John Quincy Adams.
Publié le 10/05/2013
Extrait du document
«
man of my whole country.”
When President Thomas Jefferson requested Senate approval of his treaty for the purchase of the French colony of Louisiana, Adams was the only New EnglandFederalist to vote in favor of it.
He realized that the power and influence of his own New England would be reduced if the vast territory were added to the nation, but hewas convinced that the national interest would best be served by the purchase of Louisiana ( see Louisiana Purchase).
Adams again broke with his New England supporters in 1807, when he voted for the Embargo Act.
The act banned all American trade with Europe and was intended toforce Britain and France to respect U.S.
rights on the high seas.
The embargo not only failed to win British and French compliance but dealt a severe blow to U.S.commerce.
Massachusetts shipowners, especially, suffered heavy financial losses.
Adams was denounced as a traitor to his state and to the Federalist Party.
In 1808,several months before his term was up, the Massachusetts legislature elected a senator to replace him.
Adams resigned.
C Later Diplomatic Career
C1 Russia
Adams resumed his diplomatic career in 1809, when President James Madison appointed him U.S.
diplomatic representative to Russia.
The post was an important one,for at that time Russia was the only European outlet for American trade.
French and British blockades had closed other ports in Europe to U.S.
ships.
For the next fouryears, Adams skillfully advanced American interests at Saint Petersburg, and he won the lasting friendship of the Russian leader, Tsar Alexander I.
In 1812 French Emperor Napoleon I invaded Russia, citing the tsar’s defiance of the French embargo as provocation.
Adams was a witness to the triumphant advance ofNapoleon’s armies into Russia’s old capital, Moscow.
A month later, when the French armies began their retreat, Adams wrote his mother: “The two Russian generalswho have conquered Napoleon and all his Marshals are General Famine and General Frost .”
C2 The Treaty of Ghent
During the same year the United States declared war on Britain.
A major cause of the War of 1812 was the British seizure of American ships to enforce itscounterembargo against Napoleon.
The tsar proposed to Adams that Russia mediate the differences between Britain and the United States.
Adams relayed the offer toPresident Madison, who accepted it early in 1813.
Britain, however, rejected Russian mediation and offered to deal directly with the United States.
Madison agreed tothe British proposal.
Adams was head of the U.S.
peace commission at Ghent (Gent), Belgium, in 1814.
After months of negotiations the Treaty of Ghent was signed.
Adams termed it “atruce rather than a peace,” for it merely ended the fighting.
All the issues that had led to the War of 1812 were left unsettled.
C3 Britain
In 1815 the United States resumed diplomatic relations with Britain, and Adams was appointed diplomatic representative.
During the next two years he tried, with littlesuccess, to resolve British and American differences.
He did, however, lay the groundwork for the Rush-Bagot Convention of 1817, an agreement between Britain andthe United States that provided for disarmament along the U.S.-Canadian border.
Adams also helped to negotiate agreements that guaranteed American trading rightsin British overseas possessions, including India, and that fixed the boundary between the United States and Canada as far west as the Rocky Mountains.
D Secretary of State
D1 The Purchase of Florida
In 1817 Adams was called back to the United States to become secretary of state in the Cabinet of President James Monroe.
Adams took up the post at a turning pointin American history.
The country had begun a period of expansion and development, and for the first time since its founding, the United States was not involved inEuropean struggles, because Europe itself was at peace.
There were, however, difficult problems facing the new secretary of state.
One that immediately confronted him was a conflict with Spain over its colony of Florida.Spain had confined its troops in Florida mainly to garrisons at Saint Marks, Pensacola, and Saint Augustine.
The remainder of the territory was inhabited by the hostileSeminole people, runaway slaves, and outlaws.
Spain was required by treaty to prevent these people from raiding across the U.S.
border, but failed to do so.
WhenU.S.
troops entered Florida in late 1817 and burned a Seminole village, killing some of the residents, the Seminole retaliated by ambushing a U.S.
hospital ship andkilling 42 people.
This act led to the First Seminole War (1817-1818).
General Andrew Jackson was sent to subdue the Seminole.
Jackson not only drove the Seminole back into Florida, but marched into Spanish territory and occupied Saint Marks and Pensacola.
He captured, courtmartialed, andexecuted two British subjects who had encouraged the Seminole.
As a result of Jackson’s forceful action, Spain and Britain filed strong protests with the U.S.government.
Adams was the sole member of Monroe’s Cabinet to support Jackson.
Insisting that Jackson had not exceeded his orders, Adams argued that the blame should beplaced on Spain for its weak administration of Florida.
He persuaded Monroe to accept his view and then instructed Spain either to govern Florida more effectively orcede it to the United States.
Already troubled by revolts in its South American colonies, Spain, after long negotiations, agreed to the demands of Adams, and Floridawas ceded to the United States.
In the negotiations, Adams secured another important concession from Spain.
The western boundary of the Louisiana Purchase had never been agreed on.
Actingcompletely on his own, Adams persuaded Spain to agree that Louisiana ran all the way to the Pacific Ocean.
The boundary began at the mouth of the Sabine River, rannorthwest to the 42nd parallel (the northern boundary of California), and then extended directly west to the ocean.
There still existed British and Russian claims to theOregon country that could cut off this western ocean access; but the Spanish agreement removed the major obstacle to America’s sea-to-sea expansion.
D2 Monroe Doctrine
Perhaps the most important event of Monroe’s administration was the proclamation of the Monroe Doctrine.
The doctrine resulted from two problems.
Adams wasconcerned over moves by Russia to establish colonies in the Oregon country.
At the same time, Britain feared that the Holy Alliance, consisting of Austria, Prussia,France, and Russia, was ready to help Spain recover its colonies in Latin America.
The British had obtained trading advantages in the new Latin American republics, andthese very profitable arrangements would end if the republics were restored to Spanish rule.
The British foreign secretary, George Canning, proposed that the UnitedStates join Britain in warning the Holy Alliance not to intervene in the western hemisphere.
Adams had a firm reply to the Russian threat.
As he reported later, he told the Russian diplomatic representative in Washington, D.C., that “we should contest the right.
»
↓↓↓ APERÇU DU DOCUMENT ↓↓↓
Liens utiles
- Adams John, 1735-1826, né à Quincy (Massachusetts), deuxième président des États-Unis (1797-1801), fédéraliste et partisan de George Washington, à qui il succéda.
- John Quincy Adams - Biography.
- John Quincy Adams
- Adams, John Quincy
- Adams, John Quincy