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Period 4: 1800-1848

4.1 Contextualizing Period 4

  • America expanded:

    • Economically by taking advantage of new lands, forms of transportation, & industries

    • Politically by allowing more people to participate in the democracy

      • e.g) Property ownership was dropped as a requirement to vote

    • Culturally through American literature and art

  • A market economy emerged as ppl focused more on buying & selling goods

4.2 The Rise of Political Parties and the Era of Jefferson

  • G. Washington warned against forming political parties, however…

  • Federalist (A. Hamilton) & Democratic-Republican (T. Jefferson) parties emerged

The Election of 1800

  • Adams’s presidency —>Federalists = less popular

    • e.g) Alien and Sedition Acts

  • This election provided a clear distinction b/t the parties:

    • Federalists = strong nat’l gov’t & leaned towards Britain in int’l affairs

    • Democratic-Republicans = powers reserved to states & leaned towards French

  • Both parties supported tariffs —> largest source of revenue for nat’l gov

    • North industrialists = high tariffs to protect their companies from foreign competition

    • Southerners = low tariffs to encourage trade (since they exported crops)

  • Each electoral college member cast 2 votes

    • President = 1st place

    • VP = 2nd place

  • T. Jefferson & Aaron Burr tied in the electoral college —> HOR made final decision & Jefferson won

    • D-R lawmakers took control of the HOR & Senate in 1800 —> Federalists swept from gov’t power

  • The passing of power from Adam to Jefferson was peaceful

    • Change of Federalist to D-R control = Revolution of 1800

Jefferson’s Presidency

  • T. Jefferson aimed to win the trust of Federalists by maintaining Hamilton’s nat’l bank and debt-repayment plan + he remained neutral in foreign policy

    • Retained loyalty from D-Rs through limited nat’l gov → reduced the size of the military, lowered nat’l debt, & repealed excise taxes → only appointed D-Rs to cabinet

Louisiana Purchase

  • MOST important achievement of T.J. presidency → contained Mississippi River w/the port of New Orleans

    • Due to Napoleon’s lost interest in trying to restore the French empire in America

  • The W. frontier expanded into Indiana territory during Jefferson’s presidency → settlers depended on the Mississippi River rivers for trade

    • Alarmed when the right of deposit from the Pinckney treaty prevented Americans from using the Port of New Orleans in 1802

      • Jefferson sent ministers to France to offer up to $10 million for New Orleans to FL → Napoleon’s ministers sold N.O. + the Louisiana Purchase for 15 million

  • Since Jefferson believed in a strict interpretation of the constitution, which didn’t explicitly state the president could purchase lands

    • He submitted a purchase agreement to the Senate, who ratified the purchase

  • This purchase doubled the size of the USA & removed the presence of a European power

    • Increased Jefferson’s popularity & showed Federalists as weak

  • Lewis & Clark scientifically explored the western frontier → gave a greater geographic & scientific knowledge of the area, better relations w/Natives, & more accurate maps

Judicial Impeachments

  • Jefferson suspended the Alien & Sedition Acts + freed those jailed under them

  • Impeachment campaign mostly failed, but judges were more cautious & less partisan

Jefferson’s Reelection

  • Jefferson won again 1804 & he faced a plot from Aaron Burr → D-R party split with the ‘Quids’ accusing Jefferson of abandoning the party’s principles

Aaron Burr

  • Wasn’t nominated for a second term as VP

  • Burr planned to win the governorship of NY & secede from the Union → lost to Hamilton

    • He ended up shooting Hamilton in a duel in 1804

  • Burr planned to take Mexico from Spain & unite it with Louisiana → Jefferson discovered these plans & ordered his trial for treason

    • Justice John Marshall acquitted Burr

John Marshall’s Supreme Court & Federal Power

  • Marshall was a Federalist official — chief justice who influenced many D-Rs

Influential Cases

  • Marbury v. Madison (1803):

    • Adams appointed Marbury last-minute, but Jefferson wanted to block this appointment

      • Marshall ruled the Judiciary Act of 1789 (which allowed Marbury to be appointed) as unconstitutional, & established judicial review, which gave the Supreme Court the power to decide whether an act made by Congress/the President was constitutional

  • Fletcher v. Peck

    • Allowed the Supreme Court to declare a state law invalid and/or unconstitutional

  • Martin v. Hunter’s Lease

    • Supreme Court had jurisdiction over state courts in cases involving constitutional rights

  • Dartmouth v. Woodward

    • Marshall argued that a contract for a private corporation couldn’t be altered by the state

  • McCulloch v. Maryland

    • A state couldn’t tax a federal institution since federal laws are supreme over state laws

      • Marshall established that the nat’l bank was an implied power in the constitution

      • National law > state law, when they contradict

  • Cohens v. Virginia

    • Supreme Court could review a state court’s decision involving any of the powers of the federal gov’t

Madison’s Presidency

  • Madison worked heavily alongside Jefferson to establish the D-Rs, but he was a weak public speaker & lacked Jefferson’s political skills

    • In 1808, however, Madison managed to win a majority of electoral votes

4.3 Politics and Regional Interests

The Era of Good Feelings

  • Describes Monroe’s two terms in office —> the D-Rs adopted some Federalist policies

  • During this period there were many debates over topics like tariffs, the nat’l bank, & internal improvements + regional tension over slavery were increasing

James Monroe

  • Became prominent in politics: Jefferson’s minister to G.B. & Madison’s secretary of state

  • He won the elections of 1816 & 1820 + he represented the growing nationalism

    • USA acquired FL, agreed on the Missouri Compromise, & adopted the Monroe Doctrine

Economic Nationalism

  • One impact of the War of 1812 was the movement to support the nation’s economic growth

    • It involved subsidizing internal improvements (building roads & canals) + protecting U.S. industries from European competition

  • Prior to the War of 1812, Congress levied low tariffs to raise gov’t revenue

    • During the war, many factories that were imported from Britain arose → Congress raised tariffs to protect American markets (Tariff of 1816)

      • N.E. opposed the tariff, but S + W supported it

  • Henry Clay (leader of the HOR) proposed the American System:

    1. Protective tariffs → promote American manufacturing + raise revenue for a nat’l transportation system

    2. Nat’l bank → provide a nat’l currency + the Second Bank of the US

    3. Internal improvements → Monroe + Madison argued that the constitution didn’t explicitly provide for money to be spent on roads & canals; left states to make their own internal improvement

The Panic of 1819

  • 2nd Bank of the US tightened credit to control inflation → state banks closed, unemployment, bankruptcies, and imprisonment for debt increased sharply

    • Many Westerners hit the hardest → Nat’l Bank foreclosed lots of western farmland

      • Shook nationalistic beliefs, causing Westerners to believe in land reform & opposed the nat’l bank

Political Changes

  • Federalist Party declined due to its opposition to the War of 1812, leading a secessionist convention at Hartford, & it was out of step with the nationalistic temper in the US

    • Ceased to be nat’l party & nominate a presidential candidate by 1820

  • The D-Rs faced internal struggles:

    • Members like John Randolph clung to old ideals (e.g. limited gov’t & strict interpretation of the constitution); other members, however, adopted previously Federalist ideas (e.g. large army & nat’l bank)

  • During Monroe’s second term political factions & sectional differences became more intense

Western Settlement & the Missouri Compromise

  • By 1822, the Western population past the App. Mountains had doubled

    • Many nationalist & economic interest of the country was focused on this area

Reasons for Westward Movement

  • Acquisition of Lands: Generals W. Harrison for Indiana Territory & A. Jackson for FL + South over Natives → new opportunities for White settlers

  • Economic Pressures: Difficulties in the Northeast from embargo + war → people sought new futures in the West; Tobacco/cotton planters in the S. needed new land

  • Improved transportation: Road, canals, steamboats, & railroads

  • Immigrants: More Europeans came to America due to cheap land in the West

New Questions and Issues

  • Western states were smaller than others → W. reps bargained with other representatives over:

    1. “cheap money” from state banks rather than Nat’l Bank

    2. Low prices for land sold by nat’l gov’t

    3. Improved transportation

  • Slavery was heavily debated on (S. = need; N = unnecessary)

Missouri Compromise

  • Congress attempted to maintain sectional balance over slavery (Vermont = free, Kentucky = slave)

    • Balance in the HOR was uneven due to growing N. population, but Senate was even

  • As Missouri applied for statehood, it would cause unequal representation in terms of slavery

  • James Tallmadge from NY proposed an amendment that:

    1. Prohibited the further introduction of slaves into Missouri

    2. Required children of Missouri slaves to be emancipated at 25 years old

    • It would led to the gradual elimination of slavery → angered Southerners

    • Ultimately didn’t pass

  • In the end, Henry Clay won support for 3 bills (Missouri Compromise/Compromise of 1820):

    1. Admit Missouri as slave-holding

    2. Admit Maine as free

    3. Prohibit slavery in the rest of LA territory N of the latitude 36 30

    • Preserved sectional balance for 30 years, but this period damaged the era of good feelings → led to feelings of sectionalism

4.4 America on the World Stage

Jefferson’s Foreign Policy

  • Jefferson = experiences → foreign minister in Europe & secretary of state prior to 1800

    • He aimed to avoid war by rejecting permanent alliances & maintaining U.S. neutrality

Difficulties Abroad

  • Jefferson’s first major foreign challenge was Barbary Pirates:

    • Presidents Washington & Adams paid tribute to Barbary gov’ts to protect U.S. merchant ships

      • A higher sum was demanded → Jefferson refused & sent a fleet of the U.S. Navy to fight → U.S. = respected & U.S. vessels were protected

  • Napoleonic wars impacted the U.S. economy → ships & their cargoes were confiscated; Britain even captured U.S. soldiers and forced them to serve in the British Navy

    • In 1807, British warship Leopard fired on the U.S. ship Chesapeake, killing 3 americans and impressing 4 others → many had anti-British feelings

  • Embargo Act (1807): prohibited American from sailing into any foreign port - repealed in 1809

    • Jefferson hoped Britain would stop violating the rights of Americans, rather than lose trade

      • Ultimately caused economic hardship in America & caused depression in N.E. due to a lack of shipbuilding

President Madison’s Foreign Policy

  • Aimed to use diplomacy & economic pressure to deal w/Napoleonic wars

Commercial Welfare

  • Implemented the Nonintercourse Act of 1809: allowed Americans to trade with all nations except Britain & France

  • Macon’s Bill No. 2: restored U.S. trade with Britain & France, but if either Britain or France agreed to respect the U.S. neutral rights, then the U.S. wouldn’t trade w/that nation’s foe

    • Napoleon claimed to revoke decrees that violated U.S. neutral rights → didn’t fulfill his promise

The War of 1812

Causes of the War

  • U.S. depended on shipping across the Atlantic, but Britain + France didn’t respect their neutral rights

    • British violations = worse → would impress American soldiers

  • W. Americans longed for lands of British Canada & Spanish FL

    • Britain + Indians & Spanish in the way

  • As Native Americans had been gradually pushed West, Shawnee brothers (Tecumseh & Prophet) attempted to unite all tribes East of the Mississippi

    • White settlers became suspicious → General William Henry Harrison took action

      • Battle of Tippecanoe (1811): Harrison destroyed Shawnee headquarters

      • Americans on frontier blamed Britain for instigating rebellion, due to their alliance with Native tribes

  • 1810 Congressional election = new, young D-Rs gained significant influence in the HOR

    • “War hawks” = eager for war w/Britain

    • Henry Clay + John C. Calhoun argued that war would defend American honor, gain Canada, and destroy Native American resistance on the frontier

  • British delays in U.S. demands for neutral right + pressure from war hawks → Madison sought to declare war against Britain in 1812

A Divided Nation

  • Congress + American ppl disagreed about war

    • Pennsylvania + Vermont + South & West states = support

    • New York, Jersey, and England = opposed

  • 1812 Election: D-R strength in the South overpowered Federalist opposition to war

    • Madison won reelection

  • Those who opposed war called it “Mr Madison’s War”:

    • N.E. merchants - repeal of Embargo Act, which allowed them to profit from Euro. war

      • Impressment = minor inconvenience

    • Federalists - viewed the war as a D-R scheme to conquer Canada + FL

    • Quids/old D.R.s - criticized traditional D-R view to maintain peace

Military Defeats and Naval Victories

  • U.S. hope for victory based on Napoleon’s continued success in Europe & U.S. land campaign against Canada

  • There was a 3 part invasion of Canada that was easily repulsed by British defenders - encouraged retaliation by Britain

  • U.S. had superior shipbuilding + powerful sailors = notable victories

    • Constitution/Old Ironsides ship sank a British ship → boosted American morale

    • Most notable battle on Lake Erie (1813): Oliver Perry declared victory → Battle of the Thames (1814) where W. Henry Harrison killed Tecumseh

    • Ships led by Thomas Macdonough defeated British fleet on Lake Champlain; protected NY + NE

  • Napoleon was defeated in 1814 → more British troops in N.A.

