Louisiana Purchase.
The Louisiana Purchase (1803) was a land deal between the United States and
France, in which the U.S. acquired approximately 827,000 square miles of land
west of the Mississippi River for $15 million.
this little event, of France possessing herself of Louisiana, ... is the
embryo of a tornado which will burst on the countries on both shores of the
Atlantic and involve in it’s effects their highest destinies.1
1805 Map of Louisiana by Samuel Lewis
1805 Map of Louisiana by Samuel Lewis
President Thomas Jefferson wrote this prediction in an April 1802 letter to
Pierre Samuel du Pont amid reports that Spain would retrocede to France the
vast territory of Louisiana. As the United States had expanded westward,
navigation of the Mississippi River and access to the port of New Orleans had
become critical to American commerce, so this transfer of authority was cause
for concern. Within a week of his letter to du Pont, Jefferson wrote U.S.
Minister to France Robert Livingston: "every eye in the US. is now fixed
on this affair of Louisiana. perhaps nothing since the revolutionary war has
produced more uneasy sensations through the body of the nation."2
BACKGROUND.
The presence of Spain was not so provocative. A conflict over navigation of
the Mississippi had been resolved in 1795 with a treaty in which Spain
recognized the United States' right to use the river and to deposit goods in
New Orleans for transfer to oceangoing vessels. In his letter to Livingston,
Jefferson wrote, "Spain might have retained [New Orleans] quietly for
years. her pacific dispositions, her feeble state, would induce her to increase
our facilities there, so that her possession of the place would be hardly felt
by us." He went on to speculate that "it would not perhaps be very
long before some circumstance might arise which might make the cession of it to
us the price of something of more worth to her."3
Napoleon Bonaparte
Jefferson's vision of obtaining territory from Spain was altered by the prospect
of having the much more powerful France of Napoleon Bonaparte as a next-door
neighbor.
France had surrendered its North American possessions at the end of the
French and Indian War. New Orleans and Louisiana west of the Mississippi were
transferred to Spain in 1762, and French territories east of the Mississippi,
including Canada, were ceded to Britain the next year. But Napoleon, who took
power in 1799, aimed to restore France's presence on the continent.
The Louisiana situation reached a crisis point in October 1802 when Spain's
King Charles IV signed a decree transferring the territory to France and the
Spanish agent in New Orleans, acting on orders from the Spanish court, revoked
Americans' access to the port's warehouses. These moves prompted outrage in the
United States.
1815 Plan of New Orleans
While Jefferson and Secretary of State James Madison worked to resolve the
issue through diplomatic channels, some factions in the West and the opposition
Federalist Party called for war and advocated secession by the western
territories in order to seize control of the lower Mississippi and New Orleans.
NEGOTIATIONS
Aware of the need for action more visible than diplomatic maneuvering and
concerned with the threat of disunion, Jefferson in January 1803 recommended
that James Monroe join Livingston in Paris as minister extraordinary. (Later
that same month, Jefferson asked Congress to fund an expedition that would
cross the Louisiana territory, regardless of who controlled it, and proceed on
to the Pacific. This would become the Lewis and Clark Expedition.) Monroe was a close personal friend and
political ally of Jefferson's, but he also owned land in Kentucky and had
spoken openly for the rights of the western territories.
Jefferson urged Monroe to accept the posting, saying he possessed "the
unlimited confidence of the administration & of the Western people."
Jefferson added: "all eyes, all hopes, are now fixed on you, .... for on
the event of this mission depends the future destinies of this republic."4
Shortly thereafter, Jefferson wrote to Kentucky's governor, James Garrard,
to inform him of Monroe's appointment and to assure him that Monroe was
empowered to enter into "such arrangements as may effectually secure our
rights and interest in the Mississipi, and in the country Eastward of
that."5
As Jefferson noted in that letter, Monroe's charge was to obtain land east
of the Mississippi. Monroe's instructions, drawn up by Madison and approved by
Jefferson, allocated up to $10 million for the purchase of New Orleans and all
or part of the Floridas. If this bid failed, Monroe was instructed to try to
purchase just New Orleans, or, at the very least, secure U.S. access to the
Mississippi and the port.
But when Monroe reached Paris on April 12, 1803, he learned from Livingston
that a very different offer was on the table.
Plan du Siège de Santo Domingo
Napoleon's plans to re-establish France in the New World were unraveling.
