describe the outcome of the election of 1800. explain jefferson’s policies as president

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• Describe the outcome of the election of 1800. • Explain Jefferson’s policies as President. • Discuss the importance of Marbury v. Madison. Objectives

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Objectives. Describe the outcome of the election of 1800. Explain Jefferson’s policies as President. Discuss the importance of Marbury v. Madison. Terms and People. Thomas Jefferson – third President of the United States, elected in 1800 - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Describe the outcome of the election of 1800. Explain Jefferson’s policies as President

• Describe the outcome of the election of 1800.

• Explain Jefferson’s policies as President.

• Discuss the importance of Marbury v. Madison.

Objectives

Page 2: Describe the outcome of the election of 1800. Explain Jefferson’s policies as President

Terms and People

• Thomas Jefferson – third President of the United States, elected in 1800

• Aaron Burr – Jefferson’s running mate in the 1800 election

• laissez faire – the idea that the government should not interfere in the economy

• John Marshall – Chief Justice of the Supreme Court under President Jefferson

• judicial review – the authority of the Supreme Court to strike down unconstitutional laws

Page 3: Describe the outcome of the election of 1800. Explain Jefferson’s policies as President

How did Jefferson chart a new course for the government?

In 1800, President John Adams ran for reelection against Thomas Jefferson.

Federalists supported John

Adams.

Republicans

supported Thomas Jefferson.

Page 4: Describe the outcome of the election of 1800. Explain Jefferson’s policies as President

By receiving 73 electoral votes, Jefferson defeated Adams.

Federalists threatened civil war if Jefferson were elected.

Republicans accused John Adams of creating a monarchy.

The election of 1800 was viciously contested.

Page 5: Describe the outcome of the election of 1800. Explain Jefferson’s policies as President

Jefferson

Thomas Jefferson - 73 Votes

Aaron Burr - 73 Votes

The House of Representatives had to break the tie. They voted for Jefferson to be President and Burr to be Vice President.

However, Jefferson and his running mate, Aaron Burr, received the same number of votes.

Page 6: Describe the outcome of the election of 1800. Explain Jefferson’s policies as President

To avoid this situation in the future, Congress passed the Twelfth Amendment.

Twelfth Amendment

From 1804 on, electors would vote separately for President

and Vice President.

Page 7: Describe the outcome of the election of 1800. Explain Jefferson’s policies as President

Jefferson was the first President to be inaugurated in Washington, D.C., the new capital.

In his inaugural address, Jefferson urged all Americans to unite.

Jefferson chose a less aristocratic ceremony.

In the past:

The President rode to the inauguration in a fancy carriage.

People bowed to the President.

At Jefferson’s inauguration:

Jefferson walked to the ceremony.

People did not bow. They shook Jefferson’s hand.

Page 8: Describe the outcome of the election of 1800. Explain Jefferson’s policies as President

Jefferson thought of his election as the “Revolution of 1800.”

His first goal was to limit the power of the federal government.

Jefferson vowed to change many of the policies of George Washington and John Adams.

He believed in the idea of laissez faire, from the French term for “let alone.”

Page 9: Describe the outcome of the election of 1800. Explain Jefferson’s policies as President

Jefferson created new Republican policies and kept some existing Federalist policies.

Republican Federalist

Page 10: Describe the outcome of the election of 1800. Explain Jefferson’s policies as President

Jefferson also targeted the Sedition Act, which he had long opposed.

Many people had been convicted and fined under the act.

Others had been imprisoned.

Jefferson ordered the fines refunded.

Jefferson released the prisoners.

Page 11: Describe the outcome of the election of 1800. Explain Jefferson’s policies as President

One Federalist who did not keep his job was Judge William Marbury.

Adams had appointed Marbury and other judges in his last hours as President.

When Jefferson took office, he ordered Secretary of State James Madison to cease work on the appointments.

Page 12: Describe the outcome of the election of 1800. Explain Jefferson’s policies as President

Jefferson’s decision led to the landmark Supreme Court case, Marbury v. Madison.

William Marbury sued James Madison.

This act gave the Supreme Court the power to review any case against a federal official.

Marbury cited the Judiciary Act of 1789.

Page 13: Describe the outcome of the election of 1800. Explain Jefferson’s policies as President

The ruling stated that the Court’s power came from the Constitution, not Congress.

