“Do You Go to New Orleans?”: The Louisiana Purchase, Federalism, and the Contingencies of Empire in the Early U.S. Republic

Jacob F. Lee
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Abstract

abstract:This essay examines the planned invasion of New Orleans organized by the United States in late 1803 to enforce the terms of the Louisiana Purchase treaty. This story is a little-known but revealing moment in the history of the Louisiana Purchase and the early U.S. republic, and it demonstrates the varied levels of power and authority the United States depended on to implement its imperial projects. The federal system necessitated cooperation between the Jefferson administration and state governments in Kentucky, Ohio, and Tennessee, all of which were active partners in U.S. empire-building. West of the Appalachian Mountains, however, local conditions shaped the abilities of the states to fulfill Jefferson’s request for troops. By focusing on the intricacies of the federal system as the Jefferson administration attempted to accomplish a single goal of acquiring Louisiana in a narrow window of time, this essay highlights how crucial the contingencies of politics and power on the ground were to the federal system.
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“你去新奥尔良吗?”《路易斯安那购地、联邦制和共和初期帝国的偶然性》
本文考察了1803年末美国为执行路易斯安那购买条约的条款而组织的有计划的入侵新奥尔良。这个故事是路易斯安那购地和美国早期共和国历史上一个鲜为人知但具有启示意义的时刻,它展示了美国在实施其帝国计划时所依赖的不同程度的权力和权威。联邦制需要杰斐逊政府与肯塔基州、俄亥俄州和田纳西州的州政府之间的合作,这些州政府都是美国帝国建设的积极伙伴。然而,在阿巴拉契亚山脉以西,当地的条件决定了各州满足杰斐逊增兵要求的能力。杰斐逊政府试图在很短的时间内完成获得路易斯安那州的单一目标,通过关注联邦制度的复杂性,本文强调了当地政治和权力的偶然性对联邦制度的重要性。
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