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The Dynamics of Western Settlement and Eastern Capitalism 1790

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Title: The Dynamics of Western Settlement and Eastern Capitalism 1790


1
The Dynamics ofWestern Settlement andEastern
Capitalism17901820
2
  • Two powerful ideologies
  • Nationalism and
  • Sectionalism
  • Both grew tremendously during this period.
    Lets look at the factors that helped to promote
    these two ideologies, and try to understand the
    impact of each on the nations history.
  • People frequently think that secessionist plans
    originated among radical southern states rights
    advocates. The earliest secession schemes began
    in the Northeast and the West, we need to look
    at their motives, and the reasons for their
    failure.

3
  • I also want to examine the factors that fostered
    the development of a capitalist economy in the
    United States. Specifically the forces behind the
    enactment of the Embargo Act of 1807. We need to
    understand the economic hardships and
    divisiveness it caused, and understand why it was
    replaced by less stringent legislation. We need
    to understand outwork, or putting-out, system
    its origins and the effects it had on farm
    families, agriculture, and the market economy.
  • Students often believe that after the Revolution,
    Americans were united into a single homogeneous
    people. The geographical expansion of the United
    States from 1790 to 1820 needs to be understood,
    especially the roles played by American
    presidents, diplomats, military forces, and
    foreign nations (including Native Americans) in
    acquiring new territory. We need to examine the
    power and influence of state and local
    governments in the early nineteenth century, and
    the numerous ways in which they sought to improve
    the welfare of their citizens and to regulate
    social life.

4
  • Students often believe that after the
    Revolution, Americans were united into a single
    homogeneous people.
  • The geographical expansion of the United States
    from 1790 to 1820 needs to be understood,
    especially the roles played by American
    presidents
  • diplomats
  • military forces and
  • foreign nations (including Native Americans)
  • in acquiring new territory.
  • We need to examine the power and influence of
    state and local governments in the early
    nineteenth century, and the numerous ways in
    which they attempted to improve the welfare of
    their citizens and to regulate social life.

5
  • Thanks in part to purposeful political leadership
    and innovative public policies, the young
    American republic grew at an astounding pace
    between 1790 and 1820.
  • First Census taken in 1790 -

6
  • The United States acquired immense new lands in
    the West, particularly through Thomas Jeffersons
    purchase of Louisiana from France, and settled
    them quickly. By 1820, more than two million
    white an black Americans were living west of the
    Appalachians.

7
  • Native Americans, however, struggled with whites
    for the preservation of their lands and culture.
    National policy promoted farming in the West, and
    state legislatures devised legal innovations and
    financial incentives to stimulate economic growth
    in the East.
  • The results of these twin initiatives were soon
    apparent as per capita income in the United
    States increased after 1800.

8
  • With the election of Thomas Jefferson in 1800,
    Republicans began wresting political power from
    northeastern merchants and creditors and
    implementing policies to help yeomen farmers.
  • While retaining the Bank of the United States
    and many Federalist officials, Jefferson
    eliminated excise taxes, reduced the national
    debt, cut the size of the army, and lowered the
    price of land in the West.

9
Westward Expansion
  • Native American Resistance

10
  • Invoking the Treaty of Paris and viewing
    Britains Indian allies as conquered peoples, the
    U.S. government asserted its ownership of the
    trans-Appalachian West
  • Native Americans rejected this claim and
    pointed out that they had not signed the treaty
    and had never been conquered.
  • In 1784, the United States used military threat
    to force the pro-British Iroquois peoples to sign
    the Treaty of Fort Stanwix and relinquish much of
    their land in New York and Pennsylvania.
  • Farther to the west, the United States induced
    Indian peoples to give up most of the future
    state of Ohio.