In Marbury v. Madison, the Supreme Court ruled that the Judiciary Act was unconstitutional.

Under the Judiciary Act, the Supreme Court’s power came from Congress.

Therefore, Congress did not have the right to give power to the Supreme Court in the Judiciary Act.

Supreme Court

CongressConstitution

Page 14: Describe the outcome of the election of 1800. Explain Jefferson’s policies as President

Chief Justice John Marshall used this case to establish the principle of judicial review.

This gives the Supreme Court the authority to strike down unconstitutional laws.

Judicial review remains one of the most important powers of the Supreme Court.

Unconstitutional laws

Page 15: Describe the outcome of the election of 1800. Explain Jefferson’s policies as President

Section Review

Know It, Show It QuizQuickTake Quiz

Page 16: Describe the outcome of the election of 1800. Explain Jefferson’s policies as President

What was the importance of the purchase and exploration of the Louisiana Territory?

The tide of westward settlement speeded up in the years after

America’s independence.

By 1800, more than one million settlers lived between the Appalachian Mountains and the Mississippi River.

Page 17: Describe the outcome of the election of 1800. Explain Jefferson’s policies as President

Farmers shipped goods down the Mississippi to the port of New Orleans.

Most western settlers were farmers who relied on the Mississippi River.

From there, goods were loaded on ships and carried to markets across the Atlantic.

Page 18: Describe the outcome of the election of 1800. Explain Jefferson’s policies as President

Spain, which controlled the Mississippi River and New Orleans, threatened to close the port to American ships.

Pinckney Treaty

This treaty guaranteed

Americans’ right to ship goods down

the Mississippi River to New Orleans.To prevent this, the

U.S. negotiated the Pinckney Treaty with Spain in 1795.

Page 19: Describe the outcome of the election of 1800. Explain Jefferson’s policies as President

Westerners demanded war with

Spain.

Later, after the treaty had been signed, Spain withdrew Americans’ right to ship goods through New Orleans.

Page 20: Describe the outcome of the election of 1800. Explain Jefferson’s policies as President

Jefferson feared that France would become dominant in America, as it was becoming in Europe.

If this happened, westward expansion of

the United States would be blocked.

French

territo

ry

To make matters worse, Jefferson learned that Spain had secretly given its Louisiana Territory to France.

Page 21: Describe the outcome of the election of 1800. Explain Jefferson’s policies as President

Jefferson decided to try to buy New Orleans from the French.

He sent James Monroe and Robert Livingston to Paris to make a deal.

When they arrived in France, they discovered that the situation had shifted yet again.

Page 22: Describe the outcome of the election of 1800. Explain Jefferson’s policies as President

Without Haiti, France would have trouble defending Louisiana in the event of a war.

The French had been driven from their colony on Haiti.

Page 23: Describe the outcome of the election of 1800. Explain Jefferson’s policies as President

Also, war between France and Britain was looming.

Napoleon needed money for the war.

Britain France

Page 24: Describe the outcome of the election of 1800. Explain Jefferson’s policies as President

Because of France’s situation, Monroe and Livingston received a surprising offer.

France offered to sell the entire Louisiana Territory to the United States.

LouisianaNew Orleans

Page 25: Describe the outcome of the election of 1800. Explain Jefferson’s policies as President

Jefferson hesitated to approve the purchase.

In the end, Jefferson decided that the purchase was constitutional because the President is able to make treaties with foreign countries.

Was it constitutional?

Page 26: Describe the outcome of the election of 1800. Explain Jefferson’s policies as President

After buying the Louisiana Territory in 1803, Thomas Jefferson was eager to have it explored and mapped.

Page 27: Describe the outcome of the election of 1800. Explain Jefferson’s policies as President

In 1803, Jefferson convinced Congress to fund a western expedition.

Meriwether Lewis

He chose two army officers to lead the exploration.

William Clark

Page 28: Describe the outcome of the election of 1800. Explain Jefferson’s policies as President

Goals of the western expedition

Report back on the natural features of the

region.

Look for a waterway from the Mississippi to the Pacific

Ocean.

Make contact

with Native Americans.

Page 29: Describe the outcome of the election of 1800. Explain Jefferson’s policies as President

Lewis and Clark left St. Louis in the spring of 1804 and explored the northern part of the Louisiana Territory.

