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You have been aboard this ship for many months… exploring this river… along your journey you have encountered friendly and hostile natives. A friendly native has offered to guide you through the remainder of your journey. Write a diary entry about your experience. The Jeffersonian Republic 1800-1812 Election of 1800 • Jefferson defeats Adams • 73-65 in Electoral College • Jefferson’s mission: to restore the republican experiment and check the growth of government power Jefferson • Alien and Sedition Acts expired • Jefferson pardoned “martyrs” of Sedition Act and nullified their fines • New Naturalization Act of 1802 – brought time for citizenship back to five years from fourteen Albert Gallatin • Secretary of Treasury for Jefferson • Repealed excise tax • Thought national debt was bad • Balanced the budget Jefferson and Gallatin • Did not tamper with Hamilton’s debt • Continued to pay debt back at “par” • They also did not attack the Bank of The United States Judiciary Act of 1801 • “Deathbed” Act of Adams Administration • Created 16 new federal judges, all appointed by Adams the night before Jefferson became president • Act was repealed by Republican Congress of 1801 and scratched all 16 judges Chief Justice John Marshall • Appointed by Adams to sit over Supreme Court • Staunch Federalist Shaped American legal tradition more than anyone in US History • 34 years as Chief Justice Marbury v. Madison (1803) • 1 of 16 judges scrapped was William Marbury • He sued for delivery of his judicial appointment • James Madison (Secretary of State) was who he sued • One of the most important cases in Supreme Court Marbury v. Madison (1803) • Determined who had final authority over the meaning of the Constitution • Established judicial review – the idea that the Supreme Court alone had the last word on questions of constitutionality Jefferson and the Military • Jefferson reduced the US Military to a police force of 2,500 Pirates of North African Barbary States • 1801 – blackmail and plundered merchant ships in Mediterranean Sea • Jefferson didn’t want war, but couldn’t afford to pay tribute Pasha of Tripoli • Pasha declared war on the United States • Jefferson dispatched the infant navy to Tripoli • 4 years of fighting • Treaty of Peace with Tripoli (1805) • $60,000 paid in ransom for captured Americans Louisiana Purchase Louisiana Purchase • 1800 – Napoleon got King of Spain to cede immense trans-Mississippi region of Louisiana to France (included New Orleans) • Spain then withdrew US right to free navigation Louisiana Purchase • Thomas Jefferson sent James Monroe to Paris in 1803 to purchase of New Orleans from France • spend no more than $10 million Louisiana Purchase • Napoleon willing to sell for two reasons : 1 - failed to regain island of Santo Domingo slave revolt led by Touissant L’Overture 2 – didn’t want Britain to take Louisiana by force, and he needed the money Louisiana Purchase • • • • • • April 30, 1803 – Louisiana Purchase was signed $15 million Doubled size of U.S. 828,000 square miles 3 cents an acre U.S. secured the western half of richest river valley in the world • Set a precedent of the acquisition of foreign territory and peoples by purchase Exploring Louisiana Lewis & Clark • Spring 1804 – Jefferson sent his personal secretary Meriwether Lewis and an army officer William Clark to explore northern part of Louisiana • Began in St. Louis • Expedition traveled through the Rockies up the Columbia River and to the Pacific Ocean • 2 ½ year journey, scientific observations, demonstrated viability of overland route to Pacific Ocean Election of 1804 • Jefferson was very well liked by time of 1804 election and won handily 162 – 14 in Electoral College (Charles C. Pinckney –F) • Meanwhile, Napoleon and France would enter an 11 year war with England • France – Master of Land warfare • England – Master of Sea warfare Orders In Council 1806 • British law that closed European ports under French control to foreign vessels unless vessels first stopped at a British port • Napoleon then ordered the seizure of all merchant ships that entered British ports • Catch – 22 – no way to trade with either country Britain’s war tactics • Britain used policy of Impressment – forcible enlistment of sailors • Britain enlisted 6,000 US Sailors through Impressment • 1808 – 1811 Embargo Act (1807) • Law forbade the export of all goods from US in American or foreign ships • US economy suffered severely • Illicit trade boomed out of Canada • Embargo Act repealed March 1, 1809 Non-Intercourse Act (1809) • Replaced the Embargo Act of 1807 • Formally reopened trade with all nations, except France and England • Embargo didn’t work 1 – England had good crops in those years 2 – France relied on all of conquered Europe James Madison • Jefferson retired after 1808 • March 4, 1809 – Virginian James Madison takes oath of office as President • European conflict @ climax Napoleon Tricks Madison • Non-Intercourse Act expired in 1809 and was replaced by Macon’s Bill No. 2 • If Britain and France repealed commercial restriction then America would restore embargo against non-repealing country • Napoleon announces that France would lift trade decrees if England would lift Orders In Council • (He never intended to lift decrees) • Madison then gave Britain 3 months to lift Orders In Council • London saw no need to bargain Tecumseh & Tenskwatawa • Two Shawnee brothers wanted to form an Indian Confederacy independent of the USA • Inspired a movement of Indian unity and cultural renewal • Gave up textile clothing, alcohol, and rejected land ownership War Hawks • Young hotheads in the South and West wanted to go to war against England • England was supplying hostile Indians with guns and ammunition • 1811 – Indiana Territory Governor William Henry Harrison gathered an army and attacked Tecumseh’s HQ @ Wabash and Tippecanoe Rivers (Tecumseh was away) William Henry Harrison and the Battle of Tippecanoe Creek • Harrison defeats the Shawnee • Harrison became a national hero for his route of Indians • Tecumseh continued to fight for British until his death at Battle of Thames in 1813 Spring 1812 • War with Britain was inevitable • Britain continued to arm hostile Indians • Madison and Republicans believed the US had to assert American rights • Congress declared war on Britain June 1, 1812 • 79 – 49 in House 19 – 13 in Senate • New England opposed the war, and would not allow militia to serve out of state • 2 wars – one with Old England and one with New England