The Struggle Over Foreign Policy

Download Report

Transcript The Struggle Over Foreign Policy

THE STRUGGLE OVER FOREIGN
POLICY
6.2
OBJECTIVES
Explain how territorial expansion brought
Americans into conflict with the British and with
Native Americans.
 Describe American relations with Britain,
France, and Spain.
 Analyze how the political parties’ debates over
foreign policy further divided them.

KEY PARTS
Conflict in the Ohio Valley
 American Relations With Europe
 The Parties Debate Foreign Policy
 The Election of 1800

INTRODUCTION
Read Section 6.2
 Fill in the flow chart on page 198 in regards to
foreign policy.

CONFLICT IN THE OHIO VALLEY
The Treaty of Paris gave the United States a
large sum of land west of the Appalachians.
 However there were still manned British Forts,
that supplied Miami Indians with weapons.
 Chief Little Turtle was their leader.
 Their were a couple of skirmishes that were
fought and the Indians beat the small American
forces. Until the Battle of Fallen Timbers, where
the United States ended the Indian Confederacy.

AMERICAN RELATIONS WITH EUROPE
Responding to the French Revolution the United
States was divided by political parties.
 Democratic Republicans backed the French
whereas the Federalists believed that French
revolutionaries were bloody anarchists.
 By 1793 Britain and France were at war.
 Both parties in the United States declared
neutrality due to the weak state of America.

CONT.
The United States signed treaties with Britain
and Spain to ensure peace in the states.
 The treaty with Britain was John Jay Treaty of
1794 (Pulling British Forts out of the west, but
keeping the laws on American trading ships and
paying old war debt)
 The treaty with Spain was the Pickney’s Treaty
of 1795 (free trade for Americans along the
Mississippi and New Orleans, also establish
Spanish Florida’s border)

PARTIES DEBATE FOREIGN POLICY
John Adams defeats Thomas Jefferson narrowly
in the 1796 Presidential Election
 XYZ Affair-French officials sending a $250,000
bribe and humiliating terms to Adams.
 Alien and Sedition Acts of 1798- Authorized the
President to arrest and deport immigrants who
criticized the federal government.
 The Virginia and Kentucky resolution rendered
the Sedition Acts useless and unconstitutional.

ELECTION OF 1800
The Sedition Act and the new federal taxes had
become very unpopular.
 Adams tried various techniques to give him the
upper hand in the next election.
 Adams ended up losing the election by a very
narrow margin to Thomas Jefferson, in 1801.
