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Origins of American Government

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Title: Origins of American Government


1
Origins of American Government
2
Section 1
  • Our Political Beginnings
  • -

3
English settlers brought with them 3 basic
concepts of democracy
  • Ordered government regulate interactions between
    people (police, juries, etc)
  • Limited government govt. is not all powerful,
    can be checked
  • Representative government govt. should serve the
    will of the people

4
3 landmark English documents
  • Magna Carta of 1215 written to King John b/c the
    wealthy barons were tired of military campaigns
    during peacetime, heavy taxes, unfair trials,
    etc.
  • Petition of Right 1628 written to Charles I
    demanding no taxation w/out representation and no
    military during peacetime and trial by peers
    (divine right challenged)
  • Bill of Rights 1689 was written to protect all
    classes. List of rights monarch cannot take away

5
Colonies in America
  • All colonies were formed by a charter from the
    King but all began to take on one of 3 forms.
  • Royal
  • Proprietary
  • Charter

6
Royal Colonies
  • There were 8 Royal Colonies (VA was first)
  • King chose the governor and served as an advisor
    to the King
  • Governor chose a council that was the upper
    chamber of the legislature and served as the
    highest court
  • Lower chamber of the legislature was elected by
    the people who could vote
  • Governor chose judges and he and his council had
    the power of the purse (could tax and spend)
  • All laws had to be approved by governor and King

7
Charter colonies
  • These colonies were largely self governing
  • A charter was given by the King to a group of
    people (RI, CT) and they would largely be left to
    rule themselves.
  • Governors were elected by the people and laws
    made here did not require the Kings consent.
    Judges were appointed by the colonys bicameral
    legislatures.

8
Proprietary colonies
  • 3 colonies were proprietary (MD, PA, DE)
  • These colonies were granted by the King to a
    proprietor or owner (Penn/Baltimore).
  • The owner then choose the governor and could make
    whatever laws necessary.
  • PA had a unicameral legislature, while MD/DE had
    a bicameral legislature w/ the governors council
    as the upper chamber.

9
Section 2
  • The Coming of Independence

10
Britains Colonial Policies
  • Administration of the colonies was left to the
    King, Parliament had little to do w/ them.
  • W/ distance and time, each colony became self
    sufficient and pretty much self governing
  • Mother England provided for defense, a common
    currency, and foreign affairs
  • Most parliamentary rules on trade restrictions
    were ignored and the colonists paid very little
    in taxes b/c it was difficult to collect
  • Until. King George III (1760)

11
King George III
  • He saw economic potential in the colonies and
    imposed a series of taxes (sugar, stamp,etc)
  • The French and Indian War (1754-1763) had created
    a huge war debt that had to be paid and the
    colonists were to help
  • He failed to remove British troops even after the
    war was over
  • Said they could not move west of the Appalachians

12
Early Attempts at Unity in the Colonies
  • New England Confederation in 1643- 1684 league of
    friendship between 4 colonies for defense
  • 1696 Wm Penn suggested colonies unify in matters
    of trade, defense and criminal matters but he
    was ignored
  • Albany Plan of Union 1754- meeting in Albany of 7
    northern colonies to discuss Fr/Nat Amer attacks
    and colonial trade problems. Ben Franklin
    proposed colonies send delegates annually but was
    turned down
  • Stamp Act Congress- 9 colonies meet in
    Philadelphia and write Declaration of Rights and
    Grievances to the King asking that Stamp Act be
    repealed and arguing for their rights

13
Attempts at unity cont.
  • Sons of liberty organized boycotts and protests
    throughout the colonies
  • Committees of Correspondence were formed
    throughout the colonies to transfer information
  • First Continental Congress met in 1774 to discuss
    the Intolerable Acts only GA is a no show
  • Second Continental Congress meets in 1775 a month
    after the Revolutionary War has started and
    serves as our national govt. during the war
    (foreign affairs, handles money, military, etc)

14
Reaction?
  • King loosens some taxes but creates others
  • He continues to use the military to control
    rebels
  • Protests multiply
  • Committees of Correspondence are created to unite
    the colonies
  • Sons of Liberty organize boycotts/protests

15
First Continental Congress
  • 12 out of 13 meet in Philadelphia in 1774 to
    discuss the Intolerable Acts and the worsening
    situation
  • Wrote a Declaration of Rights to the King and
    encouraged a colonial boycott of Br. Goods

16
Second Continental Congress
  • Am Revolution started in April, all 13 colonies
    sent delegates
  • Organized the war effort and handles foreign
    affairs (raised money, got supplies, etc)
  • G Washington chosen Commander in Chief of the
    military
  • J. Hancock was president of the Congress

17
Declaration of Independence
  • Richard Henry Lee had suggested this a year
    before
  • Written by a committee of 5 headed by T.
    Jefferson
  • Adopted on July 4, 1776
  • First paragraph announces the split, rest of the
    essay explains why we must separate (details
    wrongdoings)

18
First State Governments
  • States set about writing their own Constitutions
    which had many different features but many had
  • popular sovereignty
  • limited government
  • separation of powers
  • checks and balances
  • civil rights/liberties
  • Memories of Mother England were fresh when they
    wrote these!!

