Fortunate Accident: The Louisiana Purchase
Fortunate Accident: The Louisiana Purchase
Source
Great Achievement . Jefferson’s acquisition of the vast lands between the Mississippi River and the Rocky Mountains was by far the greatest achievement of his first term as president. Ironically, it came about as an accident. Jefferson had opined in his inaugural address that the United States already had enough land to provide “for a thousand generations,” and he was not planning a major land purchase from European powers. However, the purchase of Louisiana, as the territory was called, made perfect political and geopolitical sense to Jefferson and his followers.
New Orleans . By 1801 nearly a half million Americans lived west of the Appalachian mountains. Federalists, many of them New England descendants of Puritans who had migrated to America in the seventeenth century, openly feared that the white residents of the frontier were illiterate barbarians. Jefferson’s Republicans, on the other hand, saw Western expansion as the best hope for the survival of the Republic. As the nineteenth century began, settlers in the West remained under the political control of foreign powers who controlled the Mississippi River system. As a result these settlers depended on French and Spanish commercial systems to get their produce to markets—hardly a recipe for the continual renewal of the republican spirit. Jefferson understood that the key to securing permanent control of the West was to gain possession of New Orleans, located at the mouth of the Mississippi. “There is on the globe,” Jefferson wrote, “one single spot, the possessor of which is our natural and habitual enemy. It is New Orleans.”
Spain Threatens Commerce . In 1801 Spain owned New Orleans and under a treaty allowed Americans to transport produce from the interior. The year before, Spain had secretly ceded all of Louisiana to France, a move that allowed Napoleon to dream of creating a new French empire in America. In his scheme farmers in Louisiana would produce food for the immensely profitable French sugar-producing colonies based in Haiti. In late 1802 Spain closed New Orleans to American commerce, giving rise to panicked rumors that the city would soon be transferred to France. Such a move would have posed a serious threat to the existence of American settlements in the West.
Napoleon’s Surprise . To avoid this potential debacle, Jefferson sent a high-level delegation to France with instructions to offer up to $10 million for New Orleans and West Florida (the southern portions of Mississippi and Alabama). By the time they got there, Napoleon’s plans for a new French empire in America had cooled—thanks to the armed former slaves of Haiti, who rose up in 1793 and by 1801 had gained control of the entire island. At the same time, another war between France and England seemed imminent. When Jefferson’s diplomats met with Napoleon on 11 April 1803, the French leader astonished them by offering to sell not only New Orleans but the entire territory of Louisiana for the bargain price of $15 million. The resulting treaty doubled the size of the United States and gave the new nation absolute control of the entire Mississippi River valley. Jefferson predicted Louisiana would make the West an “empire of liberty.”
Robert W. Tucker and David C. Hendrickson, Empire of Liberty: The Statecraft of Thomas Jefferson (New York: Oxford University Press, 1990).
Cite this article
Pick a style below, and copy the text for your bibliography.
|
Delft U. builds innovation hub.(YES!Delft)
Magazine article from: Research-Technology Management; 9/1/2009; ; 700+ words
; Delft, the Dutch city famous for its locally manufactured blue-and...innovation hub. A new technology cluster is emerging in and around the Delft University of Technology (TU Delft), one of three technical universities in the Netherlands and...
|
|
Holiday Mercury: Take pot luck and go Dutch in Delft.
Newspaper article from: Sunday Mercury (Birmingham, England); 3/19/2000; ; 700+ words
; DELFT may not be the first name that springs to...school. Flat land, small canals and bikes - Delft is as Dutch as a pair of clogs. The town...the flavour of the old centre that makes Delft such a popular stopping-off point. It...
|
|
Royally Delft
Newspaper article from: Chicago Sun-Times; 1/25/1998; ; 700+ words
; DELFT, The Netherlands Religious tolerance made Delft one of the great cities of 17th century Holland and gave the world one of its best-loved ceramics and colors - Delft blue. The success of Delftware ceramics and the sea power...
|
|
Baan Company Wins Order From Delft Technical University
PR Newswire; 7/2/1998; 700+ words
; ...Amsterdam: BAAN) signed a contract with Delft Technical University (TU) to supply and...phase will be completed by July 1, 1999. Delft TU's existing systems, after 15 years...the Netherlands also uses Baan software. Delft TU was also attracted to Baan's capabilities...
