The Federalist Era: 1789-1801 AP U.S. History Unit 3.2

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The Federalist Era:1789-1801

AP U.S. HistoryUnit 3.2

THE FEDERALIST ERA:DOMESTIC Issues

I. America in 1790A. Population: 4 millionB. U.S. was recovering from a depressionC. Challenges by Britain and Spain threatened the unity of the U.S.

FEDERALIST ERA

Theme 1

Led by George Washington and

Alexander Hamilton, the first

administration under the

Constitution overcame various

difficulties and firmly established the political and

economic foundations of the

new federal government.

Washington arrives in NY to take the oath of office

President George Washington

1789-1791

Presidential Rankings: C-Span Survey, 2009

1. Abraham Lincoln2. Franklin Roosevelt3. George Washington4. Theodore Roosevelt5. Harry Truman6. John Kennedy7. Thomas Jefferson8. Dwight Eisenhower9. Woodrow Wilson10. Ronald Reagan11. Lyndon Johnson12. James Polk13. Andrew Jackson14. James Monroe

15. Bill Clinton16. William McKinley17. John Adams18. George H.W. Bush19. John Quincy Adams20. James Madison21. Grover Cleveland22. Gerald Ford23. Ulysses Grant24. William Taft25. Jimmy Carter26. Calvin Coolidge27. Richard Nixon28. James Garfield

29. Zachary Taylor

30. Benjamin Harrison

31. Martin Van Buren

32. Chester Arthur

33. Rutherford Hayes

34. Herbert Hoover

35. John Tyler

36. George W. Bush

37. Millard Fillmore

38. Warren Harding

39. William Harrison

40. Franklin Pierce

41. Andrew Johnson

42. James Buchanan

THE FEDERALIST ERA:DOMESTIC Issues

II. President Washington's AdministrationA. Unanimously elected by Electoral College in 1789.

-- Significance of Washington's reputation

B. Washington’s Cabinet

1. Precedent: relied on department heads for advice & consulted regularly with his cabinet

1. Stars of Washington’s cabineta. Secretary of State: Thomas Jefferson

b. Secretary of the Treasury: Alexander Hamilton

c. Cabinet characterized by the ongoing feud between Jefferson and Hamilton

III. Bill of RightsA. Debate between Federalists and Anti- FederalistsB. Amendments to Constitution. How? C. Federalists feared that another constitutional convention might reverse their victory

1. Madison drafted 12 amendments

2. Modeled after George Mason’s bill of rights in Virginia

D. Bill of Rights = First ten amendments to the Constitution

1. Freedom of speech, press, religion, assembly, and petition

2. Right to bear arms3. No quartering of troops

4. No illegal search and seizure

5. Life, liberty, or property cannot be taken without due process of law

6. Right to a fair and speedy trial in criminal cases

7. Right to a trial in civil cases

8. No cruel and unusual punishment

9. Individuals have more rights than those stated in the Constitution 10. Powers not mentioned in the Constitution belong to the states

IV. Judiciary Act of 1789A. Organized the Supreme Court: Chief Justice (John Jay) and 5 associate justicesB. Federal, district, and circuit courtsC. Attorney General

Theme 2:The cabinet debate over

Hamilton's financial plan expanded into a wider political conflict between Hamiltonian Federalists and Jeffersonian Republicans -- the first political parties in America.

V. Hamilton’s Financial PlanA. Economic goalsB. Five major components:

1. Funding at Par -- Purpose: Bolster

national credit 2. Assumption of State Debts

a. Motive: tie the states closer to the federal government

b. North-South struggle over assumption

c. Compromise (logrolling):

3. Tariffs (customs duties) 4. Excise taxes (whiskey)

5. National Banka. Organizationb. Jefferson’s views: -- "strict construction”c. Hamilton's views: -- "loose construction”

(broad construction) -- "elastic clause"

("necessary & proper") --

implied powersd. Washington's decision

Hamilton’s Financial Plan

BE FAT!

