APUSH Period 4 textbook

M
1800-1812 
Chapter 11
• Election of 1800- Adams Federalists wanted strong 
central government, Jeffersonians guardians of 
states’ rights and agrarian values 
• Federalists handicapped by Alien and Sedition Acts 
• Split with Hamiltonians 
• Preparation for war caused debt to swell, new taxes 
• Federalists concentrate on Jefferson’s personal life 
to defeat D-R’S
• 1800-Jefferson defeats Adams, 
Burr and others 
• Controversial election, went to 
House of Reps. to break tie 
• Support from South and West 
• States where there was 
universal manhood suffrage 
• VP Aaron Burr 
• Jefferson claimed election was 
“revolution” 
• Return to spirit of 1776 
• Seen as a mandate to check 
growth of gov’t power 
• Peaceful transfer of power 
remarkable achievement
• Jefferson takes office in 
Washington, D.C. 
• Still a swampy, muddy backwater 
• First party overturn in American 
history 
• Simple, frugal style contrast to 
previous presidents 
• Once in office saw political reality, 
had to reverse principles 
• Able politician, used personal 
charm to keep party together
• Jefferson kept most Federalist 
programs, viewed as a moderate 
• Got rid of Alien and Sedition Laws 
• Removed excise tax, cost government 
millions of dollars a year 
• Albert Gallatin (Sec. of Treasury), 
wanted balanced budget and reduced 
national debt 
• Streamline bureaucracy, turned over 
domestic policy to states 
• Revenue growth came from sale of 
western lands, surge in imports to 
America 
• Jefferson’s true desire for America was 
a nation of farmers (agrarian republic)
• Judiciary Act 1801 passed at the end of 
Adams term 
• Created 16 new federal judgeships 
• Adams and the “m id nig ht jud g e s ” 
• Lifetime appointments upset Jeffersonians, 
wanted to repeal act 
• John Marshall appointed Chief Justice of 
Supreme Court 
• Marshall strong Federalist, committed to 
power of federal government 
• Served 34 years as Chief Justice 
• Shaped American legal tradition more than 
any other figure
Marbury vs. Madison 
• William Marbury one of the midnight 
judges 
• Madison wanted appointment denied 
• Marbury sued government, Marshall 
dismissed case 
• Marshall said Supreme Court was not 
able to use powers of Constitution to 
make appointment 
• Supreme Court became final authority on 
questions of constitutionality (judicial 
review) 
• Established independence of judiciary, 
and separation of powers
• Jefferson wanted to reduce size of 
military 
• Wanted to transcend wars of 
Europe 
• Republicans distrusted large 
armies 
• Realities forced different course of 
action 
• Barbary States (N. Africa) kept 
taking American sailors 
• 1801- Pasha of Tripoli declared war 
on US 
• Jefferson sends in navy, marines 
• 1805- peace treaty signed 
• Jefferson builds American fleet of 
small gunboats 
• Constructed democratically in small 
shipyards
• 1800- French sign secret pact with 
Spanish to regain control of New 
Orleans 
• 1802- Spanish withdraw “right of 
deposit” to Americans 
• Americans in the trans-Mississippi 
area wanted to descend on New 
Orleans 
• US thought it would have to fight 
French to retake New Orleans 
• 1803- Jefferson sends James 
Monroe to buy New Orleans for 
$10 million
• Developments cause Napoleon to 
sell all of Louisiana 
• 1803- Revolt in Santo Domingo 
(Haiti) led by slaves and yellow 
fever defeat French troops 
• Napoleon needed money to fight 
war in Europe, needed cash from 
sale of Louisiana 
• US power might thwart British in 
New World
• French suddenly offer to sell 
all of Louisiana 
• April 1803 treaties signed, 
sold to US for $15 million 
• Doubled size of US 
• Jefferson really did not have 
power to do this (president 
not authorized to make 
treaties) 
• Senators did not complain, 
supported purchase, quickly 
approved action 
• 828,000 sq. mi. 3 cents acre
• Avoided war with France, alliance with 
England 
• Purchase foundation for future 
• It was conquest by purchase, 
imperialism with a democratic face, 
(exception- Indians, Spaniards) 
• Expanded power of federal government 
• Allowed Americans to be isolationist, 
removed last significant European power 
from continent 
• Exploration of Lewis and Clark, Pike 
provided scientific, geographic 
knowledge of region 
• Demonstrated viability of overland route 
to the Pacific
• Feeble reach of government over vast 
territory raised fears of secession and 
foreign intrigue 
• Demonstrated by Aaron Burr 
• Burr dropped from Vice Presidency, 
conspired against government, foiled by 
Hamilton 
• Bur and Hamilton duel, Hamilton killed, 
Burr becomes an outcast 
• 1806- Plots with James Wilkinson (LA 
Territory governor) to create separate 
country of trans-Mississippi west 
• Plan foiled, Burr arrested 
• Not enough evidence to put him on trial, 
flees to Europe
• 1804 Jefferson reelected 
• 1805 Britain and France reign supreme in 
Europe and on the seas 
• Cause problems for American trade 
• British close trade with Europe, unless it 
first stops at British port 
• French seize all merchant vessels 
(including American) 
• Both sides impress American seamen 
• 1807- Che s a p e a ke incident 
• British seize American frigate, demand 
surrender of American sailors 
• Americans refuse and British fire on the 
ship 
• British government admit they are 
wrong 
• American’s upset at incident
• Warring nations in Europe depend on the US (raw 
materials, food) 
• 1807-Jefferson decides to voluntarily cut off 
goods, Embargo Act 
• Forbid goods from US to be exported 
• Hurt American economy (NE- ship p ing , So uth-a 
g ric ultura l p ro duc ts ), cost people jobs 
• Effects worse in US than Europe 
• Smuggling made a comeback, so did Federalist 
party 
• Talk of succession in NE 
• 1809- Act repealed, passed Non-Intercourse Act 
(could trade with all countries except GB and FR), 
policy until 1812 
• Act extremely unpopular 
• Did revive American manufacturing, foundation 
for future industry
• 1808- Jefferson retired after two terms 
• James Madison becomes president 
• Unable to dominate congress, problems within 
Cabinet 
• 1809- Non-Intercourse Act (would expire 
1810), not supported by Congress 
• US realized it could not survive without either 
Britain or France as a trading partner 
• Macon’s Bill No. 2 seemed like American’s 
were giving in on embargoes 
• 1810 France opens trade, British do not 
• Why did they have to? 
• Trade meant end of America neutrality
• 1811- Wa r hawks dominate 
Congress, most from south and 
west 
• Supported military action 
against British 
• Tired of treatment of sailors, 
British interference in trade, 
especially farm products from 
the west headed to Europe 
• Wanted to clear Indians out of 
west (move them to LA 
Territory) 
• Two Shawnee brothers 
Te c um s e h and the Pro phe t, 
formed a confederacy of 
eastern tribes 
• Movement of Indian unity, 
resist white ways
APUSH Period 4 textbook
• Frontiersmen and 
Congressmen thought 
British were behind 
movement 
• 1811- William He nry 
Ha rris o n and army 
attacked and defeated 
Indians at Tippecanoe 
(Indiana) 
• Made Harrison a 
national hero, drove 
Indians into alliance with 
British 
• 1813-Tecumseh dies 
fighting for British
• Spring 1812 Madison sees war as inevitable 
• War hawks want to invade Canada and wipe out British 
base, stop Indian raids 
• Old Northwest –wanted Canada 
• South- wanted Florida 
• Madison wanted to restore confidence in America, years 
of steering a middle course with FR and BR brought 
international ridicule, domestic division 
• June 1812 Madison asks Congress to declare war 
• Vote was sectional- west and south support war, New 
England strongly against war 
• New England refused to send militia into battle, supplied 
British 
• Another war with the world’s most powerful empire
1812-1824 
Chapter 12
• War of 1812 was divisive 
• No national support 
• Unimpressive military outcome 
• Came out of the war with a spirit of nationalism 
• Led to rise in manufacturing, increased power of the 
federal government, development of infrastructure 
• American financial interests turned away from commerce 
and toward manufacturing
• 1812- American army poorly trained, poorly 
led 
• Canada seen as important battleground 
• British weakest there, base for operations 
to agitate Indians 
• American plan for taking Canada was 
poorly conceived at the beginning of the 
war 
• Army pushed back, Canadians were high 
energy, defended country well 
• 1812-1813- American success on water, 
Oliver Hazard Perry on the Great Lakes, 
caused British to withdraw from forts on the 
Great Lakes 
• USS Co ns titutio n, manned by free sailors 
defeats British on the ocean
• 1814- Wars against Napoleon over in 
Europe, British send troops to 
Americas 
• American victory at Lake Champlain, 
saved upper NY and NE 
• Second British force lands in 
Chesapeake Bay, march to 
Washington and burn it down, 
Americans hold firm at Baltimore 
(inspiration for Star Spangled 
Banner) 
• 1815- Major blow at New Orleans, 
Americans led by Andrew Jackson 
defeat British 
• Battle of New Orleans makes 
Jackson a national hero, seen as a 
symbol of national honor 
• Battle fought after peace treaty 
signed
• Negotiations set in motion by Tsar of Russia 
• Met in Ghent, Belgium 
• Led by John Quincy Adams, Henry Clay 
• War weariness of British made them more willing to 
compromise 
• Signed on Christmas Eve 1814 
• Both sides agreed to stop fighting, restore conquered 
territory 
• Neither side won war
• New England remained a problem after the war 
• Minority wanted secession, mostly federalist 
• 1814- Hartford Convention, New England states meet in 
complete secrecy to discuss grievances, seek to right 
wrongs 
• Final report not extreme, wanted financial assistance for lost 
trade, wanted 2/3 vote to declare war admit new states 
• Reflection of lost power of once dominant New England 
• Grievances dismissed in Washington, last gasp of Federalist 
Party
• War of 1812 small war (6,000 killed or wounded) 
• Globally unimportant, huge consequences for United States 
• Showed American resolve to resist what they regarded as wrongs 
• New respect abroad, America was here to stay 
• Reduced sectionalism, led to an upsurge of nationalism across 
country 
• New heroes (Jackson, Harrison) 
• Indians had no British allies, gave up huge areas of land 
• Manufacturing began to grow because of war, less dependent on 
British 
• 1817- Rush-Bagot Treaty limited naval armament on the Great 
Lakes, solved American and British disputes over Oregon 
• Americans began to turn their back on Europe and develop their 
own country
• After war America emerged more 
united 
• National literature (James 
Fennimore Cooper, Washington 
Irving) using American themes, 
scenes (heroic isolation of main 
character, supernatural themes) 
• American painters celebrated 
nature, man was small in the 
paintings 
• Revived Bank of the United States, 
building of a new capital, expansion 
of the army and navy all 
demonstrated new nationalism
• Manufacturing, factories grew 
during the war 
• After war British try to dump 
goods on America 
• Congress passes Tariff of 1816 
(20-25% added value on 
products) 
• Started trend toward more 
protection of American 
products 
• Henry Clay, senator from KY, 
comes up with “American 
System”
• Three main parts: 
1.Strong banking system, allow easy credit 
for business growth 
2.Protective tariff, stimulate manufacturing 
3.Building of roads and canals, bring 
country together, economically and 
politically 
• Had strong support, mainly out west (few 
roads) 
• Hard to get money, funds were 
unconstitutional (1817) 
• Individual states fund improvements (Erie 
Canal) 
• NE did not support federal funds going to 
infrastructure, drain away population
• 1816- James Monroe becomes 
president (part of the Virginia Dynasty) 
• Republican 
• Level headed executive, took goodwill 
tour of US (1817) 
• Issues of his presidency- tariffs, banks, 
sale of public lands, sectional divides 
• Geographic, economic expansion gave 
Americans a sense of nationalism 
• Monroe’s two terms called Era of Good 
Feelings (lasted through early 1820’s) 
because of growing nationalism, limited 
political opposition 
• Was it really?
• 1819- first financial panic (deflation, 
depression, bankruptcies, bank failures, 
unemployment) 
• Get rich quick fever caused by over 
speculation in frontier lands 
• West hardest hit 
• Collapse in cotton prices, land values 
• Speculative banks (wildcat banks) were forced 
by Bank of US to close, easy unregulated 
credit 
• Bank became a financial devil (to south and 
west) 
• Effected poorer classes 
• Led to reform legislation for debtors
• 1791-1819 nine frontier states joined 13 
original states 
• Most entered alternately slave and free 
Appeal for western movement 
• Cheap land (appeal to European immigrants) 
• Land exhaustion in tobacco states 
• Speculators sold land for small down 
payments 
• Removal of Indians 
• Building of new roads 
• Steamboat made river travel easier 
• Land Act 1820 made land cheap (minimum 
1.25 per acre) 
• West had to ally with other sections because 
lack of population, influence
• Sectional tension around slavery grew in this period 
• 1819 Missouri wants admission as a slave state 
• Tallmadge Amendment stipulated no more slaves in Missouri, 
gradual emancipation of slaves already there 
• Slaveholding states angry, saw amendment as threat to sectional 
balance 
• Even in 11 slave, 11 free states, admission would cause imbalance 
• Future of slave system seen as endangered if amendment passed 
• If Congress could abolish slavery would it do so in all states? 
• Moral question raised about evils of slavery 
• Abolitionist did not want spread of slavery
• 1820 bundle of compromises to solve 
Missouri question 
• Henry Clay played a leading role 
• Missouri admitted as a slave state, 
Maine admitted as a free state (kept 
balance) 
• Slavery not permitted north of 36 
degrees 30’ north (southern boundary of 
Missouri) 
• Both sides received something, seen as a 
victory for the south at the time 
• “Great American Desert” seen as not 
suitable for slavery 
• Most southern Congressmen voted against 
compromise 
• Preserved compact of states, for the time 
being
• Nationalism reflected by Supreme Court 
• Decisions bolstered power of federal government, at the 
expense of the states 
• McCulloch vs. Maryland (1819)- used principle of implied 
powers to determine states did not have right to tax Bank 
of US 
• Loose construction interpretation permitted government 
to act for benefit of people 
• Cohens vs. Virginia (1821)- Supreme Court could review 
decisions of state courts 
• Gibbons vs. Ogden (1824)- Constitution said federal 
government only could control commerce, not states
• Another group of decisions protected 
property rights 
• Fletcher vs. Peck- bolstered power of federal 
government saying states could not limit 
property contracts, upheld right of 
Supreme Court to invalidate state laws that 
conflicted with constitution 
• Dartmouth College vs. Woodward-contracts 
protected against state laws, 
chartered corporations part of federal 
control (justified by Commerce clause in 
const.) 