Page 30: Describe the outcome of the election of 1800. Explain Jefferson’s policies as President

Lewis and Clark’s expedition lasted for over two years.

July 1804 August 1804 October 1804

The party reached the mouth of the Platte River,

which feeds into the Missouri

River.

The expedition followed the

Missouri River from St. Louis to the

Rocky Mountains.

Page 31: Describe the outcome of the election of 1800. Explain Jefferson’s policies as President

July 1804 August 1804 October 1804

They met with Native

Americans for the first time.

The Americans promised to give the tribes military

support and trading rights in exchange

for peace.

Page 32: Describe the outcome of the election of 1800. Explain Jefferson’s policies as President

July 1804 August 1804 October 1804

They camped in what is now

North Dakota for the winter.

They were joined by Sacagawea, a

Shoshone translator.

Page 33: Describe the outcome of the election of 1800. Explain Jefferson’s policies as President

August 1805 November 1805 March 1806

The party reached the continental

divide.

They did not find a waterway to the

Pacific. Instead, they had to navigate

rapids in their canoes.

Page 34: Describe the outcome of the election of 1800. Explain Jefferson’s policies as President

August 1805 November 1805 March 1806

They reached the Pacific

Ocean by way of the Columbia

River.

They began the return journey,

which took about half a

year.

Page 35: Describe the outcome of the election of 1800. Explain Jefferson’s policies as President

The journey of Lewis and Clark led many Americans to feel a sense of duty to expand west.

Page 36: Describe the outcome of the election of 1800. Explain Jefferson’s policies as President

From 1805 to 1807, Zebulon Pike explored the southern part of the Louisiana Territory.

Page 37: Describe the outcome of the election of 1800. Explain Jefferson’s policies as President

Pike’s reports increased U.S. interest in the region.

Pike headed west to the Rocky Mountains.

Partway up a mountain, he was forced to turn back.

Today, this mountain is known as Pike’s Peak.

Rocky Mountains

Pike’s Peak

Pike returned home through Spanish New Mexico.

Page 38: Describe the outcome of the election of 1800. Explain Jefferson’s policies as President

• Discuss how the United States defeated the Barbary pirates.

• Explain how war in Europe hurt American trade.

• Discuss the causes and effects of the Embargo Act.

• Identify the events leading up to the Battle of Tippecanoe.

Objectives

Page 39: Describe the outcome of the election of 1800. Explain Jefferson’s policies as President

Terms and People

• tribute – money paid by one country to another in return for protection

• Stephen Decatur – led a group of American sailors in a battle to protect the warship Philadelphia against pirates

• embargo – a government order that forbids foreign trade

• smuggle – the act of illegally importing or exporting goods

Page 40: Describe the outcome of the election of 1800. Explain Jefferson’s policies as President

Terms and People (continued)

• Tecumseh – organized western Native American tribes to resist American expansion

• William Henry Harrison – governor of the Indiana Territory who sent soldiers to fight Native Americans at the Battle of Tippecanoe

Page 41: Describe the outcome of the election of 1800. Explain Jefferson’s policies as President

How did Jefferson respond to threats to the security of the nation?

Trade with Europe was critical to the American economy.

United States

Europe

crops and natural resources

manufactured goods

Page 42: Describe the outcome of the election of 1800. Explain Jefferson’s policies as President

Pirates from the North African Barbary States began attacking American ships.

America paid money to the rulers of the Barbary States.

The Barbary pirates stopped attacking American ships.

At first, America paid tribute, as other nations did.

Page 43: Describe the outcome of the election of 1800. Explain Jefferson’s policies as President

Pirates from the Barbary State of Tripoli captured the American ship, Philadelphia.

Jefferson stopped paying tribute. He sent warships to protect American merchant ships.

American sailors led by Stephen Decatur burned the Philadelphia so the pirates could not use it.

This victory and others inspired confidence in America’s ability to deal with foreign threats.

Page 44: Describe the outcome of the election of 1800. Explain Jefferson’s policies as President

A greater threat to America came from Britain and France.

United States

In 1803, Britain and France were at war. The United States remained neutral and profited by trading with both nations.