    • Summer: British marched through the U.S. capital & set fire to the White House + Capitol

    • Star-Spangled Banner created when the U.S. held out at Fort McHenry

  • Southern troops → led by Andrew Jackson

    • Battle of Horseshoe Bend (1814): Jackson ended the power of the Creek nation (an important British ally) → new land to White settlers

    • Battle of New Orleans (1815): British effort to control the Mississippi river was halted

      • Happened 2 weeks after Treaty of Ghent

The Treaty of Ghent

  • British were weary from war + Madison was doubtful about victory

  • Christmas Eve 1814: fighting was halted, all conquered territory was return to the prewar claimant,+ the boundary b/t Canada & the U.S. was recognized

The Hartford Convention (Dec. 1814)

  • N.E. states threatened to secede from Union due to opposition to war + D-Rs in gov’t in Washington

  • In the end, they adopted proposals to limit the growing power of D-Rs

    • e.g) two-thirds vote of both houses for a future war declaration

  • Jackson’s victory + Treaty of Ghent → weakened Federalists = unpatriotic

The War’s Legacy

  1. U.S. gained respect of other nations, due to surviving 2 wars w/Britain

  2. Federalist party ended as a nat’l force

  3. British naval blockades → U.S. factories were built + Americans moved toward self-sufficiency

  4. War heroes (e.g. Andrew Jackson + William Henry Harrison) → new gen of political leaders

  5. Nationalism grew stronger

Weaknesses from War:

  • Without a national bank (charter expired 1811), the U.S. lacked a reliable source of credit to raise funds

  • How weak U.S. systems of infrastructure & transportation were → difficult to move men + supplies

    • Both led to Henry Clay’s American System

Monroe and Foreign Affairs

  • After the war, the U.S. adopted a nationalistic approach w/other nations

  • President Monroe + JQ Adams advanced American interests + maintained peace

Canada

  • Rush Bagot Agreement: British + American negotiators agreed to a major disarmament pact

    • Limited naval armament on border fortifications → Border b/t U.S. and Canada = longest unfortified border in the world

  • Treaty of 1818: Improved relationships b/t U.S. and Britain

    • e.g.) joint occupation of Oregon territory + set N. limits on Louisiana Territory (49th parallel)

Florida

  • U.S. troops occupied Western FL + Spain had difficulty governing the entirety of FL, due to moving out troops to South America

    • Seminoles, runaways slaves, & white outlaws conducted raids into U.S. territory and retreated safely into FL

  • Monroe commissioned A. Jackson to stop the raiders & pursue them across the border (if necessary)

    • Jackson led a militia into FL → destroyed Seminole villages, killed 2 Seminole chiefs, attacked 2 Spanish forts, & drove out the Spanish governor of Pensacola

    • Britain + Spain were upset, but moved on — to avoid war

  • 1819: Spanish turned over all of its possessions in FL + Oregon territory to the U.S. for $5 million and for the U.S. to give up claims to Texas (Adams-Onis Treaty)

The Monroe Doctrine (Dec. 1823)

  • Many South American countries (e.g. Columbia, Peru, & Chile) had thrown off European colonial power by 1822 → Monroe recognized their independence + built diplomatic relations

  • As European monarchies were restored, there was a backlash in republican movements, and Russia had a presence in Alaska, Britain + U.S. wanted to protect N. and S. America

    • British naval power deterred the Spanish from a comeback in Latin America

      • Britain proposed to U.S. to warn European powers to not intervene in S. America

      • JQ Adams disagreed - believed that joint action w/Britain would limit opportunities for U.S. expansion

  • Monroe declared U.S. policy to Europe + Latin America: due to the rights & interests of the United States, the American continents are not to be considered subject for future colonization by any European powers

    • U.S. opposed European attempts to interfere w/affairs in the W. hemisphere

  • At the time, the Doctrine wasn’t super significant & it only upset some European monarchs

    • Later it was impactful for foreign policy toward Latin America + referenced by James Polk

Trade

  • U.S. built a trade relationship with Mexico → NE manufacturers were happy to find a new market for their goods

  • U.S. merchant ships carried goods across the Pacific + established trade in Chinese porcelains & silk

4.5 Market Revolution

  • Political conflicts over tariffs, internal improvements, and the Bank of the U.S. reflected the increasing importance of a nat’l economy

  • Overall, the Market Revolution linked Northern industries with western + southern farms

Development of the Northwest

  • Old NW: Six states that joined the Union before 1860 (due to NW Ordinance)

    • Ohio, Indiana, Illinois, Michigan, Wisconsin, and Minnesota

    • Early 19th century = mostly unsettled; relied on Mississippi river to trade w/South

    • Mid 19 century = tied to other N. states by military campaigns that drove Indians from the area & canals + railroads that established common markets

  • Corn + wheat were profitable

    • Steel plow (John Deere) + Mechanical reaper (Cyrus McCormick) allowed farm families to plant more acres

    • Part of the crop was used to feed cattle & hogs + supply distillers/brewers

Transportation

  • PA’s Lancaster Turnpike (1790): connected Philadelphia w/farmland around Lancaster

    • Stimulated construction of other short toll roads that connected many major cities

  • Highways that crossed state lines were unusual due to states’ rights advocates

    • However, National/Cumberland Rd was a major route to the West from Maryland to Illinois

  • Erie Canal in NY (1825) help linked western farms + eastern cities

    • Within a decade, canals connected all major rivers + lakes east of the Mississippi

  • Steam-powered engines revolutionized the location of factories that had to previously be located by moving water

  • Steam-powered transport began w/Robert Fulton’s ‘Clermont’ steamboat

    • Faster & cheaper

  • First U.S. railroad lines in 1820s; competed w/canals for carrying freight + people

  • Improved transportation transformed small western towns (e.g. Cleveland) into commercial centers

    • Helped to link the Midwest + North; South continued to rely on rivers

Communication

  • Samuel F. B. Morse demonstrated a successful telegraph in 1844, which transmitted messages across wires nearly instantaneously

    • Government officials + military leaders could direct people from thousands of miles away

Growth of Industry

  • By the end of the 19th century, the U.S. was the world’s leader in manufacturing

  • Eli Whitney invented the cotton gin (1793) & interchangeable parts (War of 1812)

    • Interchangeable parts standardized how rifles were made & allowed for mass production

      • One of the leading factors of the Factory System

  • NY passed a law in 1811: allowed business to incorporate + raise money by selling shares of stock

    • Changes in state corporation laws → more capital for building factories, canals, and railroads

  • Samuel Slater memorized the British factory system & their technology in cotton mills → helped him establish the first U.S. textile factory (1791)

    • Factories prospered due to War of 1812 + protective tariffs passed by Congress

  • 1820s: New England = country’s leading manufacturing center due to its abundant waterpower & seaports for shipping goods

    • Decline of its maritime industry + farming = capital for manufacturing & labor supply

  • The lure of cheap land in the West was more appealing than factory work

    • However, textile mills (e.g. Lowell, MA) recruited young farm women & housed them

    • Lowell System was imitated by many factories

  • Child + immigrant labor were also popular

  • Trade/craft unions increased as a result of the factory system

    • Skilled workers had to seek employment in factories due to their shops failing

    • Workers = mad → long hours, low pay, and poor working conditions

  • Obstacles to union success include:

    1. Immigrant replacement workers

    2. State laws banning unions

    3. Frequent economic depressions w/low unemployment

Commercial Agriculture

  • Commercial farming replaced subsistence farming — focused on growing cotton + tobacco

  • Farming became more profitable by the 1800s due to:

    • Large areas in the West being sold for cheap prices

    • State banks providing loans to farmers at low interest rates

    • Development of canals + railroads opened new markets for transporting goods

Cotton and the South

  • Since the cotton gin made cotton more profitable than indigo & tobacco, it was the leading crop of the century

  • Capital was invested in enslaved African Americans & new land

  • Cotton growth → connected the South with a global economy

    • States in North + Europe relied on cotton in textile mills

    • Southern farmers that devoted land to cotton need to buy pork, corn, and other food from states in the Midwest

4.6 Effects of the Market Revolution on Society & Culture

  • Market revolution = overall improvements (e.g. standard of living increased)

    • However, the fast changing economy presented problems

Women

  • Industrialization → many women stopped working next to their husbands on family farms

  • Women seeking employments in cities often did teaching or domestic service

    • Most working women were single; if they married they took up duties at home

  • Men worked away from home → women took on new responsibilities within the home: the cult of domesticity

Economic and Social Mobility

  • Urban workers = improved wages

    • Gap b/t very wealthy & very poor increased

  • As economic opportunities increased, social mobility (moving up or down the social pyramid) tended to occur

Population Growth and Change

  • Population growth = necessary # of consumers and laborers

  • B/t 1800 and 1825 → population doubled; it doubled again in the following 25 years

  • From the 1830s through the 1850s , nearly 4 million ppl from N. Europe came to the U.S.

    1. the development of cheap & rapid ocean transportation

    2. famines + revolutions in Europe (esp. Irish & Germans)

    3. the growing reputation of U.S. for offering economic opportunities + political freedom

  • The North’s urban population grew from 5% of the pop. in 1800 to 15% by 1850

    • Resulted in crowded housing, poor sanitation, infectious diseases, and high crime rates

    • New cities that became transfer points & distributed manufactured goods to the east include: Buffalo, Cleveland, Detroit, and Chicago on the Great Lakes; Cincinnati on the Ohio River; and St. Louis on the Mississippi

Organized Labor

  • Manufacturing → goods were less expensive; improved standard of living

  • Economic shift → small class of very wealthy people (e.g. factory owners) & a growing middle class

    • Middle class included people like shopkeepers, businessmen, and doctors

      • They prioritized education, temperance, & Protestantism

  • 1st U.S. labor party was founded in Philly (1828); increased # of urban workers joined unions throughout the 1830s

    • Commonwealth v. Hunt (1842): peaceful unions had the right to negotiate labor contracts with employers

    • Some N. states passed laws for 10 hour workdays

  • Improvements for workers limited by: periodic depressions, employers & courts that were hostile to unions, & abundant supply of low-wage immigrant labor

4.7 Expanding Democracy

  • The Panic of 1819 led to decrease in demand for exported American goods → unemployment

    • Laboring men (esp. in the West) wanted to hold politicians accountable

Greater Equality

  • Men of all backgrounds wore dark trousers & jackets; women often emulated fanciful styles from magazines — equality was becoming a governing principle of American society

The Rise of a Democratic Society

  • Many believed in the equality of opportunity for White males — ignored the enslavement of many African Americans + discrimination against those who weren’t white

    • There were legal and cultural restrictions about what women could do

Politics of the Common Man

  • Politics left rich southern planters & northern merchants who had dominated gov’t → middle & lower class homes

    • Due to: new suffrage laws, changes in political parties + campaigns, & increased newspaper circulation

  • Western states (e.g. Indiana + Illinois) adopted state constitutions that allowed White males to vote & hold office — omitted religious or property qualifications for voting

    • Prior to this, free black people with land could vote in 5 states & women with land could vote in New Jersey (until 1807)

    • Most eastern states followed

    • Voting rose from 350k (1824) to 2.4 million (1840), as a result

Changes to Parties & Campaigns

  • Prior to the 1830s, candidates for office were nominated by state legislatures or King Caucus (closed-door meeting of a political party’s Congressional leaders)

    • Replaced by nominating conventions — party politicians + voters would nominate the party’s candidates

      • Anti-Masonic Party was the first to hold one

  • Election of 1832: every state - except for SC - allowed voters to choose a state’s electors

  • Campaigns for presidents had to be conducted on a national scale - needed large political parties

  • Anti-Masonic + Workingmen’s Party were some of the first third parties

    • Reached out to ppl who’d shown little interest in politics

  • Jacksonian era → more state & local officials were elected, rather than appointed

  • During this period, candidates directed their campaigns to the interests of common ppl

    • Form of entertainment: parade floats, marching bands, & large rallies

    • However, issues were typically ignored & candidates only attacked their opponents

  • Spoils system: dispensing gov’t jobs in return for party loyalty

    • A. Jackson believed in appointing ppl to federal jobs based on if they’d actively campaigned for the Democratic Party

  • Rotation in office: limiting a person to one term in office, then appointing another Democrat

    • This + spoils system → affirmed that ordinary Americans could hold gov’t office

4.8 Jackson and Federal Power

  • Age of the Common Man/Era of Jacksonian Democracy: emergence of popular politics in the 1820s & Jackson’s presidency (1829-1837)

Jackson vs. Adams

The Election of 1824

  • The Era of Good Feelings ended around this period; the Federalist party had died & therefore 4 candidates ran under the D-R party

  • D-R party was split into

    • National Republicans: had an expansive view on federal power + loose interpretation of the Constitution

    • Democrats: limit federal power + strict interpretation of Constitution

    • Jackson won more popular + electoral votes (99) than the other candidates, but lost since no candidate had a 131 vote majority in the electoral college

    • HOR made decision (12th amendment) → Henry Clay used his influence to get John Q. Adams elected, who then made Clay his secretary of state

      • “Corrupt bargain”

President John Quincy Adams

  • Adams asked Congress for money for internal improvements, aids to manufacturing, etc

    • Jacksonians viewed these as a waste of money + unconstitutional

  • Tariff of 1828: satisfied N. manufacturers, but upset Southern planters

  • SC declared this “tariff of abominations” unconstitutional & affirmed the nullification theory — each state had a right to obey a federal law or declare it null and void

    • Webster-Hayne debate: Hayne argued for states’ rights, but Webster attacked the idea that states could defy/leave the union

      • Jackson believed the Union should be preserved

    • In 1832, SC held a convention to nullify the tariffs of 1828 & 1832 → passed a resolution forbidding the collection of tariffs within the state

      • Jackson persuaded Congress to pass the Force Bill (to act against SC), and he issued a Proclamation to the People of SC (stating that nullification and disunion were treason)

    • SC rescinded its nullification after Congress enacted a new tariff to appeal to the south + Northern industrialists

The Revolution of 1828

  • Although Adams sought reelection in 1828, Jacksonians resorted to a ‘mudslinging campaign’

  • Jackson won, carrying every state west of the Appalachians → due to rep. as a war hero

The Presidency of Andrew Jackson

  • Jackson = symbol of the common man

    • Born in a frontier cabin, gained fame as an Indian fighter + hero at the Battle of New Orleans, & no college education

    • He was a Jeffersonian — opposed increased federal spending + national debt

  • Jackson’s advisors → “kitchen cabinet” who didn’t belong to his official cabinet

  • Peggy Eaton (wife of Jackson’s secretary of war) was the target of gossip by the wives of his cabinet → most of the cabinet resigned when Jackson tried to make them accept Eaton socially

    • As a result, his VP: John C. Calhoun resigned in 1829 → replaced by Martin Van Buren for his second term

  • Jackson sympathized with land-hungry citizens who wanted lands held by Native Americans

    • Indian Removal Act (1830): forced thousands of American Indians to resettle west of the Mississippi

      • Most tribes compelled and there was even The Bureau of Indian Affairs created to assist the resettled tribes

  • Cherokee Nation v. Georgia (1831): Georgia passed a law requiring the Cherokees to migrate west, but the Supreme Court rule the Cherokees weren’t foreign and had a right to sue

  • Worcester v. Georgia (1832): Georgia’s laws had no force within Cherokee territory

    • Jackson sides with the states & the Court was unable to enforce its decision

  • Treaty of New Echota (1835): exchanged Cherokee lands in the East for reservation territory W. of the Mississippi

  • In 1838, the U.S. army forced 15k Cherokees to leave GA → Trail of Tears, caused 4k deaths

  • Jackson appealed to southerners by banning antislavery literature from being sent through the U.S. mail

  • Jackson vetoed the Bank of the U.S. (1832)- after Henry Clay tried to get Congress to recharter it - calling it a private monopoly that enriched the wealthy at the expense of common ppl

    • He was suspicious of the bank’s president - Nicholas Biddle - whose arrogance caused popular suspicion that the bank abused its powers + only served the wealthy

The Two-Party System

  • Supporters of Jackson = Democrats

    • Resembled the Democratic-Republican party

    • Supported limited power in federal gov’t, free trade, and local rule

    • They were against corporate monopolies, high tariffs, and the national bank

  • Supporters of Henry Clay = Whigs

    • Resembled the defunct Federalist party → supported spending federal money for internal improvements like roads & canals

    • Against crimes being committed by immigrants

  • Both parties were challenged in their response to westward expansion & the emergence of an industrial economy

  • Not a division based on the area

Jackson’s Second Term

  • Jackson withdrew all federal funds from the Bank of the U.S. after reelection

    • He was aided by secretary of the treasury - Roger Taney - who transferred this money into state/”pet” banks

  • There was heavy inflation due to Jackson’s financial policies + the feverish purchase of W. land

    • Specie Circular: future purchases of federal lands be made in gold/silver

      • Jackson hoped to reduce inflation, but this made paper banknotes worthless

      • After he left office, there was an economic depression → The Panic of 1837

The Election of 1836

  • Martin Van Buren was nominated for the Democrats

  • The Whig party nominated 3 candidates from 3 different regions to try and throw the election into the House of Representatives → failed, as Van Buren won 58% of the electoral vote

President Van Buren and the Panic of 1837

  • Jackson’s closing of the national bank was one of many causes of the Panic

    • Whigs blamed it on the Democrats’ laissez-faire economic style (little federal economic involvement)

The “Log Cabin and Hard Cider” Campaign of 1840

  • Whigs were in a better position to beat the Democrats in 1840

    • Voters were unhappy about the poor economic state

    • Whigs were better organized & had William Henry Harrison as their candidate

    • Campaigned to a new extent

      • Passed out cider, buttons, and hats + had name-calling propaganda like “Martin Van Ruin”

  • A month after WHH was elected, he died of pneumonia → John Tyler succeeded the presidency

    • Tyler vetoed Whigs’ nat’l bank bills & favored southern + expansionist Democrats

The Western Frontier

  • Although the definition of the West constantly changed, attitudes toward the land and Native Americans remained constant

American Indians

  • By 1850, most American Indians lived west of the Mississippi

    • Those to the east were killed by disease or in battles, or were forced to leave

    • The Great Plains were only a temporary safe haven

  • Horses were revolutionary and allowed some tribes (e.g. Cherokee & Sioux) to become nomadic hunters

The Frontier

  • The West represented the possibility of a fresh start & was typically beckoned as promising greater freedom for all ethnic groups

  • Mountain men: the earliest White people in the area who’d followed Lewis & Clark + explored American Indian trails → served as guides for settlers crossing the Rocky Mountains

White Settlers on the Western Frontier

  • Lived in log cabins/sod huts + disease & malnutrition were greater threats than Natives

  • Pioneer women performed myriad daily tasks (e.g. doctor, teacher, and cook)

    • The endless work + rigors of childbirth = short lifespan for frontier women

  • Entire forests were cleared after only two generations, soil was exhausted from poor farmings, and beavers + buffalos became nearly extinct

4.9 The Development of an American Culture

  • America’s early culture → reflected Britain + European countries settlers came from

  • By the early 19th century, American culture had a strong nationalistic tone

    • Still looked to Europe for new ideas

Cultural Nationalism

  • Ideas of the 19th century differed from those of the nation’s founders:

    • The young were excited about the prospects of Westward expansion; cared less about European affairs after the Napoleonic Wars + War of 1812

      • Believed the U.S. was entering an era of prosperity

    • Patriotic beliefs infused all aspects of American society (e.g. art to schoolbooks)

      • Revolutionary heroes were in paintings by Gilbert Stuart, for instance

      • Biography about G. Washington was widely read

      • Public schools → Noah Webster’s blue-backed speller (promoted patriotism)

A Changing Culture: Ideas, the Arts, and Literature

  • Artists and writers → intuition, feelings, individual acts of heroism, and nature

    • Romanticism → express by transcendentalists

    • Shift from the Enlightenment (reason, order, balance, etc)

The Transcendentalists

  • Questioned the doctrines of established churches & the business practices of the merchant class

    • Argued for a mystical & intuitive way of thinking to discover one’s inner self & looking for the essence of God in nature

  • Challenged the materialism of American society by suggesting that artistic expression was more important than wealth

  • Supported a variety of reforms, like the antislavery movement

  • Ralph Waldo Emerson (1803-1882): his essays + lectures expressed individualistic & nationalistic spirit urging Americans to create a distinctive American culture

    • Argued for self-reliance, independent thinking, & the primacy of spiritual matters over material ones

    • He was a leading critic of slavery

  • Henry David Thoreau (1817-1862): conducted a 2 year experiment of living in a cabin in the woods outside of town → used nature to help him search for the essential truths of life + the universe

    • Published a book: Walden + known for his “On Civil Disobedience” Essay (broke a tax law in opposition to war against Mexico)

  • Brook Farm: a communal experiment led by George Ripley (a Protestant minister), to achieve a natural union b/t intellectual & manual labor

    • Hosted transcendentalists like Emerson & Margaret Fuller (a feminist writer)

    • Ended in 1849 due to a fire & heavy debts

Other Communal Experiments

  • Over 100 experimental communities during the antebellum (pre Civil War) years that attempted to create an ideal community/utopia

  • Shakers: early religious communal movement w/6k+ members

    • Held property in common & strictly separated men & women (no marriage)

  • The Amana Colonies: Germans who settled in Iowa & belonged to the reform movement called Pietism — emphasized simple, communal living; allowed marriage

  • New Harmony: led by Robert Owen (industrialist + reformer), this nonreligious experiment in Indiana hoped to find an answer to problems of inequity & alienation due to the Industrial Revolution

    • Failed due to financial problems & disagreements

  • Oneida Community: John Noyes led this cooperative community in NY in 1848

    • Ideal of perfect social & economic equality — members shared property & even marriage partners → attacked by critics

    • Produced & sold high quality silverware

  • Fourier Phalanxes: led by theories of French socialist Charles Fourier

    • advocated that people share work & housing → died out due to Americans being too individualistic

Arts and Literature

  • Painting portrayed everyday life of ordinary people (e.g. riding riverboats & voting in elections) — George Caleb Bingham was popular, for instance

    • Many painters emphasized sentiment & emotion at the expense of accuracy

  • American architects adapted Greek styles to emphasize the democratic spirit of the republic

  • Other writers created literature that was Romantic & distinctly American

    • Due to the War of 1812, Americans were more nationalistic & eager to read works by American writers

    • Noah Webster published his American Dictionary of the English Language in 1828; helped to standardize spelling & pronunciation of American English

    • Nathaniel Hawthorne — questioned intolerance & conformity in American life

    • Edgar Allen Poe — focused on irrational aspects of human behavior & even portrayed mysterious + horrifying events (e.g. Tell-Tale Heart)

4.10 The Second Great Awakening

  • Examples of religious revivals include: traditional Calvinist/Puritan teachings of sin & predestination, as well as new development in Christianity

Causes of Religious Reform

  1. Growing emphasis on democracy & individuals who influenced politics + the arts — worshippers preferred services that were informal & participatory

  2. Rational approach to religion, more emotional expressions of beliefs in worship services

  3. Market revolution → ppl feared industrialization = increased greed & sin

  4. Disruptions of the market revolution + mobility of ppl = informal worship settings that weren’t in urban areas

Revivals

  • 2nd Great Awakening began among highly educated people (e.g. Timothy Dwight from Yale)