• Supreme Court upheld power of national 
government, checked excesses of states
• Nationalism shaped foreign 
policy 
• John Quincy Adams (Sec. 
Of State) 
• Treaty of 1818 with Britain 
gave US fishing rights off 
coast of Newfoundland 
• Fixed northern boundary of 
Louisiana 
• 10 year joint occupation of 
Oregon 
• Sign of new cooperation 
between British and US
• Florida part of crumbling Spanish 
Empire, Americans already claimed 
West Fla 
• Latin American revolutions 1816- 
1818, cause region to loose troops 
• Andrew Jackson enters region to 
capture slaves, punish Indians 
• 1818 Jackson conquers Fla, claims 
it for US 
• Many in D.C. think Jackson has 
overstepped his power, except 
Adams 
• Adams-Onis Treaty 1819 gives FL 
to US, US abandons claim to 
Texas, fixes southern boundary of 
LA
• After Napoleon Europe returned to strong 
monarchies 
• Alarmed Americans 
• Russia pushed south out of Alaska 
• Latin American revolutions crushed by European 
powers 
• British and Americans had benefitted from open 
trade with these countries 
• British ask Americans to declare joint resolution 
renouncing European powers from interfering 
with Latin America
• Adams did not trust British, did not 
want to tie America’s hands 
• Alliance would hinder American 
expansion 
• Figured British navy would keep 
ports open in L.A. 
• 1823 Adams starts planning 
Monroe Doctrine with president 
• Delivered in annual message to 
Congress 
• 2 goals 
1 . No n c o lo niz a tio n 
2 . No n inte rve ntio n 
• Era of colonization was over, keep 
what they had but could not 
acquire more
• Hard to enforce because of small military 
• Made little difference to Latin American Republics 
• Primarily defending itself from future invasion, looking out 
for American self preservation 
• Did not become important until 1845 (Mexican War) 
• Never law, just a statement of policy 
• Expression of new American nationalism 
• Deepened American isolationism, warned Old World to 
stay away
1824-1860
1825-1840
• Early 1820’s sectional differences 
emerge after the Panic of 1819 and 
the Missouri Compromise 
• New types of political parties 
emerged, became accepted 
• Emergence of two party political 
system 
• Emergence of new type of voter: 
fewer property qualifications means 
more people eligible to vote (less 
restriction) 
• New styles of campaigns, banners, 
badges, politicking 
• 1828 new party, Democrats 
• 1830’s Whig Party emerges 
• Two party system part of checks 
and balances of political power 
• More people began to vote (78% 
in1840)
1824- Last of the old style elections 
Adams (MA), Clay (KY), Wm. Crawford (GA), 
Jackson (TN) all running for president 
Jackson strongest personal appeal, support 
from the West 
Won a majority of the vote, did not win in 
electoral college 
Clay (also Speaker of the House), threw 
support behind Adams 
Clay hated Jackson (from 1818 Florida foray) 
Did not like Adams either, but both were 
nationalist
• 1825 vote in House gave 
election to Adams, Clay 
becomes Sec. of State (seen 
as stepping stone to 
presidency) 
• Supporters of Jackson called it 
a c o rrup t ba rg a in 
• Condemned Clay 
• No positive evidence of 
“corrupt bargain”, Clay 
becomes Sec. of State 
• Changed political system, no 
more elections behind closed 
doors
• Adams could be an irritable loner 
• Great Sec. of State, poor president 
• Not good at politics 
• Did not have popular support 
• Kept people in office, didn't do political 
favors for supporters 
• Nationalistic views and ideas in contrast 
with national mood turning towards 
sectionalism and state’s rights 
• Southerners thought he might take infringe 
on their “peculiar institution” 
• Land policies and Indian policies turned off 
Westerners
• By 1828 Democrat-Republicans 
split into two groups 
• National Republicans supported 
Adams 
• Republicans supported Jackson 
• Jackson seem as champion of 
common man 
• Mudslinging, accusations in 
election of 1828 
• Vote split along sectional lines 
• West and South supported 
Jackson 
• New England supported Adams 
• Vote split in rest of country but 
Jackson won the electoral vote 
handily 
• Demonstrated shift of political 
power from eastern seaboard to 
emerging western states
• Jackson from humble beginnings 
• Force of personality and power of leadership led to rise to national 
prominence 
• First president from the west, frontier aristocrat, slave owner 
• Election seen as rise of “peoples champion” 
• Wild inauguration, supporters flooded Washington, and wrecked White 
House 
• Conservatives saw this as the rise of the dreaded democratic mob
• Under Jackson spoils system used 
on a large scale (rewarding 
supporters with political jobs) 
• Washington was due for an 
overturn in the established powers, 
many had been around since the 
early 1800’s 
• Rewarding cronies led to scandal, 
but it was an important element to 
the development of the two party 
system 
• Promise of “spoils” led to party 
loyalty instead of economic, class 
and geographic loyalties
• Tariffs had protected American Industry against 
European competition 
• Invited retaliatory tariffs against American goods 
• Tariff raised in 1824, 1828 
• Southerners thought tariffs discriminated against 
them 
• Tariff of 1828 called “Tariff of Abominations”, “Black 
Tariffs” 
• Southerners sold goods on world market, 
unprotected by tariffs, forced to buy manufactured 
good in a market protected by tariffs 
• Northeast was having a boom in manufacturing, how 
was the South doing? 
• Tariff was an easy scapegoat
• These feeling were heightened by the fear 
that the federal government would interfere 
with slavery 
• Missouri Compromise, Denmark Vesey 
slave rebellion (1822), mounting pressure 
in support of abolition (in US and abroad) 
• Tariff seen as issue to the South as a way 
to take a stand for states’ rights 
• South Carolina took the lead 
• 1828 The So uth Ca ro lina Ex p o s itio n 
secretly written by John Calhoun (vice 
president) 
• Wrote that tariff was unjust and 
unconstitutional, proposed that states 
should nullify tariff within their own borders
• Tariff of 1832 tipped balance in SC to support 
nullification 
• Delegates declared tariff null and void in state 
• Threatened to take state out of the Union 
• No other Southern states actively supported SC 
actions 
• Jackson would not permit defiance, dispatched 
military reinforcements to state to enforce, 
collect tariff 
• Jackson endorsed tariff 
• Henry Clay stepped in to broker a compromise
• Compromise- Tariff Bill of 1833- 
would reduce tariff 10% over 8 years 
• Debate broke down over sectional 
lines 
• South favored compromise, Jackson 
would not have to use the military 
• Force Bill also passed at the same 
time, authorized president to use 
military to collect tariff 
• SC delegates met again repealed 
ordinance of nullification, but they 
nullified force bill 
• Only winner was Clay, seen as hero 
that saved the country
• Since 1790’s American policy toward Indians, they were recognized as 
separate nations 
• Acquired land through treaties, terms violated regularly as Anglo 
settlement pushed west 
• Some tribes assimilated into American culture, some resisted it 
• Cherokee of GA, NC assimilated into American ways (part of 5 Civilized 
Tribes- Creek, Choctaw, Seminole, Chickasaw) 
• Cherokee embraced civilization- written constitution, written legal code, 
alphabet 
• Some were even slave holders 
• Jacksonians committed to Western Expansion, viewed Native 
Americans as in the way 
• Jackson, like many Westerners thought Indians needed to be removed 
east of the Mississippi, open land to white settlement 
• 1830- Congress passes Indian Removal Act, appropriated money to 
remove Indians to permanent reservation west of the Mississippi (act 
supported by Jackson, Southerners and Westerners)
• 1828- Georgia Legislature declared 
Cherokee tribal council illegal, 
asserted jurisdiction over their lands 
• Cherokees appealed to Supreme 
Court (two separate cases) 
• Court upheld rights of Indians 
• Jackson disagreed with the 
Supreme Court, ordered removal of 
Indians (“Ma rsha ll m a d e his 
d e c is io n, no w le t him e nfo rc e it”) 
• Uprooted more than 100,000 
Indians, westward movement known 
as the Trail of Tears 
• 1836 Bureau of Indian Affairs 
established to administer relations 
with Native Americans 
• As settlers pushed west the 
permanent frontier for Indians 
gradually shrank and many other 
guarantees went up in smoke
• Sauk and Fox Indians in 
Wisconsin and Illinois resisted 
eviction 
• Led by Black Hawk the rebellion 
was crushed by American troops 
in 1832 (Black Hawk War) 
• Seminoles waged a bitter guerilla 
war for seven years in the 
swampy Everglades (1835-1842) 
• Leader, Osceola was captured 
under a flag of truce, some fled 
deeper into the swamps, 4/5’s 
were moved to Oklahoma
• Jackson distrusted big business and the Bank of 
the US 
• Why? 
• Banks minted gold and silver coins 
• Paper money printed by private banks (value 
fluctuated with health of bank and amount of 
money printed 
• Bank of US source of credit, principle depository 
of federal money, source of credit and stability 
• Acted like another branch of government
• Bank not accountable to people, existed to 
make a profit for investors, seen as against 
“American "way 
• 1832 Bank War begins 
• Webster, Clay push for recharter of Bank 
to make it a political issue in election of 
1832 
• If passed and signed by Jackson it would 
alienate his western followers, if vetoed he 
would loose support of wealthy, influential 
easterners 
• Jackson vetoed, declared bank 
unconstitutional, found it harmful to nation 
• Another instance of Jackson regarding 
executive branch superior to judicial 
branch 
• Jackson expands power of executive 
branch
• Clay and Jackson squared off in election of 
1832 
• First time third party ran, Anti-Masonic 
Party 
• Supporters in NY, Middle states, New 
England 
• Against secret societies, support from 
evangelical Protestants (use political power 
to bring moral and religious change) 
• Jacksonians against government 
interference in social and economic life 
• First use of nominating conventions 
• Clay had support from businessmen and 
eastern newspapers 
• Jackson wins election handily (219-49 in 
electoral college
• Charter for Bank of US expire 1836 
• Fear of Biddle to bring back bank, Jackson 
wants to take it out 
• 1833 Jackson removes federal deposits, bleed 
bank dry 
• Had to reshuffle cabinet to find people to 
support him 
• Biddle calls in loans from Bank to show 
importance, causes financial panic 
• Jackson places funds in state banks (“pet 
banks”), banks with pro Jackson sympathies 
• Banks flood country with paper money, 
currency becomes unreliable 
• 1836- Specie Circular required public lands to be 
purchased with hard currency (gold, silver 
currency) 
• Put brakes on land speculation, sales 
• Causes financial panic and crash in 1837
• 1830’s new political party emerges- Whigs 
• Hatred of Jackson was what they rallied around 
• Whigs were led by Clay, Calhoun, Webster 
• Attracted groups alienated by Jackson- supporters of 
American System, southern states righter's, northern 
industrialists, absorbed evangelical protestants from 
Anti-Masonic Party 
• Progressive in support of active government programs 
and reforms, called for internal improvements 
• Supported prisons, asylums, public schools and the 
market economy 
• Claimed to be defenders of common man (stole from 
Democrats)
• Martin Van Buren chosen as 
Jackson’s successor 
• Whigs don’t nominate single 
candidate, many candidates for 
regional appeal 
• Wanted to put election in hands of 
House 
• Van Buren won election easily 
• Van Buren inherited problems 
over which he had no control 
• Did not have the force of 
personality that Jackson had to 
deal with problems 
• Depression, possible war with 
Canada, depression
• Panic 1837 caused by over-speculation on lands, 
borrowed money based on shaky currency and wildcat 
banks 
Causes 
• Jackson’s policies on the Bank of the US 
• Rising grain prices 
• British Banks calling in loans 
• Caused commodity prices to drop, land sales to fall off, 
factories closed, high unemployment and bank closures
• Whigs tried to make government more active to end 
depression (expansion of credit, tariffs), Van Buren kept 
government out of economy 
• Van Buren tried to help economy through the “Divorce 
Bill”, keeping government out of banking by establishing 
an independent treasury, caused credit to shrink 
• Not popular 
• 1840- Passed by Congress, repealed next year, revived 
in 1846 and continued until the Civil War
• 1840 Van Buren runs again for 
president, Whigs get behind one 
candidate William Henry Harrison 
• Harrison, war hero and Indian fighter 
• Views on issues vaguely known 
• Played as a “common man”, really from 
old Virginia family 
• Selected John Tyler as VP 
• Plan was to drive corrupt Jacksonians 
from White House 
• Harrison won, time for Whig ideas of 
government action to stimulate the 
economy
• 1840’s American politics adopt populist, democratic style 
• Old aristocracy seen as bad 
• Politicians wanted to claim humble beginnings, politicians had to 
adopt “common touch” 
• Resulted in formation of vigorous and durable two party system 
• Both parties grew out of Jeffersonian Republicanism 
• Democrats were for the liberty of the individual, state’s rights, federal 
restraint 
• Whigs supported national bank, protective tariffs, internal 
improvements and moral reforms 
• Both mass based, appeal led to compromise within the parties, kept 
extreme views from becoming dominant, reduced sectionalism
APUSH Period 4 textbook
1790-1860
• Americans constantly pushed west, cheap land 
opportunity 
• First part of 19th century new immigrants joined 
movement (Irish, Germans) 
• New machinery allowed crops to be cultivated quicker, 
goods produced faster, expectations for workers changed 
• New methods of transportation allowed goods, people 
and products to move quicker 
• Origins of market oriented economy
 Jackson symbolized the rise of trans-Appalachia 
 Raw frontier seen as typically American 
 1850 half of all Americans under 30 
 Seen as restless energetic, always on the move 
 Demographic center of America had move steadily westward 
 Reality of pioneer life was grim (especially for women) 
 Rugged individualism became part of national character- Was this 
true?
