in only the fourth presidential election for the young American nation,
Thomas Jefferson, President John Adams and Senator Aaron Burr find
themselves in a three-way tie for the leadership of the small country.
Ballot after ballot was cast indecisively in the House of Representatives,
leading only to more rancor and entrenchment among those who wanted one of
their candidates to come out on top. Thomas Jefferson urged Senator Burr,
who had ostensibly been running with him to become Vice-President, to drop
out and throw his supporters to the Virginian. The senator, seeing himself
this close to power, balked, and campaigned vigorously for the top office.
In the end, his congressional relationships carried the day, and he won
the presidency, with Jefferson serving, yet again, as Vice-President. The
enmity between the two men over this incident spilled out into legislation
as Jefferson, in his post as President of the Senate, blocked many of
Burr's initiatives out of spite.
In 1803, this proved to be too much for Burr to take any longer, and he
challenged Jefferson to a duel. Jefferson, the better shot of the two,
emerged victorious, and assumed the office of President as Burr died on
the field of honor. This caused an uproar in the dead president's home
state of New York, which sent its militia to the capitol to seize
President Jefferson. They were met by Virginia's soldiers, and a civil war
erupted between the northern supporters of President Burr and the southern
partisans who backed Jefferson. Great Britain, seeing the chance to
reclaim their old colonies, jumped in on the side of the north, which then
annihilated the southern states. Massachusetts alone of the northern
states resisted the British reconquest of the states, but it was
overwhelmed, too. In 1812, all of the colonies were placed under a royal
vice-regent, and welcomed back into the United Kingdom.