    • Saw themselves as Calvinists leading against emerging liberal views of the 1790s

    • Based on the opportunity for salvation for all

  • On the frontier, Charles Finney led a series of revivals in upstate NY — he appealed to emotions & fear of damnation

    • Preached that every individual could be saved by faith & hard work — appeal to middle class

  • Baptist + Methodist preachers (e.g. Peter Cartwright) traveled around the South & on the W. frontier to host outdoor revivals/camp meetings

    • Activated the faith of many who hadn’t previously been in churches

    • Large black & enslaved following

New Denominations

  • Millennialism: William Miller predicted that the world was going to end with a second coming of Jesus, which attracted thousands of followers

    • Nothing happened — Millerites turned into Seventh-day Adventists

  • Mormons/Latter-day Saints: Founded by Joseph Smith in 1830 in NY — originally supported polygamy (prohibited in 1890)

    • Beliefs based on: The Book of Mormon — traced a connection b/t American Indians & lost tribes of Israel

    • Smith was persecuted & died in Illinois → members (led by Brigham Young) migrated to Utah in the Western Frontier, their community was called New Zion

Reforms Backed by Religion

  • 2nd Great Awakening → divisions b/t newer evangelical sects & older Protestant churches

  • Social reform: reduced drinking, ending slavery, and better treatment for people with mental illness

  • Many Christians viewed slavery as a sin

4.11 An Age of Reform

  • Reform movements evolved as leaders initially tried to persuade people based on morals, sermons, and pamphlets, but then moved on to political action & creating new ideas to replace old ones

    • These were also popular due to things like, the Enlightenment belief in human goodness, the Jacksonian emphasis on democracy, social classes, and religious beliefs

Improving Society

Societal Problems

Reformers and Action/Laws

Opposition

Impact on Society

Temperance

- High rate of alcohol consumption → many believed it caused crime, poverty, and abuse of women

- Most popular reform movement

- Began by moral exhortation

- American Temperance Society (1826): founded by Protestant ministers, concerned with the effects of drinking; tried to persuade drinkers to take a pledge of abstinence

- Washingtonians (1840): a group of recovering alcoholics argued that alcoholism was a disease that needed treatment

- 1mil+ members in various temperance societies

- Woman’s Christian Temperance Union: helped the movement gain strength again in the 1870s

- German & Irish immigrants; lacked political power to prevent reforms

1851: Maine put a tax on the sale of liquor & prohibited the manufacturing + sale of certain liquors → 12 states followed this

- Nat’l success due to the 18th amendment in 1919

Prison & Asylum

- Humanitarian reformers wanted to alleviate the suffering of people like, criminals & paupers, by setting up public institutions (e.g. state-supported prisons, mental hospitals, and poorhouses)

- Dorothea Dix: found mentally ill ppl locked up with convicted criminals in unsanitary cells — she publicized the awful treatment she witnessed

- Thomas Gallaudet: opened a school for the deaf

- Dr. Samuel Gridley Howe: started a school for the blind

- PA built new prisons called penitentiaries

- Reformers placed prisoners in solitary confinement

- Auburn System: in NY, enforced disciplinary rules while providing moral instruction

- New mental hospitals, improved institutions, and mental patients receiving professional treatment

- Special schools for the blind and deaf were established across the Union

- Prison reforms led to the asylum system: structure & discipline led to moral reform

Public Education

- Middle class reformers feared about the future of the republic, due to the growing # of the uneducated poor

- Workers’ groups typically supported the campaign for tax-supported schools

- Horace Mann: led the public school movement; he worked for compulsory attendance of all children and a longer school year

- McGuffey readers: emphasized moral virtues of hard work & punctuality, which were necessary in an industrial society

- The 2nd Great Awakening fueled the growth of private colleges

- Roman Catholics opposed the Protestant beliefs that were reflected in public schools, so they opened private schools

1840s: the movement for public schools spread from MA to other states

- Protestant denominations founded small colleges in newer, western states

Changes in Families & Roles for Women

  • America was still mostly rural by the mid-19th century

  • Industrialization reduced the economic value of children

    • Middle-class families used birth control to reduce avg. family size

    • Affluent women had leisure time to devote to organizations based on religion/moral uplight

  • Cult of Domesticity: idealized view of women as moral leaders in the home

    • When men took jobs outside of the home & were typically absent, women took charge of the household & children

  • Women’s Rights:

    • Women reformers resented the way men put them in secondary roles in the antislavery movement, for instance

    • Sarah Grimke: wrote the Letters on Equality of the Sexes, and the Condition of Women (1838)

    • Lucretia Mott campaigned for women’s rights after being prevented from speaking at an antislavery condition

  • Seneca Falls Convention (1848): leading feminists met in NY; 1st women’s right convention in American history

    • Declaration of Sentiments declared “all men and women are created equal” & listed women’s grievances against laws & customs that discriminated against them

  • Post-convention, women like Susan B. Anthony led the campaign for equal voting, legal, and property rights for women

    • The issue was overshadowed by slavery in the 1850s, however

Antislavery Movement

  • American Colonization Society: transporting free slaves to an African Colony

    • Appealed to opponents of slavery + White Americans who wanted to remove free Black Americans from U.S. society

    • Established an African American settlement in Liberia → many didn’t want to leave America & only about 12k moved to Africa

  • American Antislavery Society (1833): a radical abolitionist group led by William Lloyd Garrison

    • William Lloyd Garrison (1831): began an abolitionist newspaper The Liberator

      • He advocated for immediate abolition of slavery in every state & no compensation for slaveowners

    • Garrison & others condemned and burned the Constitution as a proslavery document

      • Argued: “no Union with slaveholders”

  • Liberty Party (1840): led by Northerners who believed political action was the way to reform

    • James Birney was their presidential candidate in 1840 + 1844

    • Aimed to end slavery by political & legal means

  • Black Abolitionists

    • Individuals who escaped enslavement = outspoken & convincing

      • They could speak about the brutality of slavery from firsthand experience

    • Frederick Douglass: supported Garrison, advocated for both political & direct action to end slavery, and he started The North Star antislavery journal in 1847

    • Other people like Harriet Tubman & Sojourner Truth helped fugitive slaves escape to free territory in the North or Canada

  • Violent Abolitionism

    • David Walker & Henry Grant advocated for radical solutions to end slavery

      • Argued that the enslaved should take action & revolt against their owners

    • Nat Turner Rebellion (1831): 55 Whites were killed in Virginia; led by Nat Turner, who was a slave

      • In turn, hundreds of African Americans were killed to put down the revolt

  • Antislavery talk ended in the South after the Nat Turner Rebellion & Garrison’s rhetoric

Others Reforms

  1. American Peace Society: aimed to abolish war; protested war with Mexico in 1846

  2. Laws to protect sailors from being flogged

  3. Dietary reforms: eating whole wheat bread or graham crackers, to promote good digestion

  4. Dress reforms for women, so they could move more easily

  5. Phrenology: a pseudoscience that studied the bumps on one’s skull to asses their character & ability

4.12 African Americans in the Early Republic

  • Many believed slavery would gradually disappear due to soil exhaustion in coastal lands of Virginia & the Carolinas + the constitutional ban of importing & enslaving Africans after 1808

    • The growth of the cotton industry & expansion of slavery into new states ended this belief

Free African Americans

  • 1860: 500k free African Americans living throughout the U.S.

North

South

- 250k AA in the North (~1% of northerners)

- Maintain a family & sometimes own land

- Formed their own Christian congregations

- Couldn’t vote or hold jobs in skilled professions & crafts

- Immigrants displaced them from occupations & jobs they held since the Revolution

- Often hired as strikebreakers & dismissed after the strike ended

- 250k AA in the South

- Some were freed during the Revolution

- Others were mulatto children; White fathers liberated them

- Some achieved freedom on their own (sometimes through self-purchase)

- Many lived in cities where they could own land

- Couldn’t vote or enter certain occupations

- Had to show legal papers proving their free status

- Often stayed in south for family or since they considered it home

Resistance by the Enslaved

  • Conditions of slavery each plantation varied; all suffered from being deprived of freedom

    • Families could be separated at any time

    • Women = vulnerable to sexual exploitation

    • Enslaved A. Americans maintained a strong sense of family & religious faith

  • Examples of restrained actions include work slowdowns & equipment sabotage

  • Runaways faced organized militia patrols & hunters who were paid a bounty

    • It was difficult for women caring for children or pregnant

    • Those returned to owners = physically mistreated

    • Underground Railroad + demands of Southerners for stricter fugitive slave laws prove the increased number of slaves wanting to escape

  • Rebellions

    • Gabriel Prosser led an uprising in Richmond, VA in 1800

    • Denmark Vesey (1822): in Charleston, SC, due to readings from the Bible & discussions about the Missouri Compromise, Vesey & members of a large African Methodist Church forged a plan to seize ships in the harbor & sail away to Haiti for freedom

      • Ended by informers; Vesey & over 30 conspirators were hanged

    • Nat Turner Rebellion (1831): in Virginia, over 50 white ppl were killed & the militia killed Turner, his followers, and innocent A. Americans

    • Organized rebellions had a lasting influence: gave hope to enslaved A. Americans, drove southern states to strictly enforce slaves codes, & demonstrated the evils of slavery

  • Culture maintenance

    • Many slaves would address each other by their African names

    • Kept alive West African + Caribbean languages among themselves

    • Told folktales + danced & sang

      • White plantation owners aimed to suppress cultural expression to prevent rebellions as a result of the Haitian Revolution

4.13 Southern Society in the Early Republic

Agriculture and King Cotton

  • Agriculture was the foundation of the Southern economy

    • Tobacco, rice, sugarcane, and cotton

    • Small factories in the area made ~15% of the nation’s manufactured goods

  • Textile mills + Eli Whitney’s cotton gin → made cotton cloth affordable

    • British mills relied of the American South for cotton fiber

    • 1850s: cotton provided 2/3 of all U.S. exports & linked the South w/G.B.

Slavery, the “Peculiar Institution”

  • Southern wealth was based on land & enslaved people

  • Peculiar Institution: referred to the system of slavery in the South

  • Population: cotton boom grew the # of slaves from 1mil (1800) → 4mil (1860)

    • Mostly came from natural growth; some Africans were smuggled into the South

  • Deep South: enslaved African Americans made up to 75% of the population

    • Lower Mississippi River Valley

    • Southern legislatures created slave codes to increase restrictions on movement & education

  • Economics

    • Enslaved workers labored in fields, as house servants, in factories, or learned skilled crafts

    • Slave owners in Upper South sold their slaves to owners in the cotton-rich Deep South

    • An enslaved field hand = ~$2000

    • Heavy capital investment in slaverin South → less capital than the North for industrialization

White Society

Social Hierarchy:

  1. Aristocracy: South’s elite of wealthy planters w/100+ slaves and 1k+ acres of land; dominated Southern legislatures & favored large landholders’ economic interests

  2. Farmers: less than 20 slaves + several hundreds acres of land; produced the bulk of the cotton

  3. Poor Whites: ¾ of households in the South didn’t own slaves; couldn’t afford farmland & lived as subsistence farmers - defended slavery & felt superior to Black ppl

  1. Mountain people: Small farmers who lived in frontier conditions — isolated from the South; disliked planters & slavery

  • Cities: few large commercial cities; largest city was New Orleans

    • Unique culture due to cotton-based economy → white southerners defended slavery, northerners grew hostile towards it

  • Code of Chivalry: adhered to by Southern gentlemen

    • Strong sense of personal honor, defense of womanhood, & paternalistic attitudes towards ppl deemed inferior

  • Education: slaves weren’t taught how to read or write

    • Upper class → college education for children

      • Acceptable professions: farming, law, the ministry, and the military

    • Lower class → often didn’t have schooling beyond elementary grades

  • Religion:

    • Baptists + Methods = biblical support for slavery

    • Unitarians challenged slavery & some Catholics + Episcopalians took a neutral stand

  • Social reform:

    • Mostly in North & West — worked to perfect society

    • Southerners = committed to tradition & slower to support education + humanitarian reforms