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12
  • The Indians formed a Western Confederacy to
    protect themselves against aggressive settlers
    and forced a peace compromise in the Treaty of
    Greenville in 1795.
  • In practice, this agreement eventually brought
    the transfer of millions of acres of Indian land
    to the U.S. government and sparked a wave of
    American migration into the region, resulting in
    new conflicts with native peoples over land and
    hunting rights.
  • Most Native Americans resisted attempts to
    assimilate them into white society and rejected
    European farming practices.
  • American Indian policy from 1790 to 1820
    included
  • - assimilation of Indians into American culture.
  • - acknowledging Indian ownership of western
    lands.
  • - coercing and bribing Native Americans to cede
    vast tracts of western lands to the Americans.

13
Migration and the Changing Farm Economy
Cumberland Gap was "the way West" until 1810
14
  • The migratory upsurge of white farmers and
    planters brought financial rewards to many
    settlers and transformed the American farm
    economy.
  • Most migrants who flocked through the
    Cumberland Gap were white tenant farmers and
    yeomen families fleeing the depleted soils and
    planter elite of the Chesapeake region.
  • Though poor migrants to Kentucky and Tennessee
    believed they had a customary right to occupy
    waste vacant lands, the Virginia government
    allowed them to purchase up to 1,400 acres of
    land at reduced prices but sold or granted
    estates of 20,000 to 200,000 acres to wealthy
    individuals and partnerships.
  • The end result was that New lands opened by
    the Treaty of Paris were primarily controlled by
    rich speculators.

15
  • A second stream of migrants, dominated by
    slave-owning planters and their enslaved workers,
    moved along the coastal plain of the Gulf of
    Mexico into the future states of Alabama,
    Mississippi, and Louisiana.
  • Cotton financed the rapid settlement of this
    region as well as the expansion of slavery
    into the Old Southwest as technological
    breakthroughs increased the demand for raw wool
    and cotton.
  • Seeking land for their children, a third stream
    of migrants flowed out of the overcrowded
    communities of New England into New York,
    Indiana, and Ohio.

16
  • In New York, speculators snapped up much of the
    best land and attracted tenants to work it by
    offering farms rent-free for seven years, after
    which they charged rents many New England yeomen
    preferred the Holland Land Company, which allowed
    settlers to buy the land as they worked it, but
    high interest rates and the lack of markets
    initially mired thousands of these freeholders in
    debt.
  • Unable to compete against low-priced western
    grains, eastern farmers changed their agriculture
    methods rotating crops, diversifying
    production, and planting year round which
    helped increase their productivity and boosted
    the entire American economy.

17
The Transportation Bottleneck
18
  • Improved inland trade became a high priority for
    the new state governments to overcome geographic
    impediments to getting goods to market.
  • States chartered corporations to dredge rivers
    and build turnpikes and canals. One of the
    early successes in solving transportation
    problems in the United States was the
    construction of the Lancaster Turnpike in 1794 in
    Pennsylvania.
  • Only after 1819, when the Erie Canal linked
    central and western New York to the Hudson River,
    could inland farmers easily sell their goods in
    eastern markets.
  • Improvement in roads and the construction of
    canals decreased the cost of transportation in
    the East, but these conveniences did not reach
    western farmers across the Appalachian Mountains.
    States such as Ohio and Kentucky relied on the
    transport of goods via the Mississippi River
    south to New Orleans.

19
  • Western settlers paid premium prices for land
    along navigable rivers, and farmers and merchants
    built barges to float goods to the port of New
    Orleans.
  • Many isolated western settlers had no choice but
    to be self-sufficient self-sufficiency meant a
    low standard of living.
  • Settlers continued to migrate westward,
    confident that the canal and road system would
    yield future security.

20
The Republicans Political Revolution
  • The Jeffersonian Presidency

21
  • Thomas Jefferson was the first chief executive
    to hold office in the District of Columbia, the
    new national capitol.
  • Before John Adams left office, the Federalist
    controlled Congress had passed the Judiciary Act,
    which created sixteen new judgeships and six new
    circuit courts. Just before leaving office,
    Adams filled the judgeships and courts with
    midnight appointments.

