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Building a New Nation. The Articles of Confederation to the United States Constitution. Timeline of Events. 1777 Second Continental Congress adopts the Articles of Confederation Vermont abolishes slavery 1780 States begin ceding western land to union
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Building a New Nation The Articles of Confederation to the United States Constitution
Timeline of Events • 1777 • Second Continental Congress adopts the Articles of Confederation • Vermont abolishes slavery • 1780 • States begin ceding western land to union • Other northern states emancipate slaves
Timeline of Events • 1781 • The Articles of Confederation, which John Dickinson helped write five years earlier, go into effect • Joseph II allows religious toleration in Austria • 1782 • Rama I founds a new dynasty in Siam with Bangkok as the capital
Timeline of Events • 1783 • The Treaty of Paris at the end of the Revolutionary War recognizes United States independence • Russia annexes the Crimean Peninsula • Ludwig van Beethoven’s first works are published
Timeline of Events • 1784 • Russians found colony in Alaska • Spain closes the Mississippi River to American commerce • 1785 • Land Ordinance of 1785 is adopted • The Treaty of Hopewell concerning Native Americans lands is signed
Timeline of Events • 1785 • New York state outlaws slavery • Jean-Pierre Blanchard and John Jeffries cross the English Channel in a balloon
Timeline of Events • 1786 • Daniel Shays leads a rebellion of farmers in Massachusetts • The Annapolis Convention is held • The Virginia legislature guarantees religious freedom • Charles Cornwallis becomes governor-general of India
Timeline of Events • 1787 • The Northwest Ordinance is passed • Constitutional Convention meets in Philadelphia • First Federalist paper written • Delaware first state to ratify new constitution • Sierra Leone in Africa becomes a haven for freed American slaves • War breaks out between Turkey and Russia
Timeline of Events • 1788 • New Hampshire is the ninth state to ratify the Constitution on June 21st • The Constitution, which James Madison helped write at the Pennsylvania State House, is ratified • Austria declares war on Turkey • Bread riots erupt in France
Timeline of Events • 1789 • First presidential election • First Congress meets • George Washington inaugurated, April 30th • Bill of Rights passed by Congress • Judiciary Act of 1789 passed • 1790 • Funding and Assumption passed
Timeline of Events • 1791 • First Bank of the United States created • Ratification of the Bill of Rights completed on December 15th • 1792 • Washington reelected unanimously
The Articles of Confederation • Basic ideas • Two levels of government will share fundamental powers • State governments had some supreme powers while the federal government had others
The Articles of Confederation • Powers given to Congress • Declare war • Make peace • Sign treaties • Borrow money • Set standards for coins & for weights & measures • Establish a postal service • Deal with Native American peoples
The Articles of Confederation • Weaknesses • Each state had only one vote in Congress, regardless of size • Congress could not enact or collect taxes • Congress could not regulate interstate or foreign trade • No executive branch to enforce the laws of Congress
The Articles of Confederation • Weaknesses • No national court system to settle legal disputes • Articles could be amended only if all states approved (unanimous) • 2/3 majority needed to pass any law (9 out of 13 states) • The 13 separate states lacked national unity
The Articles of Confederation • By 1779, 12 states had agreed to accept the Articles of Confederation • Maryland refused until Virginia & New York agreed to cede the land • 1781 – March 1st – Maryland finally accepts the Articles of Confederation and they go into effect
The Articles of Confederation • Achievements • Brought the American Revolution to a successful conclusion • Fostered nationalism • Kept the states united • Negotiated and signed the Treaty of Paris (1783) • Passed the Land Ordinance of 1785 and the Northwest Ordinance of 1787
Land Ordinance of 1785 • Established a plan for surveying the land • Divided the land into townships of 36 square miles • Each section is 640 acres • An individual could buy a section and sell off acreage • Typical farm is 160 acres (4 farms per section) • Minimum price - $1.00 per acre
Northwest Ordinance of 1787 • Was the procedure for dividing the land into territories • Set requirements for the admission of new states • Overlooked the land claims of the native Americans
Northwest Ordinance of 1787 • Requirements for admission of new states • Congress would appoint a territorial governor and judges • A territory with 5000 voting residents (white male landowners) could write a temporary constitution and elect their own government • When the population reached 60,000 free inhabitants, the settlers could write a state constitution, have it approved by Congress and then be granted statehood
Northwest Ordinance of 1787 • Provisions • Bars slavery from the Northwest Territory • Abolishes primogeniture • Guarantees freedom of religion • Carefully defines the individuals rights in court • Establishes the rules for creating states
Problems under the Articles • Shays’ Rebellion • Uprising in Massachusetts (1786 – 1787) • Caused by excessive land taxation, high legal costs, and an economic depression following the Revolution • Poor farmers were threatened with loss of their property or imprisonment for their debt
Problems under the Articles • Shays’ Rebellion • All over the state in 1786, smaller uprisings were stopping courts from holding session • Daniel Shays led an army of 1,000 farmers to seize the arsenal in Springfield, MA • Without authorization, the Massachusetts militia stopped Shays and his men before they could seize the arsenal
Annapolis Convention • In 1786, James Madison, Alexander Hamilton and others called for a convention to revise the Articles of Confederation • The assembly met in Annapolis, MD from September 11 - 16 • Five states sent delegates to the Annapolis Convention where they decided to set a convention for the following year in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.
Ending the Confederation • After Shays’ Rebellion, 12 states, except Rhode Island, sent delegates to a convention in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. • So in the same room that the delegates of the Second Continental Congress created and signed the Declaration of Independence, a convention was held and a group of men led by George Washington brought forth a new government after deciding to do away with the ineffective and weak Articles of Confederation.
Creating a New Government • In May of 1787, 55 men met in Philadelphia, PA in a closed room to revise the Articles of Confederation. • What they chose to do instead was create a brand new form of government, one that we still use today. • George Washington was elected chairman of the convention
Dealing with the Issues • In the process of creating a new government, the delegates needed to solve the issue at hand • Balance of Power • Congressional Vote • Slaves • Rights of the People
Representation in Congress • Large v. Small states • