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The Death of George Washington George Washington died December 14, 1799, after contracting an illness from a ride at Mt. Vernon during a winter storm He was only 3 years removed from the presidency His death left a hole in the Federalist Party that it could not overcome in 1800 “First in war, first in peace, and first in the hearts of his countrymen.” –Edmund Randolph delivering Washington’s Eulogy
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Jeffersonian AmericaJeffersonian Philosophy andOverview of Jefferson’s Presidency
Where we have been…• Exploration and Colonization
▫ 1607 – Jamestown▫ 1620 – Plymouth and Mayflower Compact▫ New England, Middle and Southern Colonies
• Rebellion and Unrest▫ Proclamation of 1763▫ Sugar Act, Stamp Act, Declaratory Act, Townshend Acts,
Quartering Act, Intolerable Acts▫ Sons of Liberty, Sam Adams, Paul Revere, Boston
Massacre, Boston Tea Party, First and Second Continental Congress
• Revolutionary War▫ Lexington and Concord, Declaration of Independence (1776),
Battle of Saratoga, Battle of Yorktown, Treaty of Paris of 1783▫ George Washington, John Adams, Thomas Jefferson, Patrick
Henry Thomas Paine, Abigail Adams, Mercy Otis Warren• Confederation Era
▫ Weaknesses of the Articles of Confederation▫ Northwest Ordinance and Land Ordinance of 1785▫ Shays’ Rebellion
• Constitution and Government• Federalist Era
The Death of George Washington • George Washington
died December 14, 1799, after contracting an illness from a ride at Mt. Vernon during a winter storm
• He was only 3 years removed from the presidency
• His death left a hole in the Federalist Party that it could not overcome in 1800
“First in war, first in peace, and first in the hearts of his countrymen.” –Edmund Randolph delivering Washington’s Eulogy
• There is no popular vote at this time
• Electors chosen by the state legislature meet in Philadelphia to choose president
• No single candidate won a majority of electoral votes▫ Results in a tie
between Jefferson and Burr
• The Constitution called for election to be decided by the House of Representatives
Candidate Electoral vote
Thomas Jefferson 73
Aaron Burr 73
John Adams 65
Charles Pinckney 64
The Election of .
Election of 1800• On the 36th vote, with the
encouragement of Alexander Hamilton, the Federalists in the House of Representatives chose Jefferson to be president and Burr, vice-president▫ Led to 12th Amendment in
1803 that called for separate ballots president and vice-president
• Jefferson dressed in regular clothes and walked to the Senate building to take the oath of office
• John Adams, accepted his defeat and quietly left the White House and allowed for a peaceful transition of power from one party to the other
• Thomas Jefferson was more than just a lawyer and politician
• He was an avocational architect, a skilled violinist, amateur scientist, avid horseman and a voracious reader
• Jefferson advised the designers of the city of Washington, D.C. and created his home, Monticello, in Virginia
A Renaissance Man – The Sage of Monticello
Jefferson’s Contradictions• He was born into
wealth and privilege yet he championed the rule by virtue and merit and the life of small farmers
• Thomas Jefferson was a wealthy planter that owned many slaves yet wrote that “all men are created equal”
• Although many southern leaders freed their slaves upon their death, Jefferson did not
Jeffersonian Ideals• Jefferson was
convinced that the future of America rested in the creation of a nation of small independent farmers
• He believed an agrarian population would better support the ideals of a democratic and republican government
• Jefferson feared the result of Americans crowding into cities as had happened in Europe
Undoing Federalist Policies• Jefferson and the
Democratic Republicans believed the federal government should have less power
• Allowed Alien and Sedition Acts to expire▫ Freed people convicted
under the acts
• Abolished many taxes▫ Including the Whiskey
Tax
• Reduced the size of the military especially the Navy
• Reduced national debt using money from tariffs and land sales
Jeffersonian America Overview• Marbury vs. Madison
▫establishment of Supreme Court’s power of Judicial Review
• Louisiana Purchase (1803)▫Doubles the size of the
United States and leads to the Louis and Clark Expedition and the idea of Manifest Destiny
• Foreign Relations▫Problems with Britain
and France continue and will eventually lead to war with England in 1812.
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