22
  • James Madisons refusal to deliver the
    commission appointing William Marbury, one of
    Adamss midnight appointees, as a justice of the
    peace in the District of Columbia caused Marbury
    to petition the Supreme Court to compel delivery
    under the terms of the Judiciary Act of 1789.
  • In Marbury v. Madison, Chief Justice John
    Marshall asserted the Courts power of judicial
    review.

23
  • Despite this setback, Jefferson mobilized
    Republicans to shrink back the national
    governments size and power they believed was
    grossly over expanded through Federalist
    policies.
  • Republicans refused to reenact the Alien and
    Sedition Acts when they expired, amended the
    Naturalization Act to permit resident aliens to
    become citizens after five years, and secured
    repeal of the Judiciary Act, thereby ousting
    forty of Adamss midnight appointees, though
    Jefferson allowed competent Federalist
    bureaucrats to retain their jobs.

24
  • In foreign affairs, Jefferson met the crisis of
    the Barbary pirates by initially refusing to
    pay an annual bribe (tribute) to protect
    American vessels in the Mediterranean, but, to
    avoid war, negotiated a diplomatic settlement
    that reduced the tribute payment.
  • In domestic matters, Jefferson set a clearly
    Republican course he abolished internal taxes
    reduced the size of the army and tolerated the
    Bank of the United States.
  • With Thomas Jefferson and Albert Gallatin at
    the helm, the national debt was reduced and the
    nation was no longer run in the interests of
    northeastern creditors and merchants.

25
  • Jefferson's Republican revolution cut back
    the size and scope of the federal government,
    decreased the national debt, and opened up the
    West. There were no work projects instituted for
    the disadvantaged. Although Jefferson did away
    with many Federalists policies, he removed only
    about one-fourth of the Federalist officeholders
    held over from the previous administration.
  • In foreign policy, Jefferson tried to enforce a
    neutral position against Britain and France, but
    he allowed the Alien and Sedition Acts to expire
    and decreased the term required for
    naturalization to five years.

26
Westward Expansion
  • The issues of westward expansion, foreign policy,
  • and slavery caused deep political divisions
    between geographical
  • regions. Indian uprisings and expansionist
    demands by western
  • Republicans led President James Madison into the
    War of 1812
  • against Britain.
  • The war split the nation, prompting a
    secessionist
  • Movement in New England, but a negotiated peace
    ended the
  • military stalemate, and Andrew Jacksons victory
    at New
  • Orleans preserved American honor. The diplomacy
    of
  • John Quincy Adams led to the acquisition of
    Florida
  • and the settlement of boundaries with British
    Canada
  • and Spanish Texas.

27
Jefferson and the West
  • As president, Jefferson seized the opportunity
    to increase the flow of settlers to the West
    Republicans passed laws reducing the minimum
    acreage available for purchase.
  • In 1801, Napoleon Bonaparte coerced Spain into
    returning Louisiana to France then he directed
    Spanish officials to restrict American access to
    New Orleans.

28
  • To avoid hostilities with France, Jefferson
    instructed Robert R. Livingston, an American
    minister in Paris, to negotiate the purchase of
    New Orleans simultaneously, he also sent James
    Monroe to Britain to seek its assistance in case
    of war with France.
  • In April 1803, Bonaparte, Livingston, and James
    Monroe concluded what came to be known as the
    Louisiana Purchase for 15 million dollars (450
    million in todays dollars).

29
  • Since it did not provide for adding new
    territory, Jefferson pragmatically accepted a
    loose interpretation of the Constitution.

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33
The acquisition of approximately 827,000 square
miles would double the size of the United
States. The Senate ratified the treaty Oct. 20 by
a vote of 24 to 7. Spain, upset by the sale but
without the military power to block it, formally
returned Louisiana to France on Nov. 30. France
officially transferred the territory to the
Americans on Dec. 20, and the United States took
formal possession on Dec. 30.
34
  • "This little event, of France's possessing
    herself of Louisiana is the embryo of a tornado
    which will burst on the countries on both sides
    of the Atlantic and involve in it's effects their
    highest destinies."
  • Jefferson's prediction of a "tornado" that would
    burst upon the countries on both sides of the
    Atlantic had been averted, but his belief that
    the affair of Louisiana would impact upon "their
    highest destinies" proved prophetic indeed.