• People molded physical environment 
• Left behind fields destroyed by tobacco cultivation 
• Planted “Kentucky Bluegrass” from charred 
canfields, 
• 1820-1840 trappers, mountain men had decimated 
beaver across the West 
• Buffalo, sea otters were hunted into near extension 
for their fur 
• Ec o lo g ic a l Im p e ria lism - exploitation of Americas 
natural bounty
• Many Americans revered nature 
• American wilderness seen as unique to many 
Europeans 
• Wild unspoiled land one of the nations defining 
attributed- move west you can always start over 
• Inspired literature, painting and by the end of the 
1800’s a conservation movement
• Population doubling every 25 years 
• By 1860 there were 33 states, 4th most populous country 
in the world 
• Urban growth- by 1860 there were 43 cities with more 
than 20,000 (1790 only 3) 
• Urbanization brought problems (inadequate public 
services, poor housing) 
• 1823 Boston developed first sewer system, 1842 NYC 
first piped in water supply
• By 1840’s population growth comes from 
immigration 
• Most Irish and German 
• What caused them to come to America? 
• Europe had surplus of population, running out of 
room 
• America seen as land of opportunity 
• Freedom of European class system 
• Abundant, cheap land 
• No compulsory military service
• Mid 1840’s potato crop failure 
pushes many out of Ireland 
• 1830-1860 2 million Irish come to 
the United States 
• Newcomers too poor to buy land, 
stayed in cities on eastern 
seaboard (NYC largest Irish city in 
the world) 
• Irish had to take worst jobs, 
poorest housing- viewed as a 
social menace 
• Competed with African Americans 
for jobs (Irish did not support 
abolition) 
• Formed Irish only clubs (Ancient 
Order of Hibernians, Molly 
Maguire's)
• Irish acquired property and 
improved lives in America 
• Politicians wanted to 
cultivate Irish vote 
• Many entered politics and 
gained control of political 
machines (NYC Tammany 
Hall) 
• Dominated police 
departments
• 1830-1860 over 1.5 million Germans immigrated to US 
• Uprooted farmers, political refugees 
• German immigrants better off than Irish, had more 
money 
• Moved to Middle West, established farms 
• Less political power, widely scattered population
• Germans more educated than 
Irish, supported public schools 
• Were not supporters of slavery 
• Fled militarism of Europe, 
became isolationists 
• Language, culture viewed as 
suspicious by many 
• Settled in colonies, separate from 
surrounding community 
• Brought Old World drinking habits 
(brought beer to America)
• Immigration inflamed anti-foreign sentiment 
• Feared they would take jobs, worried about “popish” 
newcomers 
• 1840’s Immigrants establish separate Catholic school 
system, protect children from Protestant indoctrination 
• By 1850 Catholics largest single religious group in 
America
• “Nativists” rally for political action, form 
Know-Nothing Party 1849 
• Wanted restrictions on immigration, 
easier ways to deport “aliens” 
• Promoted literature to expose foreigners 
(most of it untrue) 
• Mass violence 1834, Catholic convent 
burned 
• 1844 Philadelphia nativists, Irish 
Catholics riot 
Effects of immigration 
a. made America more pluralistic society 
b. Growth of economy really did not 
jeopardize wealth of others 
c. Labor of immigrants helped fuel economic 
expansion
• 1750 Industrial Revolution begins in England 
with mass production of textiles 
• End of muscle, animal power beginning of 
machine power 
• Slow to catch on in US cheap land, labor scarce 
• Capital in short supply, raw materials in America 
were untapped 
• 1840’s rise of immigration caused labor pool to 
grow
• Samuel Slater from England 
steals plans for first textile 
machines 
• 1791 first efficient machine for 
spinning cotton 
• 1793 Eli Whitney invents first 
cotton gin (separates cotton 
fiber from seeds, 50X more 
effective than human labor) 
• Cha ng e d his to ry o f Am e ric a 
m a d e c o tto n g ro wing p ro fita ble 
e nte rp ris e
• Slavery had been dying out 
• Invention of cotton gin caused more acres to be 
cleared -Cotton Kingdom moved westward (into 
AL, MS) 
• Cotton sent to mills in New England 
• Factories were established in Northeast 
• Little manufacturing in South, capital tied up in 
land and slaves 
New England ideal for industrialization 
a) soil too poor for farming, 
b) dense population, markets available, 
c) shipping allowed for export of finished products 
d) large poor immigrant population for labor 
e) rapid rivers good for water powered mills
• Consequences of embargo 1807 and War of 1812 was 
capital kept in America 
• Used to invest in American manufacturing 
• After war British flood America with cheap goods, Tariff of 
1816 attempts to protect American manufacturing 
• Eli Whitney develops idea of mass produced 
interchangeable parts for muskets, by 1850 became the 
basis of mass production 
• Mo s t fa c to rie s lo c a te d in the no rthe a s t (indus tria l p la nt o f 
Am e ric a )
• 1846 Isaac Singer, Elias Howe invent 
sewing machine (m a s s p ro duc tio n o f 
c lo the s ) 
• Patents increased 306 in 1800, 28,000 
1860 
• Legal status of business organizations 
changed 
• Limited liability principle allowed 
investors to invest in companies 
• Companies could concentrate capital 
• Investment capital companies used in 
textiles, railroads, insurance and 
banking 
• 1844 Invention of telegraph (Samuel 
Morse) brought world closer together 
(revolutionized exchange of information)
• Industrial Revolution end of 
age of close personal 
relationships with boss 
• Spindle Cities grew up around 
factories to house workers 
• Hours long, wages low, poor 
working conditions 
• Could not form labor unions to 
improve life at work (criminal 
conspiracy) 
• Child labor a huge problem
APUSH Period 4 textbook
• Wages did rise (1820’s-1830’s), growth of middle class 
Americans 
• More workers could vote 
• Supported Democratic Party of Jackson 
• Fight against all forms of privilege (Bank of US), 
reflected anxiety about new capitalist economy 
• 1840 Van Buren reduces work day for federal workers, 
states eventually followed 
• Workers gained right to strike but usually lost 
• They could easily be replaced by workers “fresh off the 
boat” from Europe 
• Co m m o nwe a lth vs . Hunt (1842), Mass; unions were not 
conspiracies
• Women left farms, went to work in factories 
• Gave them greater economic independence 
• Lowell Mills (Mass.) seen as a model 
workplace for “factory girls” 
• Factory provided income, protected morality 
• Overall employment opportunities for 
women were scarce 
• Influence of Harriet Beecher Stowe, many 
women became teachers (feminized 
profession) 
• Vast majority of working women single
• Women married, left jobs 
• Work as wives and mothers called “cult of domesticity”, 
glorified functions as a homemaker 
A.Home was women’s sphere 
B.Love determined choice of spouse 
C.Nuclear family became closer 
D.Home was a refuge from the industrial world 
E.Number of children per family dropped 
• Domestic feminism in the home, growing power and 
influence of women 
• New ideas of raising children, family more child centered, 
affectionate 
• Children raised by morals of “modern family” were good 
citizens
• Farms were changing the West 
• Pioneer families planted corn, lots of it 
• Staple market item, had many uses 
• Western goods floated down Mississippi 
River 
• Fed the south 
• Western Farmers wanted to cultivate 
more acres but soil hard to break up 
• 1837 John Deere introduces steel plow 
• 1830’s Cyrus McCormick introduces 
mechanical reaper, could do the work of 5 
men 
• Farmers could plant more land, rise of 
large scale cash crop agriculture for 
region 
• Farmers became businesspeople, looked 
east for a new market for their crops
• Need for cheap and efficient carriers 
of products 
• 1790’s Lancaster Turnpike first 
highway (charged toll and made a 
huge profit) 
• Turnpike building spurred western 
development, allowed for easy 
access to the West 
• Use of federal funds to build roads 
opposed by state’s righter's and 
Eastern states (fear of loss of 
population) 
• 1811 Federal government builds 
Cumberland Road (finished 1852)
• 1807 Robert Fulton launches 
steamboat craze 
• Steamboats could travel upstream, 
against the current 
• Navigable rivers two way arteries of 
transportation 
1820- sixty steamboats on Mississippi 
River 
1860- over 1,000 
• Steamboats opened up West and 
South 
• Goods could be shipped out cheaply, 
quickly 
• Bring in manufactured goods 
• New population centers grew up along 
the banks
• Canal cutting craze 
• 1817-1825 New York financed 
building of Erie Ca na l, linked 
Great Lakes and Hudson River 
• Cost of shipping and time of 
transportation dropped 
• Value of land along canal went 
up, new cities (Rochester, 
Syracuse) 
• Interior cities population 
exploded (Chicago, Detroit, 
Cleveland) 
• Settlers migrated from 
northeast to Midwest
• Railroad not limited by 
geography 
• 1828 first RR in US 
• 1860 30,000 miles of track, most 
of it in north 
• Faced opposition from canal 
backers, considered as public 
menace 
• Problems overcome by 
technology- differences in gauge 
(as time went by became more 
standardized), improvements in 
brakes, Pullman sleeping car 
introduced (1859)
• 1858- first trans-Atlantic telegraph cable connected Europe and US 
• 1840’S-1850’s- “Golden Age of American Shipping” 
• Clipper Ships rapidly move freight across Pacific, eventually 
replaced by steam powered ships 
• 1860- Pony Express established, folded after 18 months (telegraph 
better) 
• Dy ing te chno lo g y o f wind a nd m us c le p o we r, re p la c e d by m a chine s
• Before 1830 West linked to 
South by Mississippi River 
• Building of RR linked North to 
West, robbed Mississippi 
River of it’s traffic 
• NYC became major port of 
nation 
• Emergence of continental 
economy, each region 
specialized in economic 
activity
• Market Revolution transformed country from small, scattered 
subsistence farmers and workshops into national network of 
industry and commerce 
• Que s tio ns o ve r who sho uld re g ula te e c o no m y ? Who o wns 
te chno lo g y ? 
A.Supreme Court decisions sided with liberal state laws that 
encouraged greater competition in the marketplace “rights of 
the community” 
• Se lf s uffic ie nt ho us e ho ld s tra ns fo rm e d 
A.Wage earners went to work, made money and purchased 
manufactured goods 
B.Home became a place of refuge from work, separate sphere 
for women 
• Gap between have and have-nots grew, greatest in cities 
• Rising wages and middle class helped diffuse potential 
conflict between classes
Chapter 15
• Third revolution in antebellum period (political, economic) 
transformation of American character 
• Reform movements motivated by changes in American 
character, economy 
• More educated, upstanding, improve society 
• Promoted new religions, better public schools, rights for 
women, abstinence from alcohol and abolition of slavery 
• Drew reforming impulse from religion 
• Beginning in the 1790’s into early 19th century Second 
Great Awakening transformed place of religion in US
• Most Americans in first half of 19th century attended 
church 
• Not old Puritan theology but new rational theology based 
on reason and science 
• Many Founding Fathers were supporters of Deism 
(Supreme Being endowed humans with capacity for 
moral behavior, belief in reason not faith) 
• Deism inspired Unitarianism 
• Unitarianism began in New England end of 1700’s 
• Stressed essential goodness of human nature, not 
hellfire doctrine of Calvinism
• 1800 new wave of revivals 
began on southern and western 
frontiers, called Second Great 
Awakening 
• Converted souls, reorganized 
churches and spawned 
numerous new sects 
• Affected many areas of 
American life from prison 
reform, the women’s movement 
and abolition of slavery 
• Spread through “camp 
meetings” that lasted several 
days 
• Many saved returned to old 
ways after meetings over, 
provided social outlet on lonely 
frontier
• Methodists, Baptists gained most 
converts, each sect promoted personal 
salvation, democratic control over church 
affairs 
• Preachers called circuit riders 
• Cha rle s Gra nd is o n Finne y greatest of 
revival preachers, great orator 
• Became president of Oberlin College 
(Ohio), hotbed of abolitionism 
• Second G.A. caused feminization of 
religion, most ardent supporters of new 
religions and era’s reforms 
• Demonstrated ambivalence toward 
changing world (economic, industrial, 
market revolutions)
• Revivals caused fragmentation of 
religions 
• Western New York “Burned Over District” 
because so many preachers came and 
preached hellfire and damnation 
• 1830’s- Millerites (Adventists) came from 
this region 
• Leader said Christ would return on a 
certain date, did not happen 
• Second G.A. widened lines between 
classes 
• Prosperous, conservative not affected by 
revivalism (Easterners, better educated) 
• Methodists, Baptists form, newly 
established regions 
• Less educated, less prosperous 
• Religions split over slavery issues (north 
and south)
• 1830- Joseph Smith reported he 
received golden plates after a visit 
from an angel 
• Became Book of Mormon 
• Truly native American religion 
• Opposition to Mormon beliefs, ways 
caused group to migrate west 
• Antagonized non-Mormons, voting 
as a unit, practicing polygamy, 
cooperative economic practices 
• 1844 Smith and brother murdered 
by a mob in Carthage, IL 
• Leadership of Mormons taken up by 
Brigham Young
• 1846-1847 Young leads Mormon pioneers to Utah 
• 1848 -5,000 settlers 
• Irrigation, hard work, luck, leadership of Young-community 
thrived, became a frontier theocracy 
• Clashed with Washington government, could not control 
Young 
• 1857 send federal army to allow US appointed judges to 
serve, inability to conform to American standards of 
culture delayed statehood until 1896
• Tax supported primary schools for children of the poor, wealthy 
used private tutors 
• During first half of 1800’s tax supported schools seen as good for 
teaching American ways and democracy 
• Little red schoolhouse became a shrine of democracy 
• School teachers poorly trained, poorly paid 
• Reform brought by Horace Mann, campaigned for better school 
houses, better pay, expanded curriculum 
• Noah Webster, wrote school books designed to promote patriotism 
• William McGuffey (McGuffey’s Readers) lessons in patriotism
• Many small, denominational colleges established during 
this period in the South and West 
• First state supported universities established (University 
of North Carolina 1795, University of Virginia 1819) 
• Changes in curriculum from traditional religious training 
to modern languages and the sciences 
• Women’s education grew (frowned upon earlier) 
• Oberlin College in Ohio opened doors to women and 
blacks 
• Tax supported libraries, magazines, traveling lecturers 
expanded zeal for learning to wider audiences
• Reform campaigns inspired by religion 
sought to build a more perfect society 
• Appealed to middle class women as a 
way to escape home, enter arena of 
public affairs 
• Reformers wanted to reaffirm traditional 
values in a world disrupted and 
transformed by the changes brought by 
industrialization 
• Debtor’s prisons were abolished 
• Criminal punishment was reformed, idea 
of prison as place for reform established 
• Treatment of mentally ill, led by Dorthea 
Dix 
• Insane Asylums were places of brutal 
treatment and she campaigned to make 
them more humane, idea of mental 
illness born at this time
• Drinking problem attracted attention 
of nation 
• Caused decrease in efficiency of 
labor, higher risk of accidents in new 
industrial machines 
• 1826- American Temperance 
Society founded in Boston 
• Drinkers seen as scourge from Old 
World 
• Temperance pledges signed, “Cold 
Water Army” 
• Melodramatic books demonstrated 
evils of alcohol (Te n Nig hts in a 
Ba rro o m a nd Wha t I Saw The re - 
1854) 
• Alcohol consumption dropped as the 
century wore on, so the movement 
worked
• Women’s place was in the home, could not vote or own 
property 
• Legally regarded as minors 
• Changing economy separated men and women into 
different spheres 
• Women were artistic and refined, keepers of societies 
conscience 
• During antebellum period female reformers became more 
vocal 
• Most were from middle class families, white 
• Began to demand rights for women 
• Lucretia Mott, Elizabeth Cady Stanton, Susan B. Anthony, 
Grimke sisters all fought for women’s rights (many had 
Quaker backgrounds and were abolitionists) 
• 1848- Seneca Falls Convention 
• Women's Rights Convention, Stanton read “Declaration of 
Sentiments”, based on Declaration of Independence, “all 
men and women created equal” 
• Things changed for women by the eve of the Civil War 
some had property rights, beginning to gain admission to 
colleges- still they could not vote
• Over 40 cooperative communities established to live out 
the reform minded ideals of the age, most did not last 
long 
• Communities promised equality for all members 
• Many were in rural, isolated areas 
• Based on religious ideas and principles 
• Members typically worked common land and property 
• Many quickly ran into futility and failed, because after the 
founder passed away each idealist had their own vision 
• 1825- New Harmony, Indiana established by Robert 
Owen 
• 1841 Brook Farm, Mass. Based on ideas of 
transcendentalism 
• 1848- Oneida Community in NY practiced free love, 
selection of parents for superior offspring 
• Did better than most, manufactured goods that supported 
community 
• Shakers established by Mother Anne Lee, started in 
1770’s and grew to almost 6,000 members, known for 
simple furniture
APUSH Period 4 textbook
• Early American inventions centered practical gadgets, 
not pure science (plow, mechanical reaper, etc.) 
