The historical audacity of the Louisiana Purchase Judy Walton

Transcriber: Andrea McDonough
Reviewer: Bedirhan Cinar

Have you heard the one about Thomas Jefferson

and the Louisiana Territory?

Thomas Jefferson, author of The Declaration of Independence,

was not a fan of the new constitution presented in 1787.

He was very worried

that The Constitution gave too much power

to the new, national government,

and not enough power to the states,

an issue known as “big government”.

Jefferson only reluctantly agreed to support it

when his friend, James Madison,

promised to propose a bill of rights after it was ratified.

But Jefferson’s fears about big government did not go away.

For example, Secretary of the Treasury, Alexander Hamilton,

proposed a national bank in 1790,

and Jefferson knew there was no provision in The Constitution

to permit such a thing.

Hamilton claimed some sort of implied powers mumbo-jumbo.

Sure, it wasn’t written in The Constitution,

but The Constitution implied that it could be done.

But, Jefferson wasn’t buying it.

Nonetheless, the bank was established

by Hamilton and President Washington.

When Jefferson was sworn in as President in 1801,

he pledged to reduce the size and scope

of the national government.

But, of course, things didn’t go exactly as he had planned.

Spain secretly transferred the Louisiana Territory to France

right beneath Jefferson’s nose.

When Congress found out,

they quickly began discussions with France

to buy a piece of the territory

along the Mississippi River for about $2 million.

But, there was one little problem:

Jefferson knew there was no provision

in The Constitution to buy foreign territory.

So what was a strict constructionist to do?

First, he tried to get an amendment to The Constitution passed

that would expressly permit the purchase,

but Congress wasn’t willing to do it.

Then, without permission, the U.S. negotiators in France

cut a deal for all of the territory

for a cool $15 million dollars.

That new land doubled the size of the nation!

Now Jefferson was really stuck.

He knew that the territory would be a great acquisition for the country,

providing lots of new land for farmers and other settlers,

but how could he constitutionally justify it?

In the end, Jefferson turned to the argument

used by his old foe Alexander Hamilton.

He claimed that the power to purchase the territory

is implied in The Constitution’s treaty-making power.

This was the exact argument

that he had mocked openly a decade before,

so it must have crushed his pride to have to use it.

But more importantly,

he may have committed the biggest big government play ever!

How ironic is it

that one of the biggest opponents of big government

doubled the size of the young country

and did so while openly questioning its constitutionality?

At $15 million,

which is about three cents an acre,

it has been called by many

the greatest real estate deal

in the history of the United States.