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Alexander Minnaard 3136590 thesis Early ideas about US empire A history of Jefferson and Madison Alexander Minnaard 3136590 Master Thesis American Studies November 9 2015 J. Verheul Number of words: 23 104 1 Alexander Minnaard 3136590 thesis Table of contents Introduction 3 Chapter 1 Expansion and Frontier 8 Chapter 2 Military force 20 Chapter 3 Indians and Slavery 33 Conclusion 48 Bibliography 53 2 Alexander Minnaard 3136590 thesis Introduction On the outset, the war of 1812 between Great-Britain and the United States initially looked like a naval crisis. Maritime affairs and trade conflicts were the immediate causes of this war. That war, was not the most logical outcome if you take into account the fact that the new republic was small and thus nowhere ready to face the world power Great-Britain. Despite this argument against the war, the war did happen and many argued in favor of it. Leading newspapers ventilated outrage against the British and the country appeared to be ready for war. President Jefferson himself acknowledged that the public mind was “made up for war’’.1 Leading politicians used jingoistic language in order to rally the people behind the war. Speaker Clay was arguing for war “ because I believe her prior in aggression […] Britain stand preeminent in her outrage on us.”2 John Calhoun declared a war against Britain was nothing less than a second war for American Independence.3 One might wonder why these politicians had argued in favor of a war against a very powerful opponent? Great-Britain was their previous colonizer, so there was presumably still some resentment against the British Empire. However, possibly something else caused war fever. Many politicians saw this war as an opportunity to enlarge the United States. The republic needed expansion. Former president Jefferson envisioned opportunities to expand further into American continent. Historians Andrew Burstein and Nancy Isenberg argue that Jefferson’s view was that he saw that a conquest of this size would perfect the American Republic. 4 Jefferson said epigrammatically, yielding “such an empire of liberty” and thereby would the founders dream be fulfilled and the posterity forever rescued from the European extremes of luxury and squalor. “I am persuaded no constitution was ever before so well -calculated as ours for extensive empire and self-government.”5 In other words, Jefferson advocated to build an American empire. Thus the war aims were not only to defend the nation against Britain, but also to conquer Canada and expand into the south. The Louisiana Purchase (1803) had created all kinds of opportunities for further expansion but had also created potential threats such as Spain and huge tribes of Indians. The war itself did not develop as planned. Expansion into Canada did not happen and the capital of the nation, Washington, was captured and set on fire by the British 1 H.W. Brands, Andrew Jackson His life and times (New York: Doubleday 2005), 144. Ibidem, 158. 3 Ibidem, 159. 4 A. Burstein and N. Isenberg, Madison and Jefferson (New York: Random House 2010), 473. 5 Ibidem, 473. 2 3 Alexander Minnaard 3136590 thesis soldiers. The Indians were a dangerous opponent in the frontier states. However, the outcome of the war was regarded differently by the public.6 Enormously controversial with members of the Federalist Party from the moment it began, the war received a sort of popular referendum in the next two presidential elections, of 1812 and 1816. James Madison easily won reelection in November 1812 and his handpicked successor and former Secretary of War, James Monroe, enjoyed landslide success four years later in 1816. Thousands and thousands of men cast Democratic-Republican votes in these contests. The war, in other words proved to be a popular success. 7 This had to do with that the last major battle was won by the Americans in New Orleans, but it also had to do with the deeper emotions of the Americans. Americans perceived the victory of New Orleans as a sign that individualistic rifle men at the frontier were capable of defeating the arrogant British.8 So, despite all the losses the war was perceived as a success and the people rallied around their nation. Leading politicians, but also supporters of Andrew Jackson, were now supporters of Jefferson’s vision of an ‘empire of liberty’, an empire stretching to the west, a belief that the nation’s destiny lay in the multiplication of family farms and the extension of American power across continental space.9 Despite the setbacks in the war, the dream of expansion was not forgotten. Although the ambitions of expansion were shared by many other citizens of the United States, it is clear that the leading politicians were in favor of expansion and that they used their influence and power to achieve these goals, even when they left office. Both Presidents Jefferson and Madison dreamed of an American empire. However, this dream required a greater military than the two presidents had provided for, a sense of national unity that did not exist and a spirit of concession that the European powers would not exhibit.10 This research project will focus on territorial ambitions and policies of these two presidents. To what extend did Jefferson and Madison see the war of 1812 as an instrument for expansion? How did they perceive territorial expansion and a possible American empire? In short, to what extent did Jefferson and Madison want to create an empire in the period 1801-1816 and how did they put their ambitions of expansion into practice? My focus is on their terms as Presidents rather than on the war of 1812 itself, party politics or their personal lives. The focus will be on their ambitions concerning the expansion of America. 6 D.W. Howe, What Hath God Wrought The transformation of America 1815-1848 (New York: Oxford University Press 2007), 71. 7 N. Eustace, 1812: war and the passions of patriotism (Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press 2012), X-XI. 8 Howe, What Hath God Wrought, 17. 9 Ibidem, 18. 10 Burstein and Isenberg, Madison and Jefferson, 474. 4 Alexander Minnaard 3136590 thesis Academic discussion My research uses the conceptual framework of what defines an empire. Several academics argue that the United States is a modern empire. They also claim that this empire has a long history that started in the early days of the Republic. This is relevant for my research since I intend to study these early days. Jefferson and Madison and their policies toward expansionism show the roots and the founding of the Empire. This research is thereby relevant to this debate and also because it will clarify something about American foreign policy and it’s self-image. However, not many Americans have viewed themselves as inhabitants of an empire. Niall Ferguson advanced the view that the United States is and has always been an empire – though he added that it was an ’empire in denial’ whose aspirations were hypocritically (and unfortunately) denied by US policymakers.11 For Andrew J. Bacevich this denial is the main problem, he argues that like it or not America today is Rome, thereby meaning that America is an empire.12 However, America is an empire that differs from every other empire in history. Bacevich urges the US to stop to deny that they are an empire and ask themselves what kind of empire they want to be. Charles S. Maier finds the discussion if America is an empire not really relevant, he is more concerned about the impact of imperialism domestically. 13 If empire means that the US will spread more democracy and advance human rights, than there might be benefits to being an empire. Maier warns for the risk of self-chosen isolation and thereby undermining America’s state structures. Maier’s message fits in with the manifest destiny ideology. The term phrased by John O’Sullivan in 1845 means that the mission of the United States was to overspread the continent allotted by Providence for the free development of our multiplying millions. 14 This term was invented in the 1840s but Anders Stephanson argues that the idea behind was much older. 15 The US were expanding into the continent in the name of liberty at that particular time but also before the 1840s. The first settlers in the seventeenth century had already done so. This ideology was behind expansion and furthers in Stephanson view the empire of the right in our current times with Reagan. It gives a moral dimension to the imperialism of the United States. This raises the question: what is an empire? Maier states that empire is: ‘’ […] an empire in the classic sense is usually believed, first to expand its control by conquest or coercion and second, to control the political loyalty of the territories it subjugates. It may rule these subject’s land directly or it may install compliant native leaders who 11 D. Hendrickson, Union, Nation, or Empire The American debate over international relations 17891941 (Kansas: University Press Kansas 2009), 14. 12 A. J. Bacevich, American Empire The Realities & Consequences of U.S. Diplomacy (London: Harvard University Press 2002), 244. 13 C. S. Maier, Among Empires American ascendancy and its predecessors (London: Harvard University Press 2006), 3. 14 A. Stephanson, Manifest Destiny American Expansion and the empire of the right (New York: Hill and Wang 1995), XI. 15 Ibidem, XI. 5 Alexander Minnaard 3136590 thesis will govern on its behalf, but is not just an alliance system among equal partners.’’16 For my research only the first part about conquest and expansion is relevant, so I am going to focus on the roots of the modern empire. Another historical debate is about the nature and the origins of the war of 1812. Some argue that it was a war about maritime grievances. In this view Harry L. Coles describes the conflict as rights vs. rights. He uses this description because in his view both quarreling parties stood for their rights and were ready to defend them in a major war. The English thought they were fighting for the liberties of the entire world. They viewed this conflict in their narrative against the tyrant Napoleon. The Americans were fighting for their trading rights.17 However, other historians view this conflict differently. Not a conflict about maritime grievances but, about agrarian expansion. Farmers needed more land and this set in motion expansion to the west.18 Julius W. Pratt argues that there was more, he argued for a combination of sectional motives. Some regions wanted to expand into Canada and others were aiming for the West. This combination of interest caused this war.19 And not the British were the principal enemy, the Indians were. They caused unrest along the border regions and that motivated the United States in 1811 to go to war. Other historians such as Taylor focus more on economic reasons.20 This view combines expansions with maritime grievances. The historian Norman K. Risjord strongly disagrees with this view. He argues that honor and feelings of nationalism were the starting point of this conflict.21 This view concurs with the description of John Calhoun who called this war a second war of independence against GreatBritain. Concluding, many historians view this conflict differently: maritime grievances, Indians, expansion into the north and west and nationalism are all seen as reasons for this conflict. War sparked nationalistic feelings and these feelings could lead to a new expansion policy. War, expansion and nationalism are all closely linked to one another. The (re)election of Jefferson and Madison and later of James Monroe prove this. They all more of less favored the war of 1812 and they were definitely in favor of expansion. It might be said that the people supported their policies by voting them into office. So there are close symbioses between the ideas of these politicians and their supporters. Their ideas concerning expansion were well received. The Jacksonian era later in the nineteenth century proved this as well. He was revered as a new George Washington and this led to his election as president later on. Concluding, this 16 C. S. Maier, Among Empires, 24-25. H. J. Coles, The War of 1812 (Chicago: Chicago University Press 1965), 3. 18 Ibidem, 27. 19 Ibidem, 28. 20 Ibidem, 30-31. 21 Ibidem, 30-31. 17 6 Alexander Minnaard 3136590 thesis example demonstrates the close relationship between war, nationalism and expansion. Methodology My research will be based on primary and secondary sources. For primary sources I will use personal papers of Jefferson and Madison.22 I will also use their Inaugural Addresses and annual messages to Congress. I will also use letters and sources of other politicians if they fit in the narrative of my two main research objects. Jefferson was a retired politician after 1809, but he was still in close contact with his friend and successor Madison, so I will use his sources for that time period as well too in describing the Madison era. I have chosen to study their archives, because both Jefferson and Madison were very present in their time, not just as politicians but as thinkers and writers as well. They gave an interesting view of their time with all the amount of their work. In some ways they represented their time correctly. By using both men an important phase in American history will be covered. Their papers have been studied and their letters have been used, as regards to their policies concerning the American empire and its expansion. Chapters will be presented in a thematic approach. The term “empire” has many components and I have decided to use three of them. I will use source material to look for signs of these components. My first chapter will discuss expansion. What plans made Jefferson and Madison for expansion into the continent and why? In the second chapter I will focus on an basic precondition of empire: the military. How saw Jefferson and Madison the role of the army? Did they make plans to expand the army? My third chapter is about the nature of society. Both Jefferson and Madison were white men and what was their approach to other cultures in their expansionistic plans? What was the role of the Indians and the slaves and how did that role change over the years? 22 Most of their letters can be accessed through http://founders.archive.gov/ 7 Alexander Minnaard 3136590 thesis Chapter 1 Expansion and Frontier As soon as Thomas Jefferson was inaugurated as President in 1803, he accelerated the policy of securing U.S. control over western territory. The President approached Congress in order to fund a federal mission of discovery, which would be called the Lewis and Clark Expedition later on. In order to get funding, Jefferson told Congress that the explorers were principally meant to map a river route to the Pacific for the expansion of Commerce and U.S. settlement.23 For Jefferson the goal behind these expansion plans was to build a broad agricultural empire.24 Another reason for this westward expansion of the United States was the progress of civilization. Near the end of his life he looked back on the new nation’s history. “Let a philosophic observer commence a journey from the savages of the Rocky Mountains, eastwardly towards our sea-cost”, he wrote to William Ludlow, and he observed “this march of civilizations advancing from the sea cost, passing over us like a cloud of light” and as civilization advanced, “Barbarism has […] been receding.”25 Nearly a quarter of a century earlier, in his First Inaugural Address, Jefferson looked forward to the future and saw a continent that was a “chosen country, with room enough for our descendants, to the thousandth and thousandth generation.”26 To spread civilization, make room for settlements and to expand commerce and agriculture were all reasons for Jefferson to advocate expansion into the west. These motivations of Jefferson all suggest that he had empire on his mind during his Presidency. This “empire for liberty” as Jefferson called it in a letter to his friend and Secretary of State and successor as president James Madison is an ambition of Jefferson.27 In this chapter the focus will be on a specific part of this empire, namely expansion. What plans did Jefferson and James Madison make for expansion and why? How did they put their ideas into practice? Louisiana Purchase Jefferson’s confidence in the new nation’s future seems as boundless as the continent itself. However, this confidence was not based on geopolitical facts. The Unites States were at best a second rate “power” in world politics. Domestically there was political friction at the top between Federalists and Democrats-Republicans of Jefferson and Madison. Thus, the President had to maneuver very carefully in order to expand into the west, because the west had its own potential threats, such as different tribes of Indians. 23 A. Burstein and N. Isenberg, Madison and Jefferson (New York: Random House, 2010), 388. Ibidem, 388. 25 Letter from T. Jefferson to W. Ludlow, September 6 1824, http://founders.archives.gov/documents/Jefferson/98-01-02-4523 26 T. Jefferson, First Inaugural Address, March 4 1801, http://jeffersonpapers.princeton.edu/selecteddocuments/first-inaugural-address-0 27 Letter from T. Jefferson to J. Madison, April 27 1809, http://founders.archives.gov 24 8 Alexander Minnaard 3136590 thesis The frontiers of the United States were under constant threat and this would make expansion very difficult. Chances that Jefferson’s dreams were going to be fully realized were not very high, given the circumstances. Then, in 1803, the Louisiana Purchase agreement was concluded and this deal was as much a surprise to Jefferson and Madison as to any other American. Napoleon Bonaparte, ruler of France, decided that he wanted to sell the Louisiana area to the United States, in order to get back at Great-Britain. He rightly perceived that in the long haul this would benefit the United States and would hinder Great-Britain’s Empire in the future. The Louisiana Purchase would eventually clear the way for westward expansion for the United States in the future. “Possession of both sides of the Mississippi,” exulted Senator John Smith of the new state of Ohio, “shall form an invincible Bulwark to the western country, and the epoch of its commercial, manufacturing and political importance”.28 Even the most expansionistic politicians, Jefferson included, were amazed by the seemingly endless possibilities of this enormous land that had been bought from France. It would not be long before Americans began to exploit this new land, thereby stretching the borders of the United States further and further westward. Historian Peter Onuf correctly argues that the significance of the Louisiana Purchase was that it made expansion seem more “natural”.29 One serious obstacle was eliminated, the French presence in the American west was gone. Thereby, the Jefferson administration had to face one obstacle less for future expansion. The Louisiana Purchase put the theory of expansion into practice. Jefferson’s ideas accorded with the Louisiana purchase. An agrarian empire supported a republican political economy better than an urban dominated alternative.30 This idea of an empire had been magnified with the purchase. However, Madison, Jefferson’s Secretary of State, was less attached to Jefferson’s idea of an empire. Both men had endorsed territorial expansion, a reliance on agricultural production and freedom from the British and other European powers, but Madison was more comfortable with Newtonian physics for his model of westward expansion.31 Overseeing the larger picture, Madison felt that the government took too many risks by reckless pursuing expansion. Government should act to avert “collisions” along national borders. These collisions happened as the population in these border regions grew, which gave rise to new competing political factions inside and outside the United States. In Newtonian terms, he was monitoring gravitational P.S. Onuf, “Prologue Jefferson, Louisiana, and American Nationhood,” in Empires of the imagination, ed. P. J. Kastor and F. Weil (Charlottesville: University of Virginia Press 2009), 31. 