France Britain

Page 45: Describe the outcome of the election of 1800. Explain Jefferson’s policies as President

Britain and France weakened each other by cutting off each other’s foreign trade.

France seized American ships trading with Britain.

BritainFrance

Britain did the same to ships trading with France.

U.S.

U.S.

Page 46: Describe the outcome of the election of 1800. Explain Jefferson’s policies as President

Once again, Britain used impressment to gather soldiers for the war with France.

Thousands of Americans were forced to serve in the British navy.

Page 47: Describe the outcome of the election of 1800. Explain Jefferson’s policies as President

Jefferson used a peaceful method to force Britain and France to respect American neutrality.

Jefferson predicted that the embargo would stop Britain and France from attacking American ships.

He imposed an embargo on American ships sailing to any foreign port.

foreign trade

Page 48: Describe the outcome of the election of 1800. Explain Jefferson’s policies as President

American exports

declined.

The embargo hurt America in many ways.

Prices of American crops declined.

Many Americans lost

their jobs.

Merchants turned to smuggling to survive.

embargo

Page 49: Describe the outcome of the election of 1800. Explain Jefferson’s policies as President

Congress repealed the Embargo Act in 1809, just before Jefferson left office.

Congress passed a new law that reopened trade with all countries except France and Britain.

America would reopen trade with those countries when they started respecting America’s neutrality.

Page 50: Describe the outcome of the election of 1800. Explain Jefferson’s policies as President

As American settlers moved west, they took over Native American lands.

Also during this period, tens of thousands of American settlers moved westward.

Page 51: Describe the outcome of the election of 1800. Explain Jefferson’s policies as President

• Many died from new diseases.

• They lost their hunting grounds.

• Animals they hunted were driven away.

• The power of their leaders declined.

Native Americans suffered from this expansion.

Page 52: Describe the outcome of the election of 1800. Explain Jefferson’s policies as President

Shawnee leader Tecumseh organized the western tribes into a league to resist settlement.

western tribesTecumseh U.S. expansion

Page 53: Describe the outcome of the election of 1800. Explain Jefferson’s policies as President

William Henry Harrison took action against Tecumseh’s activities.

Harrison sent soldiers against Shawnee villages while Tecumseh was away. Tippecanoe

River

Page 54: Describe the outcome of the election of 1800. Explain Jefferson’s policies as President

However, Native Americans never regained their strength after the Battle of Tippecanoe.

Tecumseh and his allies continued their opposition to western settlement.

In the Battle of Tippecanoe, Harrison defeated the Native Americans.

Page 55: Describe the outcome of the election of 1800. Explain Jefferson’s policies as President

Section Review

Know It, Show It QuizQuickTake Quiz

Page 56: Describe the outcome of the election of 1800. Explain Jefferson’s policies as President

As American settlers moved west, they took over Native American lands.

Also during this period, tens of thousands of American settlers moved westward.

Page 57: Describe the outcome of the election of 1800. Explain Jefferson’s policies as President

• Many died from new diseases.

• They lost their hunting grounds.

• Animals they hunted were driven away.

• The power of their leaders declined.

Native Americans suffered from this expansion.

Page 58: Describe the outcome of the election of 1800. Explain Jefferson’s policies as President

Shawnee leader Tecumseh organized the western tribes into a league to resist settlement.

western tribesTecumseh U.S. expansion

Page 59: Describe the outcome of the election of 1800. Explain Jefferson’s policies as President

William Henry Harrison took action against Tecumseh’s activities.

Harrison sent soldiers against Shawnee villages while Tecumseh was away. Tippecanoe

River

Page 60: Describe the outcome of the election of 1800. Explain Jefferson’s policies as President

However, Native Americans never regained their strength after the Battle of Tippecanoe.

Tecumseh and his allies continued their opposition to western settlement.

In the Battle of Tippecanoe, Harrison defeated the Native Americans.

Page 61: Describe the outcome of the election of 1800. Explain Jefferson’s policies as President

What were the causes and effects of the War of 1812?

Tension with Britain was high when James Madison took office in 1809.

Britain armed Native Americans…

…and continued impressment of U.S. sailors.

American anger toward

Britain

Page 62: Describe the outcome of the election of 1800. Explain Jefferson’s policies as President

Many Americans felt a new sense of American nationalism at this time.

