4.2.b

Use complete sentences; an outline or bulleted list alone is not acceptable.  Use the excerpts to answer the question.
“The issue, then, is not whether Jefferson’s policies toward Louisiana were 
right or wrong but rather how he managed to implement decisions that 
defied in so many ways his long-standing commitment to limitations on 
executive power and the near-sacred character of republican principles. . . . 
5
Jefferson was not simply seized by power-hungry impulses once he assumed 
the presidency, since in a broad range of other policy areas he exhibited 
considerable discipline over the executive branch and habitual deference 
to the Congress; . . . he did not suddenly discover a pragmatic streak in 
his political philosophy, . . . he clung tenaciously to Jeffersonian principles 
10
despite massive evidence that they were at odds with reality. . . . The answer 
would seem to be the special, indeed almost mystical place the West had 
in his thinking. . . . For Jefferson more than any other major figure in the 
revolutionary generation, the West was America’s future.”
Joseph J. Ellis, historian, American Sphinx, 1997
“The story of the Louisiana Purchase is one of strength, of Jefferson’s 
adaptability and, most important, his determination to secure the territory 
from France, . . . A slower or less courageous politician might have bungled 
the acquisition; an overly idealistic one might have lost it by insisting on 
5
strict constitutional scruples. . . . The philosophical Jefferson had believed 
an amendment necessary. The political Jefferson, however, was not going 
to allow theory to get in the way of reality. . . . [He] expanded the powers of 
the executive in ways that would have likely driven Jefferson to distraction 
had another man been president. Much of his political life, though, had 
10
been devoted to the study and the wise exercise of power. He did what 
had to be done to preserve the possibility of republicanism and progress. 
Things were neat only in theory. And despite his love of ideas and image 
of himself, Thomas Jefferson was as much a man of action as he was of 
theory.”
Jon Meacham, historian, Thomas Jefferson: The Art of Power, 2012

Question 1

Short answer
Briefly explain how ONE historical event or development in the period 1787 to 1803 that is not explicitly mentioned in the excerpts could be used to support Ellis’s interpretation.

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