• Some scientific talent in America 
• Most notably Jo hn J. Audubo n, studied birds of 
America in detail 
• American medicine primitive and life was short (avg. 
50 years)
• American architecture copied European 
styles 
• Thomas Jefferson was the best 
American architect (designed 
Monticello, Univ. of VA) 
• Competent painters, Gilbert Sullivan 
(portraits of Washington), John 
Trumbull (Revolutionary War scenes) 
• Hudson River School of painters, 
romanticized local landscapes (misty, 
foggy, rainy, man very small) 
• 1840’s Competition for paintings comes 
from daguerreotype (crude type of 
photo) 
• Minstrel show, performers in “black 
face" became popular forms of 
entertainment
• Most influential publications up to this point 
were political essays (Co m m o n Se ns e , 
Fe d e ra lis t) 
• Nationalism and spirit of independence 
after War of 1812, new group of writers 
emerged, “Knic ke rbo c ke r Gro up ”- 
Washington Irving, James Fenimore 
Cooper, William Cullen Bryant 
• American themes of nature, the 
supernatural and individualism 
• Novels widely read in Europe, legitimized 
American literature 
• Natty Bumppo became the archetype of 
the American westerner
• Began in New England 
• Release from liberalizing straightjacket of Puritan ideology 
• Reaction to John Locke and that truth is acquired through the senses 
• Each person possesses an inner light or “Oversoul” 
• Beliefs included commitment to self- reliance, fundamental truth came 
from experience 
• Rejected authority and conventional wisdom 
• Best known Emerson, Thoreau 
• Thoreau lived in cabin on Walden Pond in Mass. for two years wrote 
Wa ld e n: Or Life in the Wo o d s about experience 
• Refused to pay poll tax in Mexican-American War, wrote essay On the 
Duty o f Civil Dis o be d ie nc e 
• Idealistic tract promoting nonviolence 
• Thoreau saw civil disobedience as the right of individuals to refuse to 
obey laws they feel are unjust 
• Walt Whitman wrote Le a ve s o f Gra s s , became poet laureate of 
democracy 
• Writings reflected leaving behind Old World, embracing new
1820-1860
• How and why did the abolition movement become more 
radical over the period 1815-1860? 
• Define Manifest Destiny and how the belief in Manifest 
Destiny influenced U.S. politics and policies in the 
1840s? 
• What was the Compromise of 1850 and to what degree 
did the Compromise of 1850 delay the breakup of the 
Union? 
• How did two of the following events contribute to the 
breakup of the Union? 
• Passage of the Kansas-Nebraska Act 
• Decision in the Dre a d Sc o tt case 
• Raid on Harpers Ferry
Chapter 16
 After Revolution slavery faced an uncertain 
future, it was logical to think slavery would 
fade away 
 Invention of the cotton gin in 1793 changed 
that 
 Cotton became dominant crop in the south, 
created demand for labor and land 
 Quick profits from cotton drew planters to the 
Gulf South during this time 
 Caused economic spiral more cotton = more 
slaves, if you had more slaves you could buy 
more land 
 Northern shippers profited from cotton trade 
 They shipped it to England 
 Largest American export after 1840 (1/2 of 
world’s supply) 
 Southern leaders knew that cotton production 
was something they could hold over heads of 
British
 Cotton and Slaves 1820 and 1860
 South was a society run be elite 
wealthy planters 
 Very few owned large amount of 
slaves 
 They had tremendous wealth, sent 
children to schools outside of south 
(kept public education from gaining 
foothold) 
 Had a sense of duty to the public 
 Dominance by planters caused a 
huge gap between rich and poor 
 Society almost feudal (lords, manors 
and serfs) 
 Shaped the lives of women, they 
managed the house and the slave 
staff, most did not support abolition
 Search for quick profit led to over cultivation and 
degradation of the environment 
 Those that could not make it headed West and 
North (Butternuts) 
 Economic structure became monopolistic, land 
owners concentrated their holdings and bought 
out small farmers 
 Land hunger led to over speculation of lands, 
heavy investment in slaves caused crushing debt 
for many planters 
 Dependence on one crop put South at the mercy 
of the world markets, caused lack of economic 
diversity that effect region well into the 20th century 
 Resentment of the northern bankers, middlemen, 
businessmen intensified as they grew rich off 
Southern cotton and made profits selling 
manufactured goods to the South 
 Slaves and high land prices kept out European 
immigrants, South had little ethnic diversity
 1/4 of families owned slaves 
 Typically small farmers (more like 
Midwestern or Northern farmers) 
 Many owned no slaves at all, they 
were subsistence farmers (raised 
corn, hogs) and lived isolated lives 
 Had no direct stake in slave system 
but supported it because there was 
somebody on the social ladder lower 
than them 
 Mountain whites in Appalachia 
disliked blacks and masters and 
provided strong Union support in the 
South during the Civil War
• Free blacks in the Upper South (MD, VA, NC) traced 
origins to Revolution 
• Lower South most free were mulattoes, some purchased 
freedom 
• New Orleans had sizeable free, mulatto community 
• Seen a third race, could not hold certain occupations, vote 
• In the North some states would not let them live there, 
could not attend public schools, competed with Irish for 
menial jobs 
• Spread of slavery in new territory grew out of prejudice not 
humanitarianism
• Number of slaves grew during first half of 
1800’s 
• King Cotton demanded tribute in slave 
labor 
• Some smuggled into country (made 
illegal 1808), most growth due to natural 
increase 
• Slaves planters biggest asset and they 
were treated like investments (for the 
most part) 
• Cotton boom sucked slaves from Upper 
to Lower South 
• Some states had majority African 
American populations 
• Slaves sold at auction, sometimes for 
bankruptcy 
• Led to breakup of families, became 
theme for Harriet Beecher Stowe and
 Conditions for slaves varied from 
region to region 
 No slaves had civil or political rights, 
no labor rights 
 Beatings and threat of beating 
substituted for wage-incentive 
system 
 Masters were never too harsh 
because of investment 
 1860 most slaves concentrated in 
“black belt” across Deep South 
 Region was southern frontier, life 
was rougher than Upper South 
 Majority lived on plantations
 Slaves managed to maintain family life 
 Kept some African traditions in marriage, descent, 
religion 
 Religion was mixture of Christian and African traditions 
 Focused on themes of persecution in the Bible 
 Call and response preaching adaptation of caller and 
dancers from West African traditions
• Slaves denied education, did not want them to get new 
ideas, question position 
• Slaves struck back by slowing the pace of work, 
sabotaging equipment, took goods they produced 
• All wanted freedom, some ran away 
• Armed rebellion never worked 
• 1800 Gabriel Prosser(Richmond, VA), 1822 Denmark 
Vesey (Charleston, SC), 1831 Nat Turner 
• All failed, all were hung or were killed 
• White southerners felt like they were under siege 
(rebellions, abolitionist propaganda) developed theory of 
superiority over blacks 
• American South was one of the world’s last bastions of 
slavery
 First anti slavery societies appeared after 
Revolution, main support among Quakers 
 Earliest efforts were to send blacks back to 
Africa 
 1822- American Colonization Society, founded 
Liberia in West Africa- 15,000 went 
 Most slaves did not see themselves as 
Africans 
 1830’s slavery becomes moral crusade 
because of Second Great Awakening 
 1833 –British abolish slavery in West Indies 
 Slavery became a sin 
 Theodore Weld and “Lane Rebels” preached 
anti-slavery gospel across Old Northwest
• 1831- William Lloyd Garrison publishes first issue of The 
Libe ra to r, a militantly anti slavery newspaper based in 
Boston 
• 1833- American Antislavery society founded 
• Black Abolitionists – David Walker (promoted bloody end 
to slavery), Sojourner Truth (advocate for emancipation 
and women’s rights) 
• Fredrick Douglass – best known black abolitionist, 
escaped slave 
• Wrote Na rra tive o f the Life o f Fre d ric k Do ug la s s , detailed 
his early life and escape
• Differences between Garrison and Douglass 
• Garrison known as inflexible, self righteous, 
impractical 
• Provided no alternative to country without 
slavery 
• Denounced politics 
• Many abolitionist questioned the role of women 
(Garrison supported women) 
• Douglass- used politics to end slavery 
• New political parties emerge in 1840’s based on 
abolition of slavery 
• Liberty Party (1840), Free Soil Party (1848), 
Republican Party (1850’s)
• Before 1830’s some antislavery 
sentiment in the south 
• 1831 publication of Liberator, Nat Turner 
Rebellion, Nullification Crisis of 1832 
• All turned tide in South 
• White southerners saw threat to way of 
life, began to defend slavery 
• Justifications- supported by Bible, good 
for civilization depraved Africans, 
master- slave relationship was like a 
family (contrasted with industrial wage 
earners in northern factories) 
• 1836 Southerners in House pass Ga g 
Re s o lutio n, tables all debate on slavery 
(defied by John Quincy Adams) 
• Postmasters given permission to 
destroy abolitionist material across 
South 
• Widened gap between north and south
• Abolitionists unpopular in many parts of the north 
• Seen as too radical 
• Heavy economic stake in south; cotton production for 
factories, money owed to northern banks 
• Abolitionists seen as rocking the boat 
• Mobs attacked abolitionists 
• By 1850’s issue of territorial expansion, other factors put 
many in north on side of abolitionists
Chapter 17
• Americans want Texas, remote backwater of Spanish 
Empire 
• US abandoned claim in 1819 
• 1823- new Mexican government gives land to Stephen 
Austin to bring settlers 
• 2 conditions settlers had to become Mexican citizens, 
become Catholic 
• Ignored by settlers, annoyed by presence of Mexican 
soldiers and government 
• Settlers typical American individualist, did not want to 
be pushed around 
• Slavery an issue, outlawed in Mex., settlers brought 
slaves anyway 
• 1836 Mex. Leader Santa Ana attempts to repress 
Texans independence
• Early 1836 Texans declare independence 
• Santa Anna attacks Alamo and Goliad 
become rallying cries for Texans, 
galvanized Americans behind Texas cause 
• Gen. Sam Houston lures Mexicans east to 
San Jacinto (near present day Houston), 
and defeats Santa Anna 
• Forces Santa Anna to sign treaty giving 
land to Rio Grande to Texas and removing 
troops from region 
• Mex. does not recognize agreement 
• Texas becomes an independent republic 
but wanted to be part of the United States 
• Refused admission, abolitionists did not 
want new slave state 
• Seen as a plot against slavery to 
Southerners
 1840’s territorial expansion dominated 
politics, diplomacy 
 War with Mexico, gained territory from 
Texas to California and questions of 
status of slavery 
 1841 William Henry Harrison (Whig) 
elected and died in office 
 Real leaders of Whigs Clay, Webster 
tried to push agenda, thwarted by 
John Tyler (VP, now president) 
 Tyler supporter of states rights 
 Clay and others tried to push 
nationalistic political agenda 
 Whigs pushed for new bank, tariffs; all 
vetoed by Tyler
• British looked down on 
Americans, increased tension 
with America 
• Americans borrowed 
extensively from British banks 
(many defaulted on loans 
during Panic of 1837) 
• 1837 Caroline incident with 
Canada, 1841 slaves offered 
asylum in Bahamas (southern 
fear of Caribbean becoming 
haven for escaped slaves), 
1842 border disputes in Maine 
(settled by Webster- 
Ashburton Treaty)
 1836- Texas achieves independence, not recognized by Mexico 
 Britain, France interested in Texas as place for cotton 
production, check American power 
 Texas as independent nation threatened US 
 Presidential campaign 1844 issue of expansion 
 Texas annexed by joint resolution of Congress 1844 
 James K. Polk won election on expansion platform 
 Texas became state 1845 
 Oregon 
 enormous wilderness 
 Claimed by many different countries until 1825, then only 
US and Britain 
 British claims based on occupation 
 American claims based on exploration and occupation 
 1830’s American missionaries settle Willamette Valley, 
stimulates interest of Americans 
 1840’s number of Americans increases, came over 
Oregon Trail 
 British had few settlers, weaker claim than Americans
 Election of 1844 between Henry Clay 
and James Polk 
 Major election issue Manifest Destiny 
 Feeling that America’s duty was to 
spread ideals of democracy across 
continent (idea of expansion and 
liberty) 
 Expansion ignored national 
boundaries, came at the expense of 
others 
 Expansionist Democrats won election 
felt they had a mandate to take Texas 
and Oregon 
 New President James K. Polk had 4 
point program – lower tariff, create 
independent treasury, acquire Oregon 
and California 
 1846 US and Britain compromise on 
Oregon territory border (dying fur trade 
made British lose interest in Oregon)
 Americans wanted San Francisco and San 
Diego Bays as ports on Pacific and to 
expand American trade to Asia 
 Americans saw weakness in Mexican control 
of borderlands 
 Polk eager to buy California, Mexicans would 
not sell 
 Wanted California to balance admission of 
Texas with a free state 
 US/Mexico issues over boundary of Texas 
 Mexican claim was boundary at Nueces 
River, American claim was Rio Grande 
 Rumors of British wanting to purchase 
California, could not be tolerated under 
Monroe doctrine 
 1846 Polk sends troops to Texas, march 
from Nueces River to Rio Grande 