35
  • In 1804, Jefferson sent Meriwether Lewis and
    William Clark on an expedition they returned two
    years later with maps of the new territory (and
    regions beyond).
  • Fearing that western expansion would diminish
    their power, New England Federalists talked
    openly of leaving the Union.
  • Refusing to support the secessionists,
    Alexander Hamilton accused their chosen leader,
    Aaron Burr, of participating in a conspiracy to
    destroy the Union, and Burr shot Hamilton to
    death in a duel.

36
  • As evidenced by Burrs probable plan to either
    capture territory in New Spain or to foment a
    rebellion to establish Louisiana as a separate
    nation headed by himself, the Republicans policy
    of western expansion increased party conflict and
    generated secessionist schemes in both New
    England and the West.

37
Conflict with Britain and France
  • As the Napoleonic Wars ravaged Europe, Great
    Britain and France refused to respect the
    neutrality of American merchant vessels.
  • Napoleon imposed the Continental System,
    which required customs officials to seize neutral
    American ships that had stopped in Britain.
  • The British naval blockade stopped American
    ships carrying goods to Europe and also searched
    them for British deserters, who were then
    impressed (forced) back into service in the Royal
    Navy.

38
  • Americans were outraged in 1807 when a British
    warship attacked the Chesapeake, killing or
    wounding twenty-one men and seizing four.
  • Jefferson devised the Embargo Act of 1807, which
    prohibited American ships from leaving their home
    ports until Britain and France repealed
    restrictions on U.S. trade.
  • The act caused American exports to plunge,
    prompting Federalists to demand its repeal.
  • The Embargo was an imaginative but naive
    policy that hurt Americans more than anyone else.

39
  • Despite discontent over the embargo, voters
    elected Republican James Madison to the
    presidency in 1808. As president, James Madison
    replaced the embargo with new economic
    restrictions, none of which persuaded Britain and
    France to respect Americas neutrality rights.
  • Republican congressmen from the West thought
    Britain was the major offender as evidenced by
    its assistance to the Indians in the Ohio River
    Valley.
  • Republican expansionists in Congress condemned
    British support of Tecumseh and his brother
    Tenskwatawa, who had revived the Western
    Confederacy, and threatened to invade Canada in
    retaliation.

40
  • In 1811, following a series of clashes between
    settlers and the Western Confederacy, William
    Henry Harrison, the governor of the Indian
    Territory, led an army against Tenskwatawas
    village of Prophetstown, fended off the
    confederacys warriors at the Battle of
    Tippecanoe, and burned the village to the ground.
  • Henry Clay and John C. Calhoun, hoping to gain
    new territory and discredit the Federalists,
    pushed Madison toward war with Britain.

41
  • With elections approaching Madison demanded
    British respect for American sovereignty in the
    West and neutral rights on the Atlantic
  • When the British did not respond quickly,
    Madison asked Congress for a declaration of war.
    In June 1812, a sharply divided Senate voted 19
    to 13 for war, and the House of Representatives
    concurred, 79 to 49.

42
The War of 1812
43
  • Pressure for war with Britain primarily came
    from western Republicans who saw British support
    for the Indians as a threat to American
    expansion.
  • The War of 1812 was a near disaster for the
    United States, both militarily and politically.
  • Political divisions in the United States
    prevented a major invasion of Canada in the East
    New Englanders opposed the war, and Boston
    merchants declined to lend money to the
    government.

