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The Confederation and the Constitution

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Title: The Confederation and the Constitution


1
Chapter 9
  • The Confederation and the Constitution

2
The Pursuit of Equality
  • The exodus of 80,000 Loyalists lead to a
    weakening of the aristocratic class which allowed
    Patriot elites to emerge

3
Fight for Separation of Church and State
  • The Congregational church continued to be legally
    established (tax supported) by some New England
    states, but the Anglican Church was humbled and
    reformed as the Protestant Episcopal Church

4
Issues Slavery
  • Slavery was an issue because the Continental
    Congress of 1774 had called for the abolition of
    slavery
  • In 1775 the Quakers founded the worlds first
    antislavery society

5
  • Several northern states went further and either
    abolished slavery altogether or provided the
    gradual emancipation of slaves.  No states south
    of Pennsylvania abolished slavery.

6
Issues Women
  • Women were still unequal to men, even though some
    had served in the Revolutionary War
  • Mothers devoted to their families were developed
    as an idea of republican motherhood and
    elevated women to higher statuses as keepers of
    the nations conscience

7
Constitution Making in the States
  • The Continental Congress in 1776 called upon the
    colonies to draft new constitutions.
  • As written documents, the state constitutions
    were intended to represent a fundamental law,
    superior to the short-lived impulses of ordinary
    legislation.

8
Characteristics of State Constitutions
  • Many states had a bill of rights and required
    annual election of legislators
  • All of them deliberately created weak executive
    and judicial branches since they distrusted power
    due to Britains abuse of it
  • The legislative branch was given sweeping powers

9
Shaky Start Toward Union
  • The people were far from united
  • After the war, Britain flooded America with cheap
    goods, greatly hurting American industries
  • Luckily, America was blessed with great political
    leaders like Washington, Madison, Jefferson,
    Hamilton, and John Adams

10
George Washington
11
James Madison
12
Thomas Jefferson
13
Hamilton
14
John Adams
15
U.S. as a Confederation
  • The states chose to be a confederation a loose
    union of states where a federal and state level
    exist, but the state level retains the most
    sovereignty to do as they wished

16
Boundaries of the New States
17
Articles Of Confederation
  • Written by a congress-appointed committee as a
    constitution for the nation.
  • Adopted by Congress in 1777
  • Unanimous approval for the Articles was required.
  • Maryland was the last to approve on March 1, 1781

18
The Articles of Confederation
  • Set up a very weak government on purpose
  • No executive branch
  • Federal government had very limited power
  • The weak government provided for inevitable
    problems in the future
  • No power to regulate trade or collect taxes from
    the states
  • Did handle the admission of new territory
    efficiently though

19
Issues with the Articles
  • Congress had too little power
  • Congress was denied the power to regulate
    interstate commerce
  • Congress had no power to enforce a tax-collection
    program. States were expected to pay their fair
    share.
  • Amendments had to be unanimous and therefore
    proved to be nearly impossible to obtain.

20
Commemorative Stamp
21
Landmarks in Land Laws
  • Land Ordinance of 1785- stated that the acreage
    of the Old Northwest (land in Ohio Valley) should
    be sold and the proceeds should be used to help
    pay off the national debt.
  • The area would be surveyed before settlement and
    then divided into townships of six square miles,
    then divided into 36 square sections with one set
    aside for public schools

22
Old Northwest Territory
23
Land Ordinance of 1785
24
Landmarks in Land Laws
  • Northwest Ordinance of 1787- a uniform national
    land policy created method of states entering
    the Union
  • When a territory had 60,000 inhabitants, states
    would write a state constitution, and upon
    approval from Congress, the state would be
    admitted to the Union

25
The Worlds Ugly Duckling
  • America was received with general dislike among
    all the major world powers.
  • Britain refused to repeal the Navigation Laws and
    closed down its trading to the U.S.
  • Spain closed the Mississippi River to American
    commerce
  • Both Spain and England encouraged Indian tribes
    to aggravate U.S. attempts at organization

26
Foreign Relations
  • France, Americas comrade-in-arms, demanded the
    repayment of money loaned during the war.

27
The Horrid Specter of Anarchy
  • States were refusing to pay taxes, and national
    debt was mounting as foreign credibility was
    slipping
  • Boundary disputes erupted into small battles
    while states taxed goods from other states