29 Ibidem, 32. 30 Burstein and Isenberg, Madison and Jefferson, 390. 31 Ibidem, 392. 28 9 Alexander Minnaard 3136590 thesis pull, making certain that the planets remained in their proper orbits. In other words, his emphasis was on avoidance of conflict.32 As a consequence of this thinking the purchase challenged the thinking of both men. Jefferson was preoccupied with the constitutionality: he had to make sure the purchase was legal and on what grounds and on whose authority it was to expand the nation. Jefferson wrote a letter to Senator John Breckinridge in August 1803 on this issue: “I suppose”, he wrote Breckinridge, with reference to the members of Congress who were critical of the purchase, “they must then appeal to the nation for an additional article to the Constitution, approving and confirming an act which the nation had not previously authorized.”33 His “I suppose” was followed by a clear recognition that “the Constitution has made no provision for our holding foreign territory, still less for incorporating foreign nation into our union.”34 Jefferson’s underlying premise in this letter by referring to the nation was that the west was inseparable from the nation’s destiny. However, Congress did not go along with Jefferson’s thinking easily, so soon after the letter to Breckinridge, Jefferson was forced to adjust his thinking. After conferring with Madison he decided not to seek authorization by means of a constitutional amendment. Instead, he forwarded the treaty to Congress, which was ratified soon enough. Extra territory for the United States was now a done deal. This whole episode demonstrates that the idea of expansion was shared by many, but in practice there were many difficulties, such as in this case, parts of Congress that were opposed to it. The difficulties surrounding the purchase of Louisiana would soon wear off, when Americans started to migrate into the territory. In ”the empire for liberty” that Jefferson envisioned, vast open spaces invited new opportunity for a decent and deserving people who were meant to spread west and republicanize.35 Cultural dominance was built into that grand vision. It was impossible not to look to the future, wrote Jefferson to his friend James Monroe in 1801, “when our rapid multiplication will expand itself beyond our limits, and over the whole northern, if not southern continent, with a people speaking the same language, governed in similar forms by similar laws.”36 Europe & Florida One consequence of the Louisiana Purchase was that France was gone from NorthAmerica, but also that Spain was closer by as a neighbor. A neighbor that had an axe to grind. Spain objected to the sale of Louisiana, it did not acknowledge the sale. 32 Burstein and Isenberg, Madison and Jefferson, 392. A.Koch, Jefferson & Madison The Great Collaboration (New York: Oxford University Press 1964), 245. 34 Ibidem, 245. 35 Letter from T. Jefferson to J. Madison, April 27 1809, http://founders.archives.gov/documents/Jefferson 36 Letter from T. Jefferson to J. Monroe, November 24 1801, http://founders.archives.gov/documents/Jefferson 33 10 Alexander Minnaard 3136590 thesis This made life at the border difficult. For instance, there were border disputes. Where ended the United States and where began Spain? In his fourth annual message on November 8, 1804, the President gave his view on this matter. He brought up the U.S. boundary with Spanish Florida and stated that America’s object had been “misunderstood on the part of Spain”, on the related matter of Madrid’s discomfort with America’s acquisition of Louisiana, he expressed equal confidence that the issue would be easily resolved. 37 However, to many it seemed as wishful thinking, Spain would not be persuaded to recognize the expansion. The United States wanted more and Madison, who led the negotiations with Spain, also preferred to buy the arc of land surrounding the Gulf of Mexico. Madison made it very clear to his diplomats Monroe and Pinckney in his letters, that, with or without an agreement, he would have the United States move into the disputed borderland that was known as West Florida.38 Madison justified this by saying it was a case of national security and thereby he would not allow this land go into the hands of the British.39 Madison’s claim to this land was certainly to be questioned, but just as with the Louisiana Purchase, he proceeded with his plans. The next step into acquiring West-Florida was to decide to unilaterally enforce its interpretation of the Louisiana Purchase in 1810 by occupying this district all the way up the Mississippi. The boundaries were pushed ahead. The Spanish government accepted neither the interpretation nor the occupation, but, lacking the troops to counter the United States, could not prevent the expansion.40 Spain, however, did garrison its American border with more troops. So, the risk of a potential war made Madison and Jefferson behave more cautious and secretive about their intentions. Especially towards Congress where political opponents were very skeptical about their plans concerning expansion. This led to evasive answers to questions and ambiguous speeches. There were also people who were advocating a more direct approach with Spain. Such as people who lived at the border regions and they were feeling under threat by the Spanish.41 Also because the Spanish weren’t strong enough to control Florida and as a consequence the whole area turned into a vacuum where nobody really ruled. This had as consequence that there was a lack of real authority and thus this created unsafe areas were whole groups of people were running wild. So, because of the weak border the frontier became unsafe. So many there argued for an expansion into Florida in order to deal with these problems.42 37 Annual message to Congress by President Jefferson, November 8 1804, http://avalon.law.yale.edu/19th_century/jeffmes4.asp 38 See for instance letter of J. Madison to J. Monroe, April 15 1804, http://founders.archive.gov/ 39 Letter of J. Madison to J. Monroe, April 15 1804, http://founders.archive.gov/ 40 H.W. Brands, Andrew Jackson His life and times (New York: Doubleday 2005), 237. 41 Ibidem, 239. 42 Ibidem, 243. 11 Alexander Minnaard 3136590 thesis The Administration was still hopeful for a diplomatic solution because of the difficulties in Congress with annexation. Jefferson still supported expansion into the south and he made this clear in a letter to Madison in the summer of 1807. “I had rather have war against Spain than not, if we go to war against England. Our southern defensive force can take the Florida’s, volunteers for a Mexican army will flock to our standard, and rich pabulum will be offered to our privateers in the plunder of their commerce and coasts. Probably Cuba would add itself to our confederation.”43 This letter gives us a hint on how far Jefferson and for that matter, Madison’s thinking went. Not only was Jefferson in this case comfortable with the ambition to obtain territory, he even a substantial territory. Jefferson was not only talking about acquiring the whole of Florida, but also the Mexican areas and even Cuba as possibility. Jefferson certainly envisioned grand expansionist plans.44 Jefferson also mentions a possible war with Great-Britain. There was a possibility in 1807 for war, however, it did not come about. It does show that there was tension with the former colonizer. This tension would build up over the years eventually leading to war. A war would certainly present opportunities to expand America’s borders. Some such as Aaron Burr, former Vice-President under Jefferson, had tried to provoke a war with Spain, with that goal in mind. His plans were not realized and he was charged with treason. No doubt, Jefferson and Madison supported his ideas but not his plans, due to internal opposition. War of 1812 Another chance to wage war was with Great Britain. Resentment of the past was still looming in the United States and the tension between the two countries was building up. Incidents, such as the Chesapeake incident, sprang up and provoked outrage in the United States. Newspapers exploded with calls for war to avenge dishonor.45 Rumors of war were floating throughout the country. Although Jefferson was unrelenting in his dreams of expansion, his response was cautious. Madison and Jefferson recognized this as a moment when heightened security and bold diplomacy would be equally critical.46 Expansion plans were put on hold. Madison issued instructions to the U.S. minister in Madrid to suspend his efforts to purchase the Floridas, East and West. His thinking was twofold: war with GreatBritain, if it came about would require massive expenditures and with war, the Floridas would be had for a lower price, because the United States would be doing Spain and France a favor by keeping it out of British hands.47 43 Letter from T. Jefferson to J. Madison, August 16, 1807, http://founders.archive.gov/ Burstein and Isenberg, Madison and Jefferson, 443. 45 Brands, Andrew Jackson, 143. 46 Ibidem, 447. 47 Letter from J. Madison to J. Monroe, July 30 1807, http://founders.archive.gov/ 44 12 Alexander Minnaard 3136590 thesis It is important to realize the European context of this possible war. France and GreatBritain were at war with each other on hegemony in Europe. Everything had happened in the Americas was a consequence of this. The Jefferson Administration clearly hoped to benefit from this conflict. The European powers were vulnerable and this vulnerability was most clearly present at the peripheries of their areas of power, in the continent of America. Jefferson wrote to Madison that he explored the prospect of take simply the Floridas from Spain, confiding that he had “rather have war against Spain than not.”48 However, it was also clear that in the fall of 1807, in spite of all the tough talk, Congress nor the executive branch really wished to go to war at that particular time. Many felt that from a military point of view the United States were not ready for war.49 With this perspective in mind, Madison and Jefferson settled for commercial retaliation.50 A trade embargo against Britain was put in to effect. The irony of this embargo was that it hurt the United States more than their aspired target. It also diminished the popularity of Jefferson and his political credit. It was a bad miscalculation. Just before the end of his presidency Jefferson and Congress lifted the embargo, in order to give his successor James Madison a clean slate when he was to take over the presidency in 1809. The tensions with the European powers did disappear. Both France and Britain disregarded the rights of the United States during their ongoing wars. What did change was the attitude of the United States. Besides a new president, there was also a change of generations in Congress. Younger politicians such as Henry Clay and John Calhoun found their way to the United States Congress. They brought a new enthusiasm for a possible war with Great-Britain with them.51 Congress was now in favor of war. President Madison, despite his ambitious plans for expansion, hesitated because of the relative weakness of the American army. The “war hawks” in Congress were now pressuring Madison for war. Clay asserted, “I am for war with Britain, because I believe her prior in aggression […] Britain stands preeminent in her outrage on us.”52 Calhoun used even stronger words: the coming war was not just any war, but a second war of independence, he argued.53 With this war, new prospects of future expansion came in sight. The war hawks also advocated expansion. Canada was a target for expansion. Clay argued that the war would pay for itself: “The conquest of Canada is in your power. I trust I shall not be deemed presumptuous when I state, what I verily believe, that the militia of Kentucky are alone competent to place Montreal and Upper Canada at your feet.”54 Clay 48 Letter from T. Jefferson to J. Madison, August 16 1808, http://founders.archive.gov/ Burstein and Isenberg, Madison and Jefferson, 449. 50 Ibidem, 450. 51 Brands, Andrew Jackson, 158. 52 Ibidem, 158. 53 Ibidem, 158. 54 Ibidem, 158. 49 13 Alexander Minnaard 3136590 thesis wanted to safeguard the frontiers (Clay was a Representative of the State Kentucky) and to secure the future of the United States with these plans. How did Jefferson and especially Madison once he became president think about the war fever of a younger generation of politicians? Jefferson had retired and wished to leave all political matters to his successor Madison, however, when he got home to his mansion in Virginia he could not help giving advice to his friend. Jefferson worried about the near future. Despite the rhetoric of expansion in the past he shared concerns that the country was nowhere near ready for a major foreign conflict. Jefferson urged for peace. “I feel great anxiety for the occurrences of the ensuing 4 or 5 months. If peace can be preserved, I hope and trust you will have a smooth administration”.55 Madison presumably shared Jefferson’s sentiment. He did not go along with the war rhetoric coming from Congress. Jefferson also gave his opinion on foreign developments in his letters and what the role for the United States should be. He envisioned opportunities to absorb the rest of the North American continent, incorporating all reachable territory. Conquest of this size would basically perfect the American Republic. Yielding “such an empire for liberty”, he said that the Founders dream would be fulfilled and their posterity would forever rescued from the European extremes of luxury and squalor: “I am persuaded no constitution was ever before so well calculated as ours for extensive empire and self-government.”56 Even in his old age, Jefferson still believed in the inevitability of an American Empire. Of course, he supported the vision of Clay and others for a conquest of Canada, but he even went a step further. Now Jefferson saw an opportunity to expand into the south. Napoleon’s recent conquest of Spain made him think that the French emperor would be willing to accept America’s “moral right” to Florida, East and West, as well as Cuba. “Napoleon will certainly give his consent without difficulty to our receiving the Floridas,” he wrote to Madison. Cuba, he said, might take a little more effort. To this, Madison replied that he expected Napoleon to dangle the Floridas before him in order to extract concessions on America’s right to trade with Haiti, which the French emperor still aimed to conquer. 57 Jefferson responded by writing that he anticipated a French takeover of Spain’s colonies in South America. He considered it in America’s best interest to position itself so that Napoleon would have to turn to the United States for help as his armies established a presence in the southern hemisphere. The former president envisioned a scenario in which the French would turn over the Floridas and Cuba to the United States and the Madison Administration would have their hands 55 Letter from T. Jefferson to J. Madison, March 17 1809, http://founders.archive.gov/ Letter from T. Jefferson to J. Madison, April 27 1809, http://founders.archive.gov/ 57 Letter from J. Madison to T. Jefferson, May 1 1809, http://founders.archive.gov/ 56 14 Alexander Minnaard 3136590 thesis free to pursue Canada, thereby eliminating all colonial threats nearby the United States.58 These plans of the two Virginians for conquest look somewhat in contrast with their attitude towards a possible war with Great-Britain. To explain their lackluster enthusiasm for war it is best to look at their belief in the inevitability for an American Empire. On the whole, the United States did not have to do anything, sooner or later the continent would become completely American, at least the northern part. The weakness of the European powers in the American continent and their competition among each other made the process easier. This attitude explains why Madison did not join the warmongers in Washington and yet supported their ambitious plans for expansion. The difference in opinion did not seen on the goals for the future, but on timing. Madison felt that war in 1810 was not the best option for the United States. Though dreams of empire were never far from the minds of Madison and Jefferson, they required a greater military than the two presidents had provided for and a sense of national unity that did not exist either as a spirit of concession that the European powers were unwilling to meet.59 Although Great-Britain was prepared to make concessions with the United States after the shock of Spain’s capitulation to France, Madison’s Administration was off to a rocky start in all other respects. In congressional elections his rivals of the Federalist Party made more or less a comeback. So, for now Madison urged caution and restored trade relations with Great-Britain. Madison’s position made him vulnerable to criticism, not only from Congress but also from his friend Jefferson. He felt that by compromising with Britain the Republic would make itself to vulnerable towards other European powers. What Jefferson did not realize but Madison did, was that the young republic was still not powerful enough to face the European powers. His problem was that Britain and France were each more powerful than the United States and each considered its war with the other more important than good relations with America. If strangling France required trampling on America’s rights, Britain would trample away. If repelling Britain necessitated treating American vessels as British, France would do so.60 In handling Congress Madison acted different from his predecessor. Jefferson mostly cajoled his Republican allies into doing what he wanted and thereby demanded loyalty. Madison did not have this ability. He was more in favor of an intellectual but also a more distant approach. In this way Madison did not get Congress to follow him as easily as Jefferson had done in the past. As a consequence, Congress put pressure on the president in order to achieve war with Great-Britain. Jefferson also pressured his friend, by leaving his past reluctance for war behind, to take position against Britain. As long as Madison, like Jefferson, aimed to enlarge the 58 Letter from T. Jefferson to J. Madison, April 27 1809, http://founders.archive.gov Letter from T. Jefferson to J. Madison, August 17 1809, http://founders.archive.gov/ 60 Brands, Andrew Jackson, 157. 