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Title: CHAPTER 6 THE REPUBLICAN EXPERIMENT Author: CMU Last modified by: E200203909 Created Date: 6/29/1998 8:06:58 PM Document presentation format – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Essential Question:


1
  • Essential Question
  • What were the long-term problems with the
    Articles of Confederation?
  • Reading Quiz Ch 7B (p.217-229)

2
Examining the Articles of Confederation
3
The Weaknesses of the Articles
  • The Articles of Confederation served as the
    framework for the U.S. govt from 1781 until
    1789
  • Early in the Confederation Period, the weakness
    of the national govt was seen as good because
    it eliminated tyranny
  • Later, these same weaknesses kept the govt from
    solving serious national problems

4
Economic Problems
  • During the American Revolution, colonial boycotts
    hurt trade
  • Everyone expected the economy to improve after
    independence, but the Confederation Congress had
    a difficult time
  • Paying off debt collecting taxes
  • Halting inflation
  • Generating a favorable balance of trade (foreign
    domestic)

5
Debt, Taxes, Inflation
The govt could request, but not require, states
to send money to Congress
  • The U.S. was burdened with 40 million in war
    debt in 1783
  • The Confederate Congress could not ease the
    national debt because it had no power to tax
  • Congress printed 200 million in new currency to
    pay off debt but this led to massive inflation
  • Creditors demanded repayment of debts at market
    value

6
Trade Problems under the Articles
Connecticut levied heavier duties on
Massachusetts goods than on British goods
  • Congress was unable to create a favorable balance
    of trade
  • To raise revenue, states created tariffs on goods
    from other states
  • The lack of hard currency made trade difficult
  • Desire for cheap British goods hurt infant
    American industries
  • England prohibited its Caribbean colonies from
    trading with USA

This especially hurt Southern planters
This especially hurt the North
7
U.S. Trade with Britain, 1783-1789
Debt
8
Economic Problems
Washington kept generals from overthrowing the
new government "Gentlemen, you will permit me to
put on my spectacles, for I have not only grown
gray but almost blind in the service of my
country."
  • The economic stagnation of the Confederation era
    led to uprisings
  • The lack of tax revenue failure of the govt to
    pay soldiers sparked a military coup in 1783
    called the Newburgh Conspiracy
  • Property foreclosures led to desperation
    uprising farmers in 1787 called Shays Rebellion

Shays Rebellion proved to be the convincing
event that led to the Constitutional Convention
of 1787
9
Shays Rebellion in Western Massachusetts
  • Poor farmers in western MA were angered over high
    taxes prospect of debtors jail
  • Daniel Shays led an uprising closed debt courts
    threatened a federal arsenal

10
Economic Problems
  • Nationalists called for a stronger central
    govt a constitutional amendment to allow
    create a 5 import tax a national bank
  • 12 states agreed, but a group of Rhode Island
    Localists refused killed the amendment
  • The failure to reform the Articles led
    Nationalists to consider the Articles hopelessly
    defective

Led by Alexander Hamilton, James Madison,
Robert Morris
A national debt if not excessive, will be a
national blessingHamilton
11
Foreign Policy Problems
Congress the army were too weak to resist
  • The Articles proved inadequate to handle
    interstate foreign affairs
  • When Americans did not repay legitimate war
    debts, Britain kept troops in the Ohio Valley
  • Spain refused to recognize the southern U.S.
    border closed access to the Mississippi River
  • Algerian pirates attacked enslaved American
    merchants
  • States argued over river rights

John Jays Jay-Gardoqui Treaty was met with
regional resistance was rejected in Congress
12
The USA in the Confederate Era
13
Have We Fought for This?
  • Have we fought for this? Was it with these
    expectations that we launched into a sea of
    trouble?
  • George Washington, 1785
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