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Chapter 7: Conflict and American Independence (1754–1800)

Albany Plan of Union

  • Developed by Benjamin Franklin in 1754

  • Proposed an intercolonial government and a system for collecting taxes for the colonies' defense

  • Representatives from seven colonies met in Albany, New York to consider the plan

  • Franklin also tried to negotiate a treaty with the Iroquois

  • Plan was rejected by the colonies as they did not want to relinquish control of their right to tax themselves or unite under a single colonial legislature

  • Franklin's frustration was well publicized in a political cartoon showing a snake broken into pieces with the words "Join or Die."

The Seven Years’ War (1754–1763)

The Seven Years' War (French and Indian War)

  • Also called the French and Indian War, it was actually one of several “wars for empire” fought between the British and the French.

  • The war was the inevitable result of colonial expansion, where English settlers moved into the Ohio Valley, and the French tried to stop them by building fortified outposts.

  • George Washington led a colonial contingent, which attacked a French outpost and lost.

  • Washington surrendered and was allowed to return to Virginia, where he was welcomed as a hero.

  • Most Native Americans in the region allied themselves with the French, who had traditionally had the best relations with Native Americans of any of the European powers.

  • The war dragged on for years before the English finally gained the upper hand.

  • When the war was over, England was the undisputed colonial power of the continent.

  • The treaty gave England control of Canada and almost everything east of the Mississippi Valley.

  • The French kept only a few small islands, underscoring the impact of mercantilism since the French prioritized two small but highly profitable islands over the large landmass of Canada.

The Seven Years' War: Consequences

  • William Pitt, the English Prime Minister during the war, was supportive of the colonists and encouraged them to join the war effort.

  • When the leadership in Britain changed after the war, that led to resentment by the colonists against the British rule.

  • Native Americans had previously been able to use French and English disputes to their own advantage, but the English victory spelled trouble for them.

  • The Native Americans particularly disliked the English, because English expansionism was more disruptive to their way of life.

  • In the aftermath of the war, the English raised the price of goods sold to the Native Americans and ceased paying rent on their western forts.

  • In response, Ottawa war chief Pontiac rallied a group of tribes in the Ohio Valley and attacked colonial outposts, which is known as Pontiac's Rebellion.

  • In response to Pontiac's Rebellion, the Paxton Boys, a group of Scots-Irish frontiersmen in Pennsylvania murdered several in the Susquehannock tribe.

General Section: Proclamation of 1763

  • In response to Pontiac's Rebellion, British government issued Proclamation of 1763, forbidding settlement west of the rivers running through the Appalachians.

  • Settlers had already moved west of the line, leading to agitation among the colonial settlers.

  • Proclamation marks the end of salutary neglect and the first step on the "road to revolution."

  • Established a pattern of demarcating "Indian Territory," a pattern that would be adopted by the US government after the colonists gained independence. Specific Section: Impact on Native Americans

  • Pontiac's rebellion was in part a response to colonists expanding into Ohio River Valley and encroaching on Native American lands.

  • British government quelled rebellion with cost and use of germ warfare.

  • Proclamation of 1763 established a pattern of demarcating "Indian Territory" which would have negative impact on Native Americans.

Proclamation of 1763:

  • Issued by British government in response to initial attacks

  • Forbidden settlement west of the rivers running through the Appalachians

  • Came too late; settlers had already moved west of the line

  • Agitated colonial settlers, viewed as unwarranted British interference

Pontiac's Rebellion:

  • In part, response to colonists expanding into Ohio River Valley and encroaching on Native American lands

  • British forced to quell rebellion at great cost, including use of germ warfare (smallpox-infected blankets) against Ottawa

Significance:

  • 1763 marks end of salutary neglect in British-colonial relations

  • First in a series of restrictions imposed on colonists by British Parliament, marks first step on "road to revolution"

  • Established pattern of demarcating "Indian Territory", later adopted and pursued by US government (e.g. Indian Removal Act, 1830)

The Sugar Act, the Currency Act, and the Stamp Act

  • Financing the war resulted in a huge debt for the British government

  • King George III and Prime Minister George Grenville felt that colonists should help pay the debt

  • Colonists believed they had fulfilled their obligation by providing soldiers

New Regulations and Taxes:

  • Parliament imposed new regulations and taxes on colonists

  • First was the Sugar Act of 1764, established new duties and provisions aimed at deterring molasses smugglers

  • Prior to the decade leading up to the Revolutionary War, there was little colonial resistance to previous trade and manufacturing regulations

  • The Sugar Act actually lowered the duty on molasses coming into the colonies from the West Indies

Colonial Response:

  • Angry about the new regulations being more strictly enforced and the duties being collected

  • Difficult for colonial shippers to avoid committing even minor violations of the Sugar Act

  • Violators were to be arrested and tried in vice-admiralty courts without jury deliberation

  • Suggested to some colonists that Parliament was overstepping its authority and violating their rights as Englishmen.

Colonial Discontent:

  • Sugar Act, Currency Act, and Proclamation of 1763 caused a great deal of discontent in the colonies

  • Colonists bristled at British attempts to exert greater control

  • End of Britain's long-standing policy of salutary neglect

  • Economic depression further exacerbated the situation

  • Colonial protest was uncoordinated and ineffective

The Stamp Act:

  • Passed in 1765 by Parliament

  • Aimed at raising revenue specifically

  • Awakened the colonists to the likelihood of more taxes to follow

  • Demonstrated that colonies' tradition of self-taxation was being unjustly taken by Parliament

  • Broad-based tax, covering all legal documents and licenses

  • Affected almost everyone, particularly lawyers

  • Tax on goods produced within the colonies

Reaction to the Stamp Act:

  • Built on previous grievances and more forceful than any protest preceding it

  • Pamphlet by James Otis, called The Rights of the British Colonies Asserted and Proved, laid out the colonists’ argument against the taxes

  • Otis put forward the “No taxation without representation” argument

  • Argued for either representation in Parliament or a greater degree of self-government for the colonies

  • British scoffed at the notion, arguing that colonists were already represented in Parliament through the theory of virtual representation

  • Colonists knew that their representation would be too small to protect their interests

  • Wanted the right to determine their own taxes.