 April 1846 US soldiers killed and Polk asks 
for war, Congress overwhelmingly supports it
 Many northerners and Whigs saw this as a land grab and war for 
extension of slavery 
 Lincoln (then Rep. from Illinois) pushes “spot resolutions” to show where 
blood was shed on American soil 
 Both sides wanted war, America to teach Mexicans a lesson, Mexicans 
saw US a bully to the north 
 South and West supported war 
 The US unprepared for the war. Ill equipped volunteers American army filled the 
 l iAttdlev amnotativgaetsio onv teor ftihgeh tM. exican military that had outdated equipment and 
 lAemadeerircsahnip industrial base to prepare and equip an army, superior 
 United States won easily over the Mexican forces in 1847 
 California- John Fremont led a revolt against Mexican rule and declared 
the state “The Bear Flag Republic”
 1848- War ended with Treaty of Guadalupe 
Hidalgo 
 Gave US vast new territory, paid Mexico $15 
million dollars for land 
 Many Americans thought that US should not 
stop with Mexico 
 European countries had new respect for 
American military 
 The Mexican American War of conquest that would have wocacsu arr belda ttahnrot uwgahr migration eventually 
 gTehnee wraalrs a(lLseoe t,r aGinraendt )t htoe fnigehxtt Agemneerricaati’osn n oefx t war – the Civil War 
 TAumrenrinicga ,p boeincta inm Ue Ss urseplaictiioonuss wofit h“C Loalotisns us of the North” 
 War aroused issue of slavery and its expansion 
 1846- David Wilmot tries to introduce 
anemwe ntedrmriteonryt ,t hnaetv selra vpearsys eshdo tuhled Sneont aetxeis bt uint (symbolized issue of slavery in territories Wilmot Proviso)
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APUSH Period 4 textbook

  • 2. • Election of 1800- Adams Federalists wanted strong central government, Jeffersonians guardians of states’ rights and agrarian values • Federalists handicapped by Alien and Sedition Acts • Split with Hamiltonians • Preparation for war caused debt to swell, new taxes • Federalists concentrate on Jefferson’s personal life to defeat D-R’S
  • 3. • 1800-Jefferson defeats Adams, Burr and others • Controversial election, went to House of Reps. to break tie • Support from South and West • States where there was universal manhood suffrage • VP Aaron Burr • Jefferson claimed election was “revolution” • Return to spirit of 1776 • Seen as a mandate to check growth of gov’t power • Peaceful transfer of power remarkable achievement
  • 4. • Jefferson takes office in Washington, D.C. • Still a swampy, muddy backwater • First party overturn in American history • Simple, frugal style contrast to previous presidents • Once in office saw political reality, had to reverse principles • Able politician, used personal charm to keep party together
  • 5. • Jefferson kept most Federalist programs, viewed as a moderate • Got rid of Alien and Sedition Laws • Removed excise tax, cost government millions of dollars a year • Albert Gallatin (Sec. of Treasury), wanted balanced budget and reduced national debt • Streamline bureaucracy, turned over domestic policy to states • Revenue growth came from sale of western lands, surge in imports to America • Jefferson’s true desire for America was a nation of farmers (agrarian republic)
  • 6. • Judiciary Act 1801 passed at the end of Adams term • Created 16 new federal judgeships • Adams and the “m id nig ht jud g e s ” • Lifetime appointments upset Jeffersonians, wanted to repeal act • John Marshall appointed Chief Justice of Supreme Court • Marshall strong Federalist, committed to power of federal government • Served 34 years as Chief Justice • Shaped American legal tradition more than any other figure
  • 7. Marbury vs. Madison • William Marbury one of the midnight judges • Madison wanted appointment denied • Marbury sued government, Marshall dismissed case • Marshall said Supreme Court was not able to use powers of Constitution to make appointment • Supreme Court became final authority on questions of constitutionality (judicial review) • Established independence of judiciary, and separation of powers
  • 8. • Jefferson wanted to reduce size of military • Wanted to transcend wars of Europe • Republicans distrusted large armies • Realities forced different course of action • Barbary States (N. Africa) kept taking American sailors • 1801- Pasha of Tripoli declared war on US • Jefferson sends in navy, marines • 1805- peace treaty signed • Jefferson builds American fleet of small gunboats • Constructed democratically in small shipyards
  • 9. • 1800- French sign secret pact with Spanish to regain control of New Orleans • 1802- Spanish withdraw “right of deposit” to Americans • Americans in the trans-Mississippi area wanted to descend on New Orleans • US thought it would have to fight French to retake New Orleans • 1803- Jefferson sends James Monroe to buy New Orleans for $10 million
  • 10. • Developments cause Napoleon to sell all of Louisiana • 1803- Revolt in Santo Domingo (Haiti) led by slaves and yellow fever defeat French troops • Napoleon needed money to fight war in Europe, needed cash from sale of Louisiana • US power might thwart British in New World
  • 11. • French suddenly offer to sell all of Louisiana • April 1803 treaties signed, sold to US for $15 million • Doubled size of US • Jefferson really did not have power to do this (president not authorized to make treaties) • Senators did not complain, supported purchase, quickly approved action • 828,000 sq. mi. 3 cents acre
  • 12. • Avoided war with France, alliance with England • Purchase foundation for future • It was conquest by purchase, imperialism with a democratic face, (exception- Indians, Spaniards) • Expanded power of federal government • Allowed Americans to be isolationist, removed last significant European power from continent • Exploration of Lewis and Clark, Pike provided scientific, geographic knowledge of region • Demonstrated viability of overland route to the Pacific
  • 13. • Feeble reach of government over vast territory raised fears of secession and foreign intrigue • Demonstrated by Aaron Burr • Burr dropped from Vice Presidency, conspired against government, foiled by Hamilton • Bur and Hamilton duel, Hamilton killed, Burr becomes an outcast • 1806- Plots with James Wilkinson (LA Territory governor) to create separate country of trans-Mississippi west • Plan foiled, Burr arrested • Not enough evidence to put him on trial, flees to Europe
  • 14. • 1804 Jefferson reelected • 1805 Britain and France reign supreme in Europe and on the seas • Cause problems for American trade • British close trade with Europe, unless it first stops at British port • French seize all merchant vessels (including American) • Both sides impress American seamen • 1807- Che s a p e a ke incident • British seize American frigate, demand surrender of American sailors • Americans refuse and British fire on the ship • British government admit they are wrong • American’s upset at incident
  • 15. • Warring nations in Europe depend on the US (raw materials, food) • 1807-Jefferson decides to voluntarily cut off goods, Embargo Act • Forbid goods from US to be exported • Hurt American economy (NE- ship p ing , So uth-a g ric ultura l p ro duc ts ), cost people jobs • Effects worse in US than Europe • Smuggling made a comeback, so did Federalist party • Talk of succession in NE • 1809- Act repealed, passed Non-Intercourse Act (could trade with all countries except GB and FR), policy until 1812 • Act extremely unpopular • Did revive American manufacturing, foundation for future industry
  • 16. • 1808- Jefferson retired after two terms • James Madison becomes president • Unable to dominate congress, problems within Cabinet • 1809- Non-Intercourse Act (would expire 1810), not supported by Congress • US realized it could not survive without either Britain or France as a trading partner • Macon’s Bill No. 2 seemed like American’s were giving in on embargoes • 1810 France opens trade, British do not • Why did they have to? • Trade meant end of America neutrality
  • 17. • 1811- Wa r hawks dominate Congress, most from south and west • Supported military action against British • Tired of treatment of sailors, British interference in trade, especially farm products from the west headed to Europe • Wanted to clear Indians out of west (move them to LA Territory) • Two Shawnee brothers Te c um s e h and the Pro phe t, formed a confederacy of eastern tribes • Movement of Indian unity, resist white ways
  • 19. • Frontiersmen and Congressmen thought British were behind movement • 1811- William He nry Ha rris o n and army attacked and defeated Indians at Tippecanoe (Indiana) • Made Harrison a national hero, drove Indians into alliance with British • 1813-Tecumseh dies fighting for British
  • 20. • Spring 1812 Madison sees war as inevitable • War hawks want to invade Canada and wipe out British base, stop Indian raids • Old Northwest –wanted Canada • South- wanted Florida • Madison wanted to restore confidence in America, years of steering a middle course with FR and BR brought international ridicule, domestic division • June 1812 Madison asks Congress to declare war • Vote was sectional- west and south support war, New England strongly against war • New England refused to send militia into battle, supplied British • Another war with the world’s most powerful empire
  • 22. • War of 1812 was divisive • No national support • Unimpressive military outcome • Came out of the war with a spirit of nationalism • Led to rise in manufacturing, increased power of the federal government, development of infrastructure • American financial interests turned away from commerce and toward manufacturing
  • 23. • 1812- American army poorly trained, poorly led • Canada seen as important battleground • British weakest there, base for operations to agitate Indians • American plan for taking Canada was poorly conceived at the beginning of the war • Army pushed back, Canadians were high energy, defended country well • 1812-1813- American success on water, Oliver Hazard Perry on the Great Lakes, caused British to withdraw from forts on the Great Lakes • USS Co ns titutio n, manned by free sailors defeats British on the ocean
  • 24. • 1814- Wars against Napoleon over in Europe, British send troops to Americas • American victory at Lake Champlain, saved upper NY and NE • Second British force lands in Chesapeake Bay, march to Washington and burn it down, Americans hold firm at Baltimore (inspiration for Star Spangled Banner) • 1815- Major blow at New Orleans, Americans led by Andrew Jackson defeat British • Battle of New Orleans makes Jackson a national hero, seen as a symbol of national honor • Battle fought after peace treaty signed
  • 25. • Negotiations set in motion by Tsar of Russia • Met in Ghent, Belgium • Led by John Quincy Adams, Henry Clay • War weariness of British made them more willing to compromise • Signed on Christmas Eve 1814 • Both sides agreed to stop fighting, restore conquered territory • Neither side won war
  • 26. • New England remained a problem after the war • Minority wanted secession, mostly federalist • 1814- Hartford Convention, New England states meet in complete secrecy to discuss grievances, seek to right wrongs • Final report not extreme, wanted financial assistance for lost trade, wanted 2/3 vote to declare war admit new states • Reflection of lost power of once dominant New England • Grievances dismissed in Washington, last gasp of Federalist Party
  • 27. • War of 1812 small war (6,000 killed or wounded) • Globally unimportant, huge consequences for United States • Showed American resolve to resist what they regarded as wrongs • New respect abroad, America was here to stay • Reduced sectionalism, led to an upsurge of nationalism across country • New heroes (Jackson, Harrison) • Indians had no British allies, gave up huge areas of land • Manufacturing began to grow because of war, less dependent on British • 1817- Rush-Bagot Treaty limited naval armament on the Great Lakes, solved American and British disputes over Oregon • Americans began to turn their back on Europe and develop their own country
  • 28. • After war America emerged more united • National literature (James Fennimore Cooper, Washington Irving) using American themes, scenes (heroic isolation of main character, supernatural themes) • American painters celebrated nature, man was small in the paintings • Revived Bank of the United States, building of a new capital, expansion of the army and navy all demonstrated new nationalism
  • 29. • Manufacturing, factories grew during the war • After war British try to dump goods on America • Congress passes Tariff of 1816 (20-25% added value on products) • Started trend toward more protection of American products • Henry Clay, senator from KY, comes up with “American System”
  • 30. • Three main parts: 1.Strong banking system, allow easy credit for business growth 2.Protective tariff, stimulate manufacturing 3.Building of roads and canals, bring country together, economically and politically • Had strong support, mainly out west (few roads) • Hard to get money, funds were unconstitutional (1817) • Individual states fund improvements (Erie Canal) • NE did not support federal funds going to infrastructure, drain away population
  • 31. • 1816- James Monroe becomes president (part of the Virginia Dynasty) • Republican • Level headed executive, took goodwill tour of US (1817) • Issues of his presidency- tariffs, banks, sale of public lands, sectional divides • Geographic, economic expansion gave Americans a sense of nationalism • Monroe’s two terms called Era of Good Feelings (lasted through early 1820’s) because of growing nationalism, limited political opposition • Was it really?
