Having a presidential term from 1801 to 1809, Thomas Jefferson was able to succeed in being the third president of the United States of America. Not only was Jefferson the president of the United States, but before he was also the Secretary of State for President Washington. For most of his life, Jefferson was actively involved in shaping America and is greatly remembered by being one of our Founding Fathers. Since Jefferson studied government and practiced law during college, he seemed fit to help draft and write the Declaration of Independence since he was in the Continental Congress. This document proclaimed individual rights’, which Jefferson was a fan of.…
But he agreed to the constitution and all its faults. . He wanted there to be a government for the people.…
Jefferson feared that the agrarian republic that he was trying to create was slowly falling apart. He didn’t need to fear though because his ideas would evolve and are still evolving from his original idea today. We still have farming and the idea that we should base our country off of local products. An example of the idea being the same and that is just evolving is in the pictures from document A the pictures show the evolution of the farm.…
As is today, unfortunatley a politiians general belief may conflict with what they "know" is the right thing to do in the situation. Take the Louisiana Purchase by Jefferson. We see earlier that unless the Constitution stated a power was specifically granted to the federal government, it would be transfered to the state. However, at this time, Jefferson as president, was altering treaties and ultimately buying land when he himself admitted it was unconstitutional in private. Jefferson believed in the land so much that he knew his contradiction would not be as powerful as the production of the newly acquired…
The United States of America in the Post-American Revolution was overflowing with joy, fear and cautious optimism. The world had held its breath as it watched thirteen small imperial colonies succeed in defeating the British Empire and wining its long sought after independence. Unfortunately, the defeat of Britain was only the beginning of the woes America would face. It would come down to two prominent political intellectuals of the time, Alexander Hamilton and Thomas Jefferson, to take it upon themselves to heed this danger. Together they sought to persuade their colleagues and the masses through secret and not so secret writings and meetings.…
Shortly after the ratification of the Constitution, George Washington unanimously won the presidential election of 1789. Striving towards a nation of unity, Washington set up a cabinet of four strong individuals in order to inaugurate a system of both balance and credibility. Although Washington was strongly against political parties, it wasn’t long until they began to emerge. Filling the cabinet with tension, Alexander Hamilton, Secretary of Treasury, and Thomas Jefferson, Secretary of State, brought upon new challenges for American politics in the eighteenth century, when they brought two very incompatible visions of what they hoped America’s future would look like to the plate. Additionally, their political and economic differences greatly…
In 17 days, he finished the first draft of the declaration of independence. It was presented to Congress on June of 1776, and the final version was adopted on July 4. Jefferson served Virginia in the House of Representatives, then as governor. George Washington appointed him as the First Secretary of State. He didn't get quite along with Alexander Hamilton, the Secretary of Treasury.…
Jefferson identified more with state independence because he lived in the states while they were still separate, whereas Hamilton didn’t have any regard for local autonomy because he never lived in an individual state and had to fight for states rights. Jefferson feared a strong centralized power because he believed the more power to the common man, the better. Thomas Jefferson shares how much trust he had in the common man in his Notes on the State of Virginia, “Those who labor in the earth are the chosen people of God.” (MP 165) This quote clearly expresses the amount of trust Jefferson had in the people and furthermore, how idealistic he was about having a government for the people by the people.…
Jefferson vs Hamilton). Jefferson did not like the idea that a president should be re-elected several times, he preferred that the President should be allowed to serve only for a few terms. Like he states, if permitted by the constitution that person is an officer for life, because he can continuously be re-elected. Although he wanted a government he feared the idea of the government having too much power seeing that it could lead to monarchy. “Jefferson expressed his fear that monarchial Federalists sought to use the new government as a stepping stone to monarchy.”…
He believed in the people’s rights to voice one’s opinion, or rights to Liberty. As opposed to Alexander Hamilton who desired constitutional power. Conflict and debate over the constitution began when Jefferson so openly shared his thoughts on the constitution to his friend James Madison. “Prima facie I do not like it. It fails in an essential character, that the hole and patch should be commensurate.…
Thomas Jefferson and Alexander Hamilton were two men who wanted change in the political party system. This is where the two new political parties were created, the Federalist party and the Democratic-Republicans. These two new forms of government brought new and different ideas on how to run a federal government. Most candidates of today still follow these ways of thinking, but their ideals are much less extreme, but also these ideas could be applied to some of the problems of today. Alexander Hamilton started his political career as an advisor to Washington during his presidency.…
Hamilton wanted to form a national government to help them get out of debt resulting from the American Revolution, he planned to borrow money from European banks then pay it back. He believed our national government had to be strong enough in order to defend ourselves. Jefferson completely disagreed with Hamilton’s ideas of government. Jefferson wanted to accomplish a small, weak government that is not to powerful. He wanted the nation to consist of only independent Yeomen farmers.…
Michael Vipond Mr. Haindfield APUSH 1 November 2017 Unit 6 Reaction Paper In the 1780s and 1790s, Thomas Jefferson and Alexander Hamilton had vastly different ideas on how the economic future would be for the United States. Both of them envisioned a prominent nation, but with both different ideas on how to get there. Despite Jefferson’s view of a future of agricultural economy, which was based on farming, no national bank, and strong state governments; Hamiltons view of an industrial economy, which was based on manufacturing, a national bank, and a strong national government, prospered. The extent in which each of their visions affected the United States were reflected by strikes done in the labor work force, the repeal of the national bank by Andrew Jackson, and the growing number of textiles in the U.S. between 1810 and 1840.…
He was an anti-federalist and in order to reduce the influence of the central government, Jefferson decreased the amount of government employees, lowered Army enlistments, and cut the national debt. During his presidency, Jefferson was faced with foreign affairs every day. It often pushed him towards Federalists policies that negates his personal political philosophy. Jefferson’s is very well spoken and that is one of the reasons he was able to purchase the Louisiana Purchase for $15 million. Jefferson’s ideal agrarian democracy ignores the fact that slaves are the ones to work on the richest farmlands in the Unites States.…
He does not believe that the collection of taxes is necessary because it was not specifically stated in the Constitution. Jefferson’s point of view is that he thinks that the Federalists are making claims that are not in the Constitution and he thinks their power is useless. “ …Cunning, ambitious, and unprincipled men will be enabled to subvert the power of the people and to usurp for themselves the reins of government…” (Document C). In George Washington’s Farewell Address, he claimed that the government should try its best to not develop political parties.…