Opposition to the Stamp Act:

  • Opponents united in the various colonies

  • Virginia, Patrick Henry drafted the Virginia Stamp Act Resolves, asserting colonists’ right to self-government

  • Boston, mobs burned customs officers in effigy, tore down a customs house, and nearly destroyed the governor’s mansion

  • Protest groups formed throughout the colonies, called themselves Sons of Liberty

  • Opposition was so effective that no duty collectors were willing to perform their job

Repeal of the Stamp Act:

  • In 1766, Parliament repealed the Stamp Act

  • George III replaced Prime Minister Grenville with Lord Rockingham, who had opposed the Stamp Act

  • Rockingham oversaw the repeal but also linked it to the passage of the Declaratory Act, which asserted British government's right to tax and legislate in all cases anywhere in the colonies

  • Although the colonists had won the battle over the stamp tax, they had not yet gained any ground in the war of principles over Parliament's powers in the colonies

Opposition to the Stamp Act:

  • Opponents united in the various colonies

  • Virginia, Patrick Henry drafted the Virginia Stamp Act Resolves, asserting colonists’ right to self-government

  • Boston, mobs burned customs officers in effigy, tore down a customs house, and nearly destroyed the governor’s mansion

  • Protest groups formed throughout the colonies, called themselves Sons of Liberty

  • Opposition was so effective that no duty collectors were willing to perform their job

Repeal of the Stamp Act:

  • In 1766, Parliament repealed the Stamp Act

  • George III replaced Prime Minister Grenville with Lord Rockingham, who had opposed the Stamp Act

  • Rockingham oversaw the repeal but also linked it to the passage of the Declaratory Act, which asserted British government's right to tax and legislate in all cases anywhere in the colonies

  • Although the colonists had won the battle over the stamp tax, they had not yet gained any ground in the war of principles over Parliament's powers in the colonies

The Townshend Acts:

  • Drafted by Charles Townshend, minister of the exchequer

  • Taxed goods imported directly from Britain, the first such tax in the colonies

  • Some of the tax collected was set aside for the payment of tax collectors, meaning that colonial assemblies could no longer withhold government officials’ wages in order to get their way

  • Created even more vice-admiralty courts and several new government offices to enforce the Crown’s will in the colonies

  • Suspended the New York legislature because it had refused to comply with a law requiring the colonists to supply British troops

  • Instituted writs of assistance, licenses that gave the British the power to search any place they suspected of hiding smuggled goods

Colonial Response:

  • Stronger than previous protests

  • Massachusetts Assembly sent letter (Massachusetts Circular Letter) to other assemblies asking that they protest the new measures in unison

  • British fanned the flames of protest by ordering the assemblies not to discuss the Massachusetts letter

  • Governors dissolved legislatures that discussed the letter, further infuriating colonists

  • Colonists held numerous rallies and organized boycotts

  • Sought support of “commoners” for the first time

  • Boycotts were most successful because they affected British merchants, who then joined the protest

  • Colonial women were essential in the effort to replace British imports with “American” (New England) products

  • After two years, Parliament repealed the Townshend

The Quartering Act of 1765:

  • Stationed large numbers of troops in America

  • Made the colonists responsible for the cost of feeding and housing them

  • Even after the Townshend duties were repealed, the soldiers remained, particularly in Boston

  • Officially sent to keep the peace but heightened tensions

  • Detachment was huge - 4,000 men in a city of only 16,000

  • Soldiers sought off-hour employment and competed with colonists for jobs

The Boston Massacre:

  • On March 5, 1770, a mob pelted a group of soldiers with rock-filled snowballs

  • Soldiers fired on the crowd, killing five

  • Propaganda campaign that followed suggested that the soldiers had shot into a crowd of innocent bystanders

  • John Adams defended the soldiers in court, helping to establish a tradition of giving a fair trial to all who are accused

The Calm, and Then the Storm

  • Boston Massacre shocks both sides into de-escalating rhetoric

  • Uneasy status quo falls into place for next two years

  • Colonial newspapers discuss ways to alter relationship between mother country and colonies

  • Very few radicals suggest independence

  • Things pick up in 1772 when British implement Townshend Acts (colonial administrators paid from customs revenues)

  • Colonists respond cautiously, setting up Committees of Correspondence to trade ideas and inform one another of political mood

  • Mercy Otis Warren and other writers call for revolution

  • John Dickinson's "Letters From a Farmer in Pennsylvania" unites colonists against Townshend Acts

  • British grant East India Tea Company monopoly on tea trade in colonies, colonists see new taxes imposed

  • Boston Tea Party results in British response with Coercive/Intolerable Acts (closes Boston Harbor, tightens control over Massachusetts government, Quartering Act)

  • Quebec Act (grants greater liberties to Catholics, extends boundaries of Quebec Territory) further impeding westward expansion, causing further dissatisfaction among colonists.

First Continental Congress

  • Convened in late 1774

  • All colonies except Georgia sent delegates

  • Represented diverse perspectives

  • Goal: enumerate American grievances, develop strategy for addressing grievances, formulate colonial position on relationship between royal government and colonial governments

  • Came up with list of laws colonists wanted repealed

  • Agreed to impose boycott on British goods until grievances were redressed

  • Formed Continental Association with towns setting up committees of observation to enforce boycott

  • These committees became de facto governments

  • Formulated limited set of parameters for acceptable Parliamentary interference in colonial affairs

Winter of 1774 and Spring of 1775

  • Committees of observation expanded powers

  • Replaced British-sanctioned assemblies in many colonies

  • Led acts of insubordination (collecting taxes, disrupting court sessions, organizing militias and stockpiling weapons)

  • John Adams later commented "The Revolution was effected before the war commenced. The Revolution was in the minds and hearts of the people"

The Shot Heard ‘Round the World

The British Underestimated the Pro-Revolutionary Movement

  • Government officials believed if they arrested ringleaders and confiscated weapons, violence could be averted

  • Dispatched troops to confiscate weapons in Concord, Massachusetts in April 1775

  • Troops had to pass through Lexington, where they confronted a small colonial militia (minutemen)

  • Someone fired a shot, which drew British return fire

  • Minutemen suffered 18 casualties (8 dead)

  • British proceeded to Concord where they faced a larger militia

  • Militia inflicted numerous casualties and forced British to retreat

  • Battle of Concord referred to as "the shot heard 'round the world"

The Pre-Revolutionary War Era

  • Colonists used time to rally citizens to the cause of independence

  • Not all were convinced, Loyalists included government officials, devout Anglicans, merchants dependent on trade with England, religious and ethnic minorities who feared persecution by the rebels

  • Many enslaved people believed their chances for liberty were better with the British than with the colonists

  • Increase in slave insurrections dampened some Southerners' enthusiasm for revolution

  • Patriots were mostly white Protestant property holders and gentry, as well as urban artisans, especially in New England

  • Much of the rest of the population hoped the whole thing would blow over

  • Quakers of Pennsylvania were pacifists and wanted to avoid war.

The Second Continental Congress

  • Convened during the summer after the battles of Lexington and Concord

  • Prepared for war by establishing a Continental Army, printing money, and creating government offices to supervise policy

  • Chose George Washington to lead the army because he was well-liked and a Southerner

John Dickinson and the Olive Branch Petition

  • Many delegates followed John Dickinson who was pushing for reconciliation with Britain using the Olive Branch Petition

  • Adopted by the Continental Congress on July 5, 1775

  • Last-ditch attempt to avoid armed conflict

  • King George III was not interested since he considered the colonists to be in open rebellion

  • One year before the adoption of the Declaration of Independence, the colonial leaders were trying to reconcile with the mother country.

