Napoleon sells all of the Louisiana territory (remember Revolution and Haiti!)
Jefferson paid $15 million (285 million today)
Was he allowed to do????
Map of Louisiana Purchase
Current states gained
Unconstitutional???
Jefferson was a strict constitutionalist
He had approved buying New Orleans for 10 million
Federalists worried about further Southern and Western support for Republicans
Congress full of Republicans
Lewis and Clark Expedition
Merriwether Lewis selected to head the “Corps of Discovery”, one of Jefferson’s aides
William Clark asked to join Lewis, former militia captain, no formal education, had been Lewis’ commander previously
“ An intelligent officer, with ten or twelve chosen men ... might explore the whole line, even to the Western Ocean...”
Aaron Burr’s Woes
First loses to Jefferson
Tries for governorship of NY, Hamilton campaigns against Burr, Burr loses
Burr challenges Hamilton to a duel!!
July 11, 1804
Boom!
Hamilton fires and misses (did he intend to?)
Burr did NOT miss
Hamilton is mortally wounded, he died the next day
“ I have resolved, if our interview [duel] is conducted in the usual manner, and it pleases God to give me the opportunity, to reserve and throw away my first fire, and I have thoughts even of reserving my second fire.”
Second Time isn’t as nice
Jefferson wins re-election easily in 1804, carrying 15 states (of 17)
Trouble is brewing internationally
Impressments and War
British and French fighting again, Napoleon wants to control the world
US ships carry cargo, and are often caught in the middle
British often impress the sailors (force them to serve in the British navy)
Chesapeake Incident
Brit ship (Leopard) orders a search of US ship (Chesapeake)
US said no, Brits opened fire and killed 3 Americans
How will Jefferson respond?? (most Americans want revenge)
Embargo you say?
Jefferson persuades the Congress to pass Embargo Act of 1807
No US ships can sail to foreign ports
Who is US’s biggest trading partner???
It backfired and left the US with a weak economy
Jefferson repeals the act during his final days in 1809
Madison and Clinton
Madison’s bio
Jefferson’s Sec. of State
Wife, Dolly, was famous for White House parties and saving Washington’s picture
Agenda for Madison
Try to stay out of the Napoleonic Wars
Fix the economy (remember Embargo Act )
“ Saving ourselves for other countries”
Nonintercourse Act in 1809
Can trade with all countries EXCEPT Br and Fra
Macon’s Bill No. 2 (1810)
War is on the horizon
Reasons for the War of 1812
Continued problems at the seas
neutrality not respected
“ British violations” on the Western frontier
Indian War!!
Tecumseh tries to unite all NA east of Miss.
… and the fighting begins
William Henry Harrison (future President) defeats Tecumseh and followers at the Battle of Tippecanoe
War Hawks
New, young Republicans from frontier states (KY, TN, OH)
Henry Clay of KY
John C. Calhoun of SC
Election of 1812
Much closer election, because of “Mr. Madison’s War”
**No president has ever been ousted during war**
Map
War of 1812 begins
US tries to attack Canada 3 TIMES, all fail
In the process the US burns the city of York
First major victory is at Lake Erie (1813)
Commodore Perry “We have met the enemy and they are ours.”
This allows control of the lake and helps to defeat Tecumseh and his confederation at the Battle of Thames
Commodore Perry
Revenge is a b….. (1814)
British attack Washington DC and burn the President’s mansion (it was repainted white)
Andrew Jackson, Horseshoe Bend
Aided by Cherokee warriors in defeating Creek Indians
Remember Jackson’s name!
Did Junaluska save Jackson?
According to the Cherokee people Chief Junaluska saved Jackson’s life by stopping a Creek warrior from stabbing him
After the battle Jackson is said to have uttered “ As long as the sun shines and the grass grows, there shall be friendship between us, and the feet of the Cherokee shall be toward the east .”
Chief Junaluska
Turning his back??
Years later, after being forced west, Junaluska said “ If I had known that Jackson would drive us from our homes, I would have killed him that day at the Horseshoe .”
“ Era of Good Feelings”
Party politics dies for a while (Federalists gone)
Nationalism booming, new generation of Americans
Treaty of Ghent
Ended the war
Returned things to status quo ante bellum
Battle of New Orleans
Jackson again, fights the British AFTER the Treaty has been signed
This makes him a war hero
Second Bank of US (1816)
Pushed through Congress by Henry Clay and John C. Calhoun
Patterned after 1 st Bank
Known for corruption and fraud
James Monroe (1817-1825)
First recession is never the worse
Panic of 1819
Banks being too conservative, called in loans
$ Value fell, unemployment rose
Marshall’s Court
Lone Federalist in power
McCullough v Maryland (1819)
Fed could create bank (implied powers), fed>state
Missouri, we have a problem…
Missouri Compromise (1820)
Missouri wants to become a state (former part of LA purchase)
There is a balance of 11 slave and 11 free states (Miss. has lots of slaves)
To keep Senate balanced they propose:
Miss. enters as slave state, Maine enters as free
Everything above 36 ° parallel is free
Miss. Compromise Map
Ready to Review?
Monroe’s big deal
Monroe Doctrine (1823)
The Americas “are henceforth not to be considered as subjects for future colonization by any European power.”
The Western Hemisphere is off limits for Europe
What does this say about America’s level of confidence??
Elections, once again
By 1824 the Era of Good Feelings between factions had faded
The next election featured some famous names in one of the most bizarre US elections of all time…..
4 men enter, 1 man emerges
Andrew Jackson Henry Clay
John Quincy Adams William Crawford
Adams and Jackson left standing
In the run-off election Jackson and Adams are tied
The vote goes to the House of Rep.
Henry Clay uses his “influence” to get Adams elected (Jackson was Clay’s rival for votes in the West)
What’s up with that??
Mysteriously when Adams wins he names Clay as his Sec. of State (this is normally a stepping stone to the presidency)
Jackson and his supporters call foul, naming the situation the “ Corrupt Bargain ”
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