B ank of the U.S.E xcise taxesF unding at ParA ssumption of State DebtsT ariffs

C. Whiskey Rebellion (1794)1. Protesters’ reasons2. Posed a threat to the power of the federal government

The tarring and feathering of a whiskey tax collector

Flag of the Whiskey Boys

3. Washington summoned militia of several states and lead the troops (half-way)

4. Result:5. Significance:

D. Hamilton’s financial plan became the cornerstone of America’s financial system

VI. Birth of the Party SystemA. View of Founding FathersB. Federalists (Hamiltonians)

1. Gov't by upper-classes2. Distrusted common

people3. Supported strong central

gov't4. Fed. gov't should help

business; not interfere

5. Nat’l debt was a blessing 6. Pro-British in foreign policy

C. Jefferson -- Republicans (Democratic-

Republicans) 1. Gov't for the people 2. Appealed to middle class

and underprivileged

3. “The government that governs

least governs best” 4. National debt was a curse 5. Primarily agrarians 6. Believed in freedom of

speech 7. Pro-French in foreign

policy

History of Major American Political Parties

(3rd Parties not included above)

c. 1792

c. 1816

c. 1825

1834

1854

Democratic-Republicans Federalists(Jeffersonians) (Hamiltonians)

Death of the Federalists

One-party Rule: Republicans“Era of Good Feelings”

Democratic-Republicans National Republicans(Jacksonians) (Followers of Clay)

Democrats Whigs

To Present To Present

Republicans

VII. War against Native Americans A. Indians on northwest &

southwest borders were hostile to U.S. settlers

B. General “Mad” Anthony Wayne led U.S. forces to victory 1. Battle of Fallen Timbers, 1794

2. Treaty of Greenville, 1795

a. Cleared Amerindians out of 2/3 of Ohio and Indiana

b. Britain abandoned its posts in the Old Northwest territory

THEME #3The French Revolution created a severe ideological and political division over foreign policy between Federalists and Republicans. The foreign-policy crisis coincided with domestic political divisions that culminated in the bitter election of 1800, but in the end power passed peacefully from Federalists to Republicans.

FOREIGN POLICYI. French Revolution (1789)

A. Significance: Most important issue separating Federalists & RepublicansB. Most Americans were initially pleased

C. Reaction to "Reign of Terror": Jeffersonians &

FederalistsD. World War: U.S. -- “Who shall we support?”

The beheading of

Louis XVI, January 21,

1793

II. NeutralityA. U.S. still obligated to France under 1778 Franco-American Alliance

1. Jeffersonian view:2. Washington's view:

B. Neutrality Proclamation of 1793

1. Significance:2. Provisions:

C. American reaction 1. Jeffersonians

enraged 2. Federalists

supported it D. Who benefited

from U.S. neutrality?

III. The Jay Treaty A. Significance: most important cause for the official creation of the Democratic- Republican party B. Britain had been harassing U.S. interests

1. Frontier posts 2. Attacks on shipping 3. Impressment of sailors

C. Federalists were unwilling to go to war

A U.S. sailor is impressed into service on a British naval ship

D. Jay Treaty provisions: U.S. got very little

1. Britain renewed pledge to remove posts from U.S.

2. Britain agreed to pay damages to U.S. shipping

3. Britain refused future guarantees to U.S.

shipping 4. U.S. agreed to pay off

Revolutionary debts to British

merchantsJohn Jay

E. Jeffersonians reacted angrilyF. War with Britain was averted

Jeffersonians burned effigies of John Jay in protest of the

Jay Treaty

IV. Pinckney Treaty of 1795 (normalized relations with Spain)

A. Spanish motive: feared an Anglo-American alliance and sought to appease the U.S.

B. Provisions: 1. Free navigation of Mississippi River and right of deposit at New Orleans

2. Spain yielded disputed region north of Florida to the U.S.

Pinckney Treaty, 1795

Disputed territory

gained by U.S.