      • Saw social reform as Northern threat

TD

Period 4: 1800-1848

4.1 Contextualizing Period 4

  • America expanded:

    • Economically by taking advantage of new lands, forms of transportation, & industries

    • Politically by allowing more people to participate in the democracy

      • e.g) Property ownership was dropped as a requirement to vote

    • Culturally through American literature and art

  • A market economy emerged as ppl focused more on buying & selling goods

4.2 The Rise of Political Parties and the Era of Jefferson

  • G. Washington warned against forming political parties, however…

  • Federalist (A. Hamilton) & Democratic-Republican (T. Jefferson) parties emerged

The Election of 1800

  • Adams’s presidency —>Federalists = less popular

    • e.g) Alien and Sedition Acts

  • This election provided a clear distinction b/t the parties:

    • Federalists = strong nat’l gov’t & leaned towards Britain in int’l affairs

    • Democratic-Republicans = powers reserved to states & leaned towards French

  • Both parties supported tariffs —> largest source of revenue for nat’l gov

    • North industrialists = high tariffs to protect their companies from foreign competition

    • Southerners = low tariffs to encourage trade (since they exported crops)

  • Each electoral college member cast 2 votes

    • President = 1st place

    • VP = 2nd place

  • T. Jefferson & Aaron Burr tied in the electoral college —> HOR made final decision & Jefferson won

    • D-R lawmakers took control of the HOR & Senate in 1800 —> Federalists swept from gov’t power

  • The passing of power from Adam to Jefferson was peaceful

    • Change of Federalist to D-R control = Revolution of 1800

Jefferson’s Presidency

  • T. Jefferson aimed to win the trust of Federalists by maintaining Hamilton’s nat’l bank and debt-repayment plan + he remained neutral in foreign policy

    • Retained loyalty from D-Rs through limited nat’l gov → reduced the size of the military, lowered nat’l debt, & repealed excise taxes → only appointed D-Rs to cabinet

Louisiana Purchase

  • MOST important achievement of T.J. presidency → contained Mississippi River w/the port of New Orleans

    • Due to Napoleon’s lost interest in trying to restore the French empire in America

  • The W. frontier expanded into Indiana territory during Jefferson’s presidency → settlers depended on the Mississippi River rivers for trade

    • Alarmed when the right of deposit from the Pinckney treaty prevented Americans from using the Port of New Orleans in 1802

      • Jefferson sent ministers to France to offer up to $10 million for New Orleans to FL → Napoleon’s ministers sold N.O. + the Louisiana Purchase for 15 million

  • Since Jefferson believed in a strict interpretation of the constitution, which didn’t explicitly state the president could purchase lands

    • He submitted a purchase agreement to the Senate, who ratified the purchase

  • This purchase doubled the size of the USA & removed the presence of a European power

    • Increased Jefferson’s popularity & showed Federalists as weak

  • Lewis & Clark scientifically explored the western frontier → gave a greater geographic & scientific knowledge of the area, better relations w/Natives, & more accurate maps

Judicial Impeachments

  • Jefferson suspended the Alien & Sedition Acts + freed those jailed under them

  • Impeachment campaign mostly failed, but judges were more cautious & less partisan

Jefferson’s Reelection

  • Jefferson won again 1804 & he faced a plot from Aaron Burr → D-R party split with the ‘Quids’ accusing Jefferson of abandoning the party’s principles

Aaron Burr

  • Wasn’t nominated for a second term as VP

  • Burr planned to win the governorship of NY & secede from the Union → lost to Hamilton

    • He ended up shooting Hamilton in a duel in 1804

  • Burr planned to take Mexico from Spain & unite it with Louisiana → Jefferson discovered these plans & ordered his trial for treason

    • Justice John Marshall acquitted Burr

John Marshall’s Supreme Court & Federal Power

  • Marshall was a Federalist official — chief justice who influenced many D-Rs

Influential Cases

  • Marbury v. Madison (1803):

    • Adams appointed Marbury last-minute, but Jefferson wanted to block this appointment

      • Marshall ruled the Judiciary Act of 1789 (which allowed Marbury to be appointed) as unconstitutional, & established judicial review, which gave the Supreme Court the power to decide whether an act made by Congress/the President was constitutional

  • Fletcher v. Peck

    • Allowed the Supreme Court to declare a state law invalid and/or unconstitutional

  • Martin v. Hunter’s Lease

    • Supreme Court had jurisdiction over state courts in cases involving constitutional rights

  • Dartmouth v. Woodward

    • Marshall argued that a contract for a private corporation couldn’t be altered by the state

  • McCulloch v. Maryland

    • A state couldn’t tax a federal institution since federal laws are supreme over state laws

      • Marshall established that the nat’l bank was an implied power in the constitution

      • National law > state law, when they contradict

  • Cohens v. Virginia

    • Supreme Court could review a state court’s decision involving any of the powers of the federal gov’t

Madison’s Presidency

  • Madison worked heavily alongside Jefferson to establish the D-Rs, but he was a weak public speaker & lacked Jefferson’s political skills

    • In 1808, however, Madison managed to win a majority of electoral votes

4.3 Politics and Regional Interests

The Era of Good Feelings

  • Describes Monroe’s two terms in office —> the D-Rs adopted some Federalist policies

  • During this period there were many debates over topics like tariffs, the nat’l bank, & internal improvements + regional tension over slavery were increasing

James Monroe

  • Became prominent in politics: Jefferson’s minister to G.B. & Madison’s secretary of state

  • He won the elections of 1816 & 1820 + he represented the growing nationalism

    • USA acquired FL, agreed on the Missouri Compromise, & adopted the Monroe Doctrine

Economic Nationalism

  • One impact of the War of 1812 was the movement to support the nation’s economic growth

    • It involved subsidizing internal improvements (building roads & canals) + protecting U.S. industries from European competition

  • Prior to the War of 1812, Congress levied low tariffs to raise gov’t revenue

    • During the war, many factories that were imported from Britain arose → Congress raised tariffs to protect American markets (Tariff of 1816)

      • N.E. opposed the tariff, but S + W supported it

  • Henry Clay (leader of the HOR) proposed the American System:

    1. Protective tariffs → promote American manufacturing + raise revenue for a nat’l transportation system

    2. Nat’l bank → provide a nat’l currency + the Second Bank of the US

    3. Internal improvements → Monroe + Madison argued that the constitution didn’t explicitly provide for money to be spent on roads & canals; left states to make their own internal improvement

The Panic of 1819

  • 2nd Bank of the US tightened credit to control inflation → state banks closed, unemployment, bankruptcies, and imprisonment for debt increased sharply

    • Many Westerners hit the hardest → Nat’l Bank foreclosed lots of western farmland

      • Shook nationalistic beliefs, causing Westerners to believe in land reform & opposed the nat’l bank

Political Changes

  • Federalist Party declined due to its opposition to the War of 1812, leading a secessionist convention at Hartford, & it was out of step with the nationalistic temper in the US

    • Ceased to be nat’l party & nominate a presidential candidate by 1820

  • The D-Rs faced internal struggles:

    • Members like John Randolph clung to old ideals (e.g. limited gov’t & strict interpretation of the constitution); other members, however, adopted previously Federalist ideas (e.g. large army & nat’l bank)

  • During Monroe’s second term political factions & sectional differences became more intense

Western Settlement & the Missouri Compromise

  • By 1822, the Western population past the App. Mountains had doubled

    • Many nationalist & economic interest of the country was focused on this area

Reasons for Westward Movement

  • Acquisition of Lands: Generals W. Harrison for Indiana Territory & A. Jackson for FL + South over Natives → new opportunities for White settlers

  • Economic Pressures: Difficulties in the Northeast from embargo + war → people sought new futures in the West; Tobacco/cotton planters in the S. needed new land

  • Improved transportation: Road, canals, steamboats, & railroads

  • Immigrants: More Europeans came to America due to cheap land in the West

New Questions and Issues

  • Western states were smaller than others → W. reps bargained with other representatives over:

    1. “cheap money” from state banks rather than Nat’l Bank

    2. Low prices for land sold by nat’l gov’t

    3. Improved transportation

  • Slavery was heavily debated on (S. = need; N = unnecessary)

Missouri Compromise

  • Congress attempted to maintain sectional balance over slavery (Vermont = free, Kentucky = slave)

    • Balance in the HOR was uneven due to growing N. population, but Senate was even

  • As Missouri applied for statehood, it would cause unequal representation in terms of slavery

  • James Tallmadge from NY proposed an amendment that:

    1. Prohibited the further introduction of slaves into Missouri

    2. Required children of Missouri slaves to be emancipated at 25 years old

    • It would led to the gradual elimination of slavery → angered Southerners

    • Ultimately didn’t pass

  • In the end, Henry Clay won support for 3 bills (Missouri Compromise/Compromise of 1820):

    1. Admit Missouri as slave-holding

    2. Admit Maine as free

    3. Prohibit slavery in the rest of LA territory N of the latitude 36 30

    • Preserved sectional balance for 30 years, but this period damaged the era of good feelings → led to feelings of sectionalism

4.4 America on the World Stage

Jefferson’s Foreign Policy

  • Jefferson = experiences → foreign minister in Europe & secretary of state prior to 1800

    • He aimed to avoid war by rejecting permanent alliances & maintaining U.S. neutrality

Difficulties Abroad

  • Jefferson’s first major foreign challenge was Barbary Pirates:

    • Presidents Washington & Adams paid tribute to Barbary gov’ts to protect U.S. merchant ships

      • A higher sum was demanded → Jefferson refused & sent a fleet of the U.S. Navy to fight → U.S. = respected & U.S. vessels were protected

  • Napoleonic wars impacted the U.S. economy → ships & their cargoes were confiscated; Britain even captured U.S. soldiers and forced them to serve in the British Navy

    • In 1807, British warship Leopard fired on the U.S. ship Chesapeake, killing 3 americans and impressing 4 others → many had anti-British feelings

  • Embargo Act (1807): prohibited American from sailing into any foreign port - repealed in 1809

    • Jefferson hoped Britain would stop violating the rights of Americans, rather than lose trade

      • Ultimately caused economic hardship in America & caused depression in N.E. due to a lack of shipbuilding

President Madison’s Foreign Policy

  • Aimed to use diplomacy & economic pressure to deal w/Napoleonic wars

Commercial Welfare

  • Implemented the Nonintercourse Act of 1809: allowed Americans to trade with all nations except Britain & France

  • Macon’s Bill No. 2: restored U.S. trade with Britain & France, but if either Britain or France agreed to respect the U.S. neutral rights, then the U.S. wouldn’t trade w/that nation’s foe

    • Napoleon claimed to revoke decrees that violated U.S. neutral rights → didn’t fulfill his promise

The War of 1812

Causes of the War

  • U.S. depended on shipping across the Atlantic, but Britain + France didn’t respect their neutral rights

    • British violations = worse → would impress American soldiers

  • W. Americans longed for lands of British Canada & Spanish FL

    • Britain + Indians & Spanish in the way

  • As Native Americans had been gradually pushed West, Shawnee brothers (Tecumseh & Prophet) attempted to unite all tribes East of the Mississippi

    • White settlers became suspicious → General William Henry Harrison took action

      • Battle of Tippecanoe (1811): Harrison destroyed Shawnee headquarters

      • Americans on frontier blamed Britain for instigating rebellion, due to their alliance with Native tribes

  • 1810 Congressional election = new, young D-Rs gained significant influence in the HOR

    • “War hawks” = eager for war w/Britain

    • Henry Clay + John C. Calhoun argued that war would defend American honor, gain Canada, and destroy Native American resistance on the frontier

  • British delays in U.S. demands for neutral right + pressure from war hawks → Madison sought to declare war against Britain in 1812

A Divided Nation

  • Congress + American ppl disagreed about war

    • Pennsylvania + Vermont + South & West states = support

    • New York, Jersey, and England = opposed

  • 1812 Election: D-R strength in the South overpowered Federalist opposition to war

    • Madison won reelection

  • Those who opposed war called it “Mr Madison’s War”:

    • N.E. merchants - repeal of Embargo Act, which allowed them to profit from Euro. war

      • Impressment = minor inconvenience

    • Federalists - viewed the war as a D-R scheme to conquer Canada + FL

    • Quids/old D.R.s - criticized traditional D-R view to maintain peace

Military Defeats and Naval Victories

  • U.S. hope for victory based on Napoleon’s continued success in Europe & U.S. land campaign against Canada

  • There was a 3 part invasion of Canada that was easily repulsed by British defenders - encouraged retaliation by Britain

  • U.S. had superior shipbuilding + powerful sailors = notable victories

    • Constitution/Old Ironsides ship sank a British ship → boosted American morale

    • Most notable battle on Lake Erie (1813): Oliver Perry declared victory → Battle of the Thames (1814) where W. Henry Harrison killed Tecumseh

    • Ships led by Thomas Macdonough defeated British fleet on Lake Champlain; protected NY + NE

  • Napoleon was defeated in 1814 → more British troops in N.A.