In 1810, nationalists Henry Clay and John C. Calhoun joined the House of Representatives.

They and their supporters were called war hawks. They supported war with Britain.

Page 63: Describe the outcome of the election of 1800. Explain Jefferson’s policies as President

The British vowed to continue impressment.

Relations with Britain worsened steadily in early 1812.

In June 1812, Congress declared war on Britain.

Native Americans began new attacks on settlers.

Page 64: Describe the outcome of the election of 1800. Explain Jefferson’s policies as President

The war did not come at a good time for the British, who were still at war in Europe.

However, Britain refused to meet American demands to avoid war.

America Britain France

Page 65: Describe the outcome of the election of 1800. Explain Jefferson’s policies as President

Americans were confident that they would win the war. However, the U.S. was not prepared.

Jefferson’s spending cuts had weakened the military.

The navy had only 16 warships ready for action.

The army had fewer than 7,000 soldiers.

Page 66: Describe the outcome of the election of 1800. Explain Jefferson’s policies as President

The War of 1812 was fought on several fronts.

One important area was along the Atlantic coast.

Page 67: Describe the outcome of the election of 1800. Explain Jefferson’s policies as President

In August 1812, the USS Constitution defeated the British warship Guerrière in the North Atlantic.

The ship’s thick wooden hull earned it the nickname “Old Ironsides.”

Page 68: Describe the outcome of the election of 1800. Explain Jefferson’s policies as President

Despite the victory of the Constitution, Britain was able to set up a blockade of the American coast.

Britain had closed off all American ports by the war’s end.

Page 69: Describe the outcome of the election of 1800. Explain Jefferson’s policies as President

The Great Lakes and the Mississippi River were also important fronts.

Page 70: Describe the outcome of the election of 1800. Explain Jefferson’s policies as President

In July 1812, the British defeated American troops in Canada. They captured over 2,000 U.S. soldiers.

Both sides won key battles during the war in the West.

In 1813, U.S. troops led by Oliver Hazard Perry won control of Lake Erie at the Battle of Put-In-Bay.

Page 71: Describe the outcome of the election of 1800. Explain Jefferson’s policies as President

Oliver Hazard Perry’s victory at Lake Erie was a key victory for the Americans.

The British were forced to retreat back into Canada.

U.S. troops pursued and defeated the British in the Battle of the Thames.

Page 72: Describe the outcome of the election of 1800. Explain Jefferson’s policies as President

Native Americans suffered defeat both in Canada and in the South.

In March 1814, U.S. troops led by Andrew Jackson defeated Creek warriors at the Battle of Horseshoe Bend, in Georgia.

The treaty that ended the

fighting forced the Creeks to

give up millions of acres of land.

Page 73: Describe the outcome of the election of 1800. Explain Jefferson’s policies as President

In 1814, the British defeated Napoleon.

This allowed Britain to send many more troops to fight against America.

America FranceBritainBritain

Page 74: Describe the outcome of the election of 1800. Explain Jefferson’s policies as President

Many New Englanders opposed the war, because the British blockade was hurting their trade.

As the war dragged on, Federalists expressed their opposition by calling it “Mr. Madison’s War.”

Page 75: Describe the outcome of the election of 1800. Explain Jefferson’s policies as President

In 1814, opposition was so high that delegates at the Hartford Convention suggested that New England secede from the United States.

United States

New England

Page 76: Describe the outcome of the election of 1800. Explain Jefferson’s policies as President

The British made their final attacks in 1814.

In August 1814, they attacked Washington, D.C.

The President fled; the capitol was burned.

On September 13, they moved on to Fort McHenry in Baltimore.

Americans won this battle, which also inspired the U.S. national anthem.

Page 77: Describe the outcome of the election of 1800. Explain Jefferson’s policies as President

Britain had tired of war. On Christmas Eve, 1814 the two sides signed the Treaty of Ghent.

Before this news reached the U.S., Americans won a final victory in the Battle of New Orleans in January 1815.

Treaty of Ghent

• Ended the war

• Returned things to the way they had been before the war

Page 78: Describe the outcome of the election of 1800. Explain Jefferson’s policies as President

Americans felt pride

and confidence.

The United States had

secured independence from Britain once and

for all.

The Hartford

Convention ended

quickly.

Effects of the End of the War of

1812