59 15 Alexander Minnaard 3136590 thesis borders of the United States, the British would remain the principal enemy and Napoleon would be treated as the lesser of two evils. Not only were the British in Canada, they were also supporting the western Indian tribes: at this point they appeared, more likely than Napoleon, to advance into Spanish-held territories on America’s frontier.61 Despite the pressure from Jefferson and others, Madison had shrunk back from a confrontation with Great-Britain, because the United States lacked military strength. Madison decided first that he would start to fix that problem. In his third annual message to Congress in October 1811, he called for a buildup of regular troops in anticipation of war. Madison gave for a reason that the British were fighting a war on lawful commerce.62 Madison did not divulge any expansionistic plans for a possible war. That he still was aiming for expansion proves the case of West-Florida. Madison had profited from the competition between the European powers and he annexed that part of Florida in 1810. He took West-Florida, because England and France were otherwise engaged and Madison foresaw that the entire Gulf Coast remained a potentially operational base for hostile Europeans. That Madison proved himself to be an expansionist was because he looked ahead. He floated the idea that East-Florida might also be wrested from Spain during his presidency, though preferably through negotiation. He gave the governor of Georgia leeway to negotiate with the Spanish for East Florida.63 However, this was not an easy task especially with the prospect of war with Great-Britain looming. Now it was almost certain that war was inevitable. The prospect of Canada was alluring to many in Congress.64 In Indiana Territory, America’s northwestern frontier, fighting broke out at the end of 1811. The Indians built up their defenses and some Indians were not averse to war. However, President Madison was even more cautious in his approach to the northwest than he was with the Gulf Coast. He was hopeful that war with Great-Britain would cause Canada to fall into U.S. hands. So, as the year 1812 began, boundary matters were again on the table. However, caution did not help Madison’s reputation. Federalists accused him to be a war monger, others accused him of avoiding a war.65 Madison, however, actually now had decided to embark on war. He submitted his war message on June 1. In this message the President summed up a long list of grievances as felt by the Americans towards the British, one grievance being that the British were responsible to have urged the Indians to war. Congress supported the war message and voted in favor of war. 61 H.L. Coles, The War of 1812 (Chicago: Chicago University Press 1965), 25. Annual Message to Congress by President Madison, November 11 1811, http://founders.archives.gov/documents/Madison/03-04-02-0001 63 Burstein and Isenberg, Madison and Jefferson, 490. 64 See for instance the comments of Henry Clay earlier in this chapter. 65 Burstein and Isenberg, Madison and Jefferson, 500. 62 16 Alexander Minnaard 3136590 thesis Madison also sent Jefferson a copy of this war declaration. Without hesitation, Jefferson gave his strategy for winning this war. “To continue the war popular two things are necessary mainly: 1. To stop Indian barbarities. The conquest of Canada will do this. 2. To furnish markets for our produce”.66 As on Canada he did have to elaborate, because both men were interested to see if the Canadians would rise against the British Empire. Of the two men, Jefferson remained the most optimistic one and urged for war. Madison was less cheerful about the subject, probably he had to shoulder all the responsibilities. The war was not going great right from the beginning. Many Americans had come to believe that simply by marching across, the border and Canada would be won. Jefferson had suggested earlier that the Canadians would rise against the British. However, this was not the case and these early defeats proved him wrong. The war hawks contributed nothing but empty words as well. U.S militia proved disappointing on the battle field. Then there was the fact that the British were fighting more aggressively than expected. Slowly, they gained the upper hand in Europe against France and as a consequence their position in world politics got stronger. The Madison Administration was not able to play the European powers against each other as had happened in the past. In 1814, the situation looked dire. The British invaded Washington and burned the Capital to the ground. Whatever possibilities for expansion many politicians had envisioned, they all went up in smoke. Canada was certainly not a viable option anymore. Madison now wanted to achieve peace with Great-Britain. Along the southern border, a showdown was about to occur. General Andrew Jackson had removed the Indian threat and the British in Pensacola in November 1814. He was now irritating the Spanish government and did not wait for orders from Washington. Secretary of War James Monroe cautioned against irritating Madrid out of fear that Spain would join the war against the United States. However, Monroe was vague in his messages to Jackson and this led historians to conclude that he anticipated Jackson’s actions and thus he (and presumably his boss Madison as well) supported Jackson’s actions into Spanish territory.67 Jackson was now headed toward a collision course with the British in New Orleans. After a hard-fought battle the Americans won in New Orleans in early 1815. The irony is that the battle was fought, while an agreement for peace was reached in Europe with the British. So, the war was finally over and the victory gave the Americans something to look back on with pride. The war was not a success as the treaty confirmed. No extra territory had been gained by the Americans. However, with the victory in New Orleans all the troubles seemed to be forgotten. The United States felt that they had won the respect of Europe in general and Britain 66 67 Letter of T. Jefferson to J. Madison, June 29 1812, http://founders.archive.gov/ Brands, Andrew Jackson, 324. 17 Alexander Minnaard 3136590 thesis in particular and this boosted the self-respect of the nation. “The war has renewed and reinstated the national feelings and characters which the Revolution has given.” declared Albert Gallatin, informal leader of the American negotiating team at Ghent.68 It tied the nation together, although no territory had been won. The United States and Great-Britain ended in a draw, nothing had been gained or lost. However, the battle of New Orleans created a new prospect in terms of expansion. The Indian threat had been mostly eliminated and therefore the United States gained more supremacy in the area surrounding the Gulf Coast.69 Sentiment in Washington turned more pro- Republican. Madison took full advantage of this sentiment by creating support for his plans such as creating the national bank and building a stronger army and better defense systems.70 Had the war then been a success for Madison and his expansion plans after all? From the beginning, America’s offensive war was flawed. Canada was not gained at all as for instance Louisiana had been in the past. The war against the Indians had been more successful and so created new openings for expansion in the south. All in all, the war turned out a mixed record in terms of expansion. Conclusion The main focus in this chapter was on the plans for expansion of these two presidents and why they wanted to expand. Jefferson was the most outspoken of the two and Madison followed more or less Jefferson’s ideas. Especially during Madison’s dealings with a possible war with Great-Britain he regularly had differences of opinion with his friend. However, in terms of expansion they thought along similar lines. They both shared the view that the American continent should become completely American. An “empire for liberty” as Jefferson so famously put it.71 Jefferson envisioned an empire that at least would contain the areas in the south, first the Louisiana areas (they had stretched out the Louisiana Purchase as far as they could), second his plans to expand into Florida and possibly into the Mexican areas as well. Even Cuba and Canada were on Jefferson’s mind.72 Looked at their ambitions and the outcome they had been very successful. All areas (and even some parts of Cuba) except Canada had been annexed over time. So, in terms of vision, both men had predicted the future very well. They certainly felt that it was inevitable that these areas should become American. To them it was so inevitable that they got the feeling they just would have to wait to see it happen. 68 D. Howe, What Hath God Wrought The transformation of America 1815-1848 (Oxford: Oxford University Press 2007), 71. 69 Ibidem, 74. 70 Ibidem, 80. 71 Letter from T. Jefferson to J. Madison, April 27 1809, http://founders.archives.gov/ 72 Letter from T. Jefferson to J. Madison, April 27 1809, http://founders.archive.gov/ 18 Alexander Minnaard 3136590 thesis In their book Burstein and Isenberg describe another motivation why Jefferson and Madison decided to build an empire. They state that they were driven by fear: fear of the other European nations and fear that the United States would crumble over time. This fear drove Jefferson and Madison to aspire expansion.73 Onuf seems to share this argument. He argues that the drive to build an empire was very obvious with Jefferson, because he was afraid for the European powers.74 In his view, expansion was necessary in order to survive as a nation. These explanations, given by various historians, sound plausible, considering the fact that both presidents took the international context into account when they made their decisions. However, the explanation of fear does not account for the approach in the War of 1812. If fear was the motivation to acquire more land than it would be best to stay away from any conflict with Great-Britain. However, this did not happen. Expansion into Canada was a goal that Madison and especially Jefferson wanted to realize. It was not fear that drove them, but ambition and confidence. Notwithstanding their motivations, they had miscalculated the situation in Canada. Canada had not become U.S. territory. The Canadians had not revolted against the British. Both men had to make plans to acquire new land for the United States. They did so, because they believed American civilization should spread throughout the continent and American farmers should have to find new places to settle. It was in American national interest to expand in order to survive as a nation. European powers had been fighting among each other and they had not particularly cared if they violated American rights in this process. The European context was thus very important in this process of expansion. It was a reason for expansion to prevent a European power to gain influence in Florida, for instance. It was also in the context of the European wars that the United States could expand. Jefferson and Madison tried to set up the Europeans against one other and they hoped to benefit. It certainly got them Louisiana and parts of Florida. But it also backfired as happened with the war of 1812 when the British proved stronger than the Americans. Luckily, the United States brokered peace without losing territory. Also the strength of the Europeans in their colonies had diminished and this created a power vacuum near the border areas of the United States. Which, created issues of security along the frontier. This fact had made the call for expansion more relevant. Concluding, both presidents aspired expansion in order to spread civilization and create safety for the American people and had done so by using the European context of war to achieve these goals. In this context expansion had become a reality. 73 Burstein and Isenberg, Madison and Jefferson, 642. P.S. Onuf, Jefferson’s Empire the language of American Nationhood (Charlottesville: University of Virginia Press 2000), 5. 74 19 Alexander Minnaard 3136590 thesis Chapter 2 Military Force Charles S. Maier states that empires do not just rely on economic organization alone. “Sterling and gold alone did not guarantee their domain. They ruled vast colonial regions by military presence”.75 In other words, in order to become an empire a strong military force is definitely required. In the United States in the early nineteenth century this was a problem. In contrast to the overwhelming display of military might of the twentieth century, the early nineteenth century was characterized by a lack of real military force. This lack of force has to do with the founding of the United States. Andrew J. Bacevich states that “antimilitarism informed the nation’s founding”.76 In American eyes, one of the factors that distinguished the new world from the old world was an aversion to war and to the wasteful and bloody military competition that was a byproduct of Europe’s preoccupation with power politics. Among the Founders, according to Bacevich, there was a belief that standing armies were antithetical to liberty: it was an article of faith.77 The focus for this chapter will be on the military force of the United States in the early nineteenth century. How did Jefferson and Madison view military power and the armies? What plans did they make concerning the military? Were they indeed as anti-militaristic as Bacevich suggests? In what way was their vision on the military linked to their plans to expand the United States? Bacevich describes the U.S. as anti-military in the sense that they reject traditional armies.78 Traditional standing armies were seen as a potential weapon for tyranny and repression. Just as easily as army could destroy enemies, it could also be used against your own population. This view was very popular, owing to the influence of the Enlightenment. The Enlightenment was inspired by ancient times. Just as the young Republic tried to emulate the Roman Republic, it also tried to learn from the mistakes made in these times. The Roman Republic ended when two generals started a civil war and eventually one took over the republic as a dictator (Caesar) . The lesson that the Founding Fathers learned was that never too much power should be given to one person and that a republic should beware of the ambitions of armies and their generals. As a consequence of this thinking there was no strong army at the start of the American republic. The American army did not even come close to their European counterparts. Napoleon Bonaparte’s coup d’état in France reinforced the conviction in the United States of to be cautious towards armies and their generals. 75 C. S. Maier, Among Empires American ascendancy and its predecessors (London: Harvard University Press 2006), 153. 76 A.J. Bacevich, American Empire The Realities and Consequences of U.S. Diplomacy (London: Cambridge University Press 2003), 122. 77 Ibidem, 122. 78 Ibidem, 122. 20 Alexander Minnaard 3136590 thesis Despite these convictions, President John Adams started to build a navy in order to face a potential threat from France during his term. His rivals, Jefferson and Madison, criticized this move, because they did not see France as their enemy, but also because they thought a large navy did not fit in with their republican ideology.79 Both men saw more potential in the loose coalitions of state militia than in a standing permanent military force such as the navy. Eventually in 1801 Jefferson took over the presidency from Adams and with his expansionistic ambitions in mind, he was now faced with a dilemma. How could the United States expand with so weak a military power? Diplomacy and War The world around the United States did not get any safer. Napoleon had taken over in France (thereby ending the Republican’s affections for France) and Great-Britain and France maintained a cease-fire. Despite this good news, France emerged as a new potential threat. Spain had handed over to Napoleon the strategic territory of Louisiana. This signaled a break with the weak Spanish local government, because a revitalized France under Napoleon eyed the western hemisphere with renewed interest. The French now looked as if they would become a far more formidable threat to American political and commercial development along the southern Mississippi than Spain ever was. The prospect of French armies close by the border of United States and on land that was desired by the President made the Administration nervous. For now, France was occupied with St. Domingue (future Haiti). However, this should all change in the next few years. Instead of answering this challenge by building a stronger military, Jefferson and Madison focused on diplomacy.80 It was crucial to improve relations with France as well as with Great-Britain. Jefferson and Madison tried to stay clear off the European power plays. Despite the focus on diplomacy, Madison did not rule out a military conflict. In an exchange with the French chargé d’affaires in Washington, Madison as Secretary of State claimed that serious “collisions” between the two countries would be inevitable if France were to become too near a neighbor of the United States.81 This collision was not to happen, in fact, the opposite happened in 1802 when the French decided to sell Louisiana to the United States. So, instead of a very dangerous neighbor, Louisiana became part of American territory. The French had gone as well from the American mainland and the weaker Spanish returned as neighbor. It might be argued that there was no need for the Jefferson Administration to expand the army. Indeed, Jefferson had achieved his goal of expansion without it. Concluding, this Administration relied more on diplomacy than on military power. However, the Louisiana purchase made also the military question more relevant. In these areas Indians lived and the Spanish were close by. In order to establish 79 H.L. Coles, The War of 1812 (Chicago: Chicago University Press 1965), 2. A. Burstein and N. Isenberg, Madison and Jefferson (New York: Random House 2010), 423. 