    • Summer: British marched through the U.S. capital & set fire to the White House + Capitol

    • Star-Spangled Banner created when the U.S. held out at Fort McHenry

  • Southern troops → led by Andrew Jackson

    • Battle of Horseshoe Bend (1814): Jackson ended the power of the Creek nation (an important British ally) → new land to White settlers

    • Battle of New Orleans (1815): British effort to control the Mississippi river was halted

      • Happened 2 weeks after Treaty of Ghent

The Treaty of Ghent

  • British were weary from war + Madison was doubtful about victory

  • Christmas Eve 1814: fighting was halted, all conquered territory was return to the prewar claimant,+ the boundary b/t Canada & the U.S. was recognized

The Hartford Convention (Dec. 1814)

  • N.E. states threatened to secede from Union due to opposition to war + D-Rs in gov’t in Washington

  • In the end, they adopted proposals to limit the growing power of D-Rs

    • e.g) two-thirds vote of both houses for a future war declaration

  • Jackson’s victory + Treaty of Ghent → weakened Federalists = unpatriotic

The War’s Legacy

  1. U.S. gained respect of other nations, due to surviving 2 wars w/Britain

  2. Federalist party ended as a nat’l force

  3. British naval blockades → U.S. factories were built + Americans moved toward self-sufficiency

  4. War heroes (e.g. Andrew Jackson + William Henry Harrison) → new gen of political leaders

  5. Nationalism grew stronger

Weaknesses from War:

  • Without a national bank (charter expired 1811), the U.S. lacked a reliable source of credit to raise funds

  • How weak U.S. systems of infrastructure & transportation were → difficult to move men + supplies

    • Both led to Henry Clay’s American System

Monroe and Foreign Affairs

  • After the war, the U.S. adopted a nationalistic approach w/other nations

  • President Monroe + JQ Adams advanced American interests + maintained peace

Canada

  • Rush Bagot Agreement: British + American negotiators agreed to a major disarmament pact

    • Limited naval armament on border fortifications → Border b/t U.S. and Canada = longest unfortified border in the world

  • Treaty of 1818: Improved relationships b/t U.S. and Britain

    • e.g.) joint occupation of Oregon territory + set N. limits on Louisiana Territory (49th parallel)

Florida

  • U.S. troops occupied Western FL + Spain had difficulty governing the entirety of FL, due to moving out troops to South America

    • Seminoles, runaways slaves, & white outlaws conducted raids into U.S. territory and retreated safely into FL

  • Monroe commissioned A. Jackson to stop the raiders & pursue them across the border (if necessary)

    • Jackson led a militia into FL → destroyed Seminole villages, killed 2 Seminole chiefs, attacked 2 Spanish forts, & drove out the Spanish governor of Pensacola

    • Britain + Spain were upset, but moved on — to avoid war

  • 1819: Spanish turned over all of its possessions in FL + Oregon territory to the U.S. for $5 million and for the U.S. to give up claims to Texas (Adams-Onis Treaty)

The Monroe Doctrine (Dec. 1823)

  • Many South American countries (e.g. Columbia, Peru, & Chile) had thrown off European colonial power by 1822 → Monroe recognized their independence + built diplomatic relations

  • As European monarchies were restored, there was a backlash in republican movements, and Russia had a presence in Alaska, Britain + U.S. wanted to protect N. and S. America

    • British naval power deterred the Spanish from a comeback in Latin America

      • Britain proposed to U.S. to warn European powers to not intervene in S. America

      • JQ Adams disagreed - believed that joint action w/Britain would limit opportunities for U.S. expansion

  • Monroe declared U.S. policy to Europe + Latin America: due to the rights & interests of the United States, the American continents are not to be considered subject for future colonization by any European powers

    • U.S. opposed European attempts to interfere w/affairs in the W. hemisphere

  • At the time, the Doctrine wasn’t super significant & it only upset some European monarchs

    • Later it was impactful for foreign policy toward Latin America + referenced by James Polk

Trade

  • U.S. built a trade relationship with Mexico → NE manufacturers were happy to find a new market for their goods

  • U.S. merchant ships carried goods across the Pacific + established trade in Chinese porcelains & silk

4.5 Market Revolution

  • Political conflicts over tariffs, internal improvements, and the Bank of the U.S. reflected the increasing importance of a nat’l economy

  • Overall, the Market Revolution linked Northern industries with western + southern farms

Development of the Northwest

  • Old NW: Six states that joined the Union before 1860 (due to NW Ordinance)

    • Ohio, Indiana, Illinois, Michigan, Wisconsin, and Minnesota

    • Early 19th century = mostly unsettled; relied on Mississippi river to trade w/South

    • Mid 19 century = tied to other N. states by military campaigns that drove Indians from the area & canals + railroads that established common markets

  • Corn + wheat were profitable

    • Steel plow (John Deere) + Mechanical reaper (Cyrus McCormick) allowed farm families to plant more acres

    • Part of the crop was used to feed cattle & hogs + supply distillers/brewers

Transportation

  • PA’s Lancaster Turnpike (1790): connected Philadelphia w/farmland around Lancaster

    • Stimulated construction of other short toll roads that connected many major cities

  • Highways that crossed state lines were unusual due to states’ rights advocates

    • However, National/Cumberland Rd was a major route to the West from Maryland to Illinois

  • Erie Canal in NY (1825) help linked western farms + eastern cities

    • Within a decade, canals connected all major rivers + lakes east of the Mississippi

  • Steam-powered engines revolutionized the location of factories that had to previously be located by moving water

  • Steam-powered transport began w/Robert Fulton’s ‘Clermont’ steamboat

    • Faster & cheaper

  • First U.S. railroad lines in 1820s; competed w/canals for carrying freight + people

  • Improved transportation transformed small western towns (e.g. Cleveland) into commercial centers

    • Helped to link the Midwest + North; South continued to rely on rivers

Communication

  • Samuel F. B. Morse demonstrated a successful telegraph in 1844, which transmitted messages across wires nearly instantaneously

    • Government officials + military leaders could direct people from thousands of miles away

Growth of Industry

  • By the end of the 19th century, the U.S. was the world’s leader in manufacturing

  • Eli Whitney invented the cotton gin (1793) & interchangeable parts (War of 1812)

    • Interchangeable parts standardized how rifles were made & allowed for mass production

      • One of the leading factors of the Factory System

  • NY passed a law in 1811: allowed business to incorporate + raise money by selling shares of stock

    • Changes in state corporation laws → more capital for building factories, canals, and railroads

  • Samuel Slater memorized the British factory system & their technology in cotton mills → helped him establish the first U.S. textile factory (1791)

    • Factories prospered due to War of 1812 + protective tariffs passed by Congress

  • 1820s: New England = country’s leading manufacturing center due to its abundant waterpower & seaports for shipping goods

    • Decline of its maritime industry + farming = capital for manufacturing & labor supply

  • The lure of cheap land in the West was more appealing than factory work

    • However, textile mills (e.g. Lowell, MA) recruited young farm women & housed them

    • Lowell System was imitated by many factories

  • Child + immigrant labor were also popular

  • Trade/craft unions increased as a result of the factory system

    • Skilled workers had to seek employment in factories due to their shops failing

    • Workers = mad → long hours, low pay, and poor working conditions

  • Obstacles to union success include:

    1. Immigrant replacement workers

    2. State laws banning unions

    3. Frequent economic depressions w/low unemployment

Commercial Agriculture

  • Commercial farming replaced subsistence farming — focused on growing cotton + tobacco

  • Farming became more profitable by the 1800s due to:

    • Large areas in the West being sold for cheap prices

    • State banks providing loans to farmers at low interest rates

    • Development of canals + railroads opened new markets for transporting goods

Cotton and the South

  • Since the cotton gin made cotton more profitable than indigo & tobacco, it was the leading crop of the century

  • Capital was invested in enslaved African Americans & new land

  • Cotton growth → connected the South with a global economy

    • States in North + Europe relied on cotton in textile mills

    • Southern farmers that devoted land to cotton need to buy pork, corn, and other food from states in the Midwest

4.6 Effects of the Market Revolution on Society & Culture

  • Market revolution = overall improvements (e.g. standard of living increased)

    • However, the fast changing economy presented problems

Women

  • Industrialization → many women stopped working next to their husbands on family farms

  • Women seeking employments in cities often did teaching or domestic service

    • Most working women were single; if they married they took up duties at home

  • Men worked away from home → women took on new responsibilities within the home: the cult of domesticity

Economic and Social Mobility

  • Urban workers = improved wages

    • Gap b/t very wealthy & very poor increased

  • As economic opportunities increased, social mobility (moving up or down the social pyramid) tended to occur

Population Growth and Change

  • Population growth = necessary # of consumers and laborers

  • B/t 1800 and 1825 → population doubled; it doubled again in the following 25 years

  • From the 1830s through the 1850s , nearly 4 million ppl from N. Europe came to the U.S.

    1. the development of cheap & rapid ocean transportation

    2. famines + revolutions in Europe (esp. Irish & Germans)

    3. the growing reputation of U.S. for offering economic opportunities + political freedom

  • The North’s urban population grew from 5% of the pop. in 1800 to 15% by 1850

    • Resulted in crowded housing, poor sanitation, infectious diseases, and high crime rates

    • New cities that became transfer points & distributed manufactured goods to the east include: Buffalo, Cleveland, Detroit, and Chicago on the Great Lakes; Cincinnati on the Ohio River; and St. Louis on the Mississippi

Organized Labor

  • Manufacturing → goods were less expensive; improved standard of living

  • Economic shift → small class of very wealthy people (e.g. factory owners) & a growing middle class

    • Middle class included people like shopkeepers, businessmen, and doctors

      • They prioritized education, temperance, & Protestantism

  • 1st U.S. labor party was founded in Philly (1828); increased # of urban workers joined unions throughout the 1830s

    • Commonwealth v. Hunt (1842): peaceful unions had the right to negotiate labor contracts with employers

    • Some N. states passed laws for 10 hour workdays

  • Improvements for workers limited by: periodic depressions, employers & courts that were hostile to unions, & abundant supply of low-wage immigrant labor

4.7 Expanding Democracy

  • The Panic of 1819 led to decrease in demand for exported American goods → unemployment

    • Laboring men (esp. in the West) wanted to hold politicians accountable

Greater Equality

  • Men of all backgrounds wore dark trousers & jackets; women often emulated fanciful styles from magazines — equality was becoming a governing principle of American society

The Rise of a Democratic Society

  • Many believed in the equality of opportunity for White males — ignored the enslavement of many African Americans + discrimination against those who weren’t white

    • There were legal and cultural restrictions about what women could do

Politics of the Common Man

  • Politics left rich southern planters & northern merchants who had dominated gov’t → middle & lower class homes

    • Due to: new suffrage laws, changes in political parties + campaigns, & increased newspaper circulation

  • Western states (e.g. Indiana + Illinois) adopted state constitutions that allowed White males to vote & hold office — omitted religious or property qualifications for voting

    • Prior to this, free black people with land could vote in 5 states & women with land could vote in New Jersey (until 1807)

    • Most eastern states followed

    • Voting rose from 350k (1824) to 2.4 million (1840), as a result

Changes to Parties & Campaigns

  • Prior to the 1830s, candidates for office were nominated by state legislatures or King Caucus (closed-door meeting of a political party’s Congressional leaders)