  • 32. • 1819- first financial panic (deflation, depression, bankruptcies, bank failures, unemployment) • Get rich quick fever caused by over speculation in frontier lands • West hardest hit • Collapse in cotton prices, land values • Speculative banks (wildcat banks) were forced by Bank of US to close, easy unregulated credit • Bank became a financial devil (to south and west) • Effected poorer classes • Led to reform legislation for debtors
  • 33. • 1791-1819 nine frontier states joined 13 original states • Most entered alternately slave and free Appeal for western movement • Cheap land (appeal to European immigrants) • Land exhaustion in tobacco states • Speculators sold land for small down payments • Removal of Indians • Building of new roads • Steamboat made river travel easier • Land Act 1820 made land cheap (minimum 1.25 per acre) • West had to ally with other sections because lack of population, influence
  • 34. • Sectional tension around slavery grew in this period • 1819 Missouri wants admission as a slave state • Tallmadge Amendment stipulated no more slaves in Missouri, gradual emancipation of slaves already there • Slaveholding states angry, saw amendment as threat to sectional balance • Even in 11 slave, 11 free states, admission would cause imbalance • Future of slave system seen as endangered if amendment passed • If Congress could abolish slavery would it do so in all states? • Moral question raised about evils of slavery • Abolitionist did not want spread of slavery
  • 35. • 1820 bundle of compromises to solve Missouri question • Henry Clay played a leading role • Missouri admitted as a slave state, Maine admitted as a free state (kept balance) • Slavery not permitted north of 36 degrees 30’ north (southern boundary of Missouri) • Both sides received something, seen as a victory for the south at the time • “Great American Desert” seen as not suitable for slavery • Most southern Congressmen voted against compromise • Preserved compact of states, for the time being
  • 36. • Nationalism reflected by Supreme Court • Decisions bolstered power of federal government, at the expense of the states • McCulloch vs. Maryland (1819)- used principle of implied powers to determine states did not have right to tax Bank of US • Loose construction interpretation permitted government to act for benefit of people • Cohens vs. Virginia (1821)- Supreme Court could review decisions of state courts • Gibbons vs. Ogden (1824)- Constitution said federal government only could control commerce, not states
  • 37. • Another group of decisions protected property rights • Fletcher vs. Peck- bolstered power of federal government saying states could not limit property contracts, upheld right of Supreme Court to invalidate state laws that conflicted with constitution • Dartmouth College vs. Woodward-contracts protected against state laws, chartered corporations part of federal control (justified by Commerce clause in const.) • Supreme Court upheld power of national government, checked excesses of states
  • 38. • Nationalism shaped foreign policy • John Quincy Adams (Sec. Of State) • Treaty of 1818 with Britain gave US fishing rights off coast of Newfoundland • Fixed northern boundary of Louisiana • 10 year joint occupation of Oregon • Sign of new cooperation between British and US
  • 39. • Florida part of crumbling Spanish Empire, Americans already claimed West Fla • Latin American revolutions 1816- 1818, cause region to loose troops • Andrew Jackson enters region to capture slaves, punish Indians • 1818 Jackson conquers Fla, claims it for US • Many in D.C. think Jackson has overstepped his power, except Adams • Adams-Onis Treaty 1819 gives FL to US, US abandons claim to Texas, fixes southern boundary of LA
  • 40. • After Napoleon Europe returned to strong monarchies • Alarmed Americans • Russia pushed south out of Alaska • Latin American revolutions crushed by European powers • British and Americans had benefitted from open trade with these countries • British ask Americans to declare joint resolution renouncing European powers from interfering with Latin America
  • 41. • Adams did not trust British, did not want to tie America’s hands • Alliance would hinder American expansion • Figured British navy would keep ports open in L.A. • 1823 Adams starts planning Monroe Doctrine with president • Delivered in annual message to Congress • 2 goals 1 . No n c o lo niz a tio n 2 . No n inte rve ntio n • Era of colonization was over, keep what they had but could not acquire more
  • 42. • Hard to enforce because of small military • Made little difference to Latin American Republics • Primarily defending itself from future invasion, looking out for American self preservation • Did not become important until 1845 (Mexican War) • Never law, just a statement of policy • Expression of new American nationalism • Deepened American isolationism, warned Old World to stay away
  • 45. • Early 1820’s sectional differences emerge after the Panic of 1819 and the Missouri Compromise • New types of political parties emerged, became accepted • Emergence of two party political system • Emergence of new type of voter: fewer property qualifications means more people eligible to vote (less restriction) • New styles of campaigns, banners, badges, politicking • 1828 new party, Democrats • 1830’s Whig Party emerges • Two party system part of checks and balances of political power • More people began to vote (78% in1840)
  • 46. 1824- Last of the old style elections Adams (MA), Clay (KY), Wm. Crawford (GA), Jackson (TN) all running for president Jackson strongest personal appeal, support from the West Won a majority of the vote, did not win in electoral college Clay (also Speaker of the House), threw support behind Adams Clay hated Jackson (from 1818 Florida foray) Did not like Adams either, but both were nationalist
  • 47. • 1825 vote in House gave election to Adams, Clay becomes Sec. of State (seen as stepping stone to presidency) • Supporters of Jackson called it a c o rrup t ba rg a in • Condemned Clay • No positive evidence of “corrupt bargain”, Clay becomes Sec. of State • Changed political system, no more elections behind closed doors
  • 48. • Adams could be an irritable loner • Great Sec. of State, poor president • Not good at politics • Did not have popular support • Kept people in office, didn't do political favors for supporters • Nationalistic views and ideas in contrast with national mood turning towards sectionalism and state’s rights • Southerners thought he might take infringe on their “peculiar institution” • Land policies and Indian policies turned off Westerners
  • 49. • By 1828 Democrat-Republicans split into two groups • National Republicans supported Adams • Republicans supported Jackson • Jackson seem as champion of common man • Mudslinging, accusations in election of 1828 • Vote split along sectional lines • West and South supported Jackson • New England supported Adams • Vote split in rest of country but Jackson won the electoral vote handily • Demonstrated shift of political power from eastern seaboard to emerging western states
  • 50. • Jackson from humble beginnings • Force of personality and power of leadership led to rise to national prominence • First president from the west, frontier aristocrat, slave owner • Election seen as rise of “peoples champion” • Wild inauguration, supporters flooded Washington, and wrecked White House • Conservatives saw this as the rise of the dreaded democratic mob
  • 51. • Under Jackson spoils system used on a large scale (rewarding supporters with political jobs) • Washington was due for an overturn in the established powers, many had been around since the early 1800’s • Rewarding cronies led to scandal, but it was an important element to the development of the two party system • Promise of “spoils” led to party loyalty instead of economic, class and geographic loyalties
  • 52. • Tariffs had protected American Industry against European competition • Invited retaliatory tariffs against American goods • Tariff raised in 1824, 1828 • Southerners thought tariffs discriminated against them • Tariff of 1828 called “Tariff of Abominations”, “Black Tariffs” • Southerners sold goods on world market, unprotected by tariffs, forced to buy manufactured good in a market protected by tariffs • Northeast was having a boom in manufacturing, how was the South doing? • Tariff was an easy scapegoat
  • 53. • These feeling were heightened by the fear that the federal government would interfere with slavery • Missouri Compromise, Denmark Vesey slave rebellion (1822), mounting pressure in support of abolition (in US and abroad) • Tariff seen as issue to the South as a way to take a stand for states’ rights • South Carolina took the lead • 1828 The So uth Ca ro lina Ex p o s itio n secretly written by John Calhoun (vice president) • Wrote that tariff was unjust and unconstitutional, proposed that states should nullify tariff within their own borders
  • 54. • Tariff of 1832 tipped balance in SC to support nullification • Delegates declared tariff null and void in state • Threatened to take state out of the Union • No other Southern states actively supported SC actions • Jackson would not permit defiance, dispatched military reinforcements to state to enforce, collect tariff • Jackson endorsed tariff • Henry Clay stepped in to broker a compromise
  • 55. • Compromise- Tariff Bill of 1833- would reduce tariff 10% over 8 years • Debate broke down over sectional lines • South favored compromise, Jackson would not have to use the military • Force Bill also passed at the same time, authorized president to use military to collect tariff • SC delegates met again repealed ordinance of nullification, but they nullified force bill • Only winner was Clay, seen as hero that saved the country
  • 56. • Since 1790’s American policy toward Indians, they were recognized as separate nations • Acquired land through treaties, terms violated regularly as Anglo settlement pushed west • Some tribes assimilated into American culture, some resisted it • Cherokee of GA, NC assimilated into American ways (part of 5 Civilized Tribes- Creek, Choctaw, Seminole, Chickasaw) • Cherokee embraced civilization- written constitution, written legal code, alphabet • Some were even slave holders • Jacksonians committed to Western Expansion, viewed Native Americans as in the way • Jackson, like many Westerners thought Indians needed to be removed east of the Mississippi, open land to white settlement • 1830- Congress passes Indian Removal Act, appropriated money to remove Indians to permanent reservation west of the Mississippi (act supported by Jackson, Southerners and Westerners)
  • 57. • 1828- Georgia Legislature declared Cherokee tribal council illegal, asserted jurisdiction over their lands • Cherokees appealed to Supreme Court (two separate cases) • Court upheld rights of Indians • Jackson disagreed with the Supreme Court, ordered removal of Indians (“Ma rsha ll m a d e his d e c is io n, no w le t him e nfo rc e it”) • Uprooted more than 100,000 Indians, westward movement known as the Trail of Tears • 1836 Bureau of Indian Affairs established to administer relations with Native Americans • As settlers pushed west the permanent frontier for Indians gradually shrank and many other guarantees went up in smoke
  • 58. • Sauk and Fox Indians in Wisconsin and Illinois resisted eviction • Led by Black Hawk the rebellion was crushed by American troops in 1832 (Black Hawk War) • Seminoles waged a bitter guerilla war for seven years in the swampy Everglades (1835-1842) • Leader, Osceola was captured under a flag of truce, some fled deeper into the swamps, 4/5’s were moved to Oklahoma
  • 59. • Jackson distrusted big business and the Bank of the US • Why? • Banks minted gold and silver coins • Paper money printed by private banks (value fluctuated with health of bank and amount of money printed • Bank of US source of credit, principle depository of federal money, source of credit and stability • Acted like another branch of government
  • 60. • Bank not accountable to people, existed to make a profit for investors, seen as against “American "way • 1832 Bank War begins • Webster, Clay push for recharter of Bank to make it a political issue in election of 1832 • If passed and signed by Jackson it would alienate his western followers, if vetoed he would loose support of wealthy, influential easterners • Jackson vetoed, declared bank unconstitutional, found it harmful to nation • Another instance of Jackson regarding executive branch superior to judicial branch • Jackson expands power of executive branch
  • 61. • Clay and Jackson squared off in election of 1832 • First time third party ran, Anti-Masonic Party • Supporters in NY, Middle states, New England • Against secret societies, support from evangelical Protestants (use political power to bring moral and religious change) • Jacksonians against government interference in social and economic life • First use of nominating conventions • Clay had support from businessmen and eastern newspapers • Jackson wins election handily (219-49 in electoral college
  • 62. • Charter for Bank of US expire 1836 • Fear of Biddle to bring back bank, Jackson wants to take it out • 1833 Jackson removes federal deposits, bleed bank dry • Had to reshuffle cabinet to find people to support him • Biddle calls in loans from Bank to show importance, causes financial panic • Jackson places funds in state banks (“pet banks”), banks with pro Jackson sympathies • Banks flood country with paper money, currency becomes unreliable • 1836- Specie Circular required public lands to be purchased with hard currency (gold, silver currency) • Put brakes on land speculation, sales • Causes financial panic and crash in 1837
  • 63. • 1830’s new political party emerges- Whigs • Hatred of Jackson was what they rallied around • Whigs were led by Clay, Calhoun, Webster • Attracted groups alienated by Jackson- supporters of American System, southern states righter's, northern industrialists, absorbed evangelical protestants from Anti-Masonic Party • Progressive in support of active government programs and reforms, called for internal improvements • Supported prisons, asylums, public schools and the market economy • Claimed to be defenders of common man (stole from Democrats)
  • 64. • Martin Van Buren chosen as Jackson’s successor • Whigs don’t nominate single candidate, many candidates for regional appeal • Wanted to put election in hands of House • Van Buren won election easily • Van Buren inherited problems over which he had no control • Did not have the force of personality that Jackson had to deal with problems • Depression, possible war with Canada, depression
  • 65. • Panic 1837 caused by over-speculation on lands, borrowed money based on shaky currency and wildcat banks Causes • Jackson’s policies on the Bank of the US • Rising grain prices • British Banks calling in loans • Caused commodity prices to drop, land sales to fall off, factories closed, high unemployment and bank closures
  • 66. • Whigs tried to make government more active to end depression (expansion of credit, tariffs), Van Buren kept government out of economy • Van Buren tried to help economy through the “Divorce Bill”, keeping government out of banking by establishing an independent treasury, caused credit to shrink • Not popular • 1840- Passed by Congress, repealed next year, revived in 1846 and continued until the Civil War
  • 67. • 1840 Van Buren runs again for president, Whigs get behind one candidate William Henry Harrison • Harrison, war hero and Indian fighter • Views on issues vaguely known • Played as a “common man”, really from old Virginia family • Selected John Tyler as VP • Plan was to drive corrupt Jacksonians from White House • Harrison won, time for Whig ideas of government action to stimulate the economy
  • 68. • 1840’s American politics adopt populist, democratic style • Old aristocracy seen as bad • Politicians wanted to claim humble beginnings, politicians had to adopt “common touch” • Resulted in formation of vigorous and durable two party system • Both parties grew out of Jeffersonian Republicanism • Democrats were for the liberty of the individual, state’s rights, federal restraint • Whigs supported national bank, protective tariffs, internal improvements and moral reforms • Both mass based, appeal led to compromise within the parties, kept extreme views from becoming dominant, reduced sectionalism
  • 71. • Americans constantly pushed west, cheap land opportunity • First part of 19th century new immigrants joined movement (Irish, Germans) • New machinery allowed crops to be cultivated quicker, goods produced faster, expectations for workers changed • New methods of transportation allowed goods, people and products to move quicker • Origins of market oriented economy
  • 72.  Jackson symbolized the rise of trans-Appalachia  Raw frontier seen as typically American  1850 half of all Americans under 30  Seen as restless energetic, always on the move  Demographic center of America had move steadily westward  Reality of pioneer life was grim (especially for women)  Rugged individualism became part of national character- Was this true?