44
  • deeply divided along party lines the
    Federalist merchants in the Northeast were
    opposed to war, while most Republicans supported
    the war.
  • After two years of sporadic warfare, the United
    States had made little progress along the
    Canadian frontier and was on the defensive along
    the Atlantic moreover, the new capital city was
    in ruins. The war was going badly for the
    United States when it ended.

45
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46
  • In the Southwest, Andrew Jackson led an army of
    militiamen to victory over British supported
    Creek Indians in the Battle of Little Horseshoe
    Bend and forced the Indians to cede 23 million
    acres of land.

47
Federalists met in Hartford, Connecticut to
discuss a strategy for a radical reform in the
National Compact. Some proposed secession but
the majority wanted an amendment to the
Constitution that would limit presidents to a
single four-year term rotate the presidency
among citizens of different states They also
suggested amendments restricting commercial
embargoes requiring a two-thirds majority in
Congress to declare war, to prohibit trade, and
to admit a new state to the Union.
48
  • The war continued to go badly an American naval
    victory on Lake Champlain narrowly averted a
    British invasion of the Hudson River Valley
    British troops landed outside New Orleans and
    threatened to cut American trade down the
    Mississippi River.
  • American military setbacks strengthened
    opposition to the war, but, fortunately, Britain,
    sapped from its twenty-year war with France,
    wanted peace.
  • The Treaty of Ghent, signed December 24, 1814,
    restored the prewar borders of the United States.

49
  • Andrew Jacksons victory against the British at
    New Orleans not only made him a national hero but
    it also redeemed the nations pride, and,
    together with the coming of peace, undercut the
    Hartford conventions demands for a significant
    revision of the Constitution.

50
                                                  
    
On January 8, 1815, American forces, under
General Jackson, decisively defeated the British
forces at New Orleans.
51
  • As a result of John Quincy Adamss diplomacy,
    the United States gained undisputed possession of
    nearly all the land south of the forty-ninth
    parallel and between the Mississippi River and
    the Rocky Mountains.
  • It was also at Adamss urging that Monroe
    announced a new American foreign policy (the
    Monroe policy) in which it was declared that the
    American continents were not subject for further
    colonization in return for which the United
    States agreed not to interfere in the internal
    concerns of European nations.

52
The Capitalist Commonwealth
  • Banks, Manufacturing, and Markets

53
  • As Americans imposed a new political economy on
    the lands of the West, they developed a
    capitalist economy in the East.
  • Beginning in the 1790s, merchant capitalists
    created a flourishing outwork system of rural
    manufacturing, and state governments, by means of
    the commonwealth system, awarded corporate
    charters and subsidies to assist transportation
    companies, manufacturers, and banks.
  • The commonwealth system involved the
    following policies
  • - corporate charters with limited liability.
  • - monopoly charters with eminent domain for
    transportation projects.
  • - judicial support of corporate activity on the
    basis of "social utility."

54
  • America was a nation of merchants, and to
    finance enterprises, Americans needed a banking
    system.
  • In 1791, Congress chartered the first Bank of
    the United States however, it did not survive.
    When the banks twenty-year charter expired in
    1811, President Madison did not seek its renewal.
  • Republican minded state legislatures enacted
    statutes that encouraged economic development by
    redefining common law property rights.

55
  • Merchants, artisans, and farmers petitioned
    their state legislatures to charter new banks and
    by 1816 there were 246 state-chartered banks with
    68 million in banknotes in circulation.
  • Many banks issued notes without adequate specie
    reserves and made ill-advised loans to insiders.
  • The Panic of 1819, sparked by a sharp drop in
    world agricultural prices, gave Americans their
    first taste of the business cycles periodic
    expansion and contraction of profits and
    employment.

56
  • The Panic of 1819 also revealed that artisans
    and yeomen as well as merchants now depended on
    regional or national markets merchant-entrepreneu
    rs developed a rural based manufacturing system
    similar to the European outwork, or putting-out,
    system.
  • The economic advances that the economy enjoyed
    during this time stemmed primarily from
    innovations in organization and marketing rather
    than in technology.
  • The penetration of the market economy into
    rural areas motivated farmers to produce more
    goods.

