HISTORY This Week

Jefferson’s Trade War Shuts Down America

29 min
Apr 13, 20266 days ago
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Summary

This episode examines Thomas Jefferson's 1806-1809 trade war against Britain, which began as an attempt to use economic coercion instead of military force but escalated into a militarized embargo that devastated the American economy, cost 5% of GDP, and ultimately failed to achieve its objectives while inadvertently spurring early American industrialization.

Insights
  • Economic sanctions can backfire when the target nation has alternative markets and the sanctioning country's trade is not critical to their economy, as Britain simply redirected commerce to South America and the Caribbean
  • Peaceable coercion theory sounds progressive but requires either genuine economic leverage or political will to enforce—Jefferson had neither, leading to military occupation of his own coastline and militia violence
  • Trade wars create unintended consequences across supply chains: farmers, sailors, merchants, and manufacturers all suffered differently, forcing governments to create early social safety nets like public works programs
  • Ideological consistency can be a liability in governance—Jefferson's anti-military philosophy prevented adequate naval defense, forcing him to adopt increasingly authoritarian enforcement measures against his own citizens
  • Failed policies can have positive side effects: the embargo's trade restrictions accidentally stimulated domestic manufacturing, growing cotton mills from 4 to 226 in seven years, reshaping America's economic trajectory
Trends
Trade policy as geopolitical weapon—effectiveness depends on target nation's economic alternatives and diversification capacityEconomic coercion escalation—initial soft measures (boycotts, tariffs) often lead to harder enforcement (militarization, border control) when they failUnequal impact of trade restrictions—maritime workers and agricultural producers bear disproportionate costs compared to political decision-makersDomestic enforcement challenges—smuggling and local resistance make trade embargoes difficult to enforce without authoritarian measuresAccidental industrial policy—trade restrictions can inadvertently spur domestic manufacturing and reduce import dependencyPolitical cost of failed economic experiments—unpopular policies can fracture political coalitions and threaten national unityBorder enforcement militarization—trade restrictions require military/naval deployment, creating occupation-like conditions in border regionsSupply chain vulnerability—concentrated trade routes (like New York Harbor) become critical chokepoints during trade conflicts
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People
Sally Helm
Host and narrator of the episode, guides listeners through Jefferson's trade war history
Harvey Strump
Expert guest discussing the HMS Leander incident and British naval aggression in New York Harbor
Lawrence Hatter
Expert guest explaining Jefferson's peaceable coercion philosophy and why British trade redirection undermined the em...
Thomas Jefferson
Central historical figure whose trade war policies, philosophy, and enforcement actions are the episode's primary sub...
James Madison
Mentioned as Jefferson's close friend and successor who inherited the economic mess from the failed embargo
Lloyd Lockridge
Mentioned in ad read for Family Lore podcast about unusual family stories
Quotes
"If you are going to harass our ships, we are going to stop buying your tin, except if it comes in a sheet."
Sally Helm (paraphrasing Jefferson's logic)~8:00
"It's sometimes referred to as peaceable coercion. We don't need to go to war with them. We can do this instead because it's progressive, right?"
Lawrence Hatter~15:30
"The man who wrote the Declaration of Independence is now using militias and the army to enforce his laws on his own people."
Sally Helm~32:00
"American trade just wasn't that important to them. And they could pivot towards different markets."
Lawrence Hatter~42:00
"The embargo, after all, only lasted 15 months. Although the debate over whether America can use trade as a weapon and who pays for it, that debate never really ended."
