JB APUSH Unit IIIA
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Transcript JB APUSH Unit IIIA
Age of Jefferson
Unit IIIA
AP United States History
Thomas Jefferson (1801-1809)
Plantation farmer from Virginia
Statesman (Declaration of
Independence, Secretary of
State, Vice-President, President)
Democratic-Republican
Founded the party in opposition
to Alexander Hamilton’s
Federalists
Kentucky Resolution
“Renaissance Man”
Inventor, philosopher, architect,
scientist
Slave owner
What is Jeffersonianism?
Republicanism and Civic Virtue
Citizens’ civic duty to aid the state
Voting and efficacy
Right to education
Resist corruption and Natural Elites
Federalism and States’ Rights
Ultimate sovereignty in the states and nullification
Strict constitutionalist
Dominant legislature, weak judiciary
Economic coercion over standing armies
Yeoman Farmers as Ideal Citizens
Educated landowners exemplified independence and virtue
Agriculture Over Manufacture/Industry
Responsibility of subsistence
Dependence led to class conflict
Empire of Liberty and Foreign Policy
America’s responsibility to spread democracy
Avoid entangling alliances
Society
Republican motherhood; absent from politics
Natives capable, just need to catch up (noble savages)
Black inferiority and white superiority
Separation of Church and State
Was Jefferson Jeffersonian?
Consider the following historical concepts
and events and answer the above
question…
The Federal Judiciary
Louisiana Purchase
Tripoli Pirates
Embargo Act of 1807
First Party System (1792-1824)
American period of political parties between the Federalists and
Democratic-Republicans
Federalists:
Nationalism; republicanism
loose interpretation of Constitution;
business, commercial, and upper class;
New England;
pro-British;
dominated early years of national government, but dominated most of
Judiciary
Democratic-Republicans:
States’ rights; individual liberties
strict interpretation of Constitution;
working class;
South, West, frontier;
large majorities in Congress and Executive in latter years
Jefferson and the Federal
Judiciary
Only Federalist justices on
the Supreme Court
John Marshall as Chief
Justice
Judiciary Act of 1801
Reduced number of SC
justices
Increased number of federal
courts; filled by Adams
Repealed in 1802
Marbury v. Madison (1803)
Judicial review - Supreme
Court’s determining
constitutionality of issues
Dem-Reps lead
impeachments against
Federalist judges
Alcoholism and partisanship
grounds for impeachment?
Jefferson and the Louisiana
Purchase
Napoleon’s Caribbean Empire
Plan and Britain’s Control of the
Atlantic
America sandwiched between
European powers
Brokered a deal for $15 million
Gain control of New Orleans
Lewis and Clark Expedition
Find waterway from east to Pacific
Federalist opposition
Jefferson and the Tripoli Pirates
Barbary pirates earned revenue for North African states
Extorting and harassing American ships
U.S. Navy and Marines dispatched to end the Tripoli threat
Treaty signed in 1805 in favor of Americans
War cost less than preserving peace
Jefferson and the Embargo Act
Orders of Council and Continental System
outlawed American trade
British impressment of Americans and seizures of
American ships
HMS Leopard and USS Chesapeake
Embargo Act of 1807
Prohibited vessels from leaving American ports for
foreign ports
Economic impact on Americans
Merchants
and traders suffered
Farms foreclosed
Increased production and diversified manufacturing
Election of 1808
Jefferson’s Legacy Becomes Madison’s
James Madison (D-R) elected
President, but Federalists gain some
seats
Anglo-French rivalry bullies USA
Seizing American ships
Nonintercourse Act of 1809
Forbade trade with Britain and France
unless promised to cease harassing U.S.
ships
Macon’s Bill No. 2 (1810)
If Britain or France repealed restrictions
on neutral ships then U.S. would cease
trade with the other
British influence in the West
Rumors of British stirring up antiAmerican sentiment among Natives
Battle of Tippecanoe (1811)
Leading Up to the War of 1812
United States vs. Great Britain
British impressment
“Our old enemy.”
British influence in the frontier
War hawks
John C. Calhoun and Henry Clay
Opposition
Federalists
Old guard Dem-Reps
New England and merchants
War of 1812
Failed American invasion of Canada
British Invasion of D.C. and Baltimore
Washington, D.C. burned (August 1814)
Ft. McHenry (September 1814)
Naval Victories and U.S.S. Constitution
Americans and the Natives
Tecumseh and William Henry Harrison
Battle of Horseshoe Bend (March 1814)
Treaty of Ghent (December 1814)
Stalemate; nothing earned
Patriotic victory
Battle of New Orleans (January 1815)
Andrew Jackson
Nature FTW
“Old Ironsides”
- Constructed in
1797
- Still in
commission
42 Wins
0 Losses
The End of the Federalists
“Victory” over Great Britain and proBritish/anti-war support labeled them as
unpatriotic
Hartford Convention (Dec. 1814)
Ratify Constitution in attempt to weaken Dem-Rep
in West and South
Talk of secession by radicals*
After the War of 1812 Federalists soon would
dissolve even in New England stronghold
War of 1812’s Impact
International respect
Development of U.S.-Canada relations
Natives on their own and weak
Industrial development
Growth of nationalism
Eyes toward the West