28
Shays Rebellion
  • Western Massachusetts 1786
  • Rebellion led by Captain Daniel Shays
  • An uprising of impoverished backcountry farmers
    who were losing their farms through mortgage
    foreclosures and tax delinquencies
  • Demanded cheap paper money, lighter taxes, and a
    suspension of mortgage foreclosures

29
Importance of Shays Rebellion
  • The movement was smashed quickly but did strike
    fear into the hearts of the upper class
  • It exposed the need for a stronger central
    government and helped launch the Constitutional
    Convention

30
Shays Rebellion
31
Annapolis Convention
  • An attempt to get state representatives together
    to fix the issues with the Articles. Failed
    because only 5 states representatives showed up.

32
Constitutional Congress
  • May 25, 1787, 55 representatives from all of the
    states except for Rhode Island were sent to
    Philadelphia to talk of the government in the
    future of the country.
  • George Washington was elect as the leader.

33
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34
Compromises
  • After some discussion, the delegates decided to
    completely scrap the Articles of Confederation
    and rewrite them.
  • They were then faced with the enormous task of
    finding a system of government that ALL the
    states agreed on.

35
The Large-State Plan
  • Proposed by Virginia
  • Two house legislature proportioned by population
  • Separate executive and judiciary chosen by
    legislature

36
The Small-State Plan
  • Proposed by New Jersey
  • Called for equal representation regardless of
    size and population.
  • Separately elected executive and judiciary
  • Power to tax and regulate commerce

37
The Great Compromise
  • After much debate, the delegates came to a
    compromise.
  • Congress would have two houses, the House of
    Representatives chosen by population and the
    Senate with two votes per state
  • Also a strong independent executive branch with a
    president as military commander-in-chief who
    could veto legislation

38
House of Representatives.
  • Representation by population based on census
    every ten years
  • Tax bills and revenue measures had to originate
    in the House because population counted more
    heavily.

39
Senate
  • Each state, no matter how poor or small, gets two
    senators

40
The Constitution
41
The Constitution cont.
The constitution set up the three branches of
government the executive, the legislative, and
the judicial branch. It also constituted the each
branches powers and created a system of checks
and balances.
42
The Articles of the Constitution
  • I Sets up the Legislative Branch
  • II Sets up the Executive Branch
  • III Sets up the Judiciary Branch
  • IV Guarantees to the States
  • V Amendment Process
  • VI Supreme Law of the Land
  • VII Ratification
  • Amendments 1-10 Bill of Rights
  • 27 Total Amendments

43
Balance of Power
44
Slavery and the Constitution
  • States wanted to know if slaves were to count as
    people when calculating population for the House.
  • Because of the great disagreement this caused,
    the 3/5th compromise was formed and slaves
    counted as 3/5th of a person.

45
Clash of Federalists and Anti-Federalists
46
Federalists
  • Federalists were in favor of a strong central
    government.
  • They supported the constitution.
  • Generally former Loyalists and aristocrats
  • The federalist papers were written in order to
    convince the states to ratify the constitution.

47
Anti-Federalists
  • Opposed a strong central government
  • Generally poor farmers, the illiterate, and
    states rights supporters
  • Leaders included Samuel Adams, Patrick Henry,
    and Richard Henry Lee

48
Struggle to Ratify
  • June 21, 1788, the Constitution was officially
    adopted after nine states (all but Virginia, New
    York, North Carolina, and Rhode Island) had
    ratified it
  • These states eventually ratified it after intense
    pressure from the government

49
Key Terms in the Constitution
  • Delegated Powers powers given to the federal
    government by the state
  • Retained Powers powers kept by the states
  • Concurrent Powers those shared by state and
    federal governments
  • Implied Powers those that are necessary and
    proper in order for the government to function

50
Constitutional Guarantees
  • No Ex Post Facto laws
  • No Bills of Attainder
  • Guaranteed Writs of Habeus Corpus
  • Amendments two-thirds of Congress to propose
  • Three-fourths of the states to ratify
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