81 A. Koch, Jefferson and Madison: the greatest collaboration (New York: Waddel Press 1964), 237. 80 21 Alexander Minnaard 3136590 thesis authority there a Governor was appointed. This Governor went to New Orleans accompanied by five hundred troops, in case the Spanish attempted to resist the transfer of power. The show of force was also meant to awe Indians of the region and frighten any potentially rebellious slaves.82 Despite this bravado against the Spanish, both Jefferson and Madison felt that a policy of neutrality was the course of action in order to protect American commercial rights. For both of them, the principle of neutrality came with an implied threat of commercial retaliation.83 However, economic pressure could work only on nations such as France and Great-Britain, that maintained trading relations with the United States. The same strategy was useless in dealing with smaller states that disrupted American commerce. Jefferson had concluded as early as the 1780s that in such situations brute force was required.84 In this case the Administration applied military force. The Barbary States of North Africa, which included Algiers, Tunis, Tripoli and Morocco, had a long-established practice of attacking American ships in the Mediterranean Sea. They demanded money if they forsook to attack American vessels. In order to get money they took American sailors hostage. These men were forced into slave labor. President Adams decided not to pay and as a consequence the high official of Tripoli declared war on the United States just as Jefferson assumed office. Unwilling to continue the past policy of “tributes and humiliations”, Jefferson told Madison that only military force would stop “the eternal increase of demand from these pirates”.85 So, after consulting his cabinet, Jefferson decided to send a squadron to the Mediterranean. This initiated the Tripolitan war (1801-1805), which turned out to be a naval war. The navy that Adams built and was criticized by Jefferson in the past, turned out a handy weapon to protect American vessels. Jefferson was not troubled by his past, he had no qualms of using this military force in this instance. His cabinet supported him mostly and Madison especially, he endorsed this show of force. The war with Tripoli was not just about protecting American commerce: it was a statement to the world about American fortitude.86 In a letter to Secretary Madison, David Humphreys, U.S. consul in Spain, expressed his concurrence with a policy designed to “chastise that haughty but contemptible power”. The military response would serve “not only as salutary example to the other piratical States, but it would produce an almost incalculable effect in elevating our national character in the estimating of all Europe.”87 In other words, war might serve as a tool for nation 82 Burstein and Isenberg, Madison and Jefferson, 394. Ibidem, 403. 84 Ibidem, 403. 85 Letter from T. Jefferson to J. Madison, August 28 1801, http://founders.archive.gov/ 86 Burstein and Isenberg, Madison and Jefferson, 404. 87 Letter from D. Humphreys to J. Madison, April 14 1801, http://Founders.archive.gov/ 83 22 Alexander Minnaard 3136590 thesis building and a strong army might impose respect of the rest of the world. In this way the United States might rise as a state in a European dominated world. Madison shared these sentiments, advising Jefferson to use force strategically, to help improve relations with Great-Britain and France. He insisted that the Administration should announce the deployment of its navy so as to allow every nation understand its purpose.88 The Secretary of the Treasury, Albert Gallatin, may have said it best when he claimed that the decisive use of power proved that the United States was “prepared, like the Great Powers, to repel every injury by the sword.” Madison, Jefferson and Gallatin all wished to prove America’s virility. 89 The war in the Mediterranean certainly did so. The American navy proved its worth. It showed military strength and skill. The enemies suffered heavy casualties without the loss of a single American life. This war proved again (after the revolutionary war) that the American republic was strong at defending itself and its interest. In Jefferson’s eyes this war was only self-defense.90 In what way was Jefferson able to connect these contradicting views with one another? On the one hand, he did not build a strong land army in order to face the European colonial armies, on the other hand, he had no problem squishing the pirates with the navy. This contradiction can be explained if the way Jefferson viewed world politics is taken into account. He listed the states in the world with a certain hierarchy.91 These rogue states such as Tripoli were seen as little children who needed to learn a lesson. In his hierarchy of states, these states were at the bottom. Spain’s provincial government in North America was viewed with the same contempt. At the top there were the great powers, Great-Britain and France, which had extended their rule through war and conquest. Next he ranked the United States, a nation different from the other powers, more morally superior and commercially strong, but unwilling to become a fully-fledged, tax and borrow, military imperial power. At the bottom there were the smaller states, that were not relevant. Jefferson’s system of classifying nations fell neatly into a classic republican division of social classes: the corrupt, bloated, but still dangerous elite; the honest and morally upright middle ranks; and the primitive, if not hopeless and contemptible, lower classes.92 As a benefit to his thinking, America would become more free. By showing it had no reluctance to use military force where it could, the United States were free and not fully depended on British maritime policy. The British still ruled the waves, but the United States had begun to climb toward greater power by controlling a small part of the Mediterranean. America could display its military strength and this would help the relations with other powers, as Madison hoped. The victorious war against Tripoli had given America the upper hand in diplomacy, not just in the 88 Letter from J. Madison to T. Jefferson, August 18 1801, http://Founders.archive.gov/ Burstein and Isenberg, Madison and Jefferson, 404. 90 Ibidem, 404. 91 Ibidem, 406. 92 Ibidem, 406. 89 23 Alexander Minnaard 3136590 thesis Mediterranean, but also on the continent, where Jefferson and Madison had great ambitions to expand. Change of view With the Louisiana Purchase behind them, Jefferson and Madison looked ahead to the future. Once again European affairs dominated policy making. The unprecedented expansion of territory may have encouraged confidence in the new nation, but abroad it made little impression. With the spectacular victory of Admiral Nelson over a combined French and Spanish force off the coast of Spain at Trafalgar, Great-Britain was able to restore her dominant position on the high seas. In December 1805 Napoleon’s victory at Austerlitz gave France control of the European continent. As these two military giants continued to fight for global hegemony, foreign policy took center stage in Washington. The policy of neutrality toward the European powers and a relatively weaker army was about to be changed. Neutrality did not mean anything to Great-Britain or France. The theory of Jefferson that his small and relative weak American navy might counter the European powers had yet to be proven. Madison responded to the changing international circumstances by retreating to his library where he prepared a 204- page pamphlet protesting the British disregard for neutral nations. Attacking London’s justifications for the capture of neutral vessels in times of war, he asserted that the policy had no basis in international law but was “a mere superiority of force.”93 This superiority of force is exactly the reason why the Administration changed its mind about the limited power of their military forces. This did not mean that the idea of the loose coalitions of militia was entirely abandoned, but that it needed to be better organized. In his annual message in December 1805, Jefferson called for a better organized militia, ready for any “sudden emergency”.94 He asked Congress for gunboats to meet the dangers of the European belligerents. “We should have a competent number of gunboats,” he said, “and the number, to be competent, must be considerable.” As a purely defensive measure, the small maneuverable boats were meant to patrol the nation’s coastline and northern border lakes. To suit his vision of a republican army of volunteers, Jefferson hoped that the naval militia would be manned by local militia regulars. He knew that the gunboats were inadequate by themselves, so he asked Congress to fund the construction of more substantial battleships.95 The fear of the European powers was menacing enough for the whole Administration to change their view on military matters. However, many in Congress did not share this change of opinion. Republican legislators flatly rejected 93 I. Brant, The Fourth President: A life of James Madison (Indianapolis: Bobbs-Merril 1970), 245. Annual Message to Congress, December 3 1805, http://avalon.law.yale.edu/19th_century/jeffmes5.asp 95 Annual Message to Congress, December 3 1805, http://avalon.law.yale.edu/19th_century/jeffmes5.asp 94 24 Alexander Minnaard 3136590 thesis the idea. The President and his Secretary of State were ready to expand the navy in peacetime, but many in Congress refused to follow their lead. This refusal would have dire consequences.96 The fear of a strong army was still present in Congress, even among supporters of Jefferson. For Jefferson it was also a change in opinion and policy, since Jefferson’s term started with budget cuts on the navy. Which was supported by Congress. Now Jefferson wanted something different and got no support. Discord between the members of the Republican Party was proven again by the Burr conspiracy. Aaron Burr, former Vice President under Jefferson shared the expansionistic aspirations of Jefferson and Madison. The difference was that it looked like he was not going to trust the outcome of the negotiations with Spain as, Madison and Jefferson had done before. Burr was accused of creating a private army and going into Spanish territory. This was not a new idea, even Alexander Hamilton thought of leading troops into Mexico, because war would present opportunities to enlarge America’s borders.97 For that to happen, America would eventually, one way or another, oust the Spanish from the continent. For now the Administration had high hopes for diplomacy. Many others did not. Burr was gathering support along the border regions. Andrew Jackson, a major general of a division of militia in Tennessee, was drawn to Burr’s message. He hoped that the Administration would welcome a force of Tennesseans in a larger effort to oust the Spanish.98 However, Burr was apprehended and accused of treason and his plans ended there. The suspicions against Burr were expanded to exaggerated claims of massive recruitment effort and even attempts to create a larger army. Jefferson, jumping on the chance to get rid of his old rival Burr led the charge against his former Vice President, despite sharing Burr’s goal: seizing Florida. What this case demonstrates is that many were frightened by the possibilities of a large army with an ambitious general at it head. That is why Congress did not go along with Jefferson’s plans. The support of many in the border regions also demonstrated that in these areas there was support for an aggressive military campaign towards the Spanish. Build-up to the War of 1812 With Congress stopping Jefferson’s plans to expand the military, it was again demonstrated that the United States had an army that would be too weak to defend the nation against possible attacks by European countries. More importantly, there were still serious reservations in Congress as regards to building a strong army. However, Jefferson and Madison were right about the aggressiveness of these countries towards the United States. The Chesapeake incident had proved this in which an American vessel was taken by the British. This breach of U.S. sovereignty changed the mood of the nation. Many 96 Burstein and Isenberg, Madison and Jefferson, 439. H.W. Brands, Andrew Jackson His life and his times (London: Doubleday 2005), 119. 98 Ibidem, 119. 97 25 Alexander Minnaard 3136590 thesis were angered by this violation by the British. Newspapers were arguing for war. 99 If Jefferson and Madison really wanted to go to war, they could not do so by the lack of military strength. They again turned to diplomacy for a solution. A simple calculation was all it took, Madison and Jefferson received information from Secretary of War Henry Dearborn concerning the number of troops that could be raised if war was to take place.100 There were too few soldiers to face the British, especially considering the fact that in this period there was talk about invading Florida. So, there was no real military power to match the British. Other members of the cabinet were also worried about the prospect of going to war. Treasury Secretary Gallatin had already warned in1805 that a strong navy was required if U.S. foreign policy was to show real teeth. Otherwise, he wrote the President, “We must be perpetually liable to injuries and insults, particularly from the belligerent powers, when there is war in Europe.”101 The United States still had a very modest navy, especially in European waters. During his first term Jefferson had deliberately reduced naval expenditures, considering defense of the home shores a much higher priority than an offensive fleet. When, at the end of 1805, he called for both gunboats as well as larger warships, and the Republican Congress balked at the latter, however, Jefferson vigorously pressed the case for more gunboats. This had as a consequence that his Federalist critics mocked him with an insincere toast: “the President of the United States – First Admiral of American Gun-Boats!”.102 Despite all the talk of war there was no real possibility to go to war. Too many politicians in power were too hesitant. The Administration settled for a commercial embargo against the British. Of course, the embargo harmed the Americans more than the British.103 This fuelled the negative light on the British even more and it opened the door for criticism towards Jefferson. Towards the end of Jefferson’s presidency there was still a mood for war against the British.104 The commercial retaliation had completely backfired and this had led Jefferson and Madison to turn to more draconian measures along the coast and the Canadian border. In August 1808, while at his home in Virginia, Madison urged that Jefferson should waste no time in deploying every available gunboat to attend to “the suspicious situations along the New England Coast”.105 He referred to the many smuggling operations there. Madison wanted to show off against the smugglers there 99 Burstein and Isenberg, Madison and Jefferson, 447. Ibidem, 449. 101 R. W. Tucker and D. C. Hendrickson, Empire of liberty The statecraft of Thomas Jefferson (New York: Oxford University Press 1990), 208. 102 Burstein and Isenberg, Madison and Jefferson, 450. 103 Coles, The war of 1812, 9. 104 Burstein and Isenberg, Madison and Jefferson, 455. 