  • 73. • People molded physical environment • Left behind fields destroyed by tobacco cultivation • Planted “Kentucky Bluegrass” from charred canfields, • 1820-1840 trappers, mountain men had decimated beaver across the West • Buffalo, sea otters were hunted into near extension for their fur • Ec o lo g ic a l Im p e ria lism - exploitation of Americas natural bounty
  • 74. • Many Americans revered nature • American wilderness seen as unique to many Europeans • Wild unspoiled land one of the nations defining attributed- move west you can always start over • Inspired literature, painting and by the end of the 1800’s a conservation movement
  • 75. • Population doubling every 25 years • By 1860 there were 33 states, 4th most populous country in the world • Urban growth- by 1860 there were 43 cities with more than 20,000 (1790 only 3) • Urbanization brought problems (inadequate public services, poor housing) • 1823 Boston developed first sewer system, 1842 NYC first piped in water supply
  • 76. • By 1840’s population growth comes from immigration • Most Irish and German • What caused them to come to America? • Europe had surplus of population, running out of room • America seen as land of opportunity • Freedom of European class system • Abundant, cheap land • No compulsory military service
  • 77. • Mid 1840’s potato crop failure pushes many out of Ireland • 1830-1860 2 million Irish come to the United States • Newcomers too poor to buy land, stayed in cities on eastern seaboard (NYC largest Irish city in the world) • Irish had to take worst jobs, poorest housing- viewed as a social menace • Competed with African Americans for jobs (Irish did not support abolition) • Formed Irish only clubs (Ancient Order of Hibernians, Molly Maguire's)
  • 78. • Irish acquired property and improved lives in America • Politicians wanted to cultivate Irish vote • Many entered politics and gained control of political machines (NYC Tammany Hall) • Dominated police departments
  • 79. • 1830-1860 over 1.5 million Germans immigrated to US • Uprooted farmers, political refugees • German immigrants better off than Irish, had more money • Moved to Middle West, established farms • Less political power, widely scattered population
  • 80. • Germans more educated than Irish, supported public schools • Were not supporters of slavery • Fled militarism of Europe, became isolationists • Language, culture viewed as suspicious by many • Settled in colonies, separate from surrounding community • Brought Old World drinking habits (brought beer to America)
  • 81. • Immigration inflamed anti-foreign sentiment • Feared they would take jobs, worried about “popish” newcomers • 1840’s Immigrants establish separate Catholic school system, protect children from Protestant indoctrination • By 1850 Catholics largest single religious group in America
  • 82. • “Nativists” rally for political action, form Know-Nothing Party 1849 • Wanted restrictions on immigration, easier ways to deport “aliens” • Promoted literature to expose foreigners (most of it untrue) • Mass violence 1834, Catholic convent burned • 1844 Philadelphia nativists, Irish Catholics riot Effects of immigration a. made America more pluralistic society b. Growth of economy really did not jeopardize wealth of others c. Labor of immigrants helped fuel economic expansion
  • 83. • 1750 Industrial Revolution begins in England with mass production of textiles • End of muscle, animal power beginning of machine power • Slow to catch on in US cheap land, labor scarce • Capital in short supply, raw materials in America were untapped • 1840’s rise of immigration caused labor pool to grow
  • 84. • Samuel Slater from England steals plans for first textile machines • 1791 first efficient machine for spinning cotton • 1793 Eli Whitney invents first cotton gin (separates cotton fiber from seeds, 50X more effective than human labor) • Cha ng e d his to ry o f Am e ric a m a d e c o tto n g ro wing p ro fita ble e nte rp ris e
  • 85. • Slavery had been dying out • Invention of cotton gin caused more acres to be cleared -Cotton Kingdom moved westward (into AL, MS) • Cotton sent to mills in New England • Factories were established in Northeast • Little manufacturing in South, capital tied up in land and slaves New England ideal for industrialization a) soil too poor for farming, b) dense population, markets available, c) shipping allowed for export of finished products d) large poor immigrant population for labor e) rapid rivers good for water powered mills
  • 86. • Consequences of embargo 1807 and War of 1812 was capital kept in America • Used to invest in American manufacturing • After war British flood America with cheap goods, Tariff of 1816 attempts to protect American manufacturing • Eli Whitney develops idea of mass produced interchangeable parts for muskets, by 1850 became the basis of mass production • Mo s t fa c to rie s lo c a te d in the no rthe a s t (indus tria l p la nt o f Am e ric a )
  • 87. • 1846 Isaac Singer, Elias Howe invent sewing machine (m a s s p ro duc tio n o f c lo the s ) • Patents increased 306 in 1800, 28,000 1860 • Legal status of business organizations changed • Limited liability principle allowed investors to invest in companies • Companies could concentrate capital • Investment capital companies used in textiles, railroads, insurance and banking • 1844 Invention of telegraph (Samuel Morse) brought world closer together (revolutionized exchange of information)
  • 88. • Industrial Revolution end of age of close personal relationships with boss • Spindle Cities grew up around factories to house workers • Hours long, wages low, poor working conditions • Could not form labor unions to improve life at work (criminal conspiracy) • Child labor a huge problem
  • 90. • Wages did rise (1820’s-1830’s), growth of middle class Americans • More workers could vote • Supported Democratic Party of Jackson • Fight against all forms of privilege (Bank of US), reflected anxiety about new capitalist economy • 1840 Van Buren reduces work day for federal workers, states eventually followed • Workers gained right to strike but usually lost • They could easily be replaced by workers “fresh off the boat” from Europe • Co m m o nwe a lth vs . Hunt (1842), Mass; unions were not conspiracies
  • 91. • Women left farms, went to work in factories • Gave them greater economic independence • Lowell Mills (Mass.) seen as a model workplace for “factory girls” • Factory provided income, protected morality • Overall employment opportunities for women were scarce • Influence of Harriet Beecher Stowe, many women became teachers (feminized profession) • Vast majority of working women single
  • 92. • Women married, left jobs • Work as wives and mothers called “cult of domesticity”, glorified functions as a homemaker A.Home was women’s sphere B.Love determined choice of spouse C.Nuclear family became closer D.Home was a refuge from the industrial world E.Number of children per family dropped • Domestic feminism in the home, growing power and influence of women • New ideas of raising children, family more child centered, affectionate • Children raised by morals of “modern family” were good citizens
  • 93. • Farms were changing the West • Pioneer families planted corn, lots of it • Staple market item, had many uses • Western goods floated down Mississippi River • Fed the south • Western Farmers wanted to cultivate more acres but soil hard to break up • 1837 John Deere introduces steel plow • 1830’s Cyrus McCormick introduces mechanical reaper, could do the work of 5 men • Farmers could plant more land, rise of large scale cash crop agriculture for region • Farmers became businesspeople, looked east for a new market for their crops
  • 94. • Need for cheap and efficient carriers of products • 1790’s Lancaster Turnpike first highway (charged toll and made a huge profit) • Turnpike building spurred western development, allowed for easy access to the West • Use of federal funds to build roads opposed by state’s righter's and Eastern states (fear of loss of population) • 1811 Federal government builds Cumberland Road (finished 1852)
  • 95. • 1807 Robert Fulton launches steamboat craze • Steamboats could travel upstream, against the current • Navigable rivers two way arteries of transportation 1820- sixty steamboats on Mississippi River 1860- over 1,000 • Steamboats opened up West and South • Goods could be shipped out cheaply, quickly • Bring in manufactured goods • New population centers grew up along the banks
  • 96. • Canal cutting craze • 1817-1825 New York financed building of Erie Ca na l, linked Great Lakes and Hudson River • Cost of shipping and time of transportation dropped • Value of land along canal went up, new cities (Rochester, Syracuse) • Interior cities population exploded (Chicago, Detroit, Cleveland) • Settlers migrated from northeast to Midwest
  • 97. • Railroad not limited by geography • 1828 first RR in US • 1860 30,000 miles of track, most of it in north • Faced opposition from canal backers, considered as public menace • Problems overcome by technology- differences in gauge (as time went by became more standardized), improvements in brakes, Pullman sleeping car introduced (1859)
  • 98. • 1858- first trans-Atlantic telegraph cable connected Europe and US • 1840’S-1850’s- “Golden Age of American Shipping” • Clipper Ships rapidly move freight across Pacific, eventually replaced by steam powered ships • 1860- Pony Express established, folded after 18 months (telegraph better) • Dy ing te chno lo g y o f wind a nd m us c le p o we r, re p la c e d by m a chine s
  • 99. • Before 1830 West linked to South by Mississippi River • Building of RR linked North to West, robbed Mississippi River of it’s traffic • NYC became major port of nation • Emergence of continental economy, each region specialized in economic activity
  • 100. • Market Revolution transformed country from small, scattered subsistence farmers and workshops into national network of industry and commerce • Que s tio ns o ve r who sho uld re g ula te e c o no m y ? Who o wns te chno lo g y ? A.Supreme Court decisions sided with liberal state laws that encouraged greater competition in the marketplace “rights of the community” • Se lf s uffic ie nt ho us e ho ld s tra ns fo rm e d A.Wage earners went to work, made money and purchased manufactured goods B.Home became a place of refuge from work, separate sphere for women • Gap between have and have-nots grew, greatest in cities • Rising wages and middle class helped diffuse potential conflict between classes
  • 102. • Third revolution in antebellum period (political, economic) transformation of American character • Reform movements motivated by changes in American character, economy • More educated, upstanding, improve society • Promoted new religions, better public schools, rights for women, abstinence from alcohol and abolition of slavery • Drew reforming impulse from religion • Beginning in the 1790’s into early 19th century Second Great Awakening transformed place of religion in US
  • 103. • Most Americans in first half of 19th century attended church • Not old Puritan theology but new rational theology based on reason and science • Many Founding Fathers were supporters of Deism (Supreme Being endowed humans with capacity for moral behavior, belief in reason not faith) • Deism inspired Unitarianism • Unitarianism began in New England end of 1700’s • Stressed essential goodness of human nature, not hellfire doctrine of Calvinism
  • 104. • 1800 new wave of revivals began on southern and western frontiers, called Second Great Awakening • Converted souls, reorganized churches and spawned numerous new sects • Affected many areas of American life from prison reform, the women’s movement and abolition of slavery • Spread through “camp meetings” that lasted several days • Many saved returned to old ways after meetings over, provided social outlet on lonely frontier
  • 105. • Methodists, Baptists gained most converts, each sect promoted personal salvation, democratic control over church affairs • Preachers called circuit riders • Cha rle s Gra nd is o n Finne y greatest of revival preachers, great orator • Became president of Oberlin College (Ohio), hotbed of abolitionism • Second G.A. caused feminization of religion, most ardent supporters of new religions and era’s reforms • Demonstrated ambivalence toward changing world (economic, industrial, market revolutions)
  • 106. • Revivals caused fragmentation of religions • Western New York “Burned Over District” because so many preachers came and preached hellfire and damnation • 1830’s- Millerites (Adventists) came from this region • Leader said Christ would return on a certain date, did not happen • Second G.A. widened lines between classes • Prosperous, conservative not affected by revivalism (Easterners, better educated) • Methodists, Baptists form, newly established regions • Less educated, less prosperous • Religions split over slavery issues (north and south)
  • 107. • 1830- Joseph Smith reported he received golden plates after a visit from an angel • Became Book of Mormon • Truly native American religion • Opposition to Mormon beliefs, ways caused group to migrate west • Antagonized non-Mormons, voting as a unit, practicing polygamy, cooperative economic practices • 1844 Smith and brother murdered by a mob in Carthage, IL • Leadership of Mormons taken up by Brigham Young
  • 108. • 1846-1847 Young leads Mormon pioneers to Utah • 1848 -5,000 settlers • Irrigation, hard work, luck, leadership of Young-community thrived, became a frontier theocracy • Clashed with Washington government, could not control Young • 1857 send federal army to allow US appointed judges to serve, inability to conform to American standards of culture delayed statehood until 1896
  • 109. • Tax supported primary schools for children of the poor, wealthy used private tutors • During first half of 1800’s tax supported schools seen as good for teaching American ways and democracy • Little red schoolhouse became a shrine of democracy • School teachers poorly trained, poorly paid • Reform brought by Horace Mann, campaigned for better school houses, better pay, expanded curriculum • Noah Webster, wrote school books designed to promote patriotism • William McGuffey (McGuffey’s Readers) lessons in patriotism
  • 110. • Many small, denominational colleges established during this period in the South and West • First state supported universities established (University of North Carolina 1795, University of Virginia 1819) • Changes in curriculum from traditional religious training to modern languages and the sciences • Women’s education grew (frowned upon earlier) • Oberlin College in Ohio opened doors to women and blacks • Tax supported libraries, magazines, traveling lecturers expanded zeal for learning to wider audiences
  • 111. • Reform campaigns inspired by religion sought to build a more perfect society • Appealed to middle class women as a way to escape home, enter arena of public affairs • Reformers wanted to reaffirm traditional values in a world disrupted and transformed by the changes brought by industrialization • Debtor’s prisons were abolished • Criminal punishment was reformed, idea of prison as place for reform established • Treatment of mentally ill, led by Dorthea Dix • Insane Asylums were places of brutal treatment and she campaigned to make them more humane, idea of mental illness born at this time
  • 112. • Drinking problem attracted attention of nation • Caused decrease in efficiency of labor, higher risk of accidents in new industrial machines • 1826- American Temperance Society founded in Boston • Drinkers seen as scourge from Old World • Temperance pledges signed, “Cold Water Army” • Melodramatic books demonstrated evils of alcohol (Te n Nig hts in a Ba rro o m a nd Wha t I Saw The re - 1854) • Alcohol consumption dropped as the century wore on, so the movement worked
  • 113. • Women’s place was in the home, could not vote or own property • Legally regarded as minors • Changing economy separated men and women into different spheres • Women were artistic and refined, keepers of societies conscience • During antebellum period female reformers became more vocal • Most were from middle class families, white • Began to demand rights for women • Lucretia Mott, Elizabeth Cady Stanton, Susan B. Anthony, Grimke sisters all fought for women’s rights (many had Quaker backgrounds and were abolitionists) • 1848- Seneca Falls Convention • Women's Rights Convention, Stanton read “Declaration of Sentiments”, based on Declaration of Independence, “all men and women created equal” • Things changed for women by the eve of the Civil War some had property rights, beginning to gain admission to colleges- still they could not vote