Sally Helm~50:00
Full Transcript
The History Channel, Original Podcast. History This Week, April 18, 1806. I'm Sally Helm. The point of this law is that it is not directly an act of war. And it certainly doesn't sound like one. It's called an act to prohibit the importation of certain goods, wares, and merchandise. Specifically goods made of leather, silk, hemp, or flax, tin, or brass. Not tin sheets though, those get an exception. Also window glass, playing cards. The list goes on. Starting later this year, the U.S. says that it will not be buying any of those things from its former colonizer, Great Britain. Today, President Thomas Jefferson signs this Non-Imbortation Act of 1806, likely in his private study, possibly with his pet mockingbird on his shoulder. And with this law, Jefferson is trying to fight fire with paper, which is not famously a very effective way to fight fire, but he's giving it a shot. Because the Revolutionary War is still pretty recent, and the U.S. is now in danger of getting drawn into another war with Britain, which they're not really prepared for. And anyway, Jefferson believes in the power of ideas over the power of weapons. The danger exists here because Britain is at war with France. They are fighting Napoleon. And in the course of that war, both countries, Britain and France, have been apprehending American merchant ships. They don't want helpful goods making it to their enemies. And Britain has been especially bold. They have set up repeated blockades of New York Harbor to stop goods from getting out to France. And not only that, they have also taken to boarding American vessels, claiming to be looking for British deserters. But in practice, they end up just basically kidnapping Americans who work on those ships and forcing them to start fighting in the British Navy. This is known as Impressment. And understandably, it has people very, very angry. So that is what Thomas Jefferson is fighting against, as he puts pen to paper in his study, surrounded by books and maps and skins brought back by Lewis and Clark. He doesn't want to fight a war war. He wants to fight a trade war. If you are going to harass our ships, we are going to stop buying your tin, except if it comes in a sheet. Protests and embargoes had worked in the years leading up to the revolution, think of the Boston Tea Party. But this is more than 30 years later. And pretty soon, things get much more complicated for Thomas Jefferson, and he will decide to up the ante in a major way. Today, trading blows. How did Jefferson, avatar of individual liberty, become the president who tried to suspend due process, who militarized the coastline, and who nearly tore his country apart? And what can this part of his legacy teach us about the prevailing wins of global trade? The week after Jefferson signs the Non-Importation Act, a little vessel called the Richard tries to sail out of New York Harbor. They're just carrying simple provisions, headed to Sandy Hook on the New Jersey coast. A short trip, but not without its dangers. The British are trying to stop every ship going in and out of New York Harbor. Harvey Strump, professor of history and political science at Russell Sage College, he told us the HMS Leander, a British ship of the line floats in the harbor, waiting to bully this American trading vessel. They fire a warning shot at the Richard from one of their 50 guns, a standard sign that the ship should heave too, essentially come to a stop in the water so that the British can board. But the Richard doesn't stop quickly enough, and the Leander opens fire. It's supposed to be a shot across the bow, but instead, by mistake, the cannonball hurtles towards the deck and decapitates the helmsman, John Pierce. He was the brother of the captain, and this became an international incident, the murder of an American within New York Harbor. There was outrage in the city. Pierce's body is brought ashore, and an angry mob gathers at the docks. They intercept a boat carrying provisions for British warships and parade the confiscated food through the streets before distributing it to the poor at a local alms house. President Jefferson responds to this incident by banning three specific British warships from American harbors. He threatens their officers with arrest, but overall, he believes that eventually his non-importation act will make a big enough dent in the British economy that they'll have to stand down. Some people in Washington disagree. One representative calls Jefferson's non-importation law a milk and water bill. The opposing party accuses him of trying to fight superpower with paper bullets, but Jefferson is just not a big war guy. We don't enlarge a navy under Jefferson. He's opposed to it philosophically. He comes up with a somewhat stupid naval policy, create gunboats, small gunboats to protect American shores, which were essentially useless. He is against defense expenditures. He considers it a waste of money. We heard more about Jefferson's philosophy from Lawrence Hatter, associate professor of early American history at Washington State University. It's sometimes referred to as peaceable coercion. We don't need to go to war with them. We can do this instead because it's progressive, right? You don't have people dying for no reason or even for a good reason. I mean, it's, you know, this seems like an alternative to centuries of warfare and dynastic politics and things like that. But so far, the British aren't cooperating. They continue to assail the coast. They seize other American ships like the Aurora and the Nimrod, especially Rudley. They fire on a ship named the Sally. They kill the man at the helm. And in June of 1807, Jefferson's theory of peaceable coercion comes under even more direct attack. June 22nd, the USS Chesapeake is sailing off the Virginia Capes. It's one of six frigates in the tiny U.S. Navy, and it isn't looking for a fight, just preparing for a trade voyage to the Mediterranean. But suddenly, a much larger British warship, the 50 gun HMS Leopard, pulls alongside. The British send a messenger aboard, demanding a routine search for deserters, which is kind of insulting, right? The American captain is not interested in having Royal Navy crew coming aboard a ship looking for these deserters. Ships are regarded as an extension of national sovereignty. The Chesapeake is basically a piece of the United States floating on the water. So Commodore James Barron refuses to let the British search his