105 Letter from J. Madison to T. Jefferson, August 10 1808, http://founders.archive.gov/ 100 26 Alexander Minnaard 3136590 thesis in order to salvage something of the embargo. However, it was too late, the embargo was increasingly unpopular and proved a failure overall. Despite the unpopularity of the embargo, Madison was chosen as the next president. Before he took over, Jefferson and Congress lifted the much hated embargo. This did not mean that anti-British feelings were gone now. The negative feelings toward a larger army were not diminished either, despite the threat coming from Europe. Madison, in spite of feeling that the current military situation was inadequate, chose to listen to these voices, at least in public. In his inaugural address, he praised the state militias. He recognized state militias as “the firmest bulwark of republics” instrumental in preserving liberty.106 Madison made no attempt to convince his fellow republicans to alter their thinking. This did not mean that priorities were changed. Still the old world dominated the immediate future of the nation, in terms of economy but also on military matters. Madison still hoped to avoid any European conflict. A newer generation of Republicans-Democrats were now in favor of a war with Great-Britain and they put pressure on Madison to declare war. Madison, fully knowing that a war required a greater military, resisted the pressure. Jefferson supported the younger generation. In his letters to Madison, he envisioned different scenarios for war with Great-Britain.107 Madison hoped to compromise with the Britons, however, they viewed the United States as an insignificant power and they were not in the mood for a compromise. Madison now had enough of diplomacy with Great-Britain. He still aimed to enlarge the United States and for that GreatBritain was to remain a principal enemy. The British were in Canada en showed support toward the western Indian tribes. There was a possibility that they would advance into Spanish-held territories on America’s frontier.108 Jefferson urged Madison to concentrate on the south, because there were possibilities to gain ground. Jefferson also expected that a next ship that would be seized by the British should serve as pretext for the coming of war.109 Despite this talk of war, the problem with the military was not solved. Federalist critics of Madison criticized the Administration for being blatantly incompetent in managing money. The most flagrant examples of this incompetence were in the realm of military expenditures, where waste was apparent in the procurement of supplies. The notorious reliance on the expensive, lightly armed gunboats, meant to defend American harbors against larger, deadlier European vessels, made no sense at all. Madison was less committed to the fifty-foot gunboats than Jefferson had been, but neither, as presidents, made an extensive study of what should be done to ensure an 106 107 108 109 Inaugural address President Madison, March 4 1809, http://www.bartleby.com/124/pres18.html Letter from T. Jefferson to J. Madison, August 17 1809, http://founders.archive.gov/ Coles, The war of 1812, 189. Letter from T. Jefferson to J. Madison, August 17 1809, http://founders.archive.gov/ 27 Alexander Minnaard 3136590 thesis economically sound, military effective naval strategy in the period after the Chesapeake incident.110 In 1807 Secretary of the Navy Robert Smith appears simply to have ratified what the President and the Secretary of State desired. Jefferson clearly did not wish to participate in an arms race with Great-Britain at any time.111 Madison also appears to have believed that eventually U.S. expansion into Spanish Florida and western destinations required vessels to meet the shallow rivers in the south. Beyond that, privateering seemed a cost-effective solution. To sum up, some parts of the American government were not at all willing to create a British-style large navy, moreover, they were not able due to internal opposition to do so either. Yet Madison, did call for a build-up of regular land troops in his annual message to Congress. He appealed to the legislative branch to authorize war preparations. “With this evidence of hostile inflexibility in trampling on rights which no independent nation can relinquish, Congress will feel the duty of putting the United States into an armor […]”.112 So, in his build-up to war, in spite of the fierce military resistance of the British, Madison started to expand his military machine. War of 1812 This expansion of the military machine became very necessary, because military conflicts were looming everywhere in the United States: the Indians in the north and in the south. There, in the south was Andrew Jackson building his army of volunteers, who were ready and willing to march to counter this threat. When war broke out, Madison hoped that this war would end quickly for reasons of budget. He raised regulars and volunteers from New England to invade Canada. The war had to be “short and successful”.113 Despite all volunteers, they could not conceal the fact that the United States were underprepared and thus vulnerable. To cover this problem, Madison called state militia into federal service, which was criticized by opponents of the president, who deemed these measures to be unconstitutional. Some states even refused to comply with the federal government. Taking all this into account, it explains why the war proceedings so far were unsuccessful. There was too much resistance towards a federal controlled army and thus towards a large government. Due to the fact that the war proved disastrous, Madison decided to take more risks. He called for an enlarged navy. He tried to sell it as a necessary measure against British tyranny. The United States would remain 110 Burstein and Isenberg, Madison and Jefferson, 482. Ibidem, 482. 112 Annual Message to Congress, November 5 1811, http://founders.archives.gov/documents/Madison/03-04-02-0001 113 Letter from J. Madison to S. Spring, September 6 1812, http://founders.archive.gov/ 111 28 Alexander Minnaard 3136590 thesis “colonists and vassals”, he said as long as the nation submitted to British domination of the high seas (“that element which covers three-fourths of the globe”).114 Thus, Madison distanced himself from the premises of Jefferson’s Administration: the United States did not need a navy of significance.115 The Royal Navy completely outclassed the U.S. fleet. A naval presence large enough to stand up to an aggressor had to become part of the American arsenal, not merely to carry on war but to prevent it, according to Madison. It would give the United States a certain autonomy in world politics in a situation that the war in Tripoli had just been ended and a stronger navy was required. The war difficulties had made Madison question Jeffersonian ideology.116 In fact, war caused Madison to change his mind about several issues, not just military issues. Gunboats were no match for the British as was proven by the war. Jefferson however, did not change his mind. He wrote to Madison and pleaded for “the humble, the ridiculed, but the formidable gunboat”.117 Madison replied, perhaps lying a little bit, that “the present Secretary of the Navy is not unfriendly to gunboats.” However, they were “too slow in sailing, and too heavy for rowing, they are limited in their use to particular situations, and rarely for other than defensive co-operations”.118 This reply illustrates that the first steps were taken to build a more professional naval bureaucracy. At the Washington Navy Yard began shipbuilding. The War Department was reorganized as well. An army needed a supply system to operate effectively as it advanced and so quartermasters were appointed for each military district to arrange for the purchase of food, clothing, arms and ammunition. However, the overall problem was a lack of funding.119 This lack of funding was to seriously harm military operations. This led Madison to make a decision to end the war and negotiate for peace. All the while the fighting kept going: the Indians in the south and in the west, the British on Lake Ontario. Slowly, these new changes led to improve the military. Higher bounties led more men to enlist. Better soldiers joined the ranks. The Secretary of War wanted to build on these successes and became convinced that conscription was needed to produce a superior force.120 He wanted a regular army of 55.000 men, because the voluntary army and state militias had proven unreliable. Madison fully supported his minister, despite criticism from other Republicans who favored more the state militias. 114 Annual Message to Congress, November 4 1812, http://www.presidency.ucsb.edu/ws/?pid=29454 Burstein and Isenberg, Madison and Jefferson, 522. 116 Coles, The War of 1812, 265-266. 117 Letter from T. Jefferson to J. Madison, May 21 1813, http://founders.archive.gov/ 118 Letter from J. Madison to T. Jefferson, June 6 1813, http://founders.archive.gov/ 119 Coles, The War of 1812, 238-139. 120 Burstein and Isenberg, Madison and Jefferson, 530. 115 29 Alexander Minnaard 3136590 thesis On December 7, 1813, Madison gave an address to the national legislature, in which he endorsed conscription.121 The President was ready to implement drastic measures, even if it meant going against dominant Republican ideology. This was necessary, because the British were still stronger than the Americans. This dominance of the British force resulted in getting Washington to be burned to the ground. As a consequence Madison was more determined to achieve military reform and more importantly a peace agreement. In early 1815 the battle of New Orleans was fought. The militias under command of Jackson beat the British. The victory itself was meaningless, the battle happened after a peace agreement had been reached. It did boost American morale and it also proved the worth of the artillery. Not the western riflemen, but the canons made the difference.122 These artillery weapons came from the U.S. Navy after reforms initiated by Madison. So, the power of artillery and the U.S. Navy was convincingly proven. Credit went out to the individual frontier soldiers and their commander and not to the navy of the United States and the power of their artillery. However, leading politicians, such as Madison and Monroe, knew probably better. With peace reached, many problems were solved. One was the problem with conscription. With no war to fight, the need for conscription vanished, in this way ending a looming conflict within Republican ranks. The fact that there was no need for conscription did not mean that the entirely military machine was to be dismantled. On the contrary, Madison urged for precaution in case of future wars. This did not mean that Madison became a pacifist. On the contrary, in his annual message on December 5, 1815 he pleaded for more military measures. He knew that reductions were inevitable, but he warned, it was important to retain the general staff, reform the militia and provide a system of military pensions that would “inspire a martial zeal for the public service”.123 Coastal defenses and naval ships under construction should be completed, not abandoned. Military matters remained a priority, also for future presidents. Madison’s successor Monroe made all these top priorities to enforce on the U.S. military during his first term. Conclusion In the early years of the American republic, there was no strong military force in the Unites States. There were state militias who were not well- organized, certainly not at a federal level. The nation faced what is called the Tocqueville problem in American history. 124 How could a Jeffersonian republic, whose vitality rested on the pursuit of 121 Annual Message to Congress, December 7, 1813, http://www.presidency.ucsb.edu/ws/?pid=29455 D. Howe, What Hath God Wrought The transformation of America 1815-1848 (Oxford: Oxford University Press 2007), 17. 123 Howe, What Hath God Wrought, 82. 124 W. Lafeber, “Jefferson and an American Foreign Policy”, in Jeffersonian Legacies, ed. by P.S. Onuf (Charlottesville: Virginia University Press 1993), 377. 122 30 Alexander Minnaard 3136590 thesis individual interests with a minimum of central government direction, create a national consensus for the conduct of an effective and necessarily long-term foreign policy? For this chapter the military side of foreign policy was important. The same problem applies here as well. The federal government at the time was relatively weak and the U.S. is surrounded by dangerous European countries that had more military power. Republican ideology prohibited the building-up of a strong army. John Lauritz Larson uses the term “ a government of limits” to describe Jefferson’s problems to improve infrastructure. The same description may be applied to Jefferson’s and Madison’s visions on how they envisioned the military.125 However, this limitation became a problem in a dangerous world. This dilemma of Tocqueville is clearly present with the policies of both presidents. Jefferson and Madison protested fiercely when President Adams started to build a navy. As president, Jefferson did not really change his mind. He cut the budget for the navy in the first years of his term. Due to circumstances in the Mediterranean, he was forced to go to war in the Tripoli war. He started to use the navy and gunboats to crush pirates. In spite of this victory, the United States were still military weak. Jefferson and Madison desired not a strong federal army.126 Jefferson advocated for more gunboats and that was it. He praised the militia many times.127 In spite of the war in Tripoli his attitude was not really changed. However due to circumstances, changes became manifest in the Jefferson and Madison government. Such a circumstance was war and this could increase the executive’s power. As did happen during the terms of Jefferson and Madison. This increase of power, so is argued by historians such as Henry Adams was antithetical to many essentials of Jeffersonianism, because it required centralization of power, increased taxation, mobilization of society and the copying of discredited European techniques to settle disputes.128 This process occurred more or less in these years of Jefferson and Madison. In spite of Jefferson’s view of limited governance , he was forced to make alterations as regards to the gunboats. Jefferson’s dislike for a military system should not be confused with a rejection of the use of military power, as Walter Lafeber argues. 129 Lafeber’s statement was correct as was demonstrated in the Tripolitan War. J. L. Larson, “Jefferson’s Union and the Problem of Internal Improvements”, in Jeffersonian Legacies, ed. by P.S. Onuf (Charlottesville: Virginia University Press 1993), 345. 126 See for instance letter from T. Jefferson to J. Monroe, January 27 1814, http://founders.archive.gov/ 125 127 See for instance Jefferson Inaugural address, March 4 1801, http://www.let.rug.nl/usa/presidents/thomas-jefferson/first-inaugural-address-1801.php and letter of T. Jefferson to W.H. Crawford, February 14 1815, T. Jefferson, Papers of Thomas Jefferson Retirement series (Princeton: Princeton University Press 2012). 128 Lafeber, “Jefferson and an American Foreign Policy”, in Jeffersonian Legacies, ed. by P.S. Onuf, 378. 129 Ibidem, 378. 31 Alexander Minnaard 3136590 thesis Madison supported Jefferson’s policies, although he did not support gunboats as much as Jefferson, as was proven later on during the War of 1812.130 Madison, more flexible concerning republican ideology in case of the military, saw very clearly that the military force of the United States was weak, which is one of the reasons why he was hesitant to go to war with Great-Britain. However, this did happen eventually and this war, as Madison probably already knew, brought many military flaws to light. As a consequence, Madison was forced to let go off Jeffersonian ideology and did that with more ease than Jefferson and started to build a better military organization.131 He even supported conscription and thus started to build a professional army which was in contrast with the militia. Jefferson was hesitant and still believed more in the militia. The responsibilities of the president and the acute problems of the war made Madison alter his thinking. Jefferson was already retired and could it afford to maintain his old position. However, due to the resistance within his own party, the professional army was not realized immediately. But the seeds were planted that future presidents could build on. Bacevich’s claim that the Founding Fathers were anti-military was true, but only in part. Jefferson was more than willing to go to war in Tripoli and he did support the war in 1812. Madison did as well. When theory met practice, steps were made to build up an army. They did so in different volumes and because the situation then required it. According to Maier a strong military was needed in order to expand as an empire. Well in this case this is only partly true because for their expansionistic plans, they relied more on diplomacy then on force, or they relied on the militias in the north and in the south. So, in order to survive in a European dominated world, Jefferson and especially Madison did make plans to expand their military. At the time, it was necessary to abandon or modify their resistance against a large army in order to survive as a nation. 130 Letter from J. Madison to T. Jefferson, June 6 1813, http://founders.archive.gov/ 131 Burstein and Isenberg, Madison and Jefferson, 521-522. 32 Alexander Minnaard 3136590 thesis Chapter 3 Indians and Slavery Charles S. Maier argues that empires are about the mission of civilization and the diffusion of cultural styles. Empires offer new possibilities of diversity. They insist on greater equality for those inside the frontier: a wider range of citizenship.132 Jane Burbank and Frederick Cooper add to this claim that successful empires maintained the diversity of people in order to thrive as an empire.133 However, they argue that in the process of creating an empire, violence and day-to-day coercion were fundamental in relation to nation building.134 Although, Maier refers to the American empire in our time, in the early nineteenth century the role of minorities and different cultures was very important for the United States. As a consequence of the expansion of the United States, more people came to live on American territory. This includes different tribes of Indians and also slaves and African-Americans. Thomas Jefferson and James Madison argued for expansion of the United States. However, did they also want to extend citizenship to other cultures? How did they perceive the position of the Indians and slaves within the American republic during their years in office? This question is more relevant considering the fact that during the War of 1812 against Great-Britain there also was a war going on against the Indians. The British were also accused of the fact that they had supported and rewarded in the subsequent peace negotiations ambitions of the Indians for an independent state. This was not realized, after the peace agreement. Quite the opposite. Daniel Howe argues that the conflict between Great-Britain and the United States ended in a draw. However, for the Native-Americans it constituted a decisive defeat with lasting consequences, because their military power had diminished.135 For centuries the tribes had been able to retain much autonomy by playing the different European countries inhabiting the North-American continent against one or the other.136 After 1815 this strategy was no longer viable. The Americans had taken crucial steps to diminish the military power of the Indians. The significance of Andrew Jackson’s victories was not his victory in New Orleans but his victory in the Creek war, so argues Howe.137 This war, part of the greater War of 1812, represented part of a larger struggle by the United States to secure white supremacy over a multiracial and multicultural society that included Native-Americans, African American Maroons, French and Spanish Creoles and intermixtures of all these people with each other 132 C. S. Maier, Among Empires American Ascendancy and its predecessors (London: Harvard University Press 2006), 19-20. 133 J. Burbank and F. Cooper, Empires in world history Power and the politics of difference (Princeton: Princeton University Press 2010), 2. 134 Ibidem, 3. 135 D. Howe, What Hath God Wrought The transformation of America 1815-1848 (Oxford: Oxford University Press 2007), 74. 136 Ibidem, 74. 137 Ibidem, 74. 