  • 114. • Over 40 cooperative communities established to live out the reform minded ideals of the age, most did not last long • Communities promised equality for all members • Many were in rural, isolated areas • Based on religious ideas and principles • Members typically worked common land and property • Many quickly ran into futility and failed, because after the founder passed away each idealist had their own vision • 1825- New Harmony, Indiana established by Robert Owen • 1841 Brook Farm, Mass. Based on ideas of transcendentalism • 1848- Oneida Community in NY practiced free love, selection of parents for superior offspring • Did better than most, manufactured goods that supported community • Shakers established by Mother Anne Lee, started in 1770’s and grew to almost 6,000 members, known for simple furniture
  • 116. • Early American inventions centered practical gadgets, not pure science (plow, mechanical reaper, etc.) • Some scientific talent in America • Most notably Jo hn J. Audubo n, studied birds of America in detail • American medicine primitive and life was short (avg. 50 years)
  • 117. • American architecture copied European styles • Thomas Jefferson was the best American architect (designed Monticello, Univ. of VA) • Competent painters, Gilbert Sullivan (portraits of Washington), John Trumbull (Revolutionary War scenes) • Hudson River School of painters, romanticized local landscapes (misty, foggy, rainy, man very small) • 1840’s Competition for paintings comes from daguerreotype (crude type of photo) • Minstrel show, performers in “black face" became popular forms of entertainment
  • 118. • Most influential publications up to this point were political essays (Co m m o n Se ns e , Fe d e ra lis t) • Nationalism and spirit of independence after War of 1812, new group of writers emerged, “Knic ke rbo c ke r Gro up ”- Washington Irving, James Fenimore Cooper, William Cullen Bryant • American themes of nature, the supernatural and individualism • Novels widely read in Europe, legitimized American literature • Natty Bumppo became the archetype of the American westerner
  • 119. • Began in New England • Release from liberalizing straightjacket of Puritan ideology • Reaction to John Locke and that truth is acquired through the senses • Each person possesses an inner light or “Oversoul” • Beliefs included commitment to self- reliance, fundamental truth came from experience • Rejected authority and conventional wisdom • Best known Emerson, Thoreau • Thoreau lived in cabin on Walden Pond in Mass. for two years wrote Wa ld e n: Or Life in the Wo o d s about experience • Refused to pay poll tax in Mexican-American War, wrote essay On the Duty o f Civil Dis o be d ie nc e • Idealistic tract promoting nonviolence • Thoreau saw civil disobedience as the right of individuals to refuse to obey laws they feel are unjust • Walt Whitman wrote Le a ve s o f Gra s s , became poet laureate of democracy • Writings reflected leaving behind Old World, embracing new
  • 121. • How and why did the abolition movement become more radical over the period 1815-1860? • Define Manifest Destiny and how the belief in Manifest Destiny influenced U.S. politics and policies in the 1840s? • What was the Compromise of 1850 and to what degree did the Compromise of 1850 delay the breakup of the Union? • How did two of the following events contribute to the breakup of the Union? • Passage of the Kansas-Nebraska Act • Decision in the Dre a d Sc o tt case • Raid on Harpers Ferry
  • 123.  After Revolution slavery faced an uncertain future, it was logical to think slavery would fade away  Invention of the cotton gin in 1793 changed that  Cotton became dominant crop in the south, created demand for labor and land  Quick profits from cotton drew planters to the Gulf South during this time  Caused economic spiral more cotton = more slaves, if you had more slaves you could buy more land  Northern shippers profited from cotton trade  They shipped it to England  Largest American export after 1840 (1/2 of world’s supply)  Southern leaders knew that cotton production was something they could hold over heads of British
  • 124.  Cotton and Slaves 1820 and 1860
  • 125.  South was a society run be elite wealthy planters  Very few owned large amount of slaves  They had tremendous wealth, sent children to schools outside of south (kept public education from gaining foothold)  Had a sense of duty to the public  Dominance by planters caused a huge gap between rich and poor  Society almost feudal (lords, manors and serfs)  Shaped the lives of women, they managed the house and the slave staff, most did not support abolition
  • 126.  Search for quick profit led to over cultivation and degradation of the environment  Those that could not make it headed West and North (Butternuts)  Economic structure became monopolistic, land owners concentrated their holdings and bought out small farmers  Land hunger led to over speculation of lands, heavy investment in slaves caused crushing debt for many planters  Dependence on one crop put South at the mercy of the world markets, caused lack of economic diversity that effect region well into the 20th century  Resentment of the northern bankers, middlemen, businessmen intensified as they grew rich off Southern cotton and made profits selling manufactured goods to the South  Slaves and high land prices kept out European immigrants, South had little ethnic diversity
  • 127.  1/4 of families owned slaves  Typically small farmers (more like Midwestern or Northern farmers)  Many owned no slaves at all, they were subsistence farmers (raised corn, hogs) and lived isolated lives  Had no direct stake in slave system but supported it because there was somebody on the social ladder lower than them  Mountain whites in Appalachia disliked blacks and masters and provided strong Union support in the South during the Civil War
  • 128. • Free blacks in the Upper South (MD, VA, NC) traced origins to Revolution • Lower South most free were mulattoes, some purchased freedom • New Orleans had sizeable free, mulatto community • Seen a third race, could not hold certain occupations, vote • In the North some states would not let them live there, could not attend public schools, competed with Irish for menial jobs • Spread of slavery in new territory grew out of prejudice not humanitarianism
  • 129. • Number of slaves grew during first half of 1800’s • King Cotton demanded tribute in slave labor • Some smuggled into country (made illegal 1808), most growth due to natural increase • Slaves planters biggest asset and they were treated like investments (for the most part) • Cotton boom sucked slaves from Upper to Lower South • Some states had majority African American populations • Slaves sold at auction, sometimes for bankruptcy • Led to breakup of families, became theme for Harriet Beecher Stowe and
  • 130.  Conditions for slaves varied from region to region  No slaves had civil or political rights, no labor rights  Beatings and threat of beating substituted for wage-incentive system  Masters were never too harsh because of investment  1860 most slaves concentrated in “black belt” across Deep South  Region was southern frontier, life was rougher than Upper South  Majority lived on plantations
  • 131.  Slaves managed to maintain family life  Kept some African traditions in marriage, descent, religion  Religion was mixture of Christian and African traditions  Focused on themes of persecution in the Bible  Call and response preaching adaptation of caller and dancers from West African traditions
  • 132. • Slaves denied education, did not want them to get new ideas, question position • Slaves struck back by slowing the pace of work, sabotaging equipment, took goods they produced • All wanted freedom, some ran away • Armed rebellion never worked • 1800 Gabriel Prosser(Richmond, VA), 1822 Denmark Vesey (Charleston, SC), 1831 Nat Turner • All failed, all were hung or were killed • White southerners felt like they were under siege (rebellions, abolitionist propaganda) developed theory of superiority over blacks • American South was one of the world’s last bastions of slavery
  • 133.  First anti slavery societies appeared after Revolution, main support among Quakers  Earliest efforts were to send blacks back to Africa  1822- American Colonization Society, founded Liberia in West Africa- 15,000 went  Most slaves did not see themselves as Africans  1830’s slavery becomes moral crusade because of Second Great Awakening  1833 –British abolish slavery in West Indies  Slavery became a sin  Theodore Weld and “Lane Rebels” preached anti-slavery gospel across Old Northwest
  • 134. • 1831- William Lloyd Garrison publishes first issue of The Libe ra to r, a militantly anti slavery newspaper based in Boston • 1833- American Antislavery society founded • Black Abolitionists – David Walker (promoted bloody end to slavery), Sojourner Truth (advocate for emancipation and women’s rights) • Fredrick Douglass – best known black abolitionist, escaped slave • Wrote Na rra tive o f the Life o f Fre d ric k Do ug la s s , detailed his early life and escape
  • 135. • Differences between Garrison and Douglass • Garrison known as inflexible, self righteous, impractical • Provided no alternative to country without slavery • Denounced politics • Many abolitionist questioned the role of women (Garrison supported women) • Douglass- used politics to end slavery • New political parties emerge in 1840’s based on abolition of slavery • Liberty Party (1840), Free Soil Party (1848), Republican Party (1850’s)
  • 136. • Before 1830’s some antislavery sentiment in the south • 1831 publication of Liberator, Nat Turner Rebellion, Nullification Crisis of 1832 • All turned tide in South • White southerners saw threat to way of life, began to defend slavery • Justifications- supported by Bible, good for civilization depraved Africans, master- slave relationship was like a family (contrasted with industrial wage earners in northern factories) • 1836 Southerners in House pass Ga g Re s o lutio n, tables all debate on slavery (defied by John Quincy Adams) • Postmasters given permission to destroy abolitionist material across South • Widened gap between north and south
  • 137. • Abolitionists unpopular in many parts of the north • Seen as too radical • Heavy economic stake in south; cotton production for factories, money owed to northern banks • Abolitionists seen as rocking the boat • Mobs attacked abolitionists • By 1850’s issue of territorial expansion, other factors put many in north on side of abolitionists
  • 139. • Americans want Texas, remote backwater of Spanish Empire • US abandoned claim in 1819 • 1823- new Mexican government gives land to Stephen Austin to bring settlers • 2 conditions settlers had to become Mexican citizens, become Catholic • Ignored by settlers, annoyed by presence of Mexican soldiers and government • Settlers typical American individualist, did not want to be pushed around • Slavery an issue, outlawed in Mex., settlers brought slaves anyway • 1836 Mex. Leader Santa Ana attempts to repress Texans independence
  • 140. • Early 1836 Texans declare independence • Santa Anna attacks Alamo and Goliad become rallying cries for Texans, galvanized Americans behind Texas cause • Gen. Sam Houston lures Mexicans east to San Jacinto (near present day Houston), and defeats Santa Anna • Forces Santa Anna to sign treaty giving land to Rio Grande to Texas and removing troops from region • Mex. does not recognize agreement • Texas becomes an independent republic but wanted to be part of the United States • Refused admission, abolitionists did not want new slave state • Seen as a plot against slavery to Southerners
  • 141.  1840’s territorial expansion dominated politics, diplomacy  War with Mexico, gained territory from Texas to California and questions of status of slavery  1841 William Henry Harrison (Whig) elected and died in office  Real leaders of Whigs Clay, Webster tried to push agenda, thwarted by John Tyler (VP, now president)  Tyler supporter of states rights  Clay and others tried to push nationalistic political agenda  Whigs pushed for new bank, tariffs; all vetoed by Tyler
  • 142. • British looked down on Americans, increased tension with America • Americans borrowed extensively from British banks (many defaulted on loans during Panic of 1837) • 1837 Caroline incident with Canada, 1841 slaves offered asylum in Bahamas (southern fear of Caribbean becoming haven for escaped slaves), 1842 border disputes in Maine (settled by Webster- Ashburton Treaty)
  • 143.  1836- Texas achieves independence, not recognized by Mexico  Britain, France interested in Texas as place for cotton production, check American power  Texas as independent nation threatened US  Presidential campaign 1844 issue of expansion  Texas annexed by joint resolution of Congress 1844  James K. Polk won election on expansion platform  Texas became state 1845  Oregon  enormous wilderness  Claimed by many different countries until 1825, then only US and Britain  British claims based on occupation  American claims based on exploration and occupation  1830’s American missionaries settle Willamette Valley, stimulates interest of Americans  1840’s number of Americans increases, came over Oregon Trail  British had few settlers, weaker claim than Americans
  • 144.  Election of 1844 between Henry Clay and James Polk  Major election issue Manifest Destiny  Feeling that America’s duty was to spread ideals of democracy across continent (idea of expansion and liberty)  Expansion ignored national boundaries, came at the expense of others  Expansionist Democrats won election felt they had a mandate to take Texas and Oregon  New President James K. Polk had 4 point program – lower tariff, create independent treasury, acquire Oregon and California  1846 US and Britain compromise on Oregon territory border (dying fur trade made British lose interest in Oregon)
  • 145.  Americans wanted San Francisco and San Diego Bays as ports on Pacific and to expand American trade to Asia  Americans saw weakness in Mexican control of borderlands  Polk eager to buy California, Mexicans would not sell  Wanted California to balance admission of Texas with a free state  US/Mexico issues over boundary of Texas  Mexican claim was boundary at Nueces River, American claim was Rio Grande  Rumors of British wanting to purchase California, could not be tolerated under Monroe doctrine  1846 Polk sends troops to Texas, march from Nueces River to Rio Grande  April 1846 US soldiers killed and Polk asks for war, Congress overwhelmingly supports it
  • 146.  Many northerners and Whigs saw this as a land grab and war for extension of slavery  Lincoln (then Rep. from Illinois) pushes “spot resolutions” to show where blood was shed on American soil  Both sides wanted war, America to teach Mexicans a lesson, Mexicans saw US a bully to the north  South and West supported war  The US unprepared for the war. Ill equipped volunteers American army filled the  l iAttdlev amnotativgaetsio onv teor ftihgeh tM. exican military that had outdated equipment and  lAemadeerircsahnip industrial base to prepare and equip an army, superior  United States won easily over the Mexican forces in 1847  California- John Fremont led a revolt against Mexican rule and declared the state “The Bear Flag Republic”
  • 147.  1848- War ended with Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo  Gave US vast new territory, paid Mexico $15 million dollars for land  Many Americans thought that US should not stop with Mexico  European countries had new respect for American military  The Mexican American War of conquest that would have wocacsu arr belda ttahnrot uwgahr migration eventually  gTehnee wraalrs a(lLseoe t,r aGinraendt )t htoe fnigehxtt Agemneerricaati’osn n oefx t war – the Civil War  TAumrenrinicga ,p boeincta inm Ue Ss urseplaictiioonuss wofit h“C Loalotisns us of the North”  War aroused issue of slavery and its expansion  1846- David Wilmot tries to introduce anemwe ntedrmriteonryt ,t hnaetv selra vpearsys eshdo tuhled Sneont aetxeis bt uint (symbolized issue of slavery in territories Wilmot Proviso)