V. Washington Refuses a Third TermA. Partisan politics

1. Washington was seen as a Federalist by 1796

2. He had reluctantly run for and served a second termB. Farewell Address

1. Warned against evils of political

parties2. Warned against foreign

alliances

C. Washington's Legacy1. Kept U.S. out of overseas

entanglements and foreign wars

-- Over 100 years of isolationism

2. Hamilton’s Financial Plan3. Westward expansion:

a. New states: Vermont, Kentucky,

& Tennessee b. Treaty of Greenville

4. Cabinet 5. Went outside the

Supreme Court to select a new Chief Justice

6. Two-term tradition

VI. Election of 1796 A. Adams vs. Jefferson B. Adams: 71 Jefferson: 66

President John Adams1797-1801Federalist

Presidential Rankings: C-Span Survey, 2009

1. Abraham Lincoln2. Franklin Roosevelt3. George Washington4. Theodore Roosevelt5. Harry Truman6. John Kennedy7. Thomas Jefferson8. Dwight Eisenhower9. Woodrow Wilson10. Ronald Reagan11. Lyndon Johnson12. James Polk13. Andrew Jackson14. James Monroe

15. Bill Clinton16. William McKinley17. John Adams18. George H.W. Bush19. John Quincy Adams20. James Madison21. Grover Cleveland22. Gerald Ford23. Ulysses Grant24. William Taft25. Jimmy Carter26. Calvin Coolidge27. Richard Nixon28. James Garfield

29. Zachary Taylor

30. Benjamin Harrison

31. Martin Van Buren

32. Chester Arthur

33. Rutherford Hayes

34. Herbert Hoover

35. John Tyler

36. George W. Bush

37. Millard Fillmore

38. Warren Harding

39. William Harrison

40. Franklin Pierce

41. Andrew Johnson

42. James Buchanan

VII. Undeclared naval war with France (“Quasi-War”) (1798-1800)A. France condemned the Jay Treaty and harassed U.S. ships -- Saw it as a step towards a British-American alliance

B. XYZ Affair

A British political cartoon commenting on the XYZ Affair.

C. War hysteria in U.S. -- “Millions for defense

but not one cent for tribute!”

D. “High Federalists”E. Undeclared

hostilities

U.S. Frigate Constellation

captures French Frigate

Insurgente, February 1799

F. Adam's finest moment1. French peace overtures2. Appointed new foreign

minister: many shocked3. Napoleon's motive:4. Convention of 18005. Significance:

VII. Domestic Repression and ProtestA. Federalist motive: silence Democratic- Republicans during the warB. Alien Acts (1798)

1. Who were the targets?2. Provisions: a. New residency

requirement b. Deportation for those

who criticized the government

C. Sedition Act (1798)1. Provisions:2. Violation of the 1st

Amendment3. Indictments of

JeffersoniansD. Popular support existed initially for both the Alien and Sedition Acts

E. Virginia and Kentucky Resolutions (Madison &

Jefferson) 1. Premise: Nullification 2. Compact Theory of government 3. Short and long-term results

IX.The Jefferson “Revolution of 1800”

A. Federalist handicapsB. Election of 1800C. Significance:D. 12th Amendment (1804)

Election of 1800

Jefferson: 73Adams: 65

X. The Federalist LegacyA. Built enduring political and financial foundations (Hamilton)

B. Diplomats kept U.S. out of war and signed advantageous treaties with Britain, France, and Spain.

C. Preserved democratic gains of Revolution; held back anarchy

D. Federalist demise result of inability to adapt to changes in US

1. Westward movement dictated fresh policies.

2. Unwilling to adjust and appeal to the common people.

MEMORY DEVICE FOR

THE FEDERALIST

ERA

B ig Bill of RightsJ olly Judiciary ActH amilton Hamilton’s

Financial Plan F inds French

RevolutionN ervous Neutrality

ProclamationJ efferson Jay TreatyE ntering Election of 1796X –Men’s XYZ AffairQ uarters Quasi WarA ngering Alien and

Sedition ActsW hite Washington’s

LegacyR epublicans Revolution of

1800

XI. ReviewA. Domestic Policy

1. Bill of Rights/ Judiciary Act2. Hamilton’s financial plan3. Jeffersonian opposition to

Hamilton4. Westward Expansion5. Alien and Sedition Acts --Virginia and Kentucky

Resolutions 6. Washington’s legacies

B. Foreign Policy1. French Revolution creates

split into two political parties

a. Neutrality Proclamation, 1793

b. Jay Treaty, 17952. Pinckney Treaty, 17953. Quasi-war with France,

1798-1800a. XYZ Affair, 1797b. Convention of 1800

C. “Revolution of 1800”

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