John Adams and Political Dissent

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John Adams and Political Dissent

A. XYZ Affair

When Americans learned that French agents had demanded a bribe of American negotiators, anti-

French sentiment swept the United States.

 Minster Y claimed “French party” in US

B.

Quasi-War with France

The U.S. fought an undeclared naval war with France, mostly in Caribbean waters.

C.

Alien and Sedition Acts

Federalists hoped to capitalize politically on

Americans’ anger toward France by passing four laws to suppress dissent and limit the growth of the

Republican party.

D. Virginia and Kentucky Resolutions

Jefferson and Madison responded to the Alien and Sedition Acts by claiming that since a compact among the states created the

Constitution, the states could judge the constitutionality of federal actions.

 Nullification

E. Convention of 1800

Negotiations between French and American diplomats ended the Quasi-War and freed the

United States from its alliance with France.

 Adams told to use war for political advantage; fires advisers; loses 1800

Indians and African Americans at the End of the

Century

A.

“Civilizing” the Indians

The Indian Trade and Intercourse Act of 1793 was a wellintentioned plan to “civilize” Native

Americans, but the plan ignored the cultural traditions of the eastern Indian peoples.

B.

Iroquois and Cherokees

The Cherokees adapted some of the teachings of Quaker missionaries to their own culture.

Iroquois culture, due largely to the influence of

Handsome Lake, adapted to European patterns to survive in the midst of changed circumstances.

C.

African Americans and Ideas of Freedom

Africans Americans took the revolutionary ideas of liberty and equality seriously. They learned the benefits of fighting collectively from the slave revolt in St. Domingue (Haiti) in 1793.

D.

Gabriel’s Rebellion

Gabriel Prosser led an unsuccessful revolt in

Virginia in 1800 that he hoped would bring equality for African Americans.

 Thought poor whites would join w/them

Sancho revived the plan for revolt in 1802, but the plan disintegrated when the plot was revealed prematurely.

Jefferson

Introduction: Thomas Jefferson’s inauguration heralded a change from the Federalistcontrolled government that had preceded. The nation’s political system became better defined and its nationalistic and international positions grew clearer over the next fifteen years.

Indian Resistance

A.The Prophet

Before the War of 1812, Shawnee brothers Tecumseh and

Prophet attempted to create an Indian federation. Prophet

(Lalawethika) claimed to have returned from the dead, and he encouraged Indians to abandon white culture and return to their traditional ways.

B.Tecumseh

Prophet and Tecumseh encouraged resistance. Tecumseh turned Prophet’s religious message into a political one and traveled widely in an attempt to unify northern and southern

Indians to resist white occupation.

In the Battle of Tippecanoe, the supporters of Prophet and

Tecumseh were dispersed. Their movement for Indian unity ended with Tecumseh’s death in 1813.

American Shipping Imperiled

A. U.S. Commerce

The U.S. economy relied heavily on shipping in the early years of the republic. The United States paid a heavy price when France and

Britain blockaded each other’s trade in their commercial war.

B. Impressment of American Sailors

Britain resorted to stopping American ships to remove deserters, although many of them had become American citizens.

C.Neutral Rights

Britain blocked goods the U.S. believed were part of neutral trade.

Congress passed the Non-Importation Act in 1806, which barred

British manufactured goods from entering American ports.

D.Chesapeake Affair

In 1807, the crew of the H.M.S. Leopard attacked and boarded the

U.S.S. Chesapeake in American waters. The incident led many

Americans to demand war, but Jefferson responded instead with

“peaceable coercion.”

E. Embargo Act

The Embargo of 1807 forbade virtually all exports from the United

States and became extremely unpopular as the American economy collapsed.

F. Domestic Manufacturing

Domestic manufacturing was made profitable by the embargo, and merchants began to shift capital from shipping to manufacturing.

G.

Election of 1808

Jefferson, emulating Washington, declined a third term. This led to the contested nomination of Democratic-Republican James Madison, who later won the election.

H.Non-Intercourse Act

The Non-Intercourse Act of 1809 resumed trade with all countries except Britain and France. In 1810, Congress substituted Macon’s Bill

Number 2, which Napoleon used to trick the United States into declaring non-intercourse with Great Britain (claimed he would respect US neutrality).

Jefferson: American Sphinx

From strict to loose

Louisiana Purchase

Barbary Pirates

Sally Hemings

A. Thomas Paine: Quill Mightier than the Sword

Thomas Paine: born England to corset-maker father, many jobs including tax collector, teacher, servant, etc.

 financial failure (throughout life)

On advice Ben Franklin emigrates America 1774 (w/letter of rec)

B. Rush suggests title change Plain Truth  Common Sense

 J. Adams writes Thoughts on Government as more moderate answer to Paine

1776: The Crisis

J. Adams: “Without the pen of the author of ‘Common Sense,’ the sword of Washington would have been raised in vain ”

JA (angrily): “History is to ascribe the American Revolution to Thomas

Paine.

Paine did also serve in the Army as aide to Nathaniel Greene

B. A Missionary of World Revolution

BF: “Where liberty is, there is my country”

TP: “Where liberty is not, there is my country.”

1787 leaves US  England, 1791: The Rights of Man

1) age of hereditary monarchy and aristocracy was over

2) people citizens, not subjects, born w/equal natural rights

3) people write constitutions to define + limit their governments;

4) written constitutions could not be changed by the governments but only by the sovereign people themselves;

5) rulers had no rights of their own, only temp ’y agents of the people (must continually watch + empower them through elections);

6) people are naturally sociable  society is practically autonomous and selfregulating;

7) people independent + free pursue happiness in own way

Essentially the summation of American political thought (esp. TJ)

Part 1: 50,000 copies 3 months; Part 2: outsold only by Bible

C. “Filthy Little Atheist”

Goes to France, elected to National Assembly 1792

Arrested by French Revolution, held in jail for year (goes insane?)

Age of Reason : “All national institutions of churches, whether

Jewish, Christian, or Turkish, appear to me no other than human inventions, set up to terrify and enslave mankind, and monopolize power and profit.

Probably the thinking of most educated, but not a belief that should be shared with the masses

Banned as blasphemous; Philadelphia printer 100,000 copies

(London: sold in vending machines to avoid prison/fine for selling)

1802: Federalists use against the other Tom

1805, J.Adams: doubted "whether any man in the world has had more influence on its inhabitants or affairs for the last thirty years than Tom Paine."

Don't call it the Age of Reason, call it the “Age of Paine”

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