy/ Article 6/ Morocco - Algeria 25 July 1785- capture of schooners Maria
and Dauphin - Captive for a decade. 600,000 each state
- 1795 release of 115 sailors, over 1 million
dollars - Jefferson refusal 1801. Pasha of Tripoli,
225,000/cut down flagstaff - The First Barbary War 1801-1805
- Second Barbary War 1815. Algerian War, Ottoman
Empire
7Gossip and Conspiracies in the Early Republic
- The Case of Sally Hemings (The Revolutionary
Period) - Biracial Enslaved Elizabeth Hemings and English
Captain John Hemings - 1774 property of Thomas Jefferson
- Paris, 1787.
- Six children
- Was not emancipated.
- The Burr Conspiracy A Treasonous Cabal and Texas
Territory - 1805-1806 Travels to Texas Territory (Spanish).
- Planters, Politicians, Army Officials. Plans in
Newspaper, August 1805. - Arrest 1806.
- Trial Charge of Treason. Not Guilty
- Lack of Evidence
- Legacy
- Privilege Executive and States
- Independence of Investigation
- Subpoenas Issue of release of papers
- Executive independent of Judiciary
- President Subject to Law
8European Harassment and An Embargo
- Harassment by Britain
- Contest for world power 1791-1815
- Seized American citizens and property
- Impressment 2nd Jefferson Administration
- 1795 Jay Treaty Did not address this issue
- Forcibly seizing ships and sailors to work in
Royal Navy - American warship the USS Chesapeake
- Growing pressure for war
- Embargo Act of 1807
- Prohibited all foreign commerce/respect of
American rights - Failed to compel
- Jefferson-hypocrite- foe of excessive
government/U.S. Navy patrols - Stimulated domestic manufacturing
- Repealed Non-Intercourse Act of 1809
9Presidency of James Madison, 1809-1817
- Characteristics
- 4th president War and Domestic Policy
- Term dominated by tensions with Britain
- Pressured towards war with Great Britain- War of
1812 - (Theatre of Napoleonic Wars)
- Domestic Problems War-hawks, the Indigenous,
Frontier - Era of Good Feelings
- Indigenous Policies
- Paternalistic
- Protected indigenous lands (military commander
Andrew Jackson) - Battle of Tippecanoe (1811)- Indiana Territory
and Tecumseh - Economic Policies
- Congress failed to re-authorize charter of first
Bank of America - 1816- signed act/ federal bank supported war
- Taxation tariffs, professional military,
internal improvements (Henry Clay) - Vetoed Bonus Bill of 1817 financed roads,
bridges, canals
10The War of 1812
- Causes
- Violation of American Rights Increased British
navy aggression - U.S. neutral- against international law
- Royal Nay boarded ships/Impressed its seamen
- Expansion
- British armed indigenous in Northwest Territory
to create buffer zone - Economic Motivations
- Unfinished business from American Revolution
- War or Absolute submission
- Incidents
- 1807 HMS Leopard boarded American warship USS
Chesapeake - Leander Affair Jefferson banned ships in ports
- Napoleons Continental System (1806) and British
Orders in Council (1807) - 900 American ships seized- 1807-1812
- 1 June 1812 Madison outlines grievances against
Britain
11Course of War of 1812
- Course of War
- Land, Coasts, and Waterways
- The War in the South
- Creek War Andrew Jackson (1813-1814)
- Began as Civil War within Creek Nation
- Red Sticks
- Battle of Burnt Corn U.S. Involvement
- Tecumseh
- Red Sticks
- Fort Mims Massacre massacre against whites and
biracial Creeks - Treaty of 1814 Language. 20 million acres of
Georgia land - Battle of New Orleans
- The War in the Chesapeake
- British response to burning of York in Upper
Canada - Burned White House in 1814
- Francis Scott Key The Star Spangled Banner
12Dolley Madison and Washington City
- National Capital
- Land given by Maryland
- Jefferson Dismal Indian swamp
- Dolley Madison
- 17 years younger
- Social graces and hospitality
- Stand-in for First Lady of Jefferson
- Architect Benjamin Latrobe
- Burning of Washington, 1814
- Statue of George Washington
- Organized enslaved to save valuables
- Paul Jennings James Madisons personal servant
(15 years old) - Purchased freedom from Dolley Madison
- Reconstruction
- 2009 Jennings reunion/ Enslaved Contributions/
White House
13Treaty of Ghent 24 December 1814
- Key Points
- Conditions of pre-war status
- Arranged prior to Battle of New Orleans
- Status quo antebellum
- Released all prisoners
- Restored all war lands and boats
- British- return of freed Black slaves