The Louisiana Purchase  “distant times, when our rapid multiplication will expand [the nation]…& cover the whole northern if not southern continent.”-

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
The Louisiana Purchase. Background Cont. After the U.S won its independence from Britain in 1783 a major concern became unrestricted access to the Mississippi.
Advertisements

The Louisiana Purchase By Ryan Bilger & Jarred Ring.
President Thomas Jefferson The Louisiana Purchase Lewis and Clark Expedition Pages Workbook pg. 72.
THE LOUISIANA PURCHASE. I. French Louisiana A.In 1800, France’s emperor Napoleon Bonaparte, caused fear across Europe. 1. As he conquered neighboring.
Objectives Explain the importance of New Orleans and the crisis over its port. Describe how the United States gained the Louisiana Purchase. Discuss.
10-30 Agenda QUIZ Take notes: Jefferson Marbury vs. Madison
Jefferson undoes Federalist Programs 1. Allowed the Alien and Sedition Acts to end and freed those imprisoned by them. 2. Ended the Tax on Whiskey 3. Reduced.
Unit 3 #1 1)Identify what type of constitutional interpretation President Jefferson used when he purchased Louisiana. 2)Describe the details of the Louisiana.
The Louisiana Purchase Lewis and Clark Expedition.
What was the importance of the purchase and exploration of the Louisiana Purchase What was the importance of the purchase and exploration of the Louisiana.
Aim: Why was the Louisiana Purchase significant to the U.S.?
The Louisiana Purchase
Louisiana Purchase. New Orleans Key Port at the bottom of Mississippi River France owns N.O. –then French and Indian War Spain owns N.O. – then sells.
John Gast, American Progress (Manifest Destiny) (1872)
The Louisiana Purchase *Control of the Mississippi River *The U.S. gains Louisiana *Lewis and Clark Expedition.
Manifest Destiny And the Louisiana Purchase Manifest Destiny Definition: The belief shared by many Americans that the United States was meant to span.
Ch. 9, Section 2: The Louisiana Purchase pg. 282
The Louisiana Purchase and Exploration
The Louisiana Purchase
TEKS 8C: Calculate percent composition and empirical and molecular formulas. Louisiana Purchase.
Louisiana Purchase and Lewis and Clark
Chapter 10: The Age of Jefferson 1801–1816
The Louisiana Purchase and The Lewis and Clark Expedition Abbie King Bobby James Maya Robertson Ivana Kallova.
Thomas Jefferson 3 rd President of the United States
The Louisiana Purchase
Social Studies Weekly Weeks 8-10 Study Guide Multiple Choice: Diplomatic minister- one who represents his own nation in working with other nations to promote.
The Louisiana Purchase Chapter 11 Section 2 Pages
The Louisiana Purchase “The greatest real estate deal in history.”
Explain the importance of New Orleans and the crisis over its port. Describe how the United States gained the Louisiana Purchase. Discuss Lewis and Clark’s.
John Gast, American Progress (Manifest Destiny) (1872)
The Louisiana Purchase. * Spain trades Louisiana to France because they can’t keep American settlers out of the territory.
CHAPTER EIGHT THE JEFFERSON ERA Section TWO THE LOUISIANA PURCHASE
The Louisiana Purchase & Lewis and Clark. Louisiana Purchase French foreign minister Charles de Talleyrand told American diplomats that the Louisiana.
Ch. 6 Spanish Louisiana Pt 4.
Louisiana Territory Thomas Jefferson author of the Declaration of Independence 3 rd president of the United States The Louisiana Purchase was the most.
Creating and Growing a Nation AFTER THE REVOLUTIONARY WAR, THE UNITED STATES UNDERWENT SIGNIFICANT SOCIAL, ECONOMIC, AND TERRITORIAL CHANGES. THE U.S.
Objectives Explain the importance of New Orleans and the crisis over its port. Describe how the United States gained the Louisiana Purchase. Discuss.
The Louisiana Purchase. Moving Westward  After we gained use of the Mississippi River through Pickney’s Treaty, thousands of settlers began moving westward.
Chapter  Explain why control of the Mississippi Rover were important to the United States.  Describe how the United States purchased Louisiana.
The Louisiana Purchase
The Greatest Land Deal in the History of the United States! The Louisiana Purchase.
Louisiana Purchase. West in 1800 Thousands moving westward over Appalachian Mountains, settling on Native American land. – Territories declare statehood.
The Era of Thomas Jefferson EQ: How did the United States come to buy all of the land in the Louisiana Territory?
Chapter 9 Section 2 The Louisiana Purchase Explain the importance of New Orleans and the crisis over its port. Describe how the United States gained the.
The Presidency of Thomas Jefferson ( ) By the end of this lesson, students will be able to explain at least three major changes that resulted from.
Page 3 – Louisiana Purchase Notes
Chapter 10: The Age of Jefferson 1801–1816
The Louisiana Purchase (1803)
Chapter 9 The Era of Thomas Jefferson Section 2: The Louisiana Purchase LEQ: What was the importance of the purchase and exploration of the Louisiana.
Page 3 – Louisiana Purchase Notes
Objectives Explain the importance of New Orleans and the crisis over its port. Describe how the United States gained the Louisiana Purchase. Discuss.
The Louisiana purchase
Louisiana Purchase.
Background French Revolution – working-class rose up in rebellion against the upper-class aristocrats. After the French Revolution, Napoleon seized power.
Terms and People expedition – a long and carefully organized journey
Louisiana Purchase.
Louisiana Purchase.
Louisiana Purchase.
Louisiana Purchase.
11.2 The Louisiana Purchase pp
Aim: How did Jefferson’s change in constitutional interpretation lead to the Louisiana Purchase? Do Now: Have you ever done something for the good of your.
Objectives Explain the importance of New Orleans and the crisis over its port. Describe how the United States gained the Louisiana Purchase. Discuss.
Objectives Explain the importance of New Orleans and the crisis over its port. Describe how the United States gained the Louisiana Purchase. Discuss.
Objectives Explain the importance of New Orleans and the crisis over its port. Describe how the United States gained the Louisiana Purchase. Discuss.
LOUISIANA PURHCASE April 30th, 1803.
Unit 8: A Strong Start for America
Louisiana Purchase.
11.2 The Louisiana Purchase pp
Presentation transcript:

