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James L. Roark ● Michael P. Johnson Patricia Cline Cohen ● Sarah Stage Susan M. Hartmann The American Promise A History of the United States Fifth Edition CHAPTER 10 Republicans in Power, 1800-1824 Copyright © 2012 by Bedford/St. Martin's I. Jefferson’s Presidency A. Turbulent Times: Election and Rebellion 1. An uncertain election • remained uncertain from November until February 1801; voters in the electoral college used the single balloting system to choose both president and vice president; gave equal number of ballots to Jefferson and his running mate, Senator Aaron Burr of New York; Burr declined to concede. 2. The House decides • after thirty-six ballots and six days, Jefferson got the necessary nine votes to win the election; his victory proved that the nation could shift from one group to its rivals in a peaceful transfer of power. • twenty-four-year-old enslaved blacksmith named Gabriel plotted rebellion in Virginia; inspired by the Haitian Revolution; said to be organizing a thousand slaves to take Governor James Monroe hostage; a few nervous slaves went to the authorities, and Gabriel’s Rebellion never occurred; it did, however, scare white Virginians, who hanged 27 black men for contemplating rebellion. 3. Gabriel’s Rebellion B. The Jeffersonian Vision of Republican Simplicity 1. Jefferson’s style • • • frugal and casual; dressed plainly to strike a tone of republican simplicity; disdained female gatherings and avoided the women of Washington City; preferred small dinners of all Republicans or all Federalists 2. Jeffersonian government wanted to scale back the power of the federal government; promoted policies that would benefit the independent farmer, whom Jefferson viewed as the true source of American liberty; the independent farmer ideal would own and work his land both for himself and for the market. 3. Dismantling Federalist innovations 4. Marbury v. Madison Adams made 217 last-minute appointments of Federalists to various judicial and military posts; Jefferson refused to honor “midnight judges”; jobseeker William Marbury sued the new secretary of state James Madison; Supreme Court decided in 1803 that the president should have delivered the valid commission, but that the Court could not compel him to do so; also declared the Judiciary Act of 1789 unconstitutional; established judicial review; the Court acted to disallow a law on the grounds that it conflicted with the Constitution. I. Jefferson’s Presidency C. Dangers Overseas: The Barbary Wars 1. The Barbary States • states—Morocco, Algiers, Tunis, and Tripoli—controlled all Mediterranean shipping traffic by demanding large tribute payment for safe passage; called the Barbary States by Americans; by the mid-1790s, the United States was paying $50,000 per year in tribute. 2. The United States goes to war • a U.S. ship then sunk the Philadelphia, rendering it useless to hijackers; without the permission of the government, American officer William Eaton raised a private force of 400 mercenaries and attacked Derne, Tripoli; leader of Tripoli yielded, released the hostages for a fee, and terminated tribute. 3. Defending the nation’s honor II. Opportunities and Challenges in the West A. The Louisiana Purchase 1. Spanish fears 2. French Louisiana • • 1800, Spain returned Louisiana to France, hoping the stronger France could create a buffer zone between Spain’s holdings in Mexico and the land-hungry Americans. 3. A discount price sent Robert R. Livingston to try to buy New Orleans from the French; instead bought all of the territory for the bargain price of $15 million; nearly doubled the size of the nation. B. The Lewis and Clark Expedition 1. Goals • appointed his secretary, Meriwether Lewis, to explore the new territory to establish relationships with Indian tribes and to determine Spanish influence and presence; Jefferson told Lewis to collect plant and animal specimens and to chart the geography of the West; Lewis chose William Clark as his co-leader. 2. Reaching the Pacific crew of 45, including the slave York; left St. Louis in spring of 1804; camped for the winter in central North Dakota; soon were accompanied by sixteen-year-old Shoshoni woman and translator named Sacajawea; reached the Pacific in November 1805; hailed as national heroes when they returned home II. Opportunities and Challenges in the West C. Osage and Comanche Indians 1. Additional expeditions • first ended at a hot springs in present-day Arkansas; the second traveled to eastern Texas; the third ventured deep into the Rocky Mountains; led by Zebulon Pike, the Americans were arrested by the Spanish. • 2. The differing tribes Osage ruled the land between the Missouri and the lower Arkansas rivers; the Comanche territory stretched from the upper Arkansas River to the Rockies and south into Texas; Osage preferred diplomacy; the Comanche cemented dominance through trade and readiness to employ violence. 