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arabera Abby Isom 12 years ago

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The Age of Jefferson

Thomas Jefferson's presidency marked significant events and shifts in American history. The Judiciary was notably influenced by Adams' midnight judges, leading to a more Federalist court, exemplified by the landmark Marbury vs.

The Age of Jefferson

The Age of Jefferson

The Lewis and Clarke Expedition

The group reached the Pacific Ocean in November 1805 and then returned to St. Louis
Jefferson had planned this exploratory expedition, and he picked fellow Virginian Merywether Louis and William Clarke

The Louisiana Purchase

Federalists were against it because they feared it would take away from New England trade.
Ended European expansion in America
He purchased the territory for 15 million dollars from France (3 cents per acre).

Jefferson's "Revolution"

He induced Congress to repeal many taxes, and they slashed expenditures by closing some embassies overseas and reducing the army.
Jefferson sought to restore the librrty and tranquility that the United Sates had enjoyed in its early years and to reverse the drift towards despotism that he had seen in Hamilton's economic program and John Adam's Alien and Sedition Acts.

The Election of 1804

Jefferson won election
The adoption in 1804 of the 12th Amendment, which required separate and distinct ballots in the electoral college for the presidential and vice presidential candidates, put an end to the possibility of an electoral tie for the chief executive.
Jefferson's main threat was Aaron Burr

Jefferson and the Judiciary

Marbury vs. Madison (1803): the judge ruled that Madison should have ruled Marbury's commission.
Adams appointed the "midnight judges," making the courts more Federalist than Democratic-Republican.

Jefferson and Jeffersonian

Jefferson regarded cities as breeding grounds for mobs and as menaces to liberty.
Also believed that popular liberty required popular virtue
He worried that high taxes, standing armies, and public corruption could destroy American liberty by turning government into the master rather than serving of the people.
He did not believe that blacks and whites could live permanently side by side in American society.