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pp. 200-211
 Napoleon named “first 
consul” of France in 1799 
 Empirical ambitions 
 France claimed Louisiana 
from Spain in 1800 
 Hoped to est. French empire 
in America
 French empire in West 
Indies 
 Guadeloupe, Martinique, 
Santo Domingo (Haiti today) 
 Sugar plantations brought 
wealth 
 Slaves revolted in Santo 
Domingo & created a 
republic 
 Led by Toussaint L’Ouverture
 The Adams 
administration/Federalist 
party had typically been 
pro-British 
 Jefferson 
administration/Republican 
Party=pro-French 
 French & British were at 
war nearly non-stop from 
1792-1815 
 Jefferson finds out in 1802 
that New Orleans/lower 
Mississippi River is off 
limits to Americans 
 Westerners are 
unhappy/limits their trade 
 Jefferson instructs Robert 
Livingston (ambassador to 
France) to negotiate for the 
purchase of New Orleans…
 While waiting for 
Livingston’s response 
Jefferson prepares for war 
 Napoleon offers not only 
New Orleans, but all of 
Louisiana 
 Napoleon had given up 
hopes of a French empire 
in America 
 Yellow fever wiped out forces 
 Ships frozen in place through 
winter of 1802-1803
 Agreement signed on April 30, 1803 
 $15 million/3 cents per acre 
 Boundaries were not clearly defined
Jefferson was happy w/ agreement & its 
terms 
But…why was he concerned with the 
acquisition of Louisiana?
“the good sense of our country will correct 
the evil of loose construction when it shall 
produce ill effects.” 
Government organized Louisiana like it had 
the NW territory 
 Louisiana becomes 18th state in 1812
 Louisiana Territory was 
relatively unknown 
 Few Americans had 
ventured west of the 
Mississippi 
 Before Purchase 
Jefferson was planning 
a westward expedition 
 Hand-picked 
Meriwether Lewis as its 
guide 
 Had been Jefferson’s 
personal secretary
 Lewis chose William 
Clark as his co-pilot 
 Experienced 
frontiersman
Left St. Louis, MO in April of 1804 
4 dozen men 
Traveled up Missouri River, against the current 
Stayed at Ft. Mandan in present-day ND 
during winter of 1804-1805 
Met Sacajawea, she led expedition from there 
Reached Pacific in October of 1805 
Back to St. Louis in by September of 1806
Made it as far west 
as Colorado 
 Pike’s Peak 
Left Americans of 
the East believing 
that Plains & West 
were uninhabitable 
& not farmable
 “Not a stick of timber” 
 “These vast plains of the 
western hemisphere, may 
become in time equally 
celebrated as the sandy 
deserts of Africa” 
 1823—Major Stephen Long 
labels the area the “Great 
American Desert” 
 Pike’s Peak, CO
What was Essex Junto? 
Why the threat of secession?
MA, extreme Federalists 
Threatened secession 
Didn’t get support from Hamilton 
 Turned to Aaron Burr 
 Supposedly Burr did support secession…
 Asked to be Federalist 
candidate for governor of NY 
 Rumors he supported 
Federalist secession 
 Hamilton accused Burr of 
treason & said he had 
“despicable” character 
 Burr lost & blamed it on 
Hamilton
Burr challenged Hamilton to a duel 
July 11, 1804 near Weehawken, NJ 
Burr wounds Hamilton, Hamilton dies the 
next day 
Burr was charged with multiple crimes, but 
never tried in court 
Finish VP term, but political career was over
 Before duel, Burr had 
plotted to capture 
Mexico 
 Also, rumors that he 
hoped to rule a 
western empire 
 Little evidence 
 Burr arrested as a 
traitor, but eventually 
acquitted 
 What did the Burr 
Conspiracy say about 
the nation in the early 
1800s?