The Declaration of Independence

  • Published in January 1776 by Thomas Paine, an English printer

  • Advocated for colonial independence and republicanism over monarchy

  • Sold more than 100,000 copies in its first three months

  • Accessible to colonists who couldn't always understand the Enlightenment-speak of the Founding Fathers

  • Helped swing support to the patriot cause among people who were unsure about attacking the mother country

Success of Common Sense

  • Bigger success than James Otis's The Rights of the British Colonies Asserted and Proved

  • Literacy rates in New England were higher due to the Puritan legacy of teaching children to read the Bible

  • Nevertheless, Paine's pamphlet reached a wider audience, including those who couldn't read

  • Proportional equivalent of selling 13 million downloads today

Role of Propaganda

  • Rebels were looking for a masterpiece of propaganda to rally colonists to their cause

  • Common Sense served as this masterpiece and helped swing support to the patriot cause.

Declaration of Independence

  • Commissioned by the Congress in June 1776

  • Written by Thomas Jefferson

  • Enumerated the colonies' grievances against the Crown

  • Articulated the principle of individual liberty and government's responsibility to serve the people

  • Despite its flaws, it remains a powerful document

  • Signed on July 4, 1776

The Significance of Declaration of Independence

  • The Revolutionary War became a war for independence with the signing of the Declaration

  • The Declaration not only set out the colonies' complaints against the British government but also laid out the philosophical underpinnings of the revolution, most notably the assertion that all men are created equal and have certain inalienable rights

  • The Declaration has been considered as a seminal document in American history, and has been a source of inspiration for movements for civil rights and freedom across the world.

The Battle of Yorktown

  • Occurred on October 17, 1781

  • Symbolic end to the American Revolution

  • Major British general, Cornwallis, was surrounded by the French navy and George Washington’s troops, and surrendered

  • Began a long period of negotiations between the American colonies and Great Britain, which would finally end the war in October of 1783

Other Facts about the War

  • Continental Army had trouble recruiting good soldiers

  • Congress eventually recruited Black people, and up to 5,000 fought on the side of the rebels

  • Franco-American Alliance, negotiated by Ben Franklin in 1778, brought the French into the war on the side of the colonists

  • Treaty of Paris, signed at the end of 1783, granted the United States independence and generous territorial rights

The Articles of Confederation

Articles of Confederation

  • Sent to the colonies for ratification in 1777 by the Continental Congress

  • The first national constitution of the United States

  • Intentionally created little to no central government due to fear of creating a tyrannical government

Limitations of the Articles of Confederation

  • Gave the federal government no power to raise an army

  • Could not enforce state or individual taxation, or a military draft

  • Could not regulate trade among the states or international trade

  • Had no executive or judicial branch

  • Legislative branch gave each state one vote, regardless of the state's population

  • In order to pass a law, 9 of the 13 of the states had to agree

  • In order to amend or change the Articles, unanimous approval was needed

Impact of the Limitations

  • These limitations hurt the colonies during Shays's Rebellion.

  • Eventually, the limitations of the Articles of Confederation led to the drafting of the Constitution of the United States.

A New Constitution

By 1787,

  • The federal government lacked sufficient authority under the Articles of Confederation.

  • Alexander Hamilton was concerned about no uniform commercial policy and fear for the survival of the new republic.

Annapolis Convention

  • Hamilton convened the meeting -Only five delegates showed up

Constitutional Convention

  • Congress consented to a "meeting in Philadelphia" for the sole purpose of revising the Articles of Confederation.

  • Delegates from all states except Rhode Island attended the meeting.

  • Meeting took place during the long, hot summer of 1787.

Delegates:

  • 55 delegates

  • All men

  • All white

  • Many wealthy lawyers or landowners

  • Many owned enslaved people

  • Came from different ideological backgrounds

New Jersey Plan:

  • Called for modifications to Articles of Confederation

  • Called for equal representation from each state

Virginia Plan:

  • Proposed by James Madison

  • Called for new government based on principle of checks and balances

  • Number of representatives for each state based on population

  • Three-tiered federal government:

    • Executive branch led by president

    • Legislative branch composed of bicameral Congress

    • Judicial branch composed of Supreme Court

Legislative Branch:

  • Expanded powers:

    • Enforce federal taxation

    • Regulate trade between states

    • Regulate international trade

    • Coin and borrow money

    • Create postal service

    • Authorize military draft

    • Declare war

Presidential Election:

  • Indirectly chosen by Electoral College

  • College composed of political leaders representing popular vote of each state

  • To win state's electoral votes, candidate must win majority of popular vote in that state

  • State's electoral count is sum of senators and representatives (determined by population)

  • Gives states with larger populations more power in presidential elections

Convention:

  • Lasted 4 months

  • Delegates hammered out compromises

  • Great Compromise (Connecticut Compromise) blended NJ and VA plans for bicameral legislature

  • Constitution established:

    • House of Representatives elected by people

    • Senate elected by state legislatures

    • President and VP elected by Electoral College

    • Three branches of government: executive, legislative, judicial

    • Power of checks and balances

Three-Fifths Compromise:

  • Method for counting enslaved people in southern states for "proportional" representation in Congress

  • Enslaved people counted as 3/5 of a person

Signing of the Constitution:

  • Only three of 42 remaining delegates refused to sign

  • Two refused because it did not include a bill of rights.

Ratification of Constitution:

  • Not guaranteed

  • Opponents (Anti-Federalists) portrayed federal government as all-powerful beast

  • Anti-Federalists came from backcountry and were particularly appalled by absence of bill of rights

  • Position resonated in state legislatures where fate of Constitution lay

  • Some held out for promise of immediate addition of Bill of Rights upon ratification

Federalist Position:

  • Forcefully and persuasively argued in Federalist Papers

  • Papers anonymously authored by James Madison, Alexander Hamilton, and John Jay

  • Published in New York newspaper and later widely circulated

  • Critical in swaying opinion in New York, a large and important state

  • Other important states of the era: Virginia, Pennsylvania, Massachusetts

Constitution:

  • Went into effect in 1789

  • Bill of Rights added in 1791

The Washington Presidency

George Washington as First President:

  • Unanimously chosen by Electoral College

  • Not sought presidency, but most popular figure in colonies

  • Accepted role out of sense of obligation

Washington's Presidency:

  • Exercised authority with care and restraint

  • Used veto only if convinced bill was unconstitutional

  • Comfortable delegating responsibility, created government of best minds of his time

  • Created a cabinet (not specifically granted in Constitution but every president since has had one)

  • Cabinet is made up of heads of executive departments, functions as president's chief group of advisors

Cabinet Selections:

  • Thomas Jefferson as secretary of state

  • Alexander Hamilton as secretary of the treasury

  • Disagreed on proper relationship between federal and state government

  • Hamilton favored strong central government, weaker state governments

  • Jefferson feared monarchy/tyranny, favored weaker federal government with main powers of defense and international commerce

