180 Chapter 6 Jeffersonian Democracy
suppose you will make the most of it.” Never, as the his-
torian Henry Adams wrote, “did the United States gov-
ernment get so much for so little.”
Napoleon’s unexpected concession caused con-
sternation in America, though there was never real
doubt that the treaty would be ratified. Jefferson did
not believe that the government had the power
under the Constitution to add new territory or to
grant American citizenship to the 50,000 residents of
Louisiana by executive act, as the treaty required. He
even drafted a constitutional amendment: “The
province of Louisiana is incorporated with the
United States and made part thereof.” But his advis-
ers convinced him that it would be dangerous to
delay approval of the treaty until an amendment
could be acted on by three-fourths of the states.
Jefferson then suggested that the Senate ratify the
treaty and submit an amendment afterward “con-
firming an act which the nation had not previously
authorized.” This idea was so obviously illogical that
he quickly dropped it. Finally, he came to believe
“that the less we say about constitutional difficulties
the better.” Since what he called “the good sense of
our country” clearly wanted Louisiana, he decided to
“acquiesce with satisfaction” while Congress over-
looked the “metaphysical subtleties” of the problem
and ratified the treaty.
Some of the more partisan Federalists, who had
been eager to fight Spain for New Orleans, attacked
Jefferson for undermining the Constitution. One
such critic described Louisiana contemptuously as a
“Gallo-Hispano-Indian” collection of “savages and
adventurers.” Even Hamilton expressed hesitation
about absorbing “this new, immense, unbounded
world,” though he had dreamed of seizing still
larger domains himself. In the end Hamilton’s
nationalism reasserted itself, and he urged ratifica-
tion of the treaty, as did such other important
Federalists as John Adams and John Marshall. And
in a way the Louisiana Purchase was as much
Hamilton’s doing as Jefferson’s. Napoleon accepted
payment in United States bonds—promises to pay
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MARYLAND
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GEORGIA
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MAINE
(part of Mass.)
MASSACHUSETTS
MISSISSIPPI
TERRITORY
INDIANA
TERRITORY
OREGON
COUNTRY
SPANISH
FLORIDA
SPANISH
TERRITORY
NEW
HAMPSHIRE
NEW
JERSEY
NEW
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NORTH
CAROLINA
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PENNSYLVANIA
RHODE
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SOUTH
CAROLINA
TENNESSEE
VERMONT
VIRGINIA
Blackfoot
Chinook
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Percé Crow
Shoshone
Cheyenne
ArapahoPawnee
Sioux
Sioux
Osage
Apache
Comanche
Fort Ross
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New Orleans
St. Louis
Louisiana Purchase 1803
Indian tribe
BRITISH NORTH AMERICA
(CANADA)
Louisiana PurchaseJefferson bought the Louisiana region from Napoleon. No payments were made to the many Indians who had no idea that
the world of their ancestors was owned by distant rulers.