 American merchant 
marine grew rapidly 
 Controlled much of the 
trans-Atlantic trade 
 By 1805 Napoleon 
controls almost entire 
European continent 
 Napoleon bans British 
trade to Europe 
 British responds by 
requiring all good 
going to Europe to be 
on British vessels or 
checked at a British 
port 
 America=Rock & Hard 
Place
British navy was capturing American sailors & 
forcing them into service=impressment 
British navy was losing manpower & needed 
replacements 
Chesapeake-Leopard incident in 1807 
 British Leopard opened fire, Americans 
surrendered 
Americans wanted revenge
Jefferson & Madison (Sec. of State) tried to 
keep the peace 
Asked Brits to end impressment, but refused 
to do so
The Embargo (Act)—Ended American exports 
to all foreign countries 
 Hurt merchants, esp. in New England 
 Led to economic downturn 
Jefferson replaced Embargo w/ Non- 
Intercourse Act 
 Only banned trade w/ France & Britain 
 Ban lifted in 1810
Jefferson’s plan: Natives could assimilate into 
settled farmers or move West of the 
Mississippi 
W. H. Harrison, governor of Indiana Territory 
from 1801 to 1812, strictly enforced 
Jefferson’s plan 
Rising American population west of 
Appalachians
 Tribes were losing 
lands quickly, see maps 
on p. 208, until… 
 1. British attempted to 
ally with Native tribes, 
expecting American 
invasion of Canada 
 2. Rise of the Prophet 
& his efforts to unite 
tribes 
Harrison
 The Prophet sparked a 
religious revival & a 
renunciation of white 
ways, back to roots 
 The Prophet’s brother, 
Tecumseh, hoped to 
unite all tribes of the 
Mississippi Valley 
 While Tecumseh was 
absent, Harrison fought 
the tribal forces 
 Battle of Tippecanoe 
(1811) 
 Weakened Native forces 
 By 1812 Tecumseh’s 
warriors were attacking 
white settlements 
 British helped supply 
Natives
 Push to acquire Spanish Florida 
 Threat to Georgia & other southern states 
 Slaves escaped 
 Indian attacks 
 Americans captured western part of Florida 
Territory in 1810 & made plans to take the 
rest 
 Spain was Britain’s ally
Calls for war increased 
Territorial expansion 
War Hawks led by: 
1. Henry Clay—KY 
2. John C. Calhoun—SC 
President Madison approved war on June 18, 
1812
Clay 
Calhoun 
President 
Madison

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Jefferson/Louisiana Purchase/Onset of War

  • 2.  Napoleon named “first consul” of France in 1799  Empirical ambitions  France claimed Louisiana from Spain in 1800  Hoped to est. French empire in America
  • 3.  French empire in West Indies  Guadeloupe, Martinique, Santo Domingo (Haiti today)  Sugar plantations brought wealth  Slaves revolted in Santo Domingo & created a republic  Led by Toussaint L’Ouverture
  • 4.  The Adams administration/Federalist party had typically been pro-British  Jefferson administration/Republican Party=pro-French  French & British were at war nearly non-stop from 1792-1815  Jefferson finds out in 1802 that New Orleans/lower Mississippi River is off limits to Americans  Westerners are unhappy/limits their trade  Jefferson instructs Robert Livingston (ambassador to France) to negotiate for the purchase of New Orleans…
  • 5.  While waiting for Livingston’s response Jefferson prepares for war  Napoleon offers not only New Orleans, but all of Louisiana  Napoleon had given up hopes of a French empire in America  Yellow fever wiped out forces  Ships frozen in place through winter of 1802-1803
  • 6.  Agreement signed on April 30, 1803  $15 million/3 cents per acre  Boundaries were not clearly defined
  • 7. Jefferson was happy w/ agreement & its terms But…why was he concerned with the acquisition of Louisiana?
