CHAPTER 8SECURING THE
REPUBLIC, 1790–1815
POLITICS IN AN AGE OF PASSION
Hamilton’s Program
To establish the government’s creditworthiness, Hamilton proposed that it pay off at full face value all national and state debts from the Revolution. He wanted to create a new national debt, issued as interest-bearing bonds to government creditors, that would tie wealthy investors to the national government.
POLITICS IN AN AGE OF PASSION
The Jefferson-Hamilton Bargain A compromise secured Hamilton’s fiscal
program, minus subsidies for factories, in exchange for locating the nation’s capital between Virginia and Maryland. This became Washington, D.C.
POLITICS IN AN AGE OF PASSION
An Expanding Public Sphere
The partisanship of the 1790s expanded the public sphere and the democratic content of American freedom. It increased the number of citizens who attended political events and read newspapers. Ordinary men never before active in politics wrote pamphlets and organized political meetings.
POLITICS IN AN AGE OF PASSION
The Rights of Women
Women were still not part of the body politic. Although women were counted in determining representation in Congress and nothing in the Constitution explicitly limited rights to men, the document and almost all Americans assumed that politics was an exclusively male sphere.
THE ADAMS PRESIDENCY
The Haitian Revolution Jeffersonians who celebrated the French
Revolution as an advance for liberty were horrified by the slave revolt in 1791 in St. Domingue, France’s most treasured colonial possession, an island of sugar plantations . The slaves defeated British and French forces sent to suppress the rebellion, and they declared an independent nation in 1804.
The revolt affirmed the universal appeal of freedom in this age of revolutions, and fostered hopes of freedom among America’s slaves.
JEFFERSON IN POWER Judicial Review
The Supreme Court under Chief Justice John Marshall, a Federalist and Adams appointee, increased its power during Jefferson’s administration. In Marbury v. Madison (1803), the Marshall Court established the right of the Supreme Count to determine whether an act of Congress violates the Constitution—the power known as “judicial review.” The Marshall Court also soon established the right of the nation’s highest court to determine the constitutionality of state laws.
THE WAR OF 1812
Causes of the War of 1812The War BeginsThe Effects of the War on America
THE PRESIDENCY OF JAMES MADISON
Elected in 1808 Virginian lawyer and
student of history Wrote a large part of
the U.S. Constitution Stood barely 5’4”
and 120 pounds but, an intellectual ahead of his time
CAUSES FOR THE WAR OF 1812
The British Navy is taking American sailors from American ships to sail on British ships. This is called impressment.
British sailors leave British ships to sail on American ships because they are treated better and get paid very well
CAUSES FOR THE WAR OF 1812
The British army is supporting Native American resistance to Anglo expansion on their land.
CAUSES FOR THE WAR OF 1812
The United States has a desire to expand into more territory like British Canada
The real cause for this land grab is because of a poor transportation system and effects from the Embargo Act
Americans believe that seizing more land will end the depression
CAUSES FOR THE WAR OF 1812
The United States wants to prove to Britain that the victory of the American Revolution was not luck.
Americans demand respect from the world.
TECUMSEH AND INDIAN NATIONALISM
Tecumseh, a Shawnee chief attempts to unify Indian tribes that have been removed from the Ohio River Valley
His brother, the Prophet preached that Indians should reject White ways and embrace their heritage
The brothers have a large following but their hopes are destroyed at the battle of fallen Timbers
AMERICAN SHORTCOMINGS IN THE WAR OF 1812 The military is poorly trained and led The U.S. navy is no match for the
British navy American forces attempt to seize
Canada but are poorly led and militia forces
Americans are forced to fight a defensive war against an invading professional army
THE BATTLE OF THAMES
October 5, 1813, British and Indian forces are defeated by American forces in Canada
Tecumseh’s death ends Indian resistance in the Ohio River Valley
THE DEATH OF TECUMSEH
THE BRITISH BURN THE CAPITAL
August 1814, the British Army invades the United States and marches on Washington D.C.
After a brief fight the city surrenders and nearly all government buildings are razed by fire
Madison rallies the American public after this defeat
“THE STAR SPANGLED BANNER”
Francis Scott Key, a prisoner on a British barge witnessed the British bombardment of Fort McHenry, near Baltimore for 12 hours
In the morning he observed that the American flag still flew over the fort and writes a poem called “The Defence of Ft McHenry” it eventually becomes a song “The Star Spangled Banner”
Americans rally to the war effort after the capital is burnt down
“THE STAR SPANGLED BANNER”
THINGS THAT MAKE YOU GO HMMM
The Treaty of Ghent on December 24, 1814 ends the War of 1812. The war is considered Staus quo ante bellum
The Hartford Convention, several New England states fear that the war is lost and actually talk about becoming another country
THE BATTLE OF NEW ORLEANS
The American forces are a multicultural motely band of experienced soldiers and warriors
The British, a trained army are virtually mauled by American forces hiding behind earthworks and cannons
THE BATTLE OF NEW ORLEANS
American forces at New Orleans are led by General Andrew Jackson whose army inflicts great casualties on the British army
Andrew Jackson will be associated with winning the war. People assume that this victory is responsible for ending the war.
A map of the Battle of New Orleans
THE BATTLE OF NEW ORLEANS
THE IMPACT OF THE WAR OF 1812
1. A sense of nationalism sweeps America. Nationalism is a belief and sense of pride in one’s country based on it’s achievements.
2. The nation will embark on foreign trade and begin to build a transportation system in the United States.
3. Native American resistance will be removed from the Ohio River Valley permanently opening the Midwest for expansion.