19
Section 3
  • The Critical Period

20
Articles of Confederation1781-1787
  • Was written by the 2nd Continental Congress
  • Was approved in 1777 by the congress and then
    ratified by the last state in 1781 when they
    would take effect
  • The is our first constitution
  • See pages 793-796 in your book for a copy of the
    Articles

21
Governmental Structure under the Articles
  • Congress was the sole body created
  • Unicameral Congress was created made up of
    delegates chosen by state legislatures from the
    13 states and was directed by a chosen presiding
    officer
  • No executive or judicial branches
  • Each state had 1 vote only regardless of
    wealth/population

22
Powers of the Congress (Articles)
  • Make war and peace
  • Send and receive ambassadors
  • Make treaties
  • Borrow money
  • Set up a money system
  • Establish a post office
  • Raise an army/navy by asking for troops
  • Set uniform standards of weights and measures

23
State obligations
  • Provide funds and troops
  • Treat citizens of other states fairly
  • Give full faith and credit to other states legal
    documents/proceedings
  • Return fugitives to their homestate
  • Allow travel between the states

24
Weaknesses of the Articles
  • No power to tax
  • Had huge unpaid debts and states didnt always
    meet requests for funds made by Congress
  • Couldnt regulate trade between states
  • No enforcement power- couldnt make states obey
  • Took 9 out of 13 states to exercise powers/make
    laws and 13 out of 13 to change the Articles.
    Getting all the states together wasnt easy
    either.

25
the critical period
  • Name given to the period that we were governed
    under the Articles of Confederation b/c our
    future was so unstable/fragile
  • The National government proved to weak to handle
    the nations problems. States bickered often
    broke rules under the Articles.
  • Economic chaos occurred as debts mounted and
    violence broke out
  • Shays Rebellion in the fall of 1786

26
Need for a stronger government
  • Mount Vernon meeting- March 1785 VA/MD met to
    work out trade problems. Meeting so successful,
    that a meeting was called for all the colonies to
    discuss economic matters the next year.
  • Annapolis September 1786 5 out of 13 colonies met
    to discuss trade problems as suggested. They
    called another meeting which would become the
    Philadelphia Convention

27
Section 4
  • Creating the Constitution

28
The Framers
  • Who were they?
  • 55 men from 12 of the 13 colonies who were some
    of the best of their times
  • Profile?
  • Wealthy, educated, experienced, young (half under
    age of 40), new generation of politicians
  • Several well knowns did not attend

29
Organization and Procedures
  • Met in May 1787
  • Worked in secrecy
  • Madison and others kept journals of proceedings
  • Used a committee system though votes were taken
    by the whole group
  • G. Washington presided.
  • Decided not to revise the Articles but rewrite
    them and get a new Constitution

30
Virginia Plan
  • Representation based on .
  • 3 Separate branches
  • bicameral legislature
  • Congress had veto power over state laws
  • Congress chose executive/judges
  • They served as a council of revision and could
    veto bills
  • Single executive/multiple courts w/ one or
    more Supreme Court

31
New Jersey Plan
  • Unicameral legislature
  • Group executive
  • Representation based on equality with each state
    having one vote
  • Single Supreme Court for the judicial branch
  • Impeachment powers
  • Strengthened ability to regulate trade/tax

32
Connecticut Compromise
  • Bicameral legislature
  • Representation based on____in the Senate.
  • Representation based on _____ in the House.
  • Single executive
  • One Supreme court and multiple lower courts
  • Impeachment and veto powers

33
3/5 compromise
  • Slavery was a divisive issue
  • Slaves would be counted for representation and
    taxation purposes. States could count 3/5 of
    their slave population.

34
Commerce and Slave Trade
  • Slavery wont be touched for 20 years.
  • A tax would be paid on newly imported slaves
  • No tax will be charged on exports

35
Bundle of compromises
  • Large and small states
  • Northern and southern states
  • Industrial and rural
  • Rich and poor

36
Section 5
  • Ratifying the Constitution

37
The Fight for Ratification
  • Copies of the secretly written Constitution were
    sent to the states to be ratified and immediately
    two camps formed (Federalists and
    Antifederalists)
  • 9 out of 13 states were needed to ratify the
    document
  • In June of 1788 New Hampshire was the 9th state
    to ratify
  • North Carolina and Rhode Island were the last two
    to hold out. VA and NY also stalled

38
Federalists v. Antifederalists
  • Federalists wanted a strong national government
    to replace the weak Articles. They also did not
    see any reason to include a Bill of Rights
    (Madison, Hamilton, J. Adams, Washington)
  • Anti federalists wanted to maintain power at the
    state level and demanded that a Bill of Rights be
    included (P. Henry, S Adams, T. Jefferson)

39
Federalist Papers
  • As a result of the close votes in Virginia and
    New York a series of 85 essays were anonymously
    published in the local newspapers to persuade
    citizens to vote for the Constitution
  • John Jay, Alexander Hamilton, James Madison wrote
    them
  • Anti federalists also submitted their own essays
    in response

40
The new Government
  • Virginia and New Yorks adoption ensured that the
    new nation would not be divided
  • Fall of 1788 plans began to be made. New York
    was chosen as our first capital and our first
    president would be chosen in January 1789 and
    take office in April.
  • George Washington was chosen unanimously as our
    first President
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