Thomas Jefferson Years in Office: 1801-1809.

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Presentation transcript:

Thomas Jefferson Years in Office: 1801-1809

Resume After attending College of William & Mary, Jefferson became a lawyer. He was then elected to the Virginia House of Burgesses. He was the primary author of the Declaration of Independence. He served as governor of Virginia during the Revolution. He served as minister to France. He worked as George Washington’s secretary of state, as John Adams’s vice president America’s third president. He was responsible for the Louisiana Purchase.

One of the things he’s most proud of… Founder of The University of Virginia The only university to be founded by a President

Home in Virginia Monticello Designed by TJ

Moldboard Plow of Least Resistance He was a violinist, architect, farmer, scholar, a horseman, and an inventor Moldboard Plow of Least Resistance Polygraph machine for copying documents Wheel cipher to encode and decode messages

Another Invention Macaroni making machine Myth that he brought “macaroni and cheese” to America. Swivel chair

The Beginning March 4, 1801 Thomas Jefferson is the first President inaugurated in the new capital city of Washington D.C. He delivers his first inaugural address. This address outlines what he feels are the essential principles of government.

First Inaugural Address Essential Principles of Government “equal and exact justice to all men” “peace, commerce, and honest friendship with all nations” “the support of state governments” “the preservation of general government” punishment for those who choose to revolt compliance with the decisions of the majority

First Inaugural Address Essential Principles of Government Cont… “a well disciplined militia” honest payment of debts maintaining a sound economy proper distribution of information freedom of religion freedom of the press

Election of 1800 Adams & Pinckney vs. Jefferson & Burr Flaws in the electoral college exposed Jefferson and Burr end up in tie House of Representatives decides on Jefferson 12th Amendment ratified 1804 stipulates that electors make a choice between selections of President and Vice President video Under the Constitution at that time, each elector was to vote for two candidates without specifying who was to be president or vice president. By mistake Jefferson received the same number of votes as his running mate Aaron Burr, deadlocking the electoral college. The election went to the House of Representatives, where each state had one vote. Burr refused to step aside, and the election was deadlocked for almost a week. By the 36th ballot Jefferson was elected. In 1804 the Twelfth Amendment corrected this problem by requiring electors to vote separately for president and vice president.

Election of 1800 Videos Expansion of Presidential Power TJ Presidential Style Under the Constitution at that time, each elector was to vote for two candidates without specifying who was to be president or vice president. By mistake Jefferson received the same number of votes as his running mate Aaron Burr, deadlocking the electoral college. The election went to the House of Representatives, where each state had one vote. Burr refused to step aside, and the election was deadlocked for almost a week. By the 36th ballot Jefferson was elected. In 1804 the Twelfth Amendment corrected this problem by requiring electors to vote separately for president and vice president.

Louisiana Purchase Greatest real estate deal in history $15 million (4 cents an acre)

Late in Life Retired from office in 1809 Went back to Monticello. He never again left the state of Virginia Sold his extensive library to government of the US to restart the Library of Congress, which had been burned during the War of 1812 by British

RIP Jefferson died at Monticello on July 4, 1826 the 50th anniversary of the signing of the Declaration of Independence. John Adams died later that same day They were the only 2 signers of the Declaration of Independence who were elected President

Epitaph Jefferson designed his own tombstone and epitaph Here was buried Thomas Jefferson, Author of the Declaration of Independence, of the Statute of Virginia for religious freedom, and the Father of the University of Virginia. Comment on what is included and what is omitted

Where do we see Thomas Jefferson today? $2 bill Nickel Jefferson Memorial Mount Rushmore University of Virginia