The French army sent to suppress a rebellion by slaves and free blacks in the
sugar-rich colony of Saint Domingue (present-day Haiti) had been decimated by
yellow fever, and a new war with Britain seemed inevitable. France's minister
of finance, François de Barbé-Marbois, who had always doubted Louisiana's
worth, counseled Napoleon that Louisiana would be less valuable without Saint
Domingue and, in the event of war, the territory would likely be taken by the
British from Canada. France could not afford to send forces to occupy the
entire Mississippi Valley, so why not abandon the idea of empire in America and
sell the territory to the United States?
Napoleon agreed. On April 11, Foreign Minister Charles Maurice de
Talleyrand told Livingston that France was willing to sell all of Louisiana.
Livingston informed Monroe upon his arrival the next day.
Seizing on what Jefferson later called "a fugitive occurrence,"
Monroe and Livingston immediately entered into negotiations and on April 30
reached an agreement that exceeded their authority — the purchase of the
Louisiana territory, including New Orleans, for $15 million. The acquisition of
approximately 827,000 square miles would double the size of the United States.
Though rumors of the purchase preceded notification from Monroe and
Livingston, their message reached Washington in time for an official
announcement on July 4, 1803.
The Louisiana Purchase Treaty
The purchase treaty had to be ratified by the end of October, which gave
Jefferson and his Cabinet time to deliberate the issues of boundaries and
constitutionality. Exact boundaries would have to be negotiated with Spain and
England and so would not be set for several years, and Jefferson's Cabinet
members argued that the constitutional amendment he proposed was not necessary.
As time for ratification of the purchase treaty grew short, Jefferson accepted
his Cabinet's counsel and rationalized: "it is the case of a guardian,
investing the money of his ward in purchasing an important adjacent territory;
& saying to him when of age, I did this for your good."6
The Senate ratified the treaty on October 20 by a vote of 24 to 7. Spain,
upset by the sale but without the military power to block it, formally returned
Louisiana to France on November 30. France officially transferred the territory
to the Americans on December 20, and the United States took formal possession
on December 30.
Jefferson's prediction of a "tornado" that would burst upon the
countries on both sides of the Atlantic had been averted, but his belief that
the affair of Louisiana would impact upon "their highest destinies"
proved prophetic indeed.
TIMELINE OF THE LOUISIANA TERRITORY
1682 René-Robert Cavelier, Sieur de La Salle, claims for France all
territory drained by Mississippi River from Canada to the Gulf of Mexico and
names it Louisiana.
1718 New Orleans is founded.
1762 France cedes New Orleans and Louisiana west of the Mississippi to
Spain.
1763 France cedes territories east of the Mississippi and north of New
Orleans to Britain.
1783 Treaty of Paris gives newly independent United States free access to
the Mississippi.
1784 Spain closes lower Mississippi and New Orleans to foreigners.
1789 French Revolution begins.
1790 Slaves revolt on Caribbean island of Saint Domingue, France's richest
colony.
1795 Spain reopens the Mississippi and New Orleans to Americans.
1799 Napoleon Bonaparte seizes power in France.
1800 Spain secretly agrees to return Louisiana to France in exchange for
Etruria, a small kingdom in Italy.
1801 President Jefferson names Robert Livingston minister to France.
1802 Spain cedes Louisiana to France. New Orleans is closed to American
shipping. French army sent to re-establish control in Saint Domingue is
decimated.
Events of 1803
January Jefferson sends James Monroe to join Livingston in France.
February Napoleon decides against sending more troops to Saint Domingue and
instead orders forces to sail to New Orleans.
March Napoleon cancels military expedition to Louisiana.
April 11 Foreign Minister Talleyrand tells Livingston that France is
willing to sell all of Louisiana.
April 12 Monroe arrives in Paris and joins Livingston in negotiations with
Finance Minister Barbé-Marbois.
April 30 Monroe, Livingston, and Barbé-Marbois agree on terms of sale: $15
million for approximately 827,000 square miles of territory.
May 18 Britain declares war on France.
July 4 Purchase is officially announced in United States.
October 20 U.S. Senate ratifies purchase treaty.
November 30 Spain formally transfers Louisiana to France.
December 20 France formally transfers Louisiana to United States.
December 30 United States takes formal possession of Louisiana
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