57
  • As the rural economy turned out more goods, it
    significantly altered the environment by the
    mid-nineteenth century, most of the forests in
    southern New England and eastern New York
    disappeared and mill dams altered the flow of New
    Englands rivers.
  • The new market system decreased the self
    sufficiency of families and communities even as
    it made them more productive.

58
Public Policy The Commonwealth System
  • Throughout the nineteenth century, state
    governments had a much greater impact on the
    day-to-day lives of Americans than did the
    national government.
  • As early as the 1790s, state legislatures
    devised an American plan of mercantilism, known
    as the commonwealth system.
  • State legislatures granted hundreds of
    corporate charters to private businesses to build
    roads, bridges, and canals to connect inland
    market centers to seaport cities.

59
  • Incorporation often included a grant of limited
    liability and transportation charters included
    the power of eminent domain.
  • By 1820, innovative state governments had
    created a new political economy the
    Commonwealth system that used state incentives to
    encourage business and improve the general
    welfare.

60
Federalist Law John Marshall and theSupreme
Court
  • Led by the Federalist John Marshall, the
    Supreme Court protected the traditional rights of
    property owners and the charter privileges of
    business corporations.
  • Entrepreneurs took advantage of state
    legislation and judicial protection in order to
    create new business enterprises, strong regional
    economies, and the beginnings of a national
    market system.

61
  • Both Federalists and Republicans endorsed the
    idea of the commonwealth system, but in different
    ways Federalists supported Alexander Hamiltons
    program of national mercantilism a funded debt,
    tariffs, and a central bank where Jeffersonian
    Republicans generally preferred the state-based
    commonwealth system.
  • Following the War of 1812, some Republicans
    advocated national economic initiatives in 1816,
    Republican Henry Clay of Kentucky won legislation
    creating the Second Bank of the United States and
    persuaded President Madison to sign it.

62
  • The difference between Federalist and
    Jeffersonian Republican conceptions of public
    policy emerged during John Marshalls tenure on
    the Supreme Court.
  • Marshall was a committed Federalist who shaped
    the evolution of the Constitution through three
    principles that formed the basis of his
    jurisprudence a commitment to judicial
    authority the supremacy of national over state
    legislation and a traditional, static view of
    property rights.
  • After Marshall proclaimed the power of judicial
    review in Marbury v. Madison, the doctrine
    evolved slowly the Supreme and state courts used
    it sparingly and only to overturn state laws that
    conflicted with constitutional principles.

63
  • Marshall adopted a loose construction of the
    Constitution and asserted the dominance of
    national statutes over state legislation
    (McCulloch v.Maryland, 1819, and Gibbons v.
    Ogden, 1824).
  • Under Marshall, the Supreme Court construed the
    Constitution so that it extended protection to
    the property rights of individuals purchasing
    state-owned lands (Fletcher v. Peck, 1810, and
    Dartmouth College v. Woodward, 1819).
  • In Fletcher v. Peck, John Marshall
    contributed to the emergence of a national
    capitalist economy by expanding the contract
    clause of the Constitution to include state
    grants and charters, thus securing the validity
    of contracts across state lines and encouraging
    companies to do interstate business.

64
  • Nationalist-minded Republicans won the
    allegiance of many Federalists in the East, while
    Jeffersonian Republicans won the support of
    western farmers and southern planters.
  • Chief Justice John Marshall
  • - was a loose constructionist.
  • - used the contract clause to defend property
    rights.
  • - claimed the right of judicial review.

65
  • Although the decline of the Federalists and of
    party politics prompted observers to dub James
    Monroes two terms as president (18171825) as
    the Era of Good Feeling, the Republican Party
    divided into a national faction and a
    Jeffersonian, or state oriented, faction.
  • This division in the ranks of the Republican
    Party would produce a second party system in
    which national-minded Whigs faced off against
    state-focused Democrats.
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