National Bank Debate:

  • Hamilton proposed National Bank to help regulate and strengthen economy

  • Both houses of Congress approved but Washington uncertain of constitutionality

  • Debate established two main schools of thought on constitutional law

  • Strict constructionists (led by Jefferson and Madison) argued bank not necessary and thus beyond national government's powers

  • Hamilton (broad constructionist) argued bank implied power of government and not explicitly forbidden by Constitution

  • Washington agreed with Hamilton and signed bill

Hamilton's Treasury:

  • Busy and successful tenure

  • Handled national debt accrued during war

  • Financial plan called for federal government to assume states' debts, repay by giving debt holders land on western frontier

  • Plan favored northern banks and drew accusations of helping monied elite at expense of working classes

  • Struck political deal to get most of plan implemented, concession was southern location for nation's capital

  • Capital moved to Washington D.C. in 1800

French Revolution and Washington Administration:

  • Took place during Washington's presidency

  • Caused considerable debate between Jefferson and Hamilton

  • Jefferson supported revolution and republican ideals

  • Hamilton had aristocratic leanings, disliked revolutionaries

  • Issue came to forefront when France and England resumed hostilities

U.S. Neutrality:

  • British were primary trading partner after war, nudged U.S. toward neutrality in French-English conflict

  • Jefferson agreed on neutrality as correct course to follow

  • Washington declared U.S. intention to remain "friendly and impartial" (Neutrality Proclamation)

  • Genêt's visit sparked rallies by American supporters of the revolution

Origins of Two-Party System:

  • Differences between Hamilton and Jefferson

  • Federalists (favoring strong federal government)

  • Republicans/Democratic-Republicans (followers of Jefferson)

  • Development of political parties troubled framers of the Constitution, seen as factions dangerous to survival of Republic

Note:

  • Federalists who supported ratification of the Constitution are often the same people as Federalists who favored strong federal government.

  • Republican party created in 1850s is a very different group which still survives today.

Hamilton's Financial Program and Whiskey Rebellion:

  • Implemented excise tax on whiskey to raise revenue

  • Farmers in western Pennsylvania resisted, instigating Whiskey Rebellion

  • Washington dispatched militia to disperse rebels, demonstrated new government's power to respond

  • Rebellion highlighted class tensions between inland farmers and coastal elites

Jay's Treaty:

  • Negotiated by John Jay to address British evacuation of NW and free trade violations

  • Prevented war with Great Britain, but considered too many concessions towards British

  • Congress attempted to withhold funding to enforce treaty

  • Washington refused to submit documents, establishing precedent of executive privilege

  • Considered low point of Washington's administration

Pinckney's Treaty:

  • Negotiated by Thomas Pinckney with Spain, addressing use of Mississippi River, duty-free access to markets, and removal of Spanish forts on American soil

  • Spain promised to try to prevent Native American attacks on Western settlers

  • Ratified by U.S. Senate in 1796, considered high point of Washington's administration

Washington's Farewell Address:

  • Declined to run for third term, set final precedent

  • Composed in part by Alexander Hamilton

  • Warned future presidents against "permanent alliances with any portion of the foreign world"

  • Promoted notion of friendly relationships with all nations, but avoiding permanent alliances

  • Warning remained prominent part of American foreign policy through mid-20th century

Republican Motherhood

General

  • During the 1790s, women’s roles in courtship, marriage, and motherhood were reevaluated in light of the new republic and its ideals

  • Women were largely excluded from political activity but had an important civil role and responsibility

  • Women were to be the teachers and producers of virtuous male citizens

Private Virtue

  • Public virtue had been a strictly masculine quality in the past, private virtue emerged as a very important quality for women

  • Women were given the task of inspiring and teaching men to be good citizens through romance and motherhood

  • Women were to entertain only suitors with good morals, providing more incentive for men to be more ethical

Motherhood

  • Women held a tremendous influence on their sons

  • Advocates for female education spoke out, arguing that educated women would be better mothers, who would produce better citizens

  • Even though the obligations of women had grown to include this new political meaning, traditional gender roles were largely unchanged as the education of women was meant only in service to husbands and family

Republican Motherhood

  • The idea of Republican Motherhood emerged in the early 1800s

  • The role of the mother became more prominent in child-rearing

  • Mothers were now expected to raise educated children who would contribute positively to the United States.

The Adams Presidency

General

  • The Electoral College selected John Adams, a Federalist, as Washington’s successor

  • Under the then-current rules, the second-place candidate became vice president, so Adams’s vice president was the Democratic-Republican Thomas Jefferson

Washington Era

  • Following the Washington Era, Adams’s presidency was bound to be an anticlimax

  • Adams, argumentative and elitist, was a difficult man to like

  • He was also a hands-off administrator, often allowing Jefferson’s political rival Alexander Hamilton to take charge

  • The animosity between Jefferson and Hamilton and the growing belligerence between the Federalists and Democratic-Republicans set the ugly, divisive tone for Adams’s term

France

  • Perhaps Adams’s greatest achievement was avoiding all-out war with France

  • After the United States signed the Jay Treaty with Britain, France began seizing American ships on the open seas

  • Adams sent three diplomats to Paris, where French officials demanded a huge bribe before they would allow negotiations even to begin

  • The diplomats returned home, and Adams published their written report in the newspapers

  • Because he deleted the French officials’ names and replaced them with the letters X, Y, and Z, the incident became known as the XYZ Affair

  • As a result, popular sentiment did a complete turnaround; formerly pro-French, the public became vehemently anti-French to the point that a declaration of war seemed possible

  • Aware of how small the American military was, Adams avoided the war (a war Hamilton wanted) and negotiated a settlement with a contrite France although he was not able to avoid the Naval skirmishes called the Quasi-War

Alien and Sedition Acts

  • The low point of Adams’s tenure was the passage and enforcement of the Alien and Sedition Acts

  • The acts allowed the government to forcibly expel foreigners and to jail newspaper editors for “scandalous and malicious writing”

  • The acts were purely political, aimed at destroying new immigrants’—especially French immigrants’—support for the Democratic-Republicans

  • Worst of all, the Sedition Act, which strictly regulated antigovernment speech, was a clear violation of the First Amendment

Opposition to Alien and Sedition Acts

  • Vice President Jefferson led the opposition to the Alien and Sedition Acts

  • Together with Madison, he drafted the Virginia and Kentucky Resolutions (which were technically anonymous)

  • The resolutions argued that the states had the right to judge the constitutionality of federal laws

  • The resolutions went on to exercise this authority they claimed, later referred to as nullification, by declaring the Alien and Sedition Acts void

  • Virginia and Kentucky, however, never prevented enforcement of the laws

  • Rather, Jefferson used the laws and the resolutions as key issues in his 1800 campaign for the presidency

  • Even today, states often pass resolutions similar to these to express their displeasure with the federal government.