3. Cultivating the Osage 4. Cultivating the Comanche • Comanche managed to resist attempts to dominate them; they welcomed the United States as a new trading partner; the trade flourished on an extensive scale into the 1820s. III. Jefferson, the Madisons, and the War of 1812 A. Impressment and Embargo 1. Impressment • ultimately, 2,500 American soldiers were “impressed” (taken by force) by the British, who needed them for the war with France; led Jefferson to call for a nonimportation law. • in June 1807; American ship with British deserters fired on by a British frigate; killed three Americans. 2. The Chesapeake incident 3. The Embargo Act of 1807 4. The election of 1808 B. Dolley Madison and Social Politics 1. Social networks • • Dolley developed elaborate social networks in Washington; this was the top level of female politicking; women couldn’t vote, so they had to work covertly; webs of friendship and influence facilitated female political lobbying; influenced the government’s patronage system. 2. The parties of the “Presidentress” struck a balance between queenliness and republican openness; dressed in fancy clothes; held weekly open-house parties, called the weekly “squeeze,” that went on for hours; established informal channels of information and provided crucial political access; Dolley Madison’s influence helped the symbolic value of the White House enhance the power and legitimacy of the presidency III. Jefferson, the Madisons, and the War of 1812 C. Tecumseh and Tippecanoe 1. Shifting demographics in the Northwest 2. William Henry Harrison • As territorial governor of Indiana, Harrison had negotiated a series of treaties in a divide-and-conquer strategy extracting Indian lands for paltry payments; the rise of Tecumseh and his brother Tenskwatawa, the Prophet, made this strategy more difficult; in 1809, while Tecumseh was away on a recruiting trip, Harrison assembled the leaders of the Potawatomi, Miami, and Delaware tribes to negotiate the Treaty of Fort Wayne; falsely promised that this was the last cession of land the United States would seek. 3. The Battle of Tippecanoe Tecumseh was furious at Harrison and local leaders for signing the treaty; he left his brother in charge of Prophetstown and went south to seek alliances; Harrison took advantage of Tecumseh’s absence and attacked Prophetstown on the Tippecanoe River in November 1811; the two-hour battle resulted in the deaths of 62 Americans and 40 Indians; when the Indians fled, the Americans set the town on fire; Americans heralded the glorious victory; Tecumseh was now more ready than ever to make war on the United States III. Jefferson, the Madisons, and the War of 1812 D. The War of 1812 1. The War Hawks • new Congress of March 1811 contained several dozen young Republicans eager to avenge insults from abroad; informally known as War Hawks, they were mostly lawyers from the West and South who welcomed a war with England to legitimize attacks on the Indians and to bring an end to impressment; they were also expansionists looking to occupy Florida and threaten Canada; led by Henry Clay and John C. Calhoun. • • 2. Sectional divisions 3. The War in the North proposed an invasion of Canada and predicted victory in four weeks; the war lasted two and half years, and Canada never fell; Americans first lost Detroit and Fort Dearborn, but they made inroads back into Canada in late 1812 and early 1813; defeated the British and the Indians at the Battle of Thames, where Tecumseh was killed in October 1813. 4. The War in the South and the Creek War Creek War ended in March 1814 when General Andrew Jackson led 2,500 Tennessee militiamen in the Battle of Horseshoe Bend; later extracted a treaty relinquishing thousands of square miles of land to the United States. III. Jefferson, the Madisons, and the War of 1812 E. Washington City Burns: The British Offensive 1. The British invasions • August 1814, British ships sailed into Chesapeake Bay; landed 5,000 troops and sent the capital into a panic; families evacuated; Dolley Madison fled with her husband’s papers; British troops entered the city and began burning government buildings, including the White House, before attacking Baltimore; British troops marched to New York from Canada; a series of mistakes cost them a naval skirmish at Plattsburgh; they retreated back to Canada. • • • 2. The Battle of New Orleans Orleans—In early 1813, the British army landed in lower Louisiana and encountered General Andrew Jackson and his militia outside New Orleans; Jackson won a decisive victory and became an instant hero; the Battle of New Orleans was the most glorious victory the country had experienced, even though negotiators had actually signed a peace agreement two weeks earlier. 3. The Treaty of Ghent 4. The Hartford Convention New England Federalists convened a secret meeting in Connecticut in December 1814; politicians discussed constitutional amendments that would have weakened the political power of the South; even discussed seceding from the union; coming just as peace was achieved made the Hartford Convention look highly unpatriotic; the Federalist Party never recovered. 