The Jeffersonian Era
Chapter Seven Main Themes
1. How Americans expressed their burgeoning cultural independence through republican education, literature and religious revivalism.
2. The impact of industrialism on the United States and its people, particularly with regard to agricultural technology and transportation.
3. The domestic questions and foreign entanglements of Thomas Jefferson's presidency, including Marbury v. Madison, the Louisiana Purchase, the settling of the west, and the impressment and embargo controversies
4. The response of the American people and their political system to the nation's physical expansion, and the reaction of Native American groups to this expansion.
5. The growing conflict between British naval policies and American self-identity that led to the War of 1812, and its ultimate consequences for the young American nation.
A thorough study of Chapter Seven should enable the student to understand:· The role of republican education in creating a "virtuous and enlightened citizenry."
· The American cultural and nationalist aspirations beginning to emerge in the first two decades of the nineteenth century.
· The effects of the revolutionary experience on American religion, and the changing religious patterns that helped bring on the Second Great Awakening.
· The growing industrialism of America and the important advances made in technology and transportation during Jefferson's presidency, belying the simple, agrarian republic envisioned by the Jeffersonians.
· The political philosophy of Thomas Jefferson, and the extent to which he was able to adhere to his philosophy while president.
· The origins and compromises that led to the creation of Washington DC as America's capital.
· The Jeffersonian-Federalist struggle over the judiciary--its causes, the main points of conflict, and the importance of the outcome for the future of the nation.
· President Jefferson's constitutional reservations concerning the Louisiana Purchase, and the significance of his decision to accept the bargain.
· The reasons for President Jefferson's sponsorship of the Lewis and Clark expedition, and the importance of that exploration.
· The strange story of Aaron Burr, his duel with Alexander Hamilton, and his trial for "conspiracy."
· The problems caused by Tecumseh's attempts at confederation and by the Spanish presence in Florida as Americans surged westward.
· The motivations behind Thomas Jefferson and James Madison's strategy of "peaceable coercion," and why it ultimately failed.
· The international events leading up to the War of 1812, and the domestic forces encouraging the war.
· The extent of the opposition to the American war effort, and the ways in which the New England Federalists attempted to show their objections.
· The end of the War of 1812, and the treaties accompanying it.
· The comparative role of the United States in the "global industrial revolution" that originated in Great Britain.
Chapter Summary
The period covered in this chapter was marked by definition and expansion. Having achieved political independence, Americans struggled to achieve cultural independence as well, and this search for self-identity touched almost every phase of the nation's life. "American" tastes in music, literature, and art developed. Religious bodies with ties to colonial ways declined as the Second Great Awakening swept America. The global process of industrialization began to have an impact in the United States while technology, unrestrained by mercantile regulations, expanded to solve problems that were particularly American. Meanwhile American politics began to take on characteristics and respond to needs with little precedent in European systems. At the center of this activity, at times leading it and at times being led, was Thomas Jefferson, a president whose versatility seemed to mirror the diversity of the nation. A pragmatic politician, Jefferson was also a committed idealist¾one who deserves to be the symbol of the age that bears his name. The War of 1812 did more than test the army and navy of the United States¾it tested the nation's ability to survive deep internal divisions that threatened America's independence as surely as did the forces of Great Britain. Hoping to keep his nation out of war, Jefferson followed a policy that kept the peace but raised fears among his political enemies. The rest of the nation, feeling that Britain was insulting its sovereignty, rallied to the president. In the end, these divisions, although they hampered the war effort, did not survive the conflict, and the United States entered the postwar period with a new sense of nationalism.
Internet Resources
For Internet quizzes, resources, references to additional books and films, and more, consult the text’s Online Learning Center at www.mhhe.com/brinkley12.
KEY TermsPublic and private education / John Marshall / Hartford Convention
Noah Webster / Louisiana Purchase / Treaty of Ghent
American authors and nationalism / Lewis and Clark / Rush- Bagot Agreement
deism / Aaron Burr
Second Great Awakening / Napoleonic Wars
Eli Whitney / Impressment
Robert Fulton / Embargo Act
Turnpikes / Non-Intercourse Act
Urbanization / Tecumseh and The Prophet
Barbary Coast piracy / Spain and Florida
Marbury v Madison / Battle of New Orleans