ship. And they open fire. The American ship is completely unprepared. The deck is cluttered with cargo, the guns aren't even loaded. For 20 minutes, the Leopard bombards the helpless Chesapeake. They killed three Americans and wounded 18. And then they boarded the ship and took off four men. Two of the men were British subjects, two were American citizens. When the mangled Chesapeake limps back into port, the country falls into an uproar. Headlines scream, British insolence, outrage and murder. It's a rare moment of near total national unity. Demonstrations in New York, New Jersey, and Virginia, everybody was ready to go to war. But even while his citizens are burning British captains in effigy, the philosopher president looks for another way. Jefferson let the moment lapse. Thomas Jefferson is a true believer. Logic, not lead. He sees himself as fundamentally different from the lions and tigers over in Europe. Instead, he will try an even more radical economic experiment, what he called his last card short of war. On December 22, 1807, Jefferson signs the Embargo Act into law. It bans all British imports, but also it is essentially a ban on all exports. The United States won't sell anything to the rest of the world. They're retreating into autarky, total national isolation. He is betting that Britain and France will blink first. Denied vital goods, American cotton, tobacco, timber, wheat, flour, corn and grain, they will have to respect the United States on the high seas. Advisors tell him that in Britain, the population will starve and rise up against their government. But it is a risky gamble and the ante is the whole national economy. Actually save you time from startups to scalabs online, in person and on the go. Shopify is made for entrepreneurs like you. Sign up for your $1 a month trial at Shopify.com. Hi, my name is Lloyd Lockridge and I'm the host of a new podcast from Odyssey called Family Lore. In this podcast, I'm going to have people on to tell unusual and sometimes far-fetched stories about their families. I've heard my whole life that she ended at the margarita. And then we're going to investigate those stories and find out how much of it is true. He gets a patent one month before the Wright brothers. Oh my God. Please follow and listen to Family Lore, an Odyssey podcast available now on Apple Podcasts, Spotify or wherever you get your shows. Christmas night, 1807. In New York Harbor, about 300 ships are bobbing quietly in the dark. But around midnight, the silence shatters. Word reaches the city that Thomas Jefferson's embargo is now law. For the merchants of New York, this is an economic death sentence. Technically, they are no longer allowed to leave the port and all hell breaks loose. Ship owners send word to their crews saying, get out now. Some ships are leaving half mad and half felled because I just got to get in New York Harbor. Better to be an outlaw than to be a pauper trapped at anchor. And so it is total complete chaos once the news arrived at the embargo. Crowds of spectators gather at the wars, cheering the ships as they flee. Customs collectors, trying to enforce the law, rush to choke off every exit to the Atlantic from New York City. Some merchant ships escape, but others make it as far as 30 miles off coast and then get caught and brought back in. Newspapers later reported that the embargo cast a gloom over every countenance. The transformation of New York is eerie. Within months, grass had begun to grow on the wharves. The once bustling waterfront lay vacant, ships rotting at anchor. And thousands of sailors roamed the streets, now unemployed. The New York City Common Council offers to provide food, clothes, firewood, and candles to seamen move to the Brooklyn Navy Yard because what they're afraid of is that the sailors will resort to crime. New York ends up creating some of the earliest public jobs programs in American history to keep the sailors busy, planting trees, clearing vacant lots. And similar stories are playing out all along the eastern seaboard. Sailors in Boston march on the governor's house. The same scene repeats in Philadelphia nine days later. And it isn't just the sailors. For the farmers, who Jefferson had earlier described as the chosen people of God, his experiment is a disaster. Within hours of the embargo news reaching Virginia, the price of flour crashes by half. In the ports produce rots in warehouses because it can't be sent overseas. There's such a glut of material that construction lumber becomes firewood just to recoup the cost. Smuggling, of course, explodes. Domestic trade vessels would leave port and somehow emerge in Halifax or the West Indies. Their excuse? Blown hundreds of miles off course by a freak wind. Jefferson orders a crackdown. In February, he tells the Navy to seize American merchant ships off the Delaware coast, which is probably illegal. By March, he takes the fight against smuggling to every dirt road and backwood stream in the country, banning trade on any boat, raft, cart, wagon, or sleigh, and calling on the regular Army to aid in enforcement. So the smugglers get even more creative. Canadians and New Yorkers will build shacks along the northern border of New York. On one side you're in Canada, on the other side you're in New York. So they put their goods on the New York side, then the Canadians come and take the goods and bring it into Canada. Or how about a little random accident? Merchants would drive a wagon to a steep hill on the border and then accidentally collapse their own cart and watch as barrels of flour careened into Canadian territory. In Burlington, Vermont, on Lake Champlain, the townspeople hold an emergency meeting at the courthouse in April to discuss the evils of Jefferson's trade war. They send a desperate plea to Congress, and just three days later, the president issues an edict. He says that sundry persons have been confederating on Lake Champlain. President Jefferson declares Lake Champlain in a state of insurrection. Lake Champlain extends across the border into Canada, and Jefferson calls on the governor of Vermont to deploy the militia to Windmill Point right near the Canadian border to stop any goods from getting through. The man who wrote the Declaration of Independence is now using militias and the army to enforce his laws on his own people. And it doesn't really work. A lot of the men in the militia are friends and family with the smugglers. Local militia units refuse to enforce