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Chapter 7: Conflict and American Independence (1754–1800)

Albany Plan of Union

  • Developed by Benjamin Franklin in 1754

  • Proposed an intercolonial government and a system for collecting taxes for the colonies' defense

  • Representatives from seven colonies met in Albany, New York to consider the plan

  • Franklin also tried to negotiate a treaty with the Iroquois

  • Plan was rejected by the colonies as they did not want to relinquish control of their right to tax themselves or unite under a single colonial legislature

  • Franklin's frustration was well publicized in a political cartoon showing a snake broken into pieces with the words "Join or Die."

The Seven Years’ War (1754–1763)

The Seven Years' War (French and Indian War)

  • Also called the French and Indian War, it was actually one of several “wars for empire” fought between the British and the French.

  • The war was the inevitable result of colonial expansion, where English settlers moved into the Ohio Valley, and the French tried to stop them by building fortified outposts.

  • George Washington led a colonial contingent, which attacked a French outpost and lost.

  • Washington surrendered and was allowed to return to Virginia, where he was welcomed as a hero.

  • Most Native Americans in the region allied themselves with the French, who had traditionally had the best relations with Native Americans of any of the European powers.

  • The war dragged on for years before the English finally gained the upper hand.

  • When the war was over, England was the undisputed colonial power of the continent.

  • The treaty gave England control of Canada and almost everything east of the Mississippi Valley.

  • The French kept only a few small islands, underscoring the impact of mercantilism since the French prioritized two small but highly profitable islands over the large landmass of Canada.

The Seven Years' War: Consequences

  • William Pitt, the English Prime Minister during the war, was supportive of the colonists and encouraged them to join the war effort.

  • When the leadership in Britain changed after the war, that led to resentment by the colonists against the British rule.

  • Native Americans had previously been able to use French and English disputes to their own advantage, but the English victory spelled trouble for them.

  • The Native Americans particularly disliked the English, because English expansionism was more disruptive to their way of life.

  • In the aftermath of the war, the English raised the price of goods sold to the Native Americans and ceased paying rent on their western forts.

  • In response, Ottawa war chief Pontiac rallied a group of tribes in the Ohio Valley and attacked colonial outposts, which is known as Pontiac's Rebellion.

  • In response to Pontiac's Rebellion, the Paxton Boys, a group of Scots-Irish frontiersmen in Pennsylvania murdered several in the Susquehannock tribe.

General Section: Proclamation of 1763

  • In response to Pontiac's Rebellion, British government issued Proclamation of 1763, forbidding settlement west of the rivers running through the Appalachians.

  • Settlers had already moved west of the line, leading to agitation among the colonial settlers.

  • Proclamation marks the end of salutary neglect and the first step on the "road to revolution."

  • Established a pattern of demarcating "Indian Territory," a pattern that would be adopted by the US government after the colonists gained independence. Specific Section: Impact on Native Americans

  • Pontiac's rebellion was in part a response to colonists expanding into Ohio River Valley and encroaching on Native American lands.

  • British government quelled rebellion with cost and use of germ warfare.

  • Proclamation of 1763 established a pattern of demarcating "Indian Territory" which would have negative impact on Native Americans.

Proclamation of 1763:

  • Issued by British government in response to initial attacks

  • Forbidden settlement west of the rivers running through the Appalachians

  • Came too late; settlers had already moved west of the line

  • Agitated colonial settlers, viewed as unwarranted British interference

Pontiac's Rebellion:

  • In part, response to colonists expanding into Ohio River Valley and encroaching on Native American lands

  • British forced to quell rebellion at great cost, including use of germ warfare (smallpox-infected blankets) against Ottawa

Significance:

  • 1763 marks end of salutary neglect in British-colonial relations

  • First in a series of restrictions imposed on colonists by British Parliament, marks first step on "road to revolution"

  • Established pattern of demarcating "Indian Territory", later adopted and pursued by US government (e.g. Indian Removal Act, 1830)

The Sugar Act, the Currency Act, and the Stamp Act

  • Financing the war resulted in a huge debt for the British government

  • King George III and Prime Minister George Grenville felt that colonists should help pay the debt

  • Colonists believed they had fulfilled their obligation by providing soldiers

New Regulations and Taxes:

  • Parliament imposed new regulations and taxes on colonists

  • First was the Sugar Act of 1764, established new duties and provisions aimed at deterring molasses smugglers

  • Prior to the decade leading up to the Revolutionary War, there was little colonial resistance to previous trade and manufacturing regulations

  • The Sugar Act actually lowered the duty on molasses coming into the colonies from the West Indies

Colonial Response:

  • Angry about the new regulations being more strictly enforced and the duties being collected

  • Difficult for colonial shippers to avoid committing even minor violations of the Sugar Act

  • Violators were to be arrested and tried in vice-admiralty courts without jury deliberation

  • Suggested to some colonists that Parliament was overstepping its authority and violating their rights as Englishmen.

Colonial Discontent:

  • Sugar Act, Currency Act, and Proclamation of 1763 caused a great deal of discontent in the colonies

  • Colonists bristled at British attempts to exert greater control

  • End of Britain's long-standing policy of salutary neglect

  • Economic depression further exacerbated the situation

  • Colonial protest was uncoordinated and ineffective

The Stamp Act:

  • Passed in 1765 by Parliament

  • Aimed at raising revenue specifically

  • Awakened the colonists to the likelihood of more taxes to follow

  • Demonstrated that colonies' tradition of self-taxation was being unjustly taken by Parliament

  • Broad-based tax, covering all legal documents and licenses

  • Affected almost everyone, particularly lawyers

  • Tax on goods produced within the colonies

Reaction to the Stamp Act:

  • Built on previous grievances and more forceful than any protest preceding it

  • Pamphlet by James Otis, called The Rights of the British Colonies Asserted and Proved, laid out the colonists’ argument against the taxes

  • Otis put forward the “No taxation without representation” argument

  • Argued for either representation in Parliament or a greater degree of self-government for the colonies

  • British scoffed at the notion, arguing that colonists were already represented in Parliament through the theory of virtual representation

  • Colonists knew that their representation would be too small to protect their interests

  • Wanted the right to determine their own taxes.