33 Alexander Minnaard 3136590 thesis and white Americans.138 This is the historical background against which Jefferson and Madison ruled. Should we understand their attitude and action in their explanation of multiculturalism, diversity and minorities as Howe did or should we follow Maier, Burbank and Cooper to understand Jefferson and Madison? St. Domingue & Indians When Thomas Jefferson became president, he imagined the nation’s expansion across the continent. North America was destined to be the site of something “new under the sun”, a great republican empire that was to secure the liberties of its citizens and provide an inspirational example for the oppressed people of the world.139 There was not another nation like the United States on the continent, there were only colonial empires of the European nations. Jefferson envisioned that the whole continent would eventually become American. In this way Jefferson perceived the continent as a blank slate, argues Peter Onuf. 140 However, despite this vision, the reality was that the United States were not very strong geopolitically. They had a weak military and internally there was friction between Federalists and Democrats-Republicans of Jefferson. The rest of the continent was dominated by European powers. Weak as they may have been there, they were still stronger than the United States. Moreover, there were also huge tribes of native-Americans in the continent. The continent that Jefferson imagined as a blank slate was crowded with potentially powerful enemies. Revolutionary France, America’s “sister republic”, was a great, expansive nation in Europe, but also in the American continent. France’s possession of New Orleans and the navigation of the Mississippi meant that the new American state and territories of the Mississippi-Ohio watershed would be drawn inexorably into the French orbit.141 Once established in Louisiana, France could then enlist Indian allies in a bloody war against the United States, it also could prohibit slavery and start a slave insurrection that would overturn the social and racial order in the southern slave states. All this made potential agreements with the Indians a precarious matter. As a consequence, it was one of the top priorities of the federal government to deal with the various Indians tribes.142 The United States had to be aware of the risk that the various Indian tribes could play the different colonial countries against each other, 138 Howe, What Hath God Wrought, 74. P. Onuf, “Prologue Jefferson, Louisiana and American Nationhood”, in Empire of the Imagination, ed. by P.J Kastor and F. Weil (Charlottesville: University of Virginia Press 2009), 23. 140 Ibidem, 24. 141 Ibidem, 25. 142 D. Hendrickson, Union, Nation or Empire: The American debate over international relations 17891941 (Lawrence: University Press of Kansas 2005),147. 139 34 Alexander Minnaard 3136590 thesis just as they had done in the past.143 Now, with the French, Spanish and British presence in the continent, dealings with Indians could be very tricky. The French had been expanding over the continent. Napoleon had set his sights on St. Domingue, where a successful slave revolt in 1797 had placed former slaves in power. This made dealings with this island very difficult, since parts of the United States were inhabited by slaves. The southern economy had been dependent on slaves, especially Virginia, home state to Jefferson and Madison. The prospect of black crews carrying seditious ideas to southern ports was menacing.144 Although he shared those exaggerated fears, Jefferson proceeded carefully.145 He had no desire to alienate American merchants by shutting down the profitable Caribbean tread. In July 1801, meeting with Edward Thornton, the British charge d’affaires, Jefferson made it clear that he supported the policy of his predecessor Adams of “freed and open trade” with the island, but he also said that he wished to prevent “all maritime exertion on the part of the negroes”.146 Striking a delicate balance here, the Administration hoped to improve relations with France as well. As demonstrated Jefferson took the European context into account, while dealing with internal problems such as failing to acknowledge the slave rebellion in St.Domingue. Jefferson and Madison began to realize that the French problems in St. Domingue might actually help America’s cause.147 The French sent a huge amount of troops into the rebellious island and this prevented the French from going to the mainland. It was a sign of relief for the Administration, because many felt that the French presence might uproot the slave society. Tench Coxe, a former Hamilton associate laid out the worst-case scenario for Madison, when he predicted that Napoleon would send “a large detachment of republican blacks” from St. Domingue to Louisiana. This, he said, would lead to the “sudden emancipation’’ of the blacks there and Madison could count on their becoming “warlike”.148 To Coxe St. Domingue was not an isolated island as it might spread ideas of emancipation and racial equality to the U.S. south. The idea of revolting against authority was not hard to understand for American republicans. However, their economy relied on slavery. The fear of rebellion could uproot the Unites States and this was very dangerous in a geopolitical sense. Fear and economic considerations were probably why Jefferson never seriously entertained emancipation as a policy option. He took comfort in the fact that both the French and the slaves on St. Domingue were fighting each other in a bloody and costly conflict.149 He predicted a French defeat. What he did not expect was that the 143 Howe, What Hath God Wrought, 74. A. Burstein and N. Isenberg, Madison and Jefferson (New York: Random House 2010), 374. 145 Letter from T. Jefferson to J. Madison, September 13 1802, http:/founders.archive.gov/ 146 Burstein and Isenberg, Madison and Jefferson, 375. 147 Hendrickson and Tucker, Empire of liberty, 158. 148 Letter from T. Coxe to J. Madison, November 28 1801, http://founders.archive.gov/ 149 Burstein and Isenberg, Madison and Jefferson, 375. 144 35 Alexander Minnaard 3136590 thesis French would grew tired of the whole North-American continent and that they would eventually propose to sell the Louisiana territory to the United States. Louisiana Purchase When in 1803 the Louisiana Purchase agreement was reached with France, the door was opened for all kinds of different possibilities for the United States. What did Jefferson envision with all this new territory? Jefferson supported this expansion, because he envisioned new land for farming and commerce. Burstein and Isenberg claim that Jefferson was attached to a fertile, fruitful land and that he saw endless opportunities. America would then become more peaceful and resilient as a breeder nation.150 This argument might be true if the president’s political vocabulary is taken into account because his vocabulary was rich in allusions to affection, attachment, health, good air, natural abundance and the rejection of bad blood.151 It all added up to propagation of a certain (white republican) species and the dissemination of those ideas that bred a healthy spirit of personal independence.152 Jefferson envisioned white settlement in the new territory, however, people already lived there. Huge tribes of Indians resided there who did not fit in with Jefferson’s ideas. After the purchase had become a fact, the president decided that the Indians should relocate west of the Mississippi. Here, he rationalized, they would find ‘’asylum’’ from conflict with whites. Here over time, they would develop ‘’useful arts’’ and ‘’civilized’’ habits.153 This convenient formula for assimilation over time basically ignored Indian traditions. The tribes south of the Ohio river were confirmed agriculturalists. In the letters from 1808 and 1809 Jefferson’s choice of words in his messages to tribal leaders changed from “Friends and Brethen” to “my children” and “son”, symbolizing a paternalistic turn. 154 Basically, the Indians had been not as important to Jefferson as the future white settlers. The Indians needed instruction, because they were prone to violence and easily waned from it; they demonstrated a “natural” kindness toward strangers and a strong commitment to friendship.155 It was for those Indians who still needed time in the endless hunting lands of the trans-Mississippi frontier that eastern Indians were to sacrifice their property for white towns. In spite of Jefferson’s somewhat positive choice of words about the nature of the Indians that he had paid to the Indians in the 150 Burstein and Isenberg, Madison and Jefferson, 390. P. Finkelman, “Jefferson and Slavery: Treason against the hopes of the world”, in Jeffersonian Legacies, ed. By P. Onuf (Charlottesville: University of Virginia Press 1993), 185. 152 Ibidem, 390. 153 Letters from T. Jefferson to Indian Nations, 21 December 1808, 10 January 1809, 18 January 1809 and 31 January 1809, http:/founders.archive.gov/ 154 Letters from T. Jefferson to Indian Nations, 21 December 1808, 10 January 1809, 18 January 1809 and 31 January 1809, http:/founders.archive.gov/ 151 155 T. Jefferson, Notes on Virginia, http://avalon.law.yale.edu/18th_century/jeffvir.asp 36 Alexander Minnaard 3136590 thesis past, Jefferson easily yielded to practical concerns of land use and political reorganization of the Louisiana Purchase.156 Jefferson needed space for Americans. He considered Indians to be physically suited for the white race, but as an unlettered race they still lacked cultural complexity. 157 As a consequence they were ranked below white Americans and thus they had to move away from Louisiana, more westward. Basic beliefs With the expansion into Louisiana territory and all consequences of this it would be interesting to further analyze the basic principles on which Jefferson and Madison viewed the native Americans and the slave system. Jefferson became famous in America when he wrote the Declaration of Independence. The most famous line of this Declaration was that all persons “are created equal, and that they are endowed by their creator with certain unalienable rights, that among these are Life, Liberty, and the pursuit of Happiness”.158 Yet, the author of this creed of liberty could never reconcile the ideals of freedom, expressed in his writings with the reality of his ownership of slave men and slave women and his leadership of a slaveholding society.159 There is obviously a huge contrast between Jefferson’s words and his actions on this matter of slavery. While writing the Declaration he owned 175 slaves. During his life, he made numerous comments about how awful the system of slavery was, however, he did little to end slavery or dissociate himself from his role as the master of his home Monticello.160 On the contrary, he acquired more slaves as his life went on. Historians have concluded that his ideas about slavery and his relationship to the institution were complex and contradictory.161 Jefferson advocated legal reform and humane criminal codes as a consequence of his Enlightenment beliefs, but when it concerned slaves he advocated barbaric, harsh punishments for slaves or free blacks. He had been all for expanding citizenship for white Americans, for blacks however, they would have to become “outlaws” in their native land. Furthermore Jefferson supported recolonization of African-Americans.162 He was also against racial intermixing. He would have slaves 156 Burstein and Isenberg, Madison and Jefferson, 391. Ibidem, 391. 158 Declaration of Independence, July 4 1776, http://www.archives.gov/exhibits/charters/declaration_transcript.html 159 P. Finkelman, “Jefferson and Slavery: Treason against the hopes of the world”, in Jeffersonian Legacies, 181. 160 Ibidem,182. 161 Ibidem, 182. 162 Letter from T. Jefferson to E. Coles, August 25 1814, http://founders.archive.gov/ 157 37 Alexander Minnaard 3136590 thesis expelled from his home State Virginia, because the children of white women and black men had “corrupt”-mixed- blood in their systems.163 Did Jefferson view African-Americans as equal? In his letters there is no sign to be found that he viewed them as equal. 164 As mentioned earlier, with the expansion into Louisiana this supposed equality might become a problem. Now many slaves came into American territory. Some argued for emancipation of slaves. Jefferson did not support this view not just because economic reasons. As said before, he viewed them not as equal. Race presented an insurmountable barrier to emancipation. Jefferson believed African-Americans were swayed by emotion, lacked intellectual abilities and were not equipped to participate in a free republican society.165 There were serious race differences between white Americans and African Americans. These differences went further than just color of their skins. Jefferson thought “the real distinction that nature has made between races” also attributed to other physical distinctions.166 Race, more than their status as slaves, doomed blacks to permanent inequality. Jefferson had never come across a black American who “had uttered a thought above the level of plain narration; never seen an elementary trait of painting or sculpture”.167 He found “no poetry” among African Americans. Jefferson argued that blacks ability to “reason” was “much inferior” to whites, while “in imagination they are dull, tasteless, and anomalous” and “inferior to the whites in the endowments of body and mind”.168 Jefferson did concede that the African Americans were brave, but this was due to “a want of fore-thought, which prevents their seeing a danger till it be present”.169 This attitude towards slavery frustrated Jefferson to be a supporter of equal rights for slaves in the American society during his presidency. However, he did speak often of the need for abolition, but he argued that the time had not come yet. Historian Paul Finkelman states that “not here” and “not now” was his philosophy.170 He further argues that his words are those of a liberty loving man of the Enlightenment, however his deeds are those of a self-indulgent and negrophobic Virginia planter.171 Madison almost certain shared most of Jefferson’s views. They had similar backgrounds as planters in Virginia, they both had slaves and both shared the ideology of republican Enlightenment thinking. As proven by the St. Domingue case Finkelman, “Jefferson and Slavery: Treason against the hopes of the world”, in Jeffersonian Legacies, 182. 163 164 See for instance letter from T. Jefferson to E. Coles, August 25 1814, http://founders.archive.gov/ Finkelman, “Jefferson and Slavery: Treason against the hopes of the world”, in Jeffersonian Legacies, 184. 166 T. Jefferson, Notes on Virginia, http://avalon.law.yale.edu/18th_century/jeffvir.asp 167 T. Jefferson, Notes on Virginia, http://avalon.law.yale.edu/18th_century/jeffvir.asp 168 T. Jefferson, Notes on Virginia, http://avalon.law.yale.edu/18th_century/jeffvir.asp 169 T. Jefferson, Notes on Virginia, http://avalon.law.yale.edu/18th_century/jeffvir.asp 170 Finkelman, “Jefferson and Slavery: Treason against the hopes of the world, in Jeffersonian Legacies”, 210. 171 Ibidem, 210. 165 38 Alexander Minnaard 3136590 thesis and the Louisiana Purchase, the pattern of thinking concerning the Indians was more or less similar to the pattern of thinking of slavery. Again there is a huge contrast between words and actions. What were their visions on matters of the Indians? Jefferson praised Indians as uncorrupted by civilization, native Americans thus reflected man’s true nature. Their “keen” sensibility, affection for their children, capacity for “strong and faithful” friendship, and unsophisticated “moral sense of right and wrong” preserved social order without compulsion or coercion.172 For Jefferson, the Indians were natural republicans who showed that society did not depend on submission to the authority of a governing class but was instead the spontaneous expression of man’s sociable nature.173 Despite the rhetoric of praise by Jefferson, policy in reality was quite the opposite. As stated earlier in the case of Louisiana, Jefferson supported migration for Americans to their territory over there. For that the Indians had either to assimilate into American society or they had to move. As Peter Onuf states “Jefferson’s generous assessment of the human potential of Indians did not lead to the construction of a durable multiracial, multicultural political order in the new world. On the contrary, Jeffersonian philosophy provided the moral and intellectual rationale for the removal of Indians across the Mississippi under President Andrew Jackson.”174 Onuf wrote this in a book about empire and nationhood and he argued that Jefferson was building an empire. Onuf argued that minorities stood in the way of such an empire. Indian territories were a roadblock to the agrarian society that Jefferson envisioned. Land was necessary in order to grow as a nation and therefore Jefferson ultimately favored removal of the Indians instead of assimilation. Empire and the threat of the European powers took precedence. Onuf’s argument is plausible and offers a clear explanation why there was such a discrepancy between policies and words spoken. Jefferson’s philosophy was used to support this removal policy. The new territory became the perfect place to relocate the eastern tribes of Indians. In August 1803 Jefferson wrote that “the best use we can make of Louisiana for some time, will be to give establishments in it to the Indians on the east side of the Mississippi, in exchange to their present country […] and thus make this acquisition the means of filling up the eastern side […] when we shall be full on this side, we may lay off a range of States on the western bank […] advancing compactly as we multiply”.175 P. S. Onuf, Jefferson’s Empire The language of American Nationhood (Charlottesville: University of Virginia Press 2000), 19. 173 Ibidem, 19. 174 Ibidem, 19. 175 R. J. Miller, Native America Discovered and Conquered Thomas Jefferson, Lewis and Clark and Manifest Destiny (London: University of Nebraska Press 2008), 91. 