Nothing was in the constitution stating he could buy land.
Even though the Louisiana Purchase which occurred under Jefferson causes a great expansion of the US, I do not think Jefferson particularly pushed for the expansion. His main goal was to secure the vital river route to the Gulf and the Atlantic via the Mississippi.
The United States got Louisiana from theLouisiana Purchase of 1803 when Thomas Jefferson the Third President of the United States was in office, originally Jefferson only wanted to buy the port of New Orleans, but France under the rule of Napoleon Bonaparte had lost their colony of Haiti and the one of the few reasons the French had held on to Louisiana was to supply Haiti. Another reason was, Louisiana being so far away from France Napoleon feared that he would not be able to defend it and he felt that it was better to have the Louisiana territory in American hands instead of the British. Also Napoleon Bonaparte at war with the superpowers of the the day Germany, Austrian Empire, Britain etc and he needed money to finance the war and he made the United States an offer they couldn't refuse asking only a few more million dollars than the Americans were offering for New Orleans alone. By making this deal Thomas Jefferson who supported the strict interpretation of the Constitution was sort of a hypocrite because he was against the elastic clause, even though he used it to obtain the Louisiana Purchase, for he feared if he waited for a Constitutional Amendment which allowed the government to acquire new lands Napoleon would no longer be interested.
Expansion and settlement. Jefferson founded the corps of discovery(lewis and clark) to settle the lands gained though the Louisana Purchase
There were a number of factors in the acquisition of the Louisiana Territory on both sides of the purchase. Until it finally came into the hands of the U.S. in 1803, the territory changed hands many times. It was originally claimed by France, but eventually it ended up in the hands of the Spanish. Spain held the territory until 1800, when it was returned to France under the Treaty of San Ildefonso. The treaty was kept a secret, and Spain retained the territory until the deal was announced just three weeks before the purchase in December, 1803. At the time of the Louisiana Purchase, Jefferson was a Republican, which, in the period, was the party that favored strict interpretation of the constitution. Jefferson was the well-respected leader of the party back then, and he was the brain behind the party's platform. Even so, when France was desperate to receive funds from selling off territory and offered the U.S. the unbelievable opportunity to purchase it for only $15,000,000, Jefferson realized that the constitution granted no right for the federal government to purchase land. As a strict constructionist, Jefferson had a conundrum. In the end, he decided to go against his own party's values and call the purchase a "treaty" in order to bypass the lack of a territory acquisition clause in the constitution. As it turned out, his risk payed off and hardly anyone in his party held his lapse of loyalty against him.
Nothing was in the constitution stating he could buy land.
Even though the Louisiana Purchase which occurred under Jefferson causes a great expansion of the US, I do not think Jefferson particularly pushed for the expansion. His main goal was to secure the vital river route to the Gulf and the Atlantic via the Mississippi.
This isn't translation. Though you could find this through a quick google search, I'm just going to say it anyway.... Thomas Jefferson, Louisiana Purchase.
Even though his election was called the revolution of 1800 he actually did not do anything arguably revolutionary while he was in office. The Louisiana Purchase was maybe his most revolutionary action and that in retrospect was more common sense that a bold new action.
Davis was an American, born in Pennsylvania, though his father moved the family to Louisiana and later Mississippi when Davis was still a boy.
Yes, because you completed the purchase on Cyber Monday, whether it was late in the evening or not!
A downfall of Thomas Jefferson was the Louisiana Purchase, since it was purchased from France. Another downfall was that he smeared john AdamsÕ name when they were both running for president.
The United States got Louisiana from theLouisiana Purchase of 1803 when Thomas Jefferson the Third President of the United States was in office, originally Jefferson only wanted to buy the port of New Orleans, but France under the rule of Napoleon Bonaparte had lost their colony of Haiti and the one of the few reasons the French had held on to Louisiana was to supply Haiti. Another reason was, Louisiana being so far away from France Napoleon feared that he would not be able to defend it and he felt that it was better to have the Louisiana territory in American hands instead of the British. Also Napoleon Bonaparte at war with the superpowers of the the day Germany, Austrian Empire, Britain etc and he needed money to finance the war and he made the United States an offer they couldn't refuse asking only a few more million dollars than the Americans were offering for New Orleans alone. By making this deal Thomas Jefferson who supported the strict interpretation of the Constitution was sort of a hypocrite because he was against the elastic clause, even though he used it to obtain the Louisiana Purchase, for he feared if he waited for a Constitutional Amendment which allowed the government to acquire new lands Napoleon would no longer be interested.
Expansion and settlement. Jefferson founded the corps of discovery(lewis and clark) to settle the lands gained though the Louisana Purchase
No, he crated a weak navy. He was hypocritic b/c he wanted to get rid of the army b/c it was a huge cost. Ended up paying the barbary pirates $60,000. & the Louisiana Purchase was unnecessary at the time, waste of $15 million. Even though he did promote agriculture. ETC..!
Thomas Jefferson was president before the civil war, making it impossible for him to send explorers to explore land acquired during the civil war. Although I am not sure, I believe that no land was acquired during the civil war. He did, though, send Meriwether Lewis and William Clark to explore the United States after the Louisiana purchase.
There were a number of factors in the acquisition of the Louisiana Territory on both sides of the purchase. Until it finally came into the hands of the U.S. in 1803, the territory changed hands many times. It was originally claimed by France, but eventually it ended up in the hands of the Spanish. Spain held the territory until 1800, when it was returned to France under the Treaty of San Ildefonso. The treaty was kept a secret, and Spain retained the territory until the deal was announced just three weeks before the purchase in December, 1803. At the time of the Louisiana Purchase, Jefferson was a Republican, which, in the period, was the party that favored strict interpretation of the constitution. Jefferson was the well-respected leader of the party back then, and he was the brain behind the party's platform. Even so, when France was desperate to receive funds from selling off territory and offered the U.S. the unbelievable opportunity to purchase it for only $15,000,000, Jefferson realized that the constitution granted no right for the federal government to purchase land. As a strict constructionist, Jefferson had a conundrum. In the end, he decided to go against his own party's values and call the purchase a "treaty" in order to bypass the lack of a territory acquisition clause in the constitution. As it turned out, his risk payed off and hardly anyone in his party held his lapse of loyalty against him.