Contents
- 1 What did Thomas Jefferson do to promote agriculture in America?
- 2 What did Jefferson believe was the best economic support for America?
- 3 What were Thomas Jefferson’s crop rotations?
- 4 What did Thomas Jefferson do to improve the plow?
- 5 Why did Jefferson support farming?
- 6 Did Thomas Jefferson favored an agricultural economy?
- 7 What did Jefferson believe about agriculture?
- 8 Who favored an agricultural economy?
- 9 What was Jefferson’s agrarian vision?
- 10 How did Thomas Jefferson feel about agriculture and industry?
- 11 Why did Jefferson favor an agrarian style culture to an industrial one?
- 12 Do you think that Thomas Jefferson’s dream of a dominant agricultural America was a realistic idea?
- 13 Why is agriculture the wisest pursuit?
- 14 Who said encouragement of agriculture and commerce as its handmaid?
- 15 Who said “I have no doubt we can buy brass cannon at market cheaper than we could make iron ones”
- 16 Who said commerce of the states cannot be regulated to the best advantage but by a single body?
- 17 Is the game of chance immoral?
- 18 Hamilton
- 19 Jefferson
What did Thomas Jefferson do to promote agriculture in America?
· Also know, why did Jefferson want an agricultural economy? Opposite of Hamilton, Jefferson believed that agricultural was the best economic support for the county over industrialization. He thought that commercialization, centralization, and industrialization would lead to many problems for the country in the future.
What did Jefferson believe was the best economic support for America?
What were Thomas Jefferson’s crop rotations?
What did Thomas Jefferson do to improve the plow?
Agricultural Innovations. Though people often think of Jefferson as an inventor, he more appropriately is described as an innovator. Rather than creating original items and ideas, Jefferson improved on those items already in existence. For instance, although Jefferson did not invent the copying machine on which he wrote his correspondence, he …
Why did Jefferson support farming?
Thomas Jefferson believed in agriculture because he thought commercialization and dependence on markets and customers begot subservience and prepared fit tools for the designs of ambition.
Did Thomas Jefferson favored an agricultural economy?
Thomas Jefferson favored strong state government and an agricultural society. Alexander Hamilton was in favor of a strong federal government and an industrial society.
What did Jefferson believe about agriculture?
In the excerpt we read for class today, Jefferson called for an American economy built on agriculture and to “let the work-shops” remain in Europe” (Jefferson, 18). He recognized the need for some domestic industry, but believed the vast land of America could be utilized by farming.
Who favored an agricultural economy?
Democratic-Republicans favored keeping the U.S. economy based on agriculture and said that the U.S. should serve as the agricultural provider for the rest of the world.
What was Jefferson’s agrarian vision?
As Thomas Jefferson saw it, the political ideal of a democratic and self-governing nation, is best entrusted to a society that is predominantly agrarian—in other words, a community of small, self-sufficient family farms.
How did Thomas Jefferson feel about agriculture and industry?
In the excerpt we read for class today, Jefferson called for an American economy built on agriculture and to “let the work-shops” remain in Europe” (Jefferson, 18). He recognized the need for some domestic industry, but believed the vast land of America could be utilized by farming.
Why did Jefferson favor an agrarian style culture to an industrial one?
Because it would allow every white farmer to have his own farm, it would allow everyone to be independent and not necessarily need country-wide markets for food and goods. This was a logical step for Jefferson to see his free, independent, agrarian utopia of white farmers thrive!
Do you think that Thomas Jefferson’s dream of a dominant agricultural America was a realistic idea?
Do you think that Thomas Jefferson’s dream of a dominantly agricultural America was a realistic one? Jefferson’s ideal was unrealistic because industrialism actually helped farmers produce even more. They could benefit from both that result and the many other non-farm goods that industry could produce.
Why is agriculture the wisest pursuit?
“Agriculture… is our wisest pursuit, because it will in the end contribute most to real wealth, good morals and happiness.” –Thomas Jefferson to George Washington, 1787. ME 6:277
Who said encouragement of agriculture and commerce as its handmaid?
“Encouragement of agriculture and of commerce as its handmaid I deem [one of the] essential principles of our government, and consequently [one of] those which ought to shape its administration.” –Thomas Jefferson: 1st Inaugural, 1801. ME 3:322
Who said “I have no doubt we can buy brass cannon at market cheaper than we could make iron ones”
I have no doubt we can buy brass cannon at market cheaper than we could make iron ones.” —Thomas Jefferson to William B. Bibb, 1808. ME 12:107
Who said commerce of the states cannot be regulated to the best advantage but by a single body?
“The commerce of the States cannot be regulated to the best advantage but by a single body, and no body so proper as Congress.” –Thomas Jefferson: Answers to de Meusnier Questions, 1786. ME 17:115
Is the game of chance immoral?
These, then, are games of chance. Yet so far from being immoral, they are indispensable to the existence of man, and every one has a natural right to choose for his pursuit such one of them as he thinks most likely to furnish him subsistence.” –Thomas Jefferson: Thoughts on Lotteries, 1826. ME 17:448
Hamilton
Hamilton believed that industry was the way to go in order to make america have more power. In order to make manufacturing big and get rid of agriculture he proposed the Whiskey tax that upset southern farmers that made whiskey.
Jefferson
Opposite of Hamilton, Jefferson believed that agricultural was the best economic support for the county over industrialization. At this time, 90% of all Americans made a living off of agriculture rather than industry. He thought that commercialization, centralization, and industrialization would lead to many problems for the country in the future.