The Politics of the Louisiana Purchase

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Before Thomas Jefferson ever entered the presidency, he believed in the “Empire of Liberty.” He wrote in a letter to a friend that “Our confederacy must be viewed as the nest from which all America, North or South, is to be peopled.” His motives for the intense eye on American expansion were greatness for his country, as well as for himself. He was disgusted with the idea of North America being divided into nation-states like Europe. His goal was for the ideals of the American Revolution to spread over the whole continent. He passed and helped pass some of the legislation that helped early America expand. He co-authored the Northwest Ordinance of 1787, which allowed for states to be made from the territory east of the Mississippi and north of the Ohio River. Jefferson’s desire for exploring the lands west of the Mississippi had been around for fifty years. Jefferson’s father was a member of the Loyal Land Company. After American Independence, there were four plans to explore the west; Jefferson was behind three of those plans. The Louisiana Purchase divided the political country, before and after the actual purchase. I intend to show these sides by examining documents from Jefferson, his colleagues, and the opposition to the Purchase, as well as international deterrents to the Purchase.

Jefferson’s dream of a transcontinental America can be shown in his letters to governors and political leaders in the western states and territories. His letter to William Henry Harrison, who was governor of Indiana, is a prime example of his attitude to consolidate all the territory east of the Mississippi. Jefferson claimed to insist on maintaining a peace with the Indian tribes, as long as they were willing to sell their land t...

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Thomas Jefferson " The Politics of the Louisiana Purchase," Annals of American History. (Accessed January 24, 2015)

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