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“We, the People vs. We, the State”:

“We, the People vs. We, the State”:. The Virginia Ratifying Convention. Great minds don’t always agree. During the Virginia ratifying convention, what were the arguments for and against the new Constitution?. Supported the Constitution created by the Constitutional Convention of 1787

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“We, the People vs. We, the State”:

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  1. “We, the People vs. We, the State”: The Virginia Ratifying Convention

  2. Great minds don’t always agree. • During the Virginia ratifying convention, what were the arguments for and against the new Constitution?

  3. Supported the Constitution created by the Constitutional Convention of 1787 James Madison George Washington Did not support the Constitution created by the Constitutional Convention of 1787 Patrick Henry George Mason Federalists Anti-Federalists

  4. Anti-Federalists

  5. Patrick Henry • Lawyer • Anti-Federalist: feared that the Constitution would create too strong a national government that would, • without a bill of rights, endanger the liberties of Americans • Represented Virginia at the First and Second Continental Congresses • Attended four of Virginia's five Revolutionary Conventions • Commonwealth of Virginia's first governor

  6. George Mason • Planter • Anti-federalist: argued that the government would be too powerful, that it blended, rather than separated, • the legislative and executive powers, and that it lacked a bill of rights • Served in three Virginia Revolutionary Conventions and wrote first drafts of the Virginia Declaration of Rights and the first Virginia constitution

  7. William Grayson • Lawyer • Anti-Federalist: feared the Constitution would allow northern and northeastern states to form majorities in Congress against the interests of southern states and also jeopardize essential interests of westerners • Represented Virginia in Congress from 1785 to 1787

  8. James Monroe • Lawyer • Anti-Federalist: believed the Constitution needed a bill of rights and that the executive should be directly elected Image courtesy of the Library of Congress: http://hdl.loc.gov/loc.pnp/cph.3g12215 • Representative to the Continental Congress 1783

  9. Federalists

  10. James Madison • Politician/planter • Federalist: “Father of the Constitution,” he drafted the Virginia Plan, which was the basis for the debates at the Convention of 1787 • Attended the fifth Virginia Revolutionary Convention and drafted one of the amendments to the Virginia Declaration of Rights that guaranteed all men the right to the free exercise of religion • Virginia Representative to the Continental Congress

  11. Edmund Pendleton • Lawyer • Federalist • Member of the First and Second Continental Congresses • President of the Virginia Committee of Safety that governed the colony from the summer of 1775 to the summer of 1776 • President of the fourth and fifth Virginia Conventions • President of the Virginia Ratifying Convention 

  12. George Nicolas • Lawyer • Federalist • Served in the House of Delegates, 1778–1779, 1781–1782, 1783, and 1786–1788

  13. Edmund Randolph • Lawyer/ Politician • Federalist: felt that adopting the Constitution was the best way to keep the states together as a union. • First attorney general of the Commonwealth of Virginia (1776–1786) • Federalist • Delegate to the Continental Congress (1779, 1781–1782) • Governor of Virginia (1786–1788) • Delegate to the Philadelphia Constitutional Convention (1787)

  14. John Marshall • Lawyer • Federalist • Later the first chief justice of the U.S. Supreme Court

  15. Image courtesy of theLibrary of Congress. <http://hdl.loc.gov/loc.rbc/bdsdcc.c0301>

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