The Louisiana Purchase  “distant times, when our rapid multiplication will expand [the nation]…& cover the whole northern if not southern continent.”- Thomas Jefferson.

The Problem-Stripping the land  Frontier farming practices  Hard on soil due to lack of crop rotation  Settlers to wanted more land  Western farmers  Needed access to the Mississippi River and the port of New Orleans to get their products to market

Thomas Jefferson’s Beliefs Jefferson was strongly anti-federalist.  against a strong federal government  advocated states' rights  feared tyranny of any kind  only recognized the need for a strong, central government for foreign affairs Jefferson was also a strict constructionist.  government can only use powers explicitly given by the Constitution

The Problem-France In 1801, Spain and France signed a secret treaty ceding Louisiana to France. Jefferson feared that if America did not purchase the port of New Orleans from France, it could lead to war. France was led by the powerful ruler, Napoleon Bonaparte.

Jefferson’s Fears President Thomas Jefferson wrote this prediction in letter in April “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." Within a week of his letter, Jefferson wrote U.S. Minister to France Robert Livingston. "Every eye in the U.S. is now fixed on this affair of Louisiana. Perhaps nothing since the revolutionary war has produced more uneasy sensations through the body of the nation."

Thomas Jefferson & the Purchase Jefferson appointed former Sec. of State James Monroe to join Livingston in Paris. Monroe's charge was to obtain land east of the Mississippi.  allocated up to $10 million for the purchase of New Orleans & all or part of the Floridas OR  purchase just New Orleans OR  secure U.S. access to the Mississippi & the port

France & the New World Napoleon's plans to re-establish France in the New World were unraveling.  rebellion by slaves and free blacks in the sugar-rich colony of Saint Domingue (present-day Haiti)  Army sent to stop rebellion decimated by yellow fever  a new war with Britain seemed inevitable. On April 11, 1803 the French Foreign Minister Charles Maurice de Talleyrand told Livingston that France was willing to sell ALL of Louisiana.

Thomas Jefferson & the Congress Congress had to ratify the treaty by October. This type of transaction was not expressly listed in the Constitution. Some, including Jefferson, wondered if a Constitutional Amendment was necessary to ratify the purchase. Jefferson put aside his strict constructionist principles and accepted his Cabinet‘s advice saying, “It is the case of a guardian, investing the money of his ward in purchasing an important adjacent territory; and saying to him when of age, I did this for your good."

1803 PPresident Thomas Jefferson approved the purchase of the entire Louisiana Territory (827,000 acres) from France for $15 million. $$.04 per acre

Lewis and Clark Expedition  Merriwether Lewis and William Clark were assigned the task of mapping and detailing in journals the Louisiana Territory.  In May of 1804, 45 men left the port of St. Louis to record all observations.

The effects of the Purchase 1. Added all or part of 13 future states to the infant nation. Doubled the size of the United States. 2. Gave the United States international stature. ““From this day the United States take their place among the powers of the first rank.”-Robert Livingston 3. Removed the threat of a French attack upon the U.S. 4. Opened up the interior of the United States for the expansion of land ownership. IIncreased the amount of immigrants that could enter the United States and become land owners. 5. Created a sense of national identity.

The Louisiana Purchase and Immigration in America Jefferson said that the Louisiana Purchase was “land enough for our descendants to the thousandth and thousandth generation.”  Do you think he was right? Is there enough land?

Settling the West-North Dakota Sod House

Settling the West-One Room School House

Settling the West-Domestic Roles

Settling the West-Farming the Land