"Let the Land rejoice, for you have bought Louisiana
for a Song."
Gen. Horatio Gates to President Thomas Jefferson, July 18,
1803
“Robert Livingston and James Monroe closed on the sweetest
real estate deal of the millennium when they signed the Louisiana Purchase
Treaty in Paris on April 30, 1803. They were authorized to pay France up to $10
million for the port of New Orleans and the Floridas. When offered the entire
territory of Louisiana–an area larger than Great Britain, France, Germany,
Italy, Spain and Portugal combined–the American negotiators swiftly agreed to a
price of $15 million.
Although President Thomas Jefferson was a strict
interpreter of the Constitution who wondered if the U.S. Government was
authorized to acquire new territory, he was also a visionary who dreamed of an
"empire for liberty" that would stretch across the entire continent.
As Napoleon threatened to take back the offer, Jefferson squelched whatever
doubts he had, submitted the treaty to Congress, and prepared to occupy a land
of unimaginable riches.
The Louisiana Purchase added 828,000 square miles of land
west of the Mississippi River to the United States. For roughly 4 cents an
acre, the United States had purchased a territory whose natural resources
amounted to a richness beyond anyone's wildest calculations” (Miller, 1931,
para. 1 - 3).
France claimed a large
chunk of land that ran from Canada to the Gulf of Mexico. Land in which many
indigenous people resided. The land exchanged hands between Spain and France
and ended up in France’s possession much to the surprise of President
Jefferson. At the same time, tension rose between France and Britain. The Island
of Saint Dominique lost appeal for Napolean Bonapart after slave rebellions and
British interference. After negotiations, France sold a young United States the
Louisiana territory. End results of the sale was the migration of many white
settlers, battles between Native Americans and pioneers, the ravages of disease
and a huge loss of land and its valuable resources for the indigenous people.
The Louisiana Purchase was the largest land takeover in the history of this
country without the act of war playing a part.
In April of 1682, Robert Cavelier,
Sieur (Lord) de La Salle, a French Explorer, made claim to land near the mouth
of the Mississippi River when he read a declaration before a group of confused
Indian people. He pronounced his claim, for his country, the entire Mississippi
basin. Cavelier named the area for Prince Louis the Great. Hence the name
Louisiana which was in honor of Louis XIV.
The French explorer Jean-Baptise le
Moyne, Sieur de Bienville later founded a settlement near the site of La
Salle’s claim named it Nouvelle Orleans for Philippe, Duke of Orleans and
Regent of France. By the time of the Louisiana Purchase, the population of
whites, slaves of African American descent and Native Americans numbered
approximately 8,000 within the Louisiana Territory (Harris, 2003).
Ownership of Louisiana went back and
forth between France and Spain. Spain took over and had control of the
territory of Louisiana in October 1800 when Napolean made a secret deal to take
back New Orleans and Louisiana from Spain. He wished to amass and send an army
to protect his land holdings. Jefferson did not learn until 1801 that Napolean
had reclaimed Louisiana. Faced with trepidation about how powerful France
became, he did not want France to have control of the United State’s trade
routes. Jefferson made plans about how he was going to purchase Louisiana from
France. He equated France’s ownership of Louisiana as big of threat as the
Revolutionary War (Cerami, 2003).
Napolean pondered his hold of the
island of Saint Domingue which could provide France and other countries with a
vast amount of sugar, cotton, cocoa and coffee. France could use the port of
New Orleans to ship the crops to Europe. The residents of Saint Domingue
believed the French were going to reinstate slavery like what happened on
Guadeloupe. Slavery was reinstated. The slave population suffered from food
shortages and brutally forced hard labor. The slaves revolted which forced
Napolean to sends more troops. More than half of the French army died from
diseases, mostly Yellow Fever while at Saint Domingue. Napolean’s interest in
the island diminished severely (Cerami, 2003).
Napolean
feared a war with Britain may ensue and he did not have the funds to pay for
such a war. He thought Britain may attack Louisiana from Canada and he would
rather fight Britain from France and not Canada.
The treaty which permitted the U.S.
to use Spanish territory on the Mississippi had expired. American ship-ments
could not be stored in New Orleans warehouses. Merchandise and produce had to
be left on open wharfs while awaiting shipment to the other locations which
risked exposure to weather and theft. The U.S. economy was in jeopardy.
Senator James Ross of Pennsylvania
drafted a resolution which requested Jefferson to form a 50,000 man army to
take over the city of New Orleans. France and the U.S. definitely had a stake
in the outcome of the ownership of Louisiana.
French Minister, Francois de
Barbe-Marbois, Robert Livingston, a New Yorker and the American Minster of
France and James Monroe, former member of Congress and former governor of
Virginia met in Paris on April 12th to discuss the sale of Louisiana.
Much to their surprise Napolean, was more than ready to sell and confirmed and
stated his asking price of $22,500,000. Livingston told him the price needed to
be lowered considerably.
Barbe-Marbois stalled pretending
that Napolean lost interest in the sale. By April 27th he told
Americans that Napolean firmly agreed to a selling price of $15,000,000. The
treaty was signed by the three men on May 2 but was backdated to April 30.
Livingston did not have permission to carry out the land deal but they needed
to act fast. Nearly doubling the size of America could help make it a world
power in the future.
Jefferson
approved the purchase and requested the Senate to ratify the Louisiana Purchase
Treaty in which they voted 24 to 7 on October 20, 1803. Congress approved the
treaty. Money needed to be borrowed in the form of bonds from European
countries which had to be paid back in 15 years. Business took time to be
carried out because trans-atlantic mail took weeks and sometimes months.
Finally, Louisiana belonged to the United States (Harris, 2003).
Fifteen
states joined the union as the result of the Louisiana Purchase: Louisiana;
Missouri; Arkansas; Texas; Iowa; Minnesota; Kansas; Nebraska; Colorado; North
Dakota; South Dakota; Montana; Wyoming; Oklahoma; and New Mexico. Some of the
aforementioned states were entirely within the boundaries of the Louisiana
Purchase and others were also a part of the deal struck with Mexico after the
Mexican/American War (Raum, 2014). States developed statehood as a result of
the 1787 Northwest Ordinance in which land was considered a territory that had
a population of at least five thousand and full-fledged statehood would occur
when the population reached 60,000. Self-governance applied for territories and
states according to the ordinance (Cerami, 2003).
The
Louisiana Purchased with an accumulated land mass of approximately 828,000
square miles led to a great westward migration. White settlers believed they
had a right to move to the uncharted
territories. The Indian population did not fare well after the purchase. Much
of the game, land and other valuable resources were taken over by white
settlers. They faced starvation and died from diseases such as small pox. Many Native
Americans lost their lives when they fought against white settlers or American
armies while they tried to hold onto their land. The Louisiana Purchase
represented land purchased from a country by a country who were not the
original inhabitants.
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