172 39 Alexander Minnaard 3136590 thesis This letter is interesting for several reasons. One is that Jefferson is talking about relocating Indians by proposing to trade eastern lands for lands in the Mississippi. However, this would be a temporary measure. Jefferson expected that the American population would grow and thus would drive the Indians out of their lands again. A second reason why this letter is so interesting because it demonstrates again the contrast between words and actual policy. Robert J. Miller concludes that Jefferson did not support assimilation at all, despite his words. He advocated tactics of taking tribal lands. He argues that obtaining Indians lands for the United States was Jefferson true goal.176 Miller, who is from native American origin, is not an entirely unbiased source, his argument stems from a book that considers the long term history of the United States with a judiciary perspective. Despite that narrow perspective, Miller certainly has a point, here. Jefferson’s policies combined with his republican dreams for an empire of liberty suggest that these ideas were valued more than his positive assessment of Indians. The other problem with the Indians was that they lived near the borders of the United States. This would create a threat. People who lived on the frontier were under constant threat and they pled for harsher measures against the Indian invaders. It also meant that the relationship with the Indians was under constant pressure and that foreign powers could interfere. There were rumors that the Spanish and the British supported the Indians to create problems in the United States. This geopolitical fact in combination with the plans for further expansion of the United States would create problems for the Jefferson and Madison Administrations. Maier argues that frontiers in themselves might function as a reason for expansion. He argues that stable frontiers are critical for the credibility for any regime.177 Instability provokes expansion. With this perspective in mind it is easy to suggest that this argument prevailed over the right of the Indians. It is not too difficult to suggest that building an empire according to the vision of Maier was more important for Jefferson and Madison than the position of the Indians. Build-up to the War of 1812 The world outside the United States was still tense, because the European powers had been competing with each other and the United States was getting caught in the crossfire. Great-Britain emerged as a potential enemy in the last years of the presidency of Jefferson. When Madison took over the presidency the country was preparing to go to war with their former colonizer. The role of the Indians was discussed again in relation to Great-Britain. There were also Indian tribes who lived near the border with Canada. As to these Indians, Jefferson had left a memo regarding unresolved intrusions by whites on Cherokee 176 177 Miller, Native America Discovered, 92. Maier, Among Empires, 78. 40 Alexander Minnaard 3136590 thesis and Chickasaw lands in Georgia.178 The third president’s thinking was that these Indians should become individual farmers over there followed by possible banishment across the Mississippi, where a mobile, hunting society could be sustained for a period of time. What about the fourth president? Did he share the thinking of his predecessor? Madison shared many of Jefferson’s ideas and he lacked the impulse to give the minorities political equality as well. Madison vowed in his inaugural message “to carry on the benevolent plans which have been so meritoriously applied to the conversion of our aboriginal neighbors from the degradation and wretchedness of savage life to a participation of the improvements of which the human mind and manners are susceptible in a civilized state”.179 America’s priority lay with the old world. The world power relations were closely linked to the nation’s immediate future. In such a political climate, attention was given, but little real sensitivity was shown, to the needs of Indians and people of African origins in slavery in the south. In Washington, they viewed these people with suspicion as if they were ready to join the European powers to destroy the United States. The stereotypes that already existed about Indians and African-Americas in Washington were enhanced by the European threat. As a consequence, government policy focused even more on Indian removal and black recolonization. This was accompanied by an increase in anxiety about racial intermixing. Laws that rendered mixed-race offspring as bastards, deprived of any inheritance, would outlast slavery itself.180 Burstein and Isenberg argue that freedom was defined as exclusively a white inheritance and Indians and blacks were seen not just as inferiors but also as social deviants who posed a credible danger to the wholesome vigor as well as necessary security of American expansionism.181 Congress banned slave trading outside the United States, but domestically there was no discussion about abolition of slavery. The black republic of Haiti was a frightening prospect for the United States. With attention focused on Spanish Florida and the unsettled Louisiana purchase lands, some began asking whether the black population might be relocated from the Atlantic states onto lands still populated by Indians.182 It is important to see that in these plans the threat of the black population in relation to black Haiti and slavery outweighed the threat posed by the Indians. That’s why Madison thought it easier, in the text of his inaugural address, to direct his attention 178 Burstein and Isenberg, Madison and Jefferson, 468. The Inaugural Address by President J. Madison, March 4 1809, http://www.bartleby.com/124/pres18.html 180 Burstein and Isenberg, Madison and Jefferson, 468. 181 Ibidem, 468. 182 Ibidem, 469. 179 41 Alexander Minnaard 3136590 thesis to the project of making Indians “white”.183 Indians were a mobile race, whereas slaves were bound to the land, because their owners needed to render it fruitful. Slavery remained a blight on the cultural landscape and an issue that was too huge to tackle head on in the lead up to the War of 1812. War of 1812 Despite the anxiety about slavery, the Indians formed a more formidable obstacle in the War of 1812. Canada was a target for the American government. Near the Canadian border, in Indiana, fighting broke out at the end of 1811. The Shawnee leader Tecumseh attempted to build a tribal confederation for defence against the Americas. Tecumseh’ s brother Tenskwatawa had even more aggressive plans on his mind. He believed it was possible to turn back the white settlements. Tenskwatawa ran into the crusading William Henry Harrison, who achieved a resounding victory at the Battle of Tippecanoe. In Washington, word was floating around that the British to the north were supplying the Indians and would stop at nothing. This made the urge for expansion into Canada and the call for war more urgent. President Madison declared war on Great-Britain on June 1 1812. He presented a list of grievances against Great-Britain to Congress. Among this list was the accusation that the British were supporting and encouraging the Indians in the northwest. 184 Jefferson, from his house, supported this claim. He urged Madison “to stop Indian barbarities. The conquest of Canada will do this.”185 However, Canada was not conquered at all. British troops defeated the Americans and the Indians, now supported by the British had increased their attacks on American troops. The war was not going as planned. In the southwest there were Indians fighting as well. There the Shawnee leader Tecumseh proved impatient with the British commander with whom he was meant to coordinate operations. On the American side, the troops of Harrison were accused of wasting time and money by constantly retreating from the battlefield. However, this tactic eventually paid off. When on Lake Erie a substantial part of the British fleet was destroyed by the Americans, the door was opened for Harrison and his troops. Boosted by Kentucky riflemen, he crossed into Canada in pursuit of the enemy; and at the Battle of the Thames in October 1813 , Tecumseh, spokesman of pan-Indian alliance and excellent warrior, was killed. As a consequence, the British-Indian alliance became weakened, because the British had done better, military speaking, than the Indians. 183 The Inaugural Address by President J. Madison, March 4 1809, http://www.bartleby.com/124/pres18.html 184 185 Letter from J. Madison to Congress, June 1 812, http://founders.archive.gov// Letter from T. Jefferson to J. Madison, June 29 1812, http://founders.archive.gov/ 42 Alexander Minnaard 3136590 thesis The northern campaign of the Americans was cut short, because the British proved too resilient. With all the attention that was given to the Indians, the question of slavery was put on the backburner. This was illustrated by the fact that almost no one asked President Madison to abolish slavery. He himself made no effort to do so. He did, however, not entirely escape condemnation for his support of slavery. His papers reveal that at least one federal Representative was bold enough to write to him directly and expose the hypocrisy in his complaining about Britain’s “pressing and enslaving a few thousand of your seamen,” while “you southern Nabobs, to glut your avrise for sorded gain, make no scruple of enslaving millions of the sons and daughters of Africa, & their descendants.”186 In this period anxiety rose concerning the fact that too many slaves resided in one area. Thereby it would be easier for them to rebel against the authorities. The recolonization or removal option, whether coming from human concern or out of more selfish motives of slave holders, remained very much alive as an idea.187 Jefferson wholeheartedly supported these plans. He wrote in 1811 to businessman John Lynch, that his views concerning “the people of color of these states” had never really changed. He had long favored “gradually drawing off this part of our population” and “transplanting them among the inhabitants of Africa.”188 In 1814 a young Virginian Edward Coles wrote to Jefferson about his plan to end slavery in their state. He planned to emancipate slaves and give them land in Illinois. Jefferson replied that he was becoming too old and refused to give his opinion on this matter. He was fond of his “love of tranquility”.189 Jefferson refused to accommodate Coles and was more than happy to carry on with his life as a farmer with all his slaves. In 1814 there were more pressing matters ahead for Jefferson and for his friend Madison. One of these pressing matters was that the British were gaining ground in America. The British invaded America and went after the capital Washington, in the south however, the Americans were more successful. Militias under general Jackson removed the British from Pensacola in November 1814. After this victory Jackson was headed to New Orleans. In order to achieve success there, Jackson took some unorthodox measures. Jackson released prisoners from war if they agreed to join his militia. He enlisted friendly Indians and African Americans in his army. Slaves did the hardest work, digging trenches and raising fortifications.190 Jackson’s hard work paid off because he won the battle of New Orleans. However, this battle had not been really 186 Letter from S. Potter to J. Madison, February 13 1813, http://founders.archive.gov/ Burstein and Isenberg, Madison and Jefferson, 468. 188 Letter from T. Jefferson to J. Lynch, January 121 1811, http://founders.archive.gov/ 189 Letter from T. Jefferson to E. Coles, August 25 1814, http://founders.archive.gov/ 190 Burstein and Isenberg, Madison and Jefferson, 549. 187 43 Alexander Minnaard 3136590 thesis necessary. A peace agreement had already been reached with the British in Ghent. Americans at the time did not see their great victory as meaningless. They were beaming with pride. It gave the nation self-respect, overlooking the fact that the army had a multiracial and multiethnic nature.191 With this peace agreement, the war was now over and the United States had to be rebuilt. By the end of the war, the fear of slave uprisings was put to rest. The British had urged slaves to revolt against their American masters. They had promised freedom for those who would rally to their cause. This caused anxiety with the Americans and had forced the American government to divert large numbers of militia away from the battlefield into preserving domestic security.192 In spite of that, three hundred slaves revolted. Most slaves however, stayed on their plantations. Madison decided to give a personal justification of the war, which should be written by Madison’s aide Alexander Dallas after the war, which was going to give – “a correct and full view of the war”, as Madison put it to Jefferson in March 1815.193 In this paper there was also a part on a potential slave uprising: “The slaves of the American planters were invited to join the British standard, in a covert phraseology, that afforded but a slight veil for the real design. But even the negroes seem, in contempt, or disgust, to have resisted the solicitation; no rebellion or massacre ensued.”194 In this narrative of Madison, the slaves were able to see through the British and remain at peace with their masters. In this document there are signs of the paternalistic view of slavery that would be part of southern defense for slavery in the coming decades, eventually leading up to the civil war. Slavery was put to rest for the time being, the problems with the Indians were not. In the peace agreement no extra territory had been gained or lost. What happened was that the British dropped their support for the Indians. The British negotiators aimed for the creation of a completely independent native American buffer state in the Great Lakes region. The American negotiators were adamant in their opposition against this plan. The British ultimately dropped their support for the Indians, because they could not afford to remain engaged in war due to the tensions in Europe. Moreover their strategic position in America had weakened as a result of their defeats at Plattsburgh and New Orleans. During the war, the British had their own problems with the reliability of the Indians and as a consequence of all this they let go of the demand of the independent Indian state. Instead, they made an agreement with the Americans to return to the status quo before the war. However, this was a very vague agreement and the British stopped to support the Indians and therefore the Indians were left in the hands of the Americans. 191 Howe, What Hath God Wrought, 17. Howe, What Hath God Wrought, 64. 193 Letter from J. Madison to T. Jefferson, March 12 1815, http://founders.archive.gov/ 194 A. J. Dallas, An Exposition of the causes and Character of the Late War with Great-Britain, http://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt?id=aeu.ark:/13960/t3jw95h55;view=1up;seq=9, 69-70. 192 44 Alexander Minnaard 3136590 thesis Concluding, the war ended badly for the Native-Americans. Their uprisings were squashed at the battle of the Thames and at the slaughter at Horsehoe Bend on March 27, 1814. That diminished the military power of the Indians. With these facts in mind, it was noted that the only relevance of General Jackson’s victory at New Orleans was that he diminished the Indian threat.195 The Creek war had really strategic value. This war was turned into a frontier war where the southern militias aimed for the land of the Indians. The British were blamed for encouraging Indian atrocities during the war, but the Americans under leadership of Jackson crushed the Creek insurgency. He forced on August 9, 1814, the Treaty of Fort Jackson upon the Creeks, thereby pressing the tribes to concede over 22 million acres in Alabama and Georgia. It was an enormous land grab supported by the American government. 196 The peace Treaty in Ghent with the British restored as mentioned before the status quo: the Indians were guaranteed their lands. In June 1815 the Madison Administration ordered Jackson to begin to return land to the Indians.197 But Jackson refused to comply and the federal government felt that they could not strike against the popular war hero and let the land grab pass. The British were not inclined either to support the Indians, they withdrew their support and thereby leaving the Indians into the hands of the Americans. The American government concluded a series of treaties with the Indians, beginning with the second Treaty of Greenville, which forced the Indians to declare themselves allies of the United States. Over the next few years treaties were concluded that included removal of tribal lands and diminishing fur trading, which hurt the economic position of the Indians.198 Andrew Jackson extorted a treaty with the Cherokees in 1816 and thereby confirmed possession of Indian area that had taken from them before. The Senate ratified this treaty because of Jackson’s involvement. Obviously, the war ended very badly for the Indian population and the aftermath of the war was no better for them either. Conclusion This chapter started stating the theories of Maier, Burbank and Cooper that an empire should imply the inclusion of different cultures and races. The question raised was, how was the situation in the early years of the American Republic during the presidencies of Jefferson and Madison. As noted by various historians, there is a huge gap between their words and their actions.199 On paper they wrote all kind of idealistic things about the Indians and the need to abolish slavery. Contrary to reality: the Indians were pushed back to the frontier and across and they were perceived as a huge threat to American lives. 195 Howe, What Hath God Wrought, 74. Ibidem, 76. 197 Ibidem, 75. 198 Ibidem, 76. 199 Finkelman, “Jefferson and Slavery: Treason against the hopes of the world”, in Jeffersonian Legacies, 182. 196 45 Alexander Minnaard 3136590 thesis When the United States expanded into Louisiana Territory, there were plans to make room for settlements of farmers and settlers there. This expansion made the Indian problem more relevant. Jefferson, despite his rhetoric, was basically a supporter of land removal in order to make room for white settlements. There was no sign of Jefferson endorsing racial equality in the Louisiana territory at all. Unfortunately, there were also no signs of extending citizenship to the African Americans slaves either . Despite their discussions about abolishment of slavery, Jefferson and Madison did little to nothing to end slavery. They lived privately at their plantations where slaves lived and worked for them. They needed slaves for economic reasons. Equality was only for the white population, in spite of the rhetoric in the Declaration of Independence. The example of the black republic of Haiti proves this. Rebellion against a European power was beautiful, but not for the black population over there. Both men feared that Haiti could serve as an example to the Americans black population. This anxiety about uprisings was enhanced by the War of 1812. The British had promised freedom and as a consequence a few slaves turned against their masters. However, in the larger picture there was no mass rebellion. Later on, Madison used this fact to justify the culture of slavery.200 The Indians got no better treatment during the War of 1812. Some Indian tribes aligned themselves with the British. Later this fact was used to deprive Indians of their lands. The British dropped their support for the Indians in the peace negotiations. Andrew Jackson’s victories in the south had cleared the way for future land grabbing by the Americans.201 To conclude, both men and in particular Jefferson wrote eloquently and in an inspirational manor about freedom and equality. However, in reality they did not live up to their words. Inclusion and equality were never realized. Both men supported land removal and sustained slavery. It seemed that their words were only meant for a certain part of the population, the white Americans. The rest of the population was ignored, removed or repressed in order to build their nation. In this sense both men do not fit in with the descriptions of inclusion as given by Maier, Burbank and Cooper. Howe’s description about white supremacy over Indians and slaves is more accurate. Burbank and Cooper’s arguments that empires eventually need diversity may be true in the long haul, but their statements about an early violent and reclusive phase of an empire is certainly more than true in the cases of Jefferson and Madison. What are the effects of their views on minorities on their plans to build an empire? Jefferson and Madison were in an early and reclusive phase of building an empire and did not aspire to equal rights for the whole population. When they wrote about equality they meant equality for people such as themselves. Men of a certain 200 A. J. Dallas, An Exposition of the causes and Character of the Late War with Great-Britain, http://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt?id=aeu.ark:/13960/t3jw95h55;view=1up;seq=9, 69-70. 