Opposition to the Stamp Act:

  • Opponents united in the various colonies

  • Virginia, Patrick Henry drafted the Virginia Stamp Act Resolves, asserting colonists’ right to self-government

  • Boston, mobs burned customs officers in effigy, tore down a customs house, and nearly destroyed the governor’s mansion

  • Protest groups formed throughout the colonies, called themselves Sons of Liberty

  • Opposition was so effective that no duty collectors were willing to perform their job

Repeal of the Stamp Act:

  • In 1766, Parliament repealed the Stamp Act

  • George III replaced Prime Minister Grenville with Lord Rockingham, who had opposed the Stamp Act

  • Rockingham oversaw the repeal but also linked it to the passage of the Declaratory Act, which asserted British government's right to tax and legislate in all cases anywhere in the colonies

  • Although the colonists had won the battle over the stamp tax, they had not yet gained any ground in the war of principles over Parliament's powers in the colonies

Opposition to the Stamp Act:

  • Opponents united in the various colonies

  • Virginia, Patrick Henry drafted the Virginia Stamp Act Resolves, asserting colonists’ right to self-government

  • Boston, mobs burned customs officers in effigy, tore down a customs house, and nearly destroyed the governor’s mansion

  • Protest groups formed throughout the colonies, called themselves Sons of Liberty

  • Opposition was so effective that no duty collectors were willing to perform their job

Repeal of the Stamp Act:

  • In 1766, Parliament repealed the Stamp Act

  • George III replaced Prime Minister Grenville with Lord Rockingham, who had opposed the Stamp Act

  • Rockingham oversaw the repeal but also linked it to the passage of the Declaratory Act, which asserted British government's right to tax and legislate in all cases anywhere in the colonies

  • Although the colonists had won the battle over the stamp tax, they had not yet gained any ground in the war of principles over Parliament's powers in the colonies

The Townshend Acts:

  • Drafted by Charles Townshend, minister of the exchequer

  • Taxed goods imported directly from Britain, the first such tax in the colonies

  • Some of the tax collected was set aside for the payment of tax collectors, meaning that colonial assemblies could no longer withhold government officials’ wages in order to get their way

  • Created even more vice-admiralty courts and several new government offices to enforce the Crown’s will in the colonies

  • Suspended the New York legislature because it had refused to comply with a law requiring the colonists to supply British troops

  • Instituted writs of assistance, licenses that gave the British the power to search any place they suspected of hiding smuggled goods

Colonial Response:

  • Stronger than previous protests

  • Massachusetts Assembly sent letter (Massachusetts Circular Letter) to other assemblies asking that they protest the new measures in unison

  • British fanned the flames of protest by ordering the assemblies not to discuss the Massachusetts letter

  • Governors dissolved legislatures that discussed the letter, further infuriating colonists

  • Colonists held numerous rallies and organized boycotts

  • Sought support of “commoners” for the first time

  • Boycotts were most successful because they affected British merchants, who then joined the protest

  • Colonial women were essential in the effort to replace British imports with “American” (New England) products

  • After two years, Parliament repealed the Townshend

The Quartering Act of 1765:

  • Stationed large numbers of troops in America

  • Made the colonists responsible for the cost of feeding and housing them

  • Even after the Townshend duties were repealed, the soldiers remained, particularly in Boston

  • Officially sent to keep the peace but heightened tensions

  • Detachment was huge - 4,000 men in a city of only 16,000

  • Soldiers sought off-hour employment and competed with colonists for jobs

The Boston Massacre:

  • On March 5, 1770, a mob pelted a group of soldiers with rock-filled snowballs

  • Soldiers fired on the crowd, killing five

  • Propaganda campaign that followed suggested that the soldiers had shot into a crowd of innocent bystanders

  • John Adams defended the soldiers in court, helping to establish a tradition of giving a fair trial to all who are accused

The Calm, and Then the Storm

  • Boston Massacre shocks both sides into de-escalating rhetoric

  • Uneasy status quo falls into place for next two years

  • Colonial newspapers discuss ways to alter relationship between mother country and colonies

  • Very few radicals suggest independence

  • Things pick up in 1772 when British implement Townshend Acts (colonial administrators paid from customs revenues)

  • Colonists respond cautiously, setting up Committees of Correspondence to trade ideas and inform one another of political mood

  • Mercy Otis Warren and other writers call for revolution

  • John Dickinson's "Letters From a Farmer in Pennsylvania" unites colonists against Townshend Acts

  • British grant East India Tea Company monopoly on tea trade in colonies, colonists see new taxes imposed

  • Boston Tea Party results in British response with Coercive/Intolerable Acts (closes Boston Harbor, tightens control over Massachusetts government, Quartering Act)

  • Quebec Act (grants greater liberties to Catholics, extends boundaries of Quebec Territory) further impeding westward expansion, causing further dissatisfaction among colonists.

First Continental Congress

  • Convened in late 1774

  • All colonies except Georgia sent delegates

  • Represented diverse perspectives

  • Goal: enumerate American grievances, develop strategy for addressing grievances, formulate colonial position on relationship between royal government and colonial governments

  • Came up with list of laws colonists wanted repealed

  • Agreed to impose boycott on British goods until grievances were redressed

  • Formed Continental Association with towns setting up committees of observation to enforce boycott

  • These committees became de facto governments

  • Formulated limited set of parameters for acceptable Parliamentary interference in colonial affairs

Winter of 1774 and Spring of 1775

  • Committees of observation expanded powers

  • Replaced British-sanctioned assemblies in many colonies

  • Led acts of insubordination (collecting taxes, disrupting court sessions, organizing militias and stockpiling weapons)

  • John Adams later commented "The Revolution was effected before the war commenced. The Revolution was in the minds and hearts of the people"

The Shot Heard ‘Round the World

The British Underestimated the Pro-Revolutionary Movement

  • Government officials believed if they arrested ringleaders and confiscated weapons, violence could be averted

  • Dispatched troops to confiscate weapons in Concord, Massachusetts in April 1775

  • Troops had to pass through Lexington, where they confronted a small colonial militia (minutemen)

  • Someone fired a shot, which drew British return fire

  • Minutemen suffered 18 casualties (8 dead)

  • British proceeded to Concord where they faced a larger militia

  • Militia inflicted numerous casualties and forced British to retreat

  • Battle of Concord referred to as "the shot heard 'round the world"

The Pre-Revolutionary War Era

  • Colonists used time to rally citizens to the cause of independence

  • Not all were convinced, Loyalists included government officials, devout Anglicans, merchants dependent on trade with England, religious and ethnic minorities who feared persecution by the rebels

  • Many enslaved people believed their chances for liberty were better with the British than with the colonists

  • Increase in slave insurrections dampened some Southerners' enthusiasm for revolution

  • Patriots were mostly white Protestant property holders and gentry, as well as urban artisans, especially in New England

  • Much of the rest of the population hoped the whole thing would blow over

  • Quakers of Pennsylvania were pacifists and wanted to avoid war.

The Second Continental Congress

  • Convened during the summer after the battles of Lexington and Concord

  • Prepared for war by establishing a Continental Army, printing money, and creating government offices to supervise policy

  • Chose George Washington to lead the army because he was well-liked and a Southerner

John Dickinson and the Olive Branch Petition

  • Many delegates followed John Dickinson who was pushing for reconciliation with Britain using the Olive Branch Petition

  • Adopted by the Continental Congress on July 5, 1775

  • Last-ditch attempt to avoid armed conflict

  • King George III was not interested since he considered the colonists to be in open rebellion

  • One year before the adoption of the Declaration of Independence, the colonial leaders were trying to reconcile with the mother country.

