history

profileTonyttttt
180OL.18-07.ppt

*

American Portraits: Lewis and Clark

Charles Willson Peale, Meriwether Lewis, 1807, and William Clark, c. 1808. Oil on canvas.

HIST 180 Survey of American History

Charles Willson Peale, Meriwether Lewis, 1807.

Oil on canvas.

Benjamin Cawthra, Ph.D.

California State University, Fullerton

The Jefferson and Madison Administrations

Timeline: The Jefferson and Madison Administrations

Jefferson v. the Federalists

3. The Revolution of 1800

The Louisiana Purchase and Its Significance

Native Americans and the New Republic

Conflict with Britain

*

  • Timeline: The Jefferson and
    Madison Administrations

1798 Alien and Sedition Acts.

1800 Washington, DC becomes capital.

Thomas Jefferson elected president.

1803 Marbury v. Madison, Supreme Court upholds right of judicial review.

Louisiana Purchase.

Lewis and Clark expedition begins.

1804 Jefferson elected to second term.

1805 Increased tensions with Great Britain.

1807 Embargo Act.

1808 Congress ends American slave trade.

James Madison elected president.

1810 Trade with Britain and France restored.

1811 Battle of Tippecanoe, Indiana; Tecumseh and allies defeated.

Congress declares war on Britian.

1814 British burn Washington, D.C.

1815 Andrew Jackson defeats British at Battle of New Orleans.

2. Jefferson v. the Federalists

John Trumbull, John Adams, 1793.

Oil on canvas. The White House.

*

“[T]he power to create, define, and punish such . . . crimes is reserved, and, of right, appertains solely and exclusively to the respective States, each within its own territory.”

Thomas Jefferson, the Kentucky Resolutions, 1798.

W. Goodacre, Jr., Virginia State Capitol, 1831. Hand-colored engraving. Architect: Thomas Jefferson.

*

3. The Revolution of 1800

“We are all Republicans--we are all Federalists.”

Thomas Jefferson, Inaugural Address, 1800.

Rembrandt Peale, Thomas Jefferson, 1800. Oil on canvas.

*

Pierre-Charles L’Enfant, plan for Washington, D.C., 1791 (detail).
Drawing.

*

William Russell Birch, U.S. Capitol, 1800.

Library of Congress.

*

Unknown, Congressional Pugilists, 1798.

Cartoon.

*

Samuel F.B. Morse, The House of Representatives, 1822-23.

Oil on canvas. Corcoran Gallery of Art, Washington, D.C.

*

“Burning of the Plaine du Cap - Massacre of whites by the blacks,” 1831.

Oil on canvas. Corcoran Gallery of Art, Washington, D.C.

*

Richmond, Virginia, 1800.

Etching, The Richmond Progress, 1882.

*

4. The Louisiana Purchase and Its Significance

*

Charles Willson Peale, The Artist in His Museum, 1822.
Oil on canvas.

*

New Orleans, a plan of the city published in London in 1761 after the plan by Pierre Le Blond de La Tour, 1722.

*

Jackson Square, New Orleans, showing the Cabildo or town hall (1795-99), St. Louis Cathedral (1788-94), and the Presbytere or rectory (1788-1813), by Gilbert Guillemard.

*

Parlange Plantation, near New Roads, Louisiana, c. 1785-95.

*

Africa House, Melrose Plantation, Natchitoches, Louisiana, late 18th century.

*

5. Native Americans and the New Republic

John Vanderlyn, The Murder of Jane McCrea, 1803-04.

Oil on canvas.

*

Jefferson Peace Medal, 1801.

Charles Bird King, Young Omawhaw, War Eagle, Little Missouri, and Pawnees, 1822.

Oil on Canvas.

*

“Incorporating themselves with us as citizens of the United States . . . their history may terminate.”
Thomas Jefferson

Charles Willson Peale, Thomas Jefferson, 1803.

Oil on canvas.

6. Conflict with Britain

John Vanderlyn, James Madison, 1816.

Oil on canvas.

*

George Munger, U.S. Capitol, 1814.

Drawing.

*

John Trumbull, The Declaration of Independence, 1819.

Oil on canvas. Capitol Rotunda.

*

John Trumbull, The Surrender of Lord Cornwallis at Yorktown, 19 October 1781, 1787-1820.

Oil on canvas.

*

Antonio Capellano, The Preservation of Captain Smith by Pocahontas, 1825.

Enrico Causici, The Landing of the Pilgrims, 1825.

Sandstone. U.S Capitol Rotunda.

*

Nicholas Gevelot, William Penn’s Treaty with the Indians, 1827.

Enrico Causici, The Conflict of Daniel Boone and the Indians, 1826-27.

Sandstone. U.S Capitol Rotunda.

*

*