    • Replaced by nominating conventions — party politicians + voters would nominate the party’s candidates

      • Anti-Masonic Party was the first to hold one

  • Election of 1832: every state - except for SC - allowed voters to choose a state’s electors

  • Campaigns for presidents had to be conducted on a national scale - needed large political parties

  • Anti-Masonic + Workingmen’s Party were some of the first third parties

    • Reached out to ppl who’d shown little interest in politics

  • Jacksonian era → more state & local officials were elected, rather than appointed

  • During this period, candidates directed their campaigns to the interests of common ppl

    • Form of entertainment: parade floats, marching bands, & large rallies

    • However, issues were typically ignored & candidates only attacked their opponents

  • Spoils system: dispensing gov’t jobs in return for party loyalty

    • A. Jackson believed in appointing ppl to federal jobs based on if they’d actively campaigned for the Democratic Party

  • Rotation in office: limiting a person to one term in office, then appointing another Democrat

    • This + spoils system → affirmed that ordinary Americans could hold gov’t office

4.8 Jackson and Federal Power

  • Age of the Common Man/Era of Jacksonian Democracy: emergence of popular politics in the 1820s & Jackson’s presidency (1829-1837)

Jackson vs. Adams

The Election of 1824

  • The Era of Good Feelings ended around this period; the Federalist party had died & therefore 4 candidates ran under the D-R party

  • D-R party was split into

    • National Republicans: had an expansive view on federal power + loose interpretation of the Constitution

    • Democrats: limit federal power + strict interpretation of Constitution

    • Jackson won more popular + electoral votes (99) than the other candidates, but lost since no candidate had a 131 vote majority in the electoral college

    • HOR made decision (12th amendment) → Henry Clay used his influence to get John Q. Adams elected, who then made Clay his secretary of state

      • “Corrupt bargain”

President John Quincy Adams

  • Adams asked Congress for money for internal improvements, aids to manufacturing, etc

    • Jacksonians viewed these as a waste of money + unconstitutional

  • Tariff of 1828: satisfied N. manufacturers, but upset Southern planters

  • SC declared this “tariff of abominations” unconstitutional & affirmed the nullification theory — each state had a right to obey a federal law or declare it null and void

    • Webster-Hayne debate: Hayne argued for states’ rights, but Webster attacked the idea that states could defy/leave the union

      • Jackson believed the Union should be preserved

    • In 1832, SC held a convention to nullify the tariffs of 1828 & 1832 → passed a resolution forbidding the collection of tariffs within the state

      • Jackson persuaded Congress to pass the Force Bill (to act against SC), and he issued a Proclamation to the People of SC (stating that nullification and disunion were treason)

    • SC rescinded its nullification after Congress enacted a new tariff to appeal to the south + Northern industrialists

The Revolution of 1828

  • Although Adams sought reelection in 1828, Jacksonians resorted to a ‘mudslinging campaign’

  • Jackson won, carrying every state west of the Appalachians → due to rep. as a war hero

The Presidency of Andrew Jackson

  • Jackson = symbol of the common man

    • Born in a frontier cabin, gained fame as an Indian fighter + hero at the Battle of New Orleans, & no college education

    • He was a Jeffersonian — opposed increased federal spending + national debt

  • Jackson’s advisors → “kitchen cabinet” who didn’t belong to his official cabinet

  • Peggy Eaton (wife of Jackson’s secretary of war) was the target of gossip by the wives of his cabinet → most of the cabinet resigned when Jackson tried to make them accept Eaton socially

    • As a result, his VP: John C. Calhoun resigned in 1829 → replaced by Martin Van Buren for his second term

  • Jackson sympathized with land-hungry citizens who wanted lands held by Native Americans

    • Indian Removal Act (1830): forced thousands of American Indians to resettle west of the Mississippi

      • Most tribes compelled and there was even The Bureau of Indian Affairs created to assist the resettled tribes

  • Cherokee Nation v. Georgia (1831): Georgia passed a law requiring the Cherokees to migrate west, but the Supreme Court rule the Cherokees weren’t foreign and had a right to sue

  • Worcester v. Georgia (1832): Georgia’s laws had no force within Cherokee territory

    • Jackson sides with the states & the Court was unable to enforce its decision

  • Treaty of New Echota (1835): exchanged Cherokee lands in the East for reservation territory W. of the Mississippi

  • In 1838, the U.S. army forced 15k Cherokees to leave GA → Trail of Tears, caused 4k deaths

  • Jackson appealed to southerners by banning antislavery literature from being sent through the U.S. mail

  • Jackson vetoed the Bank of the U.S. (1832)- after Henry Clay tried to get Congress to recharter it - calling it a private monopoly that enriched the wealthy at the expense of common ppl

    • He was suspicious of the bank’s president - Nicholas Biddle - whose arrogance caused popular suspicion that the bank abused its powers + only served the wealthy

The Two-Party System

  • Supporters of Jackson = Democrats

    • Resembled the Democratic-Republican party

    • Supported limited power in federal gov’t, free trade, and local rule

    • They were against corporate monopolies, high tariffs, and the national bank

  • Supporters of Henry Clay = Whigs

    • Resembled the defunct Federalist party → supported spending federal money for internal improvements like roads & canals

    • Against crimes being committed by immigrants

  • Both parties were challenged in their response to westward expansion & the emergence of an industrial economy

  • Not a division based on the area

Jackson’s Second Term

  • Jackson withdrew all federal funds from the Bank of the U.S. after reelection

    • He was aided by secretary of the treasury - Roger Taney - who transferred this money into state/”pet” banks

  • There was heavy inflation due to Jackson’s financial policies + the feverish purchase of W. land

    • Specie Circular: future purchases of federal lands be made in gold/silver

      • Jackson hoped to reduce inflation, but this made paper banknotes worthless

      • After he left office, there was an economic depression → The Panic of 1837

The Election of 1836

  • Martin Van Buren was nominated for the Democrats

  • The Whig party nominated 3 candidates from 3 different regions to try and throw the election into the House of Representatives → failed, as Van Buren won 58% of the electoral vote

President Van Buren and the Panic of 1837

  • Jackson’s closing of the national bank was one of many causes of the Panic

    • Whigs blamed it on the Democrats’ laissez-faire economic style (little federal economic involvement)

The “Log Cabin and Hard Cider” Campaign of 1840

  • Whigs were in a better position to beat the Democrats in 1840

    • Voters were unhappy about the poor economic state

    • Whigs were better organized & had William Henry Harrison as their candidate

    • Campaigned to a new extent

      • Passed out cider, buttons, and hats + had name-calling propaganda like “Martin Van Ruin”

  • A month after WHH was elected, he died of pneumonia → John Tyler succeeded the presidency

    • Tyler vetoed Whigs’ nat’l bank bills & favored southern + expansionist Democrats

The Western Frontier

  • Although the definition of the West constantly changed, attitudes toward the land and Native Americans remained constant

American Indians

  • By 1850, most American Indians lived west of the Mississippi

    • Those to the east were killed by disease or in battles, or were forced to leave

    • The Great Plains were only a temporary safe haven

  • Horses were revolutionary and allowed some tribes (e.g. Cherokee & Sioux) to become nomadic hunters

The Frontier

  • The West represented the possibility of a fresh start & was typically beckoned as promising greater freedom for all ethnic groups

  • Mountain men: the earliest White people in the area who’d followed Lewis & Clark + explored American Indian trails → served as guides for settlers crossing the Rocky Mountains

White Settlers on the Western Frontier

  • Lived in log cabins/sod huts + disease & malnutrition were greater threats than Natives

  • Pioneer women performed myriad daily tasks (e.g. doctor, teacher, and cook)

    • The endless work + rigors of childbirth = short lifespan for frontier women

  • Entire forests were cleared after only two generations, soil was exhausted from poor farmings, and beavers + buffalos became nearly extinct

4.9 The Development of an American Culture

  • America’s early culture → reflected Britain + European countries settlers came from

  • By the early 19th century, American culture had a strong nationalistic tone

    • Still looked to Europe for new ideas

Cultural Nationalism

  • Ideas of the 19th century differed from those of the nation’s founders:

    • The young were excited about the prospects of Westward expansion; cared less about European affairs after the Napoleonic Wars + War of 1812

      • Believed the U.S. was entering an era of prosperity

    • Patriotic beliefs infused all aspects of American society (e.g. art to schoolbooks)

      • Revolutionary heroes were in paintings by Gilbert Stuart, for instance

      • Biography about G. Washington was widely read

      • Public schools → Noah Webster’s blue-backed speller (promoted patriotism)

A Changing Culture: Ideas, the Arts, and Literature

  • Artists and writers → intuition, feelings, individual acts of heroism, and nature

    • Romanticism → express by transcendentalists

    • Shift from the Enlightenment (reason, order, balance, etc)

The Transcendentalists

  • Questioned the doctrines of established churches & the business practices of the merchant class

    • Argued for a mystical & intuitive way of thinking to discover one’s inner self & looking for the essence of God in nature

  • Challenged the materialism of American society by suggesting that artistic expression was more important than wealth

  • Supported a variety of reforms, like the antislavery movement

  • Ralph Waldo Emerson (1803-1882): his essays + lectures expressed individualistic & nationalistic spirit urging Americans to create a distinctive American culture

    • Argued for self-reliance, independent thinking, & the primacy of spiritual matters over material ones

    • He was a leading critic of slavery

  • Henry David Thoreau (1817-1862): conducted a 2 year experiment of living in a cabin in the woods outside of town → used nature to help him search for the essential truths of life + the universe

    • Published a book: Walden + known for his “On Civil Disobedience” Essay (broke a tax law in opposition to war against Mexico)

  • Brook Farm: a communal experiment led by George Ripley (a Protestant minister), to achieve a natural union b/t intellectual & manual labor

    • Hosted transcendentalists like Emerson & Margaret Fuller (a feminist writer)

    • Ended in 1849 due to a fire & heavy debts

Other Communal Experiments

  • Over 100 experimental communities during the antebellum (pre Civil War) years that attempted to create an ideal community/utopia

  • Shakers: early religious communal movement w/6k+ members

    • Held property in common & strictly separated men & women (no marriage)

  • The Amana Colonies: Germans who settled in Iowa & belonged to the reform movement called Pietism — emphasized simple, communal living; allowed marriage

  • New Harmony: led by Robert Owen (industrialist + reformer), this nonreligious experiment in Indiana hoped to find an answer to problems of inequity & alienation due to the Industrial Revolution

    • Failed due to financial problems & disagreements

  • Oneida Community: John Noyes led this cooperative community in NY in 1848

    • Ideal of perfect social & economic equality — members shared property & even marriage partners → attacked by critics

    • Produced & sold high quality silverware

  • Fourier Phalanxes: led by theories of French socialist Charles Fourier

    • advocated that people share work & housing → died out due to Americans being too individualistic

Arts and Literature

  • Painting portrayed everyday life of ordinary people (e.g. riding riverboats & voting in elections) — George Caleb Bingham was popular, for instance

    • Many painters emphasized sentiment & emotion at the expense of accuracy

  • American architects adapted Greek styles to emphasize the democratic spirit of the republic

  • Other writers created literature that was Romantic & distinctly American

    • Due to the War of 1812, Americans were more nationalistic & eager to read works by American writers

    • Noah Webster published his American Dictionary of the English Language in 1828; helped to standardize spelling & pronunciation of American English

    • Nathaniel Hawthorne — questioned intolerance & conformity in American life

    • Edgar Allen Poe — focused on irrational aspects of human behavior & even portrayed mysterious + horrifying events (e.g. Tell-Tale Heart)

4.10 The Second Great Awakening

  • Examples of religious revivals include: traditional Calvinist/Puritan teachings of sin & predestination, as well as new development in Christianity

Causes of Religious Reform

  1. Growing emphasis on democracy & individuals who influenced politics + the arts — worshippers preferred services that were informal & participatory

  2. Rational approach to religion, more emotional expressions of beliefs in worship services

  3. Market revolution → ppl feared industrialization = increased greed & sin

  4. Disruptions of the market revolution + mobility of ppl = informal worship settings that weren’t in urban areas

Revivals

  • 2nd Great Awakening began among highly educated people (e.g. Timothy Dwight from Yale)

