The Jeffersonian Vision of Republican Simplicity

Once elected, Thomas Jefferson turned his attention to establishing his administration in clear contrast to the Federalists. For his inauguration, the first in the newly established District of Columbia, he dressed in everyday clothing to strike a tone of republican simplicity, and he walked to the Capitol for the modest swearing-in ceremony. As president, he scaled back Federalist building plans for Washington and cut the government budget.

Martha Washington and Abigail Adams had received the wives of government officials at weekly teas, thereby cementing social relations in the governing class. But Jefferson, a longtime widower, disdained female gatherings and avoided the women of Washington City. He abandoned George Washington’s practice of holding weekly formal receptions. He preferred small dinner parties with carefully chosen politicos, either all Republicans or all Federalists (and all male). At these intimate dinners, the president exercised influence and strengthened informal relationships that would help him govern.

> COMPARE AND CONTRAST

How was Thomas Jefferson’s economic vision for the United States different from Alexander Hamilton’s? What, if anything, did they have in common?

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Thomas Jefferson, by John Trumbull, 1788 (detail) This portrait captures Jefferson when he lived in Paris as a diplomat with his daughters and slave Sally Hemings. In 1802, a scandal erupted when a journalist charged that Jefferson had fathered children by Hemings. DNA evidence and historical evidence of Jefferson’s whereabouts at the start of Hemings’s pregnancies make a powerful case that he did father some and perhaps all of her children.
Image copyright © The Metropolitan Museum of Art. Bequest of Cornelia Cruger, 1923 (24.19.1). Image source: Art Resource, NY.

Jefferson was no Antifederalist; he had supported the Constitution in 1788. But events of the 1790s had caused him to worry about the stretching of powers in the executive branch. Jefferson had watched with distrust as Hamiltonian policies refinanced the public debt, established a national bank, and secured commercial ties with Britain (see “The Public Debt and Taxes” in chapter 9). These policies seemed to Jefferson to promote the interests of greedy speculators and profiteers at the expense of the rest of the country. In Jefferson’s vision, the source of true liberty in America was the independent farmer, someone who owned and worked his land both for himself and for the market. [[LP Photo: P10.02 Thomas Jefferson, by John Trumbull, 1788 (detail)/ROA_04224_10_P02.JPG]]

Jefferson set out to dismantle Federalist innovations. He reduced the size of the army by a third, preferring a militia-based defense, and he cut back the navy to six ships. With the consent of Congress, he abolished all federal taxes based on population or whiskey. Government revenue would now derive solely from customs duties and the sale of western land. This strategy benefited the South, where three-fifths of the slaves counted for representation but not for taxation now. By the end of his first term, Jefferson had deeply reduced Hamilton’s cherished national debt.

A limited federal government, according to Jefferson, maintained a postal system, federal courts, and coastal lighthouses; it collected customs duties and conducted the census. The president had one private secretary, a young man named Meriwether Lewis, and Jefferson paid him out of his own pocket. The Department of State employed 8 people: Secretary James Madison, 6 clerks, and a messenger. The Treasury Department was by far the largest unit, with 73 revenue commissioners, auditors, and clerks, plus 2 watchmen. The entire payroll of the executive branch amounted to a mere 130 people in 1801.

However, 217 government workers lay beyond Jefferson’s command, all judicial and military appointments made by John Adams as his very last-minute act in office. Jefferson refused to honor those “midnight judges” whose hires had not yet been fully processed. One disappointed job seeker, William Marbury, sued the new secretary of state, James Madison, for failure to make good on the appointment. This action gave rise to a landmark Supreme Court case, Marbury v. Madison, decided in 1803. The Court ruled that although Marbury’s commission was valid and the new president should have delivered it, the Court could not compel him to do so. What made the case significant was little noted at the time: The Court found that the grounds of Marbury’s suit, resting in the Judiciary Act of 1789, conflicted with the Constitution. For the first time, the Court disallowed a federal law on the grounds that it was unconstitutional. [[LP Photo: P10.03 Stephen Decatur, Celebrated Hero of the Tripolitan War, 1804/ROA_04224_10_P03.JPG]]

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Stephen Decatur, Celebrated Hero of the Tripolitan War, 1804 Stephen Decatur, just twenty-five, won soaring praise from the American public for his daring nighttime raid into Tripoli’s harbor to burn the USS Philadelphia. Decatur’s fame grew when, six months later, he led ten men into combat against some fifty Tripolitan sailors. An 1850s artist re-created the dramatic moment when a wounded American took a saber blow for Decatur, who forthwith shot his attacker.
Saving the Life of Commodore Decatur, Chappel, Alonzo (1828–87)/Private Collection/© Look and Learn/Bridgeman Images.