201 Howe, What Hath God Wrought, 74. 46 Alexander Minnaard 3136590 thesis background and not other people. In their vision society benefited from their policies. There was a need to enhance agriculture and to spread civilization. That’s why they aspired to expand. If this happened their own society could grow. This is what they meant: they did not mean any modern interpretations that historians of our time mean when they use the concepts such as diversity and equality . In this sense Jefferson’s and Madison’s words have to be put in the right historical context. In our time their words at least seem strange and contradictory but in their time their words were understood more clearly. The majority of the people supported their vision. Race equality was just not on their minds and they were again supported by the majority of the people. They were elected again by these same people. Empires take time to build and in this sense racial thinking evolves over time. Even in the civil war there was a huge debate about this process. So, it is logical that Jefferson and Madison were no supporters of the modern view of racial equality and America had to go to through a violent and reclusive phase in order to achieve some version of racial equality. In that sense Burbank and Cooper were right. Onuf argues that the reason why Jefferson and Madison were so reluctant to expand the rights of the minorities was because of their ambition to build an American empire.202 Jefferson was determined in his vision to build an empire that was built on the foundation that a homogenous nation was strong enough to expand and to survive in a European dominated world. This vision is correct. Jefferson saw survival of the United States as his top priority. It was not that he did not realize that slavery was wrong but as a solution he suggested relocation. In their native countries they could aspire freedom to be compared to the freedom Americans had acquired after their revolutionary war.203 Finkelman painted a more negative picture, after he had read the words of the Declaration and then gave an overview of the outcome. As mentioned before there is a huge gap between words and reality. Finkelman’s view ignores the empire dimension as well as the European geopolitical situation in which Jefferson and Madison operated. In this sense his vision is a bit narrow. Agreeing with Onuf it is clear that it is more important to take into account the empire context that is crucial in understanding Jefferson’s and Madison’s policies on race relations. Both Jefferson and Madison were in the process to build an empire and for that goal a more homogenous society was necessary in order to grow as a society and ultimately to survive as a nation in a dangerous world. Onuf, Jefferson’s Empire, 21. Finkelman, “Jefferson and Slavery: Treason against the hopes of the world”, in Jeffersonian Legacies, 185. 202 203 47 Alexander Minnaard 3136590 thesis Conclusion The question if Jefferson and Madison were building an empire during their times as presidents of the United States is addressed in this paper. Closely linked to this question is whether they saw the War of 1812 as a chance to expand the United States or not. This research is divided into three sub questions and each part covers an answer to the questions put in this paper. The first chapter discusses the expansion of the United States. Had both Virginians expansionistic ambitions? The answer to this question is undoubtedly yes. Jefferson and Madison envisioned a larger United States. They desired Florida, parts of Mexico, Louisiana, Cuba, and Canada.204 Their ambitions sprang from their thinking. They saw their nation as paramount to freedom and against repression. Their nation had come into the world as a republic, not as a monarchy. They rebelled against their colonizer Great-Britain and they persisted. Madison and Jefferson felt that in order for the republic to flourish they had to expand. They perceived their continent as a place where American agriculture could flourish and eventually expand.205 Following the spirit of the Enlightenment they perceived the inhabitants of America as capable of reaching a high degree of civilization. Civilization could spread across the continent and thereby freeing the continent of European repressors. However, practice never suits theory. How did expansionism fare in practice? Sometimes, opportunities just present themselves, as in case of the Louisiana Purchase. This deal took place due to the European struggle for hegemony over world politics. The United States profited from this. Both men knew this and tried to use this European context to their advantage. Jefferson and Madison succeeded in the case of Louisiana and in parts of Florida. In other cases they miscalculated the European context: Madison and Jefferson and others misperceived the strength of Great-Britain and its distraction with France. Despite attempts to further expansion they did not succeed: Great-Britain proved too strong in the War of 1812. The second chapter deals with military power. There was no strong army at the time of the presidency of Jefferson and Madison, due to fear of a strong central government and anxiety about military power. Both men knew that a strong force was required in order to expand and for purposes of self-defense. Internal resistance prevented the buildup of a strong military machine. Jefferson aspired to build gunboats and in this he succeeded. However, it was only a reversal in policy, not an expansion of the military machine. Early in his presidency he cut the budget of the navy. 204 Letter from T. Jefferson to J. Madison, August 16, 1807, http://founders.archive.gov/ See for instance a letter from T. Jefferson to W. Ludlow, September 6 1824, http://founders.archives.gov/documents/Jefferson/98-01-02-4523 205 48 Alexander Minnaard 3136590 thesis Later on Jefferson needed more ships for the Tripolitan War. What this war demonstrates is that in order to win a war, principles had to be set aside. Jefferson realized this and opted for a slight change in policy. Madison, however, made a complete turnaround. He abolished the use of gunboats during the War of 1812 and argued for a professional navy with real power, he started to build a war organization and even advocated for conscription, which was completely contrary to the voluntary armies of the State militias. These state militias proved unreliable and were no real match for the British. Thus expansion into Canada was no option. For such an expansion, however, both men only partly relied on military force, perhaps realizing that the other powers were just too strong, so in the end they relied on diplomacy. With smart maneuvering they tried to expand. They did hint at a military conflict such as Madison’s meeting with the French ambassador demonstrates.206 However, this as far as it went. No military power was involved in order to achieve expansion except in 1812. The third chapter discusses the inclusive nature of their empire as envisioned by Jefferson and Madison. What was their view of the role of minorities, especially slaves and Indians? In spite of the beautifully written language about equality and rights, this did not hold for the Indians. One of Jefferson’s legacies was that the policy to remove Indians from their lands was inspired by Jefferson’s rhetoric.207 The need for expansion was further fueled in order to enable white settlers and farmers to settle elsewhere in the continent and Indians stood in their way. Jefferson and Madison tried to force the Indians to assimilate, but in reality they wanted them to leave. One of the consequences of the War of 1812 was the diminished military power of the Indians.208 Without this power, removal would be far less difficult. In this sense the Madison Administration cleared the way for the Indian removal such as took place later on in the nineteenth century. If Madison was building an empire, this empire would be inhabited by a more homogenous society. As regards to the slaves, it was more or less the same pattern. Jefferson spoke about the end of slavery, but in reality he never was true to his words. Furthermore Jefferson as well as Madison envisioned black Americans as not equal to white Americans. Jefferson and Madison both supported recolonization to Africa.209 So, in terms of diversity, both men were not ready to extend citizenship to other races than to white American, who were their priority. They wanted land and they were capable 206 A.Koch, Jefferson & Madison The Great Collaboration (New York: Oxford University Press 1964), 237. 207 P. S. Onuf, Jefferson’s Empire The Language of American Nationhood (Charlottesville: Virginia University Press 1993), 19. 208 D.Howe, What Hath God Wrought The Transformation of America 1815-1848 (Oxford: Oxford University Press 2007), 74. 209 A. Burstein and N. Isenberg, Madison and Jefferson ( New York: Random House 2010), 468. 49 Alexander Minnaard 3136590 thesis of behaving in a civilized way and this took precedence over the rights of Indians and slaves. This double standard was clearly demonstrated with the resurrection in St. Domingue. Both presidents did not support this rebellion because the rebels were black and that would threaten to uproot American society. Equality and liberty were fine in theory but not in reality. However, the main question is whether Jefferson and Madison had begun to build an empire during their times as presidents, judged by the criteria used. Ultimately, empires require military supremacy, according to Maier, who adds that empires must retain a decisive military resource and that resource is reserved for executive power.210 Judged by these criteria, the answer is a clear no. Neither Jefferson nor Madison built an empire, because their military machine was very weak and on the whole remained so. The command structure of the executive branch of the federal government was not strong either. However, were there traces of a military power developing? Then the answer would be yes, because these traces were visible during the presidencies of both Jefferson and Madison. Both men tried to expand the military when an opportunity presented itself and war was necessary. Jefferson appeared more reluctant than Madison. Jefferson opted for gunboats and Madison was forced to plead for a federal command structure, professional navy, military organization due to the failings of the War of 1812. He even advocated a conscription army. Definitely, signs are present of their endeavors to build a stronger military force. Another criterion of Maier is that an empire is to be defined by its frontiers, which has to do with plans for expansion.211 Both presidents certainly advocated expansion. There were ambitions enough and to spare but they failed to realize some of their ideals. The frontier was no clear line and both men envisioned to spread their American civilization across the continent. In this sense they were heading to what later would be called Manifest Destiny ideology, a phrase invented in the 1840s, but the idea behind it had already been present long before the 1840s, as is argued by Stephanson.212 Jefferson and Madison felt that this was inevitable.213 They tried to steer this inevitable process in the right direction. Jefferson and Madison stretched out the terms of the Louisiana Purchase as far as they could. They analyzed the European power plays and tried to use these to their advantage or to prevent Europe from gaining more ground in America. 210 C. S. Maier, Among Empires American Ascendancy and Its Predecessors (London: Harvard University Press 2006), 70. 211 Ibidem, 80. 212 A. Stephanson, Manifest Destiny American Expansion and the Empire of Right (New York: Hill and Wang 1995), XXI. 213 Letter from T. Jefferson to J. Madison, April 27 1809, http://founders.archive.gov/ 50 Alexander Minnaard 3136590 thesis The European context of power plays also explains their eagerness to acquire traditional Indian lands and lawful Spanish lands, which they did to prevent the mere possibility of future British or French expansionism. This European context was also present in the War of 1812. One of the war aims was expansion into British Canada. Expansion into this territory would eliminate a European threat just as the Louisiana Purchase had eliminated the French presence from the mainland of America. However, expansion into Canada did not take place either: local resistance and the British were too strong, but the war provided the groundwork for further expansion into the future. The military power of the Indians had diminished and the British had dropped their support for an Indian state during peace negotiations. Furthermore, no territory was lost by the United States. Soon after the war the whole of Florida was acquired and more territory followed. To conclude, Jefferson and Madison wanted expansion for the United States and gave it their best effort. Indeed, during their years in office, the nation had expanded and they envisioned future expansion such as Canada and Cuba demonstrate. Their vision and policies were carried on by their successors, so they had laid out the groundwork for an enlarged United States. Empire also meant extending civil rights, being open to diversity and multiculturalism, as argue Maier, Burbank and Cooper.214 As stated earlier and argued by many historians, there was a huge gap between Madison’s words and in particular Jefferson’s words on this issue.215 Both men saw the benefits of slavery for the southern economy and thus realized abolition of slavery was no option. As regards to the Indians, they followed more or less the same pattern. In spite of the positive, yet paternalistic tone of their writings on the nature of Indians, they felt Indians were and obstacle as regards the expansion of white settlements. Jefferson is accused to have laid the groundwork for the later Indian removals, which sounds plausible.216 Expansion for the republic and advancing the ideals of the American republic clearly took precedence over the rights of Indians. The War of 1812 demonstrated this again. The British and the Indians were considered the main enemies. The Americans were deadly opposed to a British plan for an Indian state.217 The British compromised, on the condition that the Indians should be given a fair treatment according to treaties concluded in the past. However, this did not happen. Madison tried to uphold it but eventually did not follow through in the face of resistance. This proves that the rights of the Indians were indeed a concern for Madison but no top priority. His priorities and Jefferson’s priorities lay elsewhere. 214 Maier, Among Empires, 19-20. And J. Burbank and F. Cooper, Empires in World History Power and the Politics of Difference (Princeton: Princeton University Press 2010), 2. 215 P. Finkelman, “Jefferson and Slavery: Treason against the hopes of the world”, in Jeffersonian Legacies, ed. By P. Onuf (Charlottesville: University of Virginia Press 1993), 182. 216 Onuf, Jefferson’s Empire, 19. 217 Howe, What Hath God Wrought, 75. 51 Alexander Minnaard 3136590 thesis Clearly, the priorities of Jefferson and Madison were directed at expansion. They envisioned expansion and they used every opportunity to realize this goal. Louisiana, Florida and Canada demonstrate this. Canada was one of America’s war aims and Jefferson supported and encouraged this policy. 218 It is clear that the war was started for the purpose of expansion. Both Jefferson and Madison envisioned an enlarged United States as essential for the future of its white citizens: more land for agriculture, civilization would be advanced and even the safety in a European dominated world would be guaranteed.219 This vision can be seen as the early phase of a American empire. An empire that has traces of anti-militarism to a certain degree just as Bacevich stated.220 Their empire was also not open for diversity either, so it does not follow the description of Maier, Burbank and Cooper.221 Their empire is not a reluctant one either, as Ferguson argued: it was well planned and both men definitely strived for expansion. 222 Jefferson had called America “an empire for liberty”, however, it was an empire with serious limitations.223 The military was not strong and an anti-militaristic point of view remained in the United States. Jefferson mostly agreed with this vision. Madison was more realistic and realized a stronger army was necessary to create an empire. It seemed as if Jefferson and Madison had wanted to create an empire exclusively for white Americans, whereby minorities were meant to work as slaves or to go back to Africa. Concluding, both men indeed had started to create an empire, but it had turned out an empire with serious flaws. 218 Letter from T. Jefferson to J. Madison, April 27 1809, http://founders.archive.gov/ Letter from T. Jefferson to W. Ludlow, September 6 1824, http://founders.archive.gov/ 220A.J. Bacevich, American Empire The Realities and Consequences of U.S. Diplomacy (London: Cambridge University Press 2003),122. 221 Maier, Among Empires, 19-20. And Burbank and Cooper, Empires in World History, 2. 222 D. Hendrickson, Union, Nation, or Empire. The American debate over international relations 17891941 (Kansas: University Press Kansas 2009), 14. 223 Letter from T. Jefferson to J. 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Letters Madison & Jefferson through, http://founders.archives.gov/ Pictures front-page: Madison and Jefferson: http://www.taraross.com/wpcontent/uploads/2014/08/jefferson-madison.jpg American eagle: http://www.thewarof1812.com/Warof1812documents/eaglwglobe.gif 54