The Louisiana Purchase: Environment And Geography

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The Louisiana Purchase The overarching theme in the section regarding the Louisiana Purchase is Environment and Geography. In this section , the Jefferson Administration was astonished by the unexpected and abrupt acceptance of the American offer on the part of Napoleon to sell the vast Louisiana territory. Jefferson accepted the deal without much hesitation fearing that while waiting for some type of treaty to be authorized by the government, Napoleon might have a change of heart. The United States paid a sum of $15 million dollars to the French, as wella s granting special concessions in the commercial sector. Jefferson was unsure of at first if the act of the president accepting the deal was constitutional, yet the congress would effectively …show more content…

A large portion of French troops in North America had been affected by disease, and reinforcements failed to arrive and provide support, as well as the strain on France’s economy with the war in Europe, These factors pressured Napoleon to accept what he saw as a decision over French priorities, and what he no longer saw as useful. A similar situation would present itself during the Mexican American war, that revolved around a series of territorial disputes, on vague and unclear claims to land. This war was also founded on a similar platform that the Louisiana Territory based off on, that America's destiny was to expand westward, that was called “manifest destiny”. The territories claimed contained a mix of citizens who identified of different nationalities, and held different views toward a change through annexation. Through a single purchase of land, geography would play a greater role in shaping the actions the U.S government would take against foreign powers, and the value it placed on territorial acquisitions, willing to go to war in defense …show more content…

In this topic, the Jefferson Administration seeks to expand westward, following the “manifest destiny”, with ever growing desire of white Americans for settlement land. Jefferson’s efforts to expand would be hindered by the Native Americans, who sw their available land decreasing steadily, being backed into a corner, and relied on enemies of the U.S. such as Great Britain for support against expansion. William Harrison, governor of the Indiana territory, would be one of the leading figures against the Indian problem, by which natives were offered an ultimatum: assimilate into American society, leaving their customs aside, or migrate farther west of the Mississippi, losing tribal lands either way. This assertive policy was deemed benign on the part of the Americans, as Jefferson saw the Natives as eventually losing the conflict against white settlers. Through the use of immoral tactics, Harrison concluded many treaties that granted treaty rights to many northwestern lands, with the Indians helpless to America’s power,yet the alliance between native tribes and the British would come to make the American expansion not as smooth. The Chesapeake incident, as well as the surge of resentment towards the British would reveal the development of a new British attitude towards Americans. As a result of such animosity, both politically and socially, British colonial

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