The Declaration of Independence

  • Published in January 1776 by Thomas Paine, an English printer

  • Advocated for colonial independence and republicanism over monarchy

  • Sold more than 100,000 copies in its first three months

  • Accessible to colonists who couldn't always understand the Enlightenment-speak of the Founding Fathers

  • Helped swing support to the patriot cause among people who were unsure about attacking the mother country

Success of Common Sense

  • Bigger success than James Otis's The Rights of the British Colonies Asserted and Proved

  • Literacy rates in New England were higher due to the Puritan legacy of teaching children to read the Bible

  • Nevertheless, Paine's pamphlet reached a wider audience, including those who couldn't read

  • Proportional equivalent of selling 13 million downloads today

Role of Propaganda

  • Rebels were looking for a masterpiece of propaganda to rally colonists to their cause

  • Common Sense served as this masterpiece and helped swing support to the patriot cause.

Declaration of Independence

  • Commissioned by the Congress in June 1776

  • Written by Thomas Jefferson

  • Enumerated the colonies' grievances against the Crown

  • Articulated the principle of individual liberty and government's responsibility to serve the people

  • Despite its flaws, it remains a powerful document

  • Signed on July 4, 1776

The Significance of Declaration of Independence

  • The Revolutionary War became a war for independence with the signing of the Declaration

  • The Declaration not only set out the colonies' complaints against the British government but also laid out the philosophical underpinnings of the revolution, most notably the assertion that all men are created equal and have certain inalienable rights

  • The Declaration has been considered as a seminal document in American history, and has been a source of inspiration for movements for civil rights and freedom across the world.

The Battle of Yorktown

  • Occurred on October 17, 1781

  • Symbolic end to the American Revolution

  • Major British general, Cornwallis, was surrounded by the French navy and George Washington’s troops, and surrendered

  • Began a long period of negotiations between the American colonies and Great Britain, which would finally end the war in October of 1783

Other Facts about the War

  • Continental Army had trouble recruiting good soldiers

  • Congress eventually recruited Black people, and up to 5,000 fought on the side of the rebels

  • Franco-American Alliance, negotiated by Ben Franklin in 1778, brought the French into the war on the side of the colonists

  • Treaty of Paris, signed at the end of 1783, granted the United States independence and generous territorial rights

The Articles of Confederation

Articles of Confederation

  • Sent to the colonies for ratification in 1777 by the Continental Congress

  • The first national constitution of the United States

  • Intentionally created little to no central government due to fear of creating a tyrannical government

Limitations of the Articles of Confederation

  • Gave the federal government no power to raise an army

  • Could not enforce state or individual taxation, or a military draft

  • Could not regulate trade among the states or international trade

  • Had no executive or judicial branch

  • Legislative branch gave each state one vote, regardless of the state's population

  • In order to pass a law, 9 of the 13 of the states had to agree

  • In order to amend or change the Articles, unanimous approval was needed

Impact of the Limitations

  • These limitations hurt the colonies during Shays's Rebellion.

  • Eventually, the limitations of the Articles of Confederation led to the drafting of the Constitution of the United States.

A New Constitution

By 1787,

  • The federal government lacked sufficient authority under the Articles of Confederation.

  • Alexander Hamilton was concerned about no uniform commercial policy and fear for the survival of the new republic.

Annapolis Convention

  • Hamilton convened the meeting -Only five delegates showed up

Constitutional Convention

  • Congress consented to a "meeting in Philadelphia" for the sole purpose of revising the Articles of Confederation.

  • Delegates from all states except Rhode Island attended the meeting.

  • Meeting took place during the long, hot summer of 1787.

Delegates:

  • 55 delegates

  • All men

  • All white

  • Many wealthy lawyers or landowners

  • Many owned enslaved people

  • Came from different ideological backgrounds

New Jersey Plan:

  • Called for modifications to Articles of Confederation

  • Called for equal representation from each state

Virginia Plan:

  • Proposed by James Madison

  • Called for new government based on principle of checks and balances

  • Number of representatives for each state based on population

  • Three-tiered federal government:

    • Executive branch led by president

    • Legislative branch composed of bicameral Congress

    • Judicial branch composed of Supreme Court

Legislative Branch:

  • Expanded powers:

    • Enforce federal taxation

    • Regulate trade between states

    • Regulate international trade

    • Coin and borrow money

    • Create postal service

    • Authorize military draft

    • Declare war

Presidential Election:

  • Indirectly chosen by Electoral College

  • College composed of political leaders representing popular vote of each state

  • To win state's electoral votes, candidate must win majority of popular vote in that state

  • State's electoral count is sum of senators and representatives (determined by population)

  • Gives states with larger populations more power in presidential elections

Convention:

  • Lasted 4 months

  • Delegates hammered out compromises

  • Great Compromise (Connecticut Compromise) blended NJ and VA plans for bicameral legislature

  • Constitution established:

    • House of Representatives elected by people

    • Senate elected by state legislatures

    • President and VP elected by Electoral College

    • Three branches of government: executive, legislative, judicial

    • Power of checks and balances

Three-Fifths Compromise:

  • Method for counting enslaved people in southern states for "proportional" representation in Congress

  • Enslaved people counted as 3/5 of a person

Signing of the Constitution:

  • Only three of 42 remaining delegates refused to sign

  • Two refused because it did not include a bill of rights.

Ratification of Constitution:

  • Not guaranteed

  • Opponents (Anti-Federalists) portrayed federal government as all-powerful beast

  • Anti-Federalists came from backcountry and were particularly appalled by absence of bill of rights

  • Position resonated in state legislatures where fate of Constitution lay

  • Some held out for promise of immediate addition of Bill of Rights upon ratification

Federalist Position:

  • Forcefully and persuasively argued in Federalist Papers

  • Papers anonymously authored by James Madison, Alexander Hamilton, and John Jay

  • Published in New York newspaper and later widely circulated

  • Critical in swaying opinion in New York, a large and important state

  • Other important states of the era: Virginia, Pennsylvania, Massachusetts

Constitution:

  • Went into effect in 1789

  • Bill of Rights added in 1791

The Washington Presidency

George Washington as First President:

  • Unanimously chosen by Electoral College

  • Not sought presidency, but most popular figure in colonies

  • Accepted role out of sense of obligation

Washington's Presidency:

  • Exercised authority with care and restraint

  • Used veto only if convinced bill was unconstitutional

  • Comfortable delegating responsibility, created government of best minds of his time

  • Created a cabinet (not specifically granted in Constitution but every president since has had one)

  • Cabinet is made up of heads of executive departments, functions as president's chief group of advisors

Cabinet Selections:

  • Thomas Jefferson as secretary of state

  • Alexander Hamilton as secretary of the treasury

  • Disagreed on proper relationship between federal and state government

  • Hamilton favored strong central government, weaker state governments

  • Jefferson feared monarchy/tyranny, favored weaker federal government with main powers of defense and international commerce