|
|
Design Management Education at the Delft University of Technology
Magazine article from: Design Management Review; 7/1/2007; ; 700+ words
; ...The Faculty of Industrial Design Engineering (Delft IDE), an institute of the Delft University of Technology in The Netherlands, is...Vermeersch, studio chief at Pininfarina. And Delft IDE is not even an automotive design school! All...
|
|
The genius with a Delft touch with a Delft touch; Discovering the Dutch canal city that was home to Vermeer, celebrated Old Master and an enigma to the grave . . . and beyond.
Newspaper article from: The Mail on Sunday (London, England); 6/24/2001; ; 700+ words
; ...impoverished? And why did he stubbornly remain in Delft, refusing to follow his fellow artists...had been buried alongside his family in Delft's Old Church but when the ancient flagstones...with works by his contemporaries from the Delft school. There will be 13 works by Vermeer...
|
|
Last chance to save a painting by Jan Steen The Burgher of Delft and his Daughter (1655).
M2 Presswire; 5/25/2004; 700+ words
; ...a painting by Jan Steen The Burgher of Delft and his Daughter (1655)(C)1994...painting by Jan Steen entitled The Burgher of Delft and His Daughter, c.1655. This painting...PA bulletin board. 2. The Burgher of Delft and his Daughter is often regarded as one...
|
|
Van Delft takes helm at GOP
Newspaper article from: Sunday News Lancaster, PA; 7/31/2005; ; 700+ words
; ...conference Saturday morning. Pieter Van Delft, 45, will replace Terry Trego, who resigned...selected as executive director, said Van Delft, who received the consensus vote over...character." Born in the Netherlands, Van Delft and his family immigrated to the United...
|
|
It's the look of classic delft
Newspaper article from: The Record (Bergen County, NJ); 7/11/2002; ; 466 words
; ...00-0000 It's the look of classic delft By LESLIE HINDMAN, SPECIAL FROM THE CHICAGO...photograph of eight tiles. I was told they are delft tiles made in the 17th century. I would...inspect. However, your tiles certainly look delft and 17th century. The name delft comes...
|
|
In the manner of Delft
Magazine article from: Antiques & Collecting Magazine; 4/1/2001; ; 700+ words
; ...called galleyware was called Delf or Delft to describe the wares imported from the...tradition and Eastern elements; however, the Delft workshops soon left these styles behind...pottery was established in the city of Delft. Delft objects from this early peak period...
|
|
Delft
Book article from: The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition
Delft , city (1994 pop. 91,941), South Holland...in the 11th cent. and chartered in 1246, Delft was an important commercial center until...cent.) by Rotterdam . The aspect of old Delft has changed little since Jan Vermeer , who...
|
|
delft
Book article from: The Oxford Pocket Dictionary of Current English
delft / delft / • n. English or Dutch tin-glazed earthenware, typically decorated by hand in blue on a white background. DERIVATIVES: delft·ware / -ˌwe(ə)r / n.
|
|
Jan Vermeer
Encyclopedia entry from: Encyclopedia of World Biography
...painter Jan Vermeer (1632-1675) of Delft transformed traditional Dutch themes into...Vermeer's life are scanty. He was born in Delft. His father was an art dealer and silk...his marriage he became a master in the Delft painters' guild, of which he was an officer...
|
|
Pieter de Hooch
Encyclopedia entry from: Encyclopedia of World Biography
...by a cloth merchant who had homes in both Delft and Leiden and who by 1655 owned 10 paintings...his native city. That year he married a Delft girl, and the following year he was a member of the Delft guild. De Hooch's best works were painted...
|
|
Leeuwenhoek, Antoni Van (1632–1723)
Encyclopedia entry from: Europe, 1450 to 1789: Encyclopedia of the Early Modern World
...of a basket maker on 24 October 1632 in Delft, Leeuwenhoek had little formal education...employed by a draper. In 1654 he returned to Delft, married his first wife, Barbara, and...he became chamberlain to the sheriffs of Delft. In 1669 he passed the exam to become...
|