    • Saw themselves as Calvinists leading against emerging liberal views of the 1790s

    • Based on the opportunity for salvation for all

  • On the frontier, Charles Finney led a series of revivals in upstate NY — he appealed to emotions & fear of damnation

    • Preached that every individual could be saved by faith & hard work — appeal to middle class

  • Baptist + Methodist preachers (e.g. Peter Cartwright) traveled around the South & on the W. frontier to host outdoor revivals/camp meetings

    • Activated the faith of many who hadn’t previously been in churches

    • Large black & enslaved following

New Denominations

  • Millennialism: William Miller predicted that the world was going to end with a second coming of Jesus, which attracted thousands of followers

    • Nothing happened — Millerites turned into Seventh-day Adventists

  • Mormons/Latter-day Saints: Founded by Joseph Smith in 1830 in NY — originally supported polygamy (prohibited in 1890)

    • Beliefs based on: The Book of Mormon — traced a connection b/t American Indians & lost tribes of Israel

    • Smith was persecuted & died in Illinois → members (led by Brigham Young) migrated to Utah in the Western Frontier, their community was called New Zion

Reforms Backed by Religion

  • 2nd Great Awakening → divisions b/t newer evangelical sects & older Protestant churches

  • Social reform: reduced drinking, ending slavery, and better treatment for people with mental illness

  • Many Christians viewed slavery as a sin

4.11 An Age of Reform

  • Reform movements evolved as leaders initially tried to persuade people based on morals, sermons, and pamphlets, but then moved on to political action & creating new ideas to replace old ones

    • These were also popular due to things like, the Enlightenment belief in human goodness, the Jacksonian emphasis on democracy, social classes, and religious beliefs

Improving Society

Societal Problems

Reformers and Action/Laws

Opposition

Impact on Society

Temperance

- High rate of alcohol consumption → many believed it caused crime, poverty, and abuse of women

- Most popular reform movement

- Began by moral exhortation

- American Temperance Society (1826): founded by Protestant ministers, concerned with the effects of drinking; tried to persuade drinkers to take a pledge of abstinence

- Washingtonians (1840): a group of recovering alcoholics argued that alcoholism was a disease that needed treatment

- 1mil+ members in various temperance societies

- Woman’s Christian Temperance Union: helped the movement gain strength again in the 1870s

- German & Irish immigrants; lacked political power to prevent reforms

1851: Maine put a tax on the sale of liquor & prohibited the manufacturing + sale of certain liquors → 12 states followed this

- Nat’l success due to the 18th amendment in 1919

Prison & Asylum

- Humanitarian reformers wanted to alleviate the suffering of people like, criminals & paupers, by setting up public institutions (e.g. state-supported prisons, mental hospitals, and poorhouses)

- Dorothea Dix: found mentally ill ppl locked up with convicted criminals in unsanitary cells — she publicized the awful treatment she witnessed

- Thomas Gallaudet: opened a school for the deaf

- Dr. Samuel Gridley Howe: started a school for the blind

- PA built new prisons called penitentiaries

- Reformers placed prisoners in solitary confinement

- Auburn System: in NY, enforced disciplinary rules while providing moral instruction

- New mental hospitals, improved institutions, and mental patients receiving professional treatment

- Special schools for the blind and deaf were established across the Union

- Prison reforms led to the asylum system: structure & discipline led to moral reform

Public Education

- Middle class reformers feared about the future of the republic, due to the growing # of the uneducated poor

- Workers’ groups typically supported the campaign for tax-supported schools

- Horace Mann: led the public school movement; he worked for compulsory attendance of all children and a longer school year

- McGuffey readers: emphasized moral virtues of hard work & punctuality, which were necessary in an industrial society

- The 2nd Great Awakening fueled the growth of private colleges

- Roman Catholics opposed the Protestant beliefs that were reflected in public schools, so they opened private schools

1840s: the movement for public schools spread from MA to other states

- Protestant denominations founded small colleges in newer, western states

Changes in Families & Roles for Women

  • America was still mostly rural by the mid-19th century

  • Industrialization reduced the economic value of children

    • Middle-class families used birth control to reduce avg. family size

    • Affluent women had leisure time to devote to organizations based on religion/moral uplight

  • Cult of Domesticity: idealized view of women as moral leaders in the home

    • When men took jobs outside of the home & were typically absent, women took charge of the household & children

  • Women’s Rights:

    • Women reformers resented the way men put them in secondary roles in the antislavery movement, for instance

    • Sarah Grimke: wrote the Letters on Equality of the Sexes, and the Condition of Women (1838)

    • Lucretia Mott campaigned for women’s rights after being prevented from speaking at an antislavery condition

  • Seneca Falls Convention (1848): leading feminists met in NY; 1st women’s right convention in American history

    • Declaration of Sentiments declared “all men and women are created equal” & listed women’s grievances against laws & customs that discriminated against them

  • Post-convention, women like Susan B. Anthony led the campaign for equal voting, legal, and property rights for women

    • The issue was overshadowed by slavery in the 1850s, however

Antislavery Movement

  • American Colonization Society: transporting free slaves to an African Colony

    • Appealed to opponents of slavery + White Americans who wanted to remove free Black Americans from U.S. society

    • Established an African American settlement in Liberia → many didn’t want to leave America & only about 12k moved to Africa

  • American Antislavery Society (1833): a radical abolitionist group led by William Lloyd Garrison

    • William Lloyd Garrison (1831): began an abolitionist newspaper The Liberator

      • He advocated for immediate abolition of slavery in every state & no compensation for slaveowners

    • Garrison & others condemned and burned the Constitution as a proslavery document

      • Argued: “no Union with slaveholders”

  • Liberty Party (1840): led by Northerners who believed political action was the way to reform

    • James Birney was their presidential candidate in 1840 + 1844

    • Aimed to end slavery by political & legal means

  • Black Abolitionists

    • Individuals who escaped enslavement = outspoken & convincing

      • They could speak about the brutality of slavery from firsthand experience

    • Frederick Douglass: supported Garrison, advocated for both political & direct action to end slavery, and he started The North Star antislavery journal in 1847

    • Other people like Harriet Tubman & Sojourner Truth helped fugitive slaves escape to free territory in the North or Canada

  • Violent Abolitionism

    • David Walker & Henry Grant advocated for radical solutions to end slavery

      • Argued that the enslaved should take action & revolt against their owners

    • Nat Turner Rebellion (1831): 55 Whites were killed in Virginia; led by Nat Turner, who was a slave

      • In turn, hundreds of African Americans were killed to put down the revolt

  • Antislavery talk ended in the South after the Nat Turner Rebellion & Garrison’s rhetoric

Others Reforms

  1. American Peace Society: aimed to abolish war; protested war with Mexico in 1846

  2. Laws to protect sailors from being flogged

  3. Dietary reforms: eating whole wheat bread or graham crackers, to promote good digestion

  4. Dress reforms for women, so they could move more easily

  5. Phrenology: a pseudoscience that studied the bumps on one’s skull to asses their character & ability

4.12 African Americans in the Early Republic

  • Many believed slavery would gradually disappear due to soil exhaustion in coastal lands of Virginia & the Carolinas + the constitutional ban of importing & enslaving Africans after 1808

    • The growth of the cotton industry & expansion of slavery into new states ended this belief

Free African Americans

  • 1860: 500k free African Americans living throughout the U.S.

North

South

- 250k AA in the North (~1% of northerners)

- Maintain a family & sometimes own land

- Formed their own Christian congregations

- Couldn’t vote or hold jobs in skilled professions & crafts

- Immigrants displaced them from occupations & jobs they held since the Revolution

- Often hired as strikebreakers & dismissed after the strike ended

- 250k AA in the South

- Some were freed during the Revolution

- Others were mulatto children; White fathers liberated them

- Some achieved freedom on their own (sometimes through self-purchase)

- Many lived in cities where they could own land

- Couldn’t vote or enter certain occupations

- Had to show legal papers proving their free status

- Often stayed in south for family or since they considered it home

Resistance by the Enslaved

  • Conditions of slavery each plantation varied; all suffered from being deprived of freedom

    • Families could be separated at any time

    • Women = vulnerable to sexual exploitation

    • Enslaved A. Americans maintained a strong sense of family & religious faith

  • Examples of restrained actions include work slowdowns & equipment sabotage

  • Runaways faced organized militia patrols & hunters who were paid a bounty

    • It was difficult for women caring for children or pregnant

    • Those returned to owners = physically mistreated

    • Underground Railroad + demands of Southerners for stricter fugitive slave laws prove the increased number of slaves wanting to escape

  • Rebellions

    • Gabriel Prosser led an uprising in Richmond, VA in 1800

    • Denmark Vesey (1822): in Charleston, SC, due to readings from the Bible & discussions about the Missouri Compromise, Vesey & members of a large African Methodist Church forged a plan to seize ships in the harbor & sail away to Haiti for freedom

      • Ended by informers; Vesey & over 30 conspirators were hanged

    • Nat Turner Rebellion (1831): in Virginia, over 50 white ppl were killed & the militia killed Turner, his followers, and innocent A. Americans

    • Organized rebellions had a lasting influence: gave hope to enslaved A. Americans, drove southern states to strictly enforce slaves codes, & demonstrated the evils of slavery

  • Culture maintenance

    • Many slaves would address each other by their African names

    • Kept alive West African + Caribbean languages among themselves

    • Told folktales + danced & sang

      • White plantation owners aimed to suppress cultural expression to prevent rebellions as a result of the Haitian Revolution

4.13 Southern Society in the Early Republic

Agriculture and King Cotton

  • Agriculture was the foundation of the Southern economy

    • Tobacco, rice, sugarcane, and cotton

    • Small factories in the area made ~15% of the nation’s manufactured goods

  • Textile mills + Eli Whitney’s cotton gin → made cotton cloth affordable

    • British mills relied of the American South for cotton fiber

    • 1850s: cotton provided 2/3 of all U.S. exports & linked the South w/G.B.

Slavery, the “Peculiar Institution”

  • Southern wealth was based on land & enslaved people

  • Peculiar Institution: referred to the system of slavery in the South

  • Population: cotton boom grew the # of slaves from 1mil (1800) → 4mil (1860)

    • Mostly came from natural growth; some Africans were smuggled into the South

  • Deep South: enslaved African Americans made up to 75% of the population

    • Lower Mississippi River Valley

    • Southern legislatures created slave codes to increase restrictions on movement & education

  • Economics

    • Enslaved workers labored in fields, as house servants, in factories, or learned skilled crafts

    • Slave owners in Upper South sold their slaves to owners in the cotton-rich Deep South

    • An enslaved field hand = ~$2000

    • Heavy capital investment in slaverin South → less capital than the North for industrialization

White Society

Social Hierarchy:

  1. Aristocracy: South’s elite of wealthy planters w/100+ slaves and 1k+ acres of land; dominated Southern legislatures & favored large landholders’ economic interests

  2. Farmers: less than 20 slaves + several hundreds acres of land; produced the bulk of the cotton

  3. Poor Whites: ¾ of households in the South didn’t own slaves; couldn’t afford farmland & lived as subsistence farmers - defended slavery & felt superior to Black ppl

  1. Mountain people: Small farmers who lived in frontier conditions — isolated from the South; disliked planters & slavery

  • Cities: few large commercial cities; largest city was New Orleans

    • Unique culture due to cotton-based economy → white southerners defended slavery, northerners grew hostile towards it

  • Code of Chivalry: adhered to by Southern gentlemen

    • Strong sense of personal honor, defense of womanhood, & paternalistic attitudes towards ppl deemed inferior

  • Education: slaves weren’t taught how to read or write

    • Upper class → college education for children

      • Acceptable professions: farming, law, the ministry, and the military

    • Lower class → often didn’t have schooling beyond elementary grades

  • Religion:

    • Baptists + Methods = biblical support for slavery

    • Unitarians challenged slavery & some Catholics + Episcopalians took a neutral stand

  • Social reform:

    • Mostly in North & West — worked to perfect society

    • Southerners = committed to tradition & slower to support education + humanitarian reforms

      • Saw social reform as Northern threat