National Bank Debate:

  • Hamilton proposed National Bank to help regulate and strengthen economy

  • Both houses of Congress approved but Washington uncertain of constitutionality

  • Debate established two main schools of thought on constitutional law

  • Strict constructionists (led by Jefferson and Madison) argued bank not necessary and thus beyond national government's powers

  • Hamilton (broad constructionist) argued bank implied power of government and not explicitly forbidden by Constitution

  • Washington agreed with Hamilton and signed bill

Hamilton's Treasury:

  • Busy and successful tenure

  • Handled national debt accrued during war

  • Financial plan called for federal government to assume states' debts, repay by giving debt holders land on western frontier

  • Plan favored northern banks and drew accusations of helping monied elite at expense of working classes

  • Struck political deal to get most of plan implemented, concession was southern location for nation's capital

  • Capital moved to Washington D.C. in 1800

French Revolution and Washington Administration:

  • Took place during Washington's presidency

  • Caused considerable debate between Jefferson and Hamilton

  • Jefferson supported revolution and republican ideals

  • Hamilton had aristocratic leanings, disliked revolutionaries

  • Issue came to forefront when France and England resumed hostilities

U.S. Neutrality:

  • British were primary trading partner after war, nudged U.S. toward neutrality in French-English conflict

  • Jefferson agreed on neutrality as correct course to follow

  • Washington declared U.S. intention to remain "friendly and impartial" (Neutrality Proclamation)

  • Genêt's visit sparked rallies by American supporters of the revolution

Origins of Two-Party System:

  • Differences between Hamilton and Jefferson

  • Federalists (favoring strong federal government)

  • Republicans/Democratic-Republicans (followers of Jefferson)

  • Development of political parties troubled framers of the Constitution, seen as factions dangerous to survival of Republic

Note:

  • Federalists who supported ratification of the Constitution are often the same people as Federalists who favored strong federal government.

  • Republican party created in 1850s is a very different group which still survives today.

Hamilton's Financial Program and Whiskey Rebellion:

  • Implemented excise tax on whiskey to raise revenue

  • Farmers in western Pennsylvania resisted, instigating Whiskey Rebellion

  • Washington dispatched militia to disperse rebels, demonstrated new government's power to respond

  • Rebellion highlighted class tensions between inland farmers and coastal elites

Jay's Treaty:

  • Negotiated by John Jay to address British evacuation of NW and free trade violations

  • Prevented war with Great Britain, but considered too many concessions towards British

  • Congress attempted to withhold funding to enforce treaty

  • Washington refused to submit documents, establishing precedent of executive privilege

  • Considered low point of Washington's administration

Pinckney's Treaty:

  • Negotiated by Thomas Pinckney with Spain, addressing use of Mississippi River, duty-free access to markets, and removal of Spanish forts on American soil

  • Spain promised to try to prevent Native American attacks on Western settlers

  • Ratified by U.S. Senate in 1796, considered high point of Washington's administration

Washington's Farewell Address:

  • Declined to run for third term, set final precedent

  • Composed in part by Alexander Hamilton

  • Warned future presidents against "permanent alliances with any portion of the foreign world"

  • Promoted notion of friendly relationships with all nations, but avoiding permanent alliances

  • Warning remained prominent part of American foreign policy through mid-20th century

Republican Motherhood

General

  • During the 1790s, women’s roles in courtship, marriage, and motherhood were reevaluated in light of the new republic and its ideals

  • Women were largely excluded from political activity but had an important civil role and responsibility

  • Women were to be the teachers and producers of virtuous male citizens

Private Virtue

  • Public virtue had been a strictly masculine quality in the past, private virtue emerged as a very important quality for women

  • Women were given the task of inspiring and teaching men to be good citizens through romance and motherhood

  • Women were to entertain only suitors with good morals, providing more incentive for men to be more ethical

Motherhood

  • Women held a tremendous influence on their sons

  • Advocates for female education spoke out, arguing that educated women would be better mothers, who would produce better citizens

  • Even though the obligations of women had grown to include this new political meaning, traditional gender roles were largely unchanged as the education of women was meant only in service to husbands and family

Republican Motherhood

  • The idea of Republican Motherhood emerged in the early 1800s

  • The role of the mother became more prominent in child-rearing

  • Mothers were now expected to raise educated children who would contribute positively to the United States.

The Adams Presidency

General

  • The Electoral College selected John Adams, a Federalist, as Washington’s successor

  • Under the then-current rules, the second-place candidate became vice president, so Adams’s vice president was the Democratic-Republican Thomas Jefferson

Washington Era

  • Following the Washington Era, Adams’s presidency was bound to be an anticlimax

  • Adams, argumentative and elitist, was a difficult man to like

  • He was also a hands-off administrator, often allowing Jefferson’s political rival Alexander Hamilton to take charge

  • The animosity between Jefferson and Hamilton and the growing belligerence between the Federalists and Democratic-Republicans set the ugly, divisive tone for Adams’s term

France

  • Perhaps Adams’s greatest achievement was avoiding all-out war with France

  • After the United States signed the Jay Treaty with Britain, France began seizing American ships on the open seas

  • Adams sent three diplomats to Paris, where French officials demanded a huge bribe before they would allow negotiations even to begin

  • The diplomats returned home, and Adams published their written report in the newspapers

  • Because he deleted the French officials’ names and replaced them with the letters X, Y, and Z, the incident became known as the XYZ Affair

  • As a result, popular sentiment did a complete turnaround; formerly pro-French, the public became vehemently anti-French to the point that a declaration of war seemed possible

  • Aware of how small the American military was, Adams avoided the war (a war Hamilton wanted) and negotiated a settlement with a contrite France although he was not able to avoid the Naval skirmishes called the Quasi-War

Alien and Sedition Acts

  • The low point of Adams’s tenure was the passage and enforcement of the Alien and Sedition Acts

  • The acts allowed the government to forcibly expel foreigners and to jail newspaper editors for “scandalous and malicious writing”

  • The acts were purely political, aimed at destroying new immigrants’—especially French immigrants’—support for the Democratic-Republicans

  • Worst of all, the Sedition Act, which strictly regulated antigovernment speech, was a clear violation of the First Amendment

Opposition to Alien and Sedition Acts

  • Vice President Jefferson led the opposition to the Alien and Sedition Acts

  • Together with Madison, he drafted the Virginia and Kentucky Resolutions (which were technically anonymous)

  • The resolutions argued that the states had the right to judge the constitutionality of federal laws

  • The resolutions went on to exercise this authority they claimed, later referred to as nullification, by declaring the Alien and Sedition Acts void

  • Virginia and Kentucky, however, never prevented enforcement of the laws

  • Rather, Jefferson used the laws and the resolutions as key issues in his 1800 campaign for the presidency

  • Even today, states often pass resolutions similar to these to express their displeasure with the federal government.