the law. In the summer of 1808, things escalate. A new vessel appears on Lake Champlain. It's 40 feet long, pitch black, painted entirely in tar, with a flat bottom and seven oars on each side. This is the Black Snake. Fully loaded, it can smuggle 100 barrels of contraband into Canada. And in August, a federal enforcement vessel tracks it down. They corner the Black Snake up a small river. The smugglers abandon ship and take up positions on the shore. They arm a massive cannon and fire. One soldier falls. They fire again. Two more. By the time the smoke clears, two militiamen and one private citizen are dead. Eight members of the Black Snake crew are jailed for murder, and one is executed. The violence on Lake Champlain is part of an emerging national tragedy. The embargo has begun looking more and more like an occupation. By late summer 1808, Thomas Jefferson has essentially established a military and naval blockade around his own country, reaching from Lake Ontario to New Orleans. It leads to a nosedive in his popularity. His party loses big in the midterm elections. But in his State of the Union address, Thomas Jefferson tries to spin it by coming up with a whole new rationale for his embargo, one that he hopes the country will like a little bit better. In November 1808, in his eighth and final State of the Union address, President Jefferson tells the country that actually this whole embargo, which started with the imprisonment of American merchants because of the Napoleonic Wars, he now says actually it was meant to stimulate American manufacturing the whole time. He's stealing an idea from Alexander Hamilton. Hamilton was a strong advocate of industrialization of the United States. Jefferson, in years past, had fought against Hamilton's vision. He believed that the power of America lay with the yeoman farmer, not with industrial power. But his embargo has actually helped American industry. Forced to some limited industrialization in Rhode Island and also in Dutchess County, New York. But it's not enough to counter the losses from trade. It's estimated that Jefferson's trade war cost the US 5% of its GDP. Imports fall by almost 60%. Exports by 80%. The prices of cotton, tobacco, and flour all crater. It is a depression. And Jefferson is also faced with a harsh reality. The initial point of the embargo was to punish Great Britain to apply economic pressure so they'll stop impressing sailors. But it doesn't work. Here's Lawrence Hatter. American trade just wasn't that important to them. And they could pivot towards different markets. So Britain develops new markets in South America to replace those in the United States. The kinds of tactics that had worked in the years leading up to the American Revolution, boycotts after the Stamp Act, the Boston Tea Party, those don't work anymore. The British just redirect their trade to the Caribbean and South America. Their economy is not devastated and the people don't rise up. So the British have continued impressing American sailors throughout this whole embargo. And Jefferson has lost the country. In New England, some people were even in talks with the British to separate from the Union. So he knows the embargo is unpopular. He can also read the economic impact of the embargo, despite his talk about industrialization. None of that happens in a year. On March 1st, 1809, just three days before he leaves office, Jefferson all but ends the embargo. He signed something called the Non-Intercourse Act, which opens up American trade to the rest of the world, though still barring Britain and France. It's a little funny that he waits so long. It is an interesting question. Why would you do that? Why repeal his signature legislation just before leaving office? It is partly the power of friendship. James Madison is going to follow him in the job. I mean, Jefferson and Madison are very close, right? So, you know, he is concerned about, I think, Madison's presidency. And for good reason. He does kind of leave James Madison with a mess, a struggling economy, impressments still running rampant. Today, the embargo is regarded as the biggest mistake of Jefferson's entire presidency. And three years later, in June of 1812, the United States goes to war with the British anyway, the War of 1812. So, Jefferson did not achieve his stated aim of avoiding war. But he did do what he talked about in his State of the Union. He inadvertently launched an American industrial revolution, at least a little one. In 1803, there were only four cotton mills in the entire country. By 1810, that number had exploded to 226. That set the country on a new trajectory that would continue for more than a century. Thomas Jefferson leaves the presidency exhausted. He can't wait to get back to Monticello. If it had enough, this was not a pleasant experience at this time. And he tries to put all this behind him as he lives out the rest of his life. If he go to Monticello and see his grave, it at least is accomplishments. Author of the Declaration of American Independence, of the Statute of Virginia for Religious Freedom, and father of the University of Virginia. But there is one thing missing. And you will not see President of the United States on there. Jefferson's economic experiment seems to have cast a shadow over his entire presidency, even if it's not what he's remembered for today. The embargo, after all, only lasted 15 months. Although the debate over whether America can use trade as a weapon and who pays for it, that debate never really ended. History This Week is a back pocket studios production in partnership with the History Channel. To stay updated on all things history this week, sign up at historythisweekpodcast.com and follow us on Instagram at historythisweekpodcast. If you have any thoughts or questions, you can always send us an email at historythisweekathistory.com. Special thanks to our guests, Harvey Strumb, Professor of History and Political Science at Russell Sage College in Albany and Troy, New York, and Lawrence Hatter, Associate Professor of Early American History at Washington State University. This episode was produced by Danny Vagnoni, Ben Dixdine, and me, Sally Helm. Ben also did the sound design. For Back Pocket Studios, our Executive Producer is, once again, Ben Dixdine. From the History Channel, our Executive Producers are Eli Lerner and Liv Fiddler. Don't forget to follow, rate, and review History This Week wherever you get your podcasts. And we'll see you next week.