5. The war’s legacies Americans celebrated as though they had; gave rise to a new spirit of nationalism; biggest winners were the War Hawks; carried the Republican Party in new, expansive directions; favored trade, western expansion, internal improvements, and the development of new markets; biggest losers were the Indians, who lost land and their British protectors. IV. Women’s Status in the Early Republic A. Women and the Law 1. Feme Covert • • • wives had no independent legal or political personhood; legal doctrine of feme covert held that a wife’s civic life was subsumed by that of her husband; state legislatures generally did not rewrite the laws of domestic relations even though they redrafted other British laws in light of republican principles. 2. Divorce 3. Single women could own and convey property, make contracts, initiate lawsuits, and pay taxes; could not vote, serve on juries, or practice law. 4. Slave women they could not freely consent to any contractual obligation, including marriage; slave unions were informal and thus did not establish unequal power relations between partners backed by the force of law. B. Women and Church Governance 1. Protestant hierarchy 2. Women preachers • 1790 and 1820, a small and highly unusual set of women actively engaged in open preaching; most were from Freewill Baptist groups in New England and upstate New York; probably fewer than a hundred such women existed, but several dozen traveled beyond local communities; claimed to exhort rather than to preach; Jemima Wilkinson was best known; claimed her body was no longer female or male; dressed in men’s clothes and did not use gender-specific pronouns. IV. Women’s Status in the Early Republic C. Female Education 1. Public schools • • • states and localities began investing in public schools; young girls attended; learned basic literacy and numeracy; by 1830, girls approached male literacy rates in many places. 2. Private female academies advanced female education came from private academies; there were nearly 200 academies in the United States by 1839; attended by daughters of elite families as well as those of middling families with elite aspirations; curriculum included ornamental arts and solid academics; Latin, rhetoric, logic, algebra, even chemistry and physics; by the 1820s, the courses and reading lists equaled those at male colleges such as Harvard and Yale; best known female academies were seminaries that prepared female students to teach. 3. Value of female education total annual enrollment at the female academies and seminaries equaled male enrollment at the almost six dozen male colleges in the United States; both groups accounted for only about 1 percent of their age cohort in the United States; new attention to the training of female minds laid the foundation for major changes in the gender system as girl students of the 1810s matured into adult women of the 1830s. V. Monroe and Adams A. From Property to Democracy 1. Democratization of politics • twelve of the thirteen original states enacted landed property qualifications for voting; in the 1790s, Vermont became the first state to enfranchise all adult males, and four more states soon broadened suffrage considerably; between 1800 and 1830, the trend for democratization gripped all the states; many new western states abandoned property qualifications altogether. 2. Suffrage debate • expanding numbers of commercial men, renters, and mortgage holders of all classes contended with entrenched landed elites who favored the status quo; still, by 1820, half a dozen states passed suffrage reform. • many states excluded paupers and felons; excluding women required no discussion; except for New York, which retained existing property qualifications for black voters as it removed it for whites; the pattern was one of expanded suffrage for whites and a total eclipse of suffrage for blacks. 3. Persistent exclusion B. The Missouri Compromise 1. Missouri applies for statehood 2. The Tallmadge amendments • New York representative James Tallmadge Jr., proposed two amendments to the statehood bill; the first stipulated that slaves born in Missouri after statehood would be free at age 25; the second declared that no new slaves could be brought into the state; amendments passed in the House, but fell in the Senate. • emerged in the Senate in 1820; Maine would enter the union as a free state and Missouri would come in as a slave state, maintaining the balance of slave and free states; the Southern border of Missouri at the 36º30’ latitude would become the permanent line dividing slave states and free states; temporarily solved the slavery debate. 3. The compromise V. Monroe and Adams C. The Monroe Doctrine 1. Obtaining Florida 2. The Monroe Doctrine D. The Election of 1824 1. Variety of Republicans 2. Wives’ roles in campaigns 3. The popular vote 4. The corrupt bargain V. Monroe and Adams E. The Adams Administration 1. Diplomacy, not politics 2. Lofty ideals, few results