  • 8. “the good sense of our country will correct the evil of loose construction when it shall produce ill effects.” Government organized Louisiana like it had the NW territory  Louisiana becomes 18th state in 1812
  • 9.  Louisiana Territory was relatively unknown  Few Americans had ventured west of the Mississippi  Before Purchase Jefferson was planning a westward expedition  Hand-picked Meriwether Lewis as its guide  Had been Jefferson’s personal secretary
  • 10.  Lewis chose William Clark as his co-pilot  Experienced frontiersman
  • 11. Left St. Louis, MO in April of 1804 4 dozen men Traveled up Missouri River, against the current Stayed at Ft. Mandan in present-day ND during winter of 1804-1805 Met Sacajawea, she led expedition from there Reached Pacific in October of 1805 Back to St. Louis in by September of 1806
  • 12.
  • 13. Made it as far west as Colorado  Pike’s Peak Left Americans of the East believing that Plains & West were uninhabitable & not farmable
  • 14.  “Not a stick of timber”  “These vast plains of the western hemisphere, may become in time equally celebrated as the sandy deserts of Africa”  1823—Major Stephen Long labels the area the “Great American Desert”  Pike’s Peak, CO
  • 15. What was Essex Junto? Why the threat of secession?
  • 16. MA, extreme Federalists Threatened secession Didn’t get support from Hamilton  Turned to Aaron Burr  Supposedly Burr did support secession…
  • 17.  Asked to be Federalist candidate for governor of NY  Rumors he supported Federalist secession  Hamilton accused Burr of treason & said he had “despicable” character  Burr lost & blamed it on Hamilton
  • 18. Burr challenged Hamilton to a duel July 11, 1804 near Weehawken, NJ Burr wounds Hamilton, Hamilton dies the next day Burr was charged with multiple crimes, but never tried in court Finish VP term, but political career was over
  • 19.
  • 20.  Before duel, Burr had plotted to capture Mexico  Also, rumors that he hoped to rule a western empire  Little evidence  Burr arrested as a traitor, but eventually acquitted  What did the Burr Conspiracy say about the nation in the early 1800s?
  • 21.  American merchant marine grew rapidly  Controlled much of the trans-Atlantic trade  By 1805 Napoleon controls almost entire European continent  Napoleon bans British trade to Europe  British responds by requiring all good going to Europe to be on British vessels or checked at a British port  America=Rock & Hard Place
  • 22. British navy was capturing American sailors & forcing them into service=impressment British navy was losing manpower & needed replacements Chesapeake-Leopard incident in 1807  British Leopard opened fire, Americans surrendered Americans wanted revenge
  • 23. Jefferson & Madison (Sec. of State) tried to keep the peace Asked Brits to end impressment, but refused to do so
  • 24. The Embargo (Act)—Ended American exports to all foreign countries  Hurt merchants, esp. in New England  Led to economic downturn Jefferson replaced Embargo w/ Non- Intercourse Act  Only banned trade w/ France & Britain  Ban lifted in 1810
  • 25. Jefferson’s plan: Natives could assimilate into settled farmers or move West of the Mississippi W. H. Harrison, governor of Indiana Territory from 1801 to 1812, strictly enforced Jefferson’s plan Rising American population west of Appalachians
  • 26.  Tribes were losing lands quickly, see maps on p. 208, until…  1. British attempted to ally with Native tribes, expecting American invasion of Canada  2. Rise of the Prophet & his efforts to unite tribes Harrison
  • 27.  The Prophet sparked a religious revival & a renunciation of white ways, back to roots  The Prophet’s brother, Tecumseh, hoped to unite all tribes of the Mississippi Valley  While Tecumseh was absent, Harrison fought the tribal forces  Battle of Tippecanoe (1811)  Weakened Native forces  By 1812 Tecumseh’s warriors were attacking white settlements  British helped supply Natives
  • 28.  Push to acquire Spanish Florida  Threat to Georgia & other southern states  Slaves escaped  Indian attacks  Americans captured western part of Florida Territory in 1810 & made plans to take the rest  Spain was Britain’s ally
  • 29. Calls for war increased Territorial expansion War Hawks led by: 1. Henry Clay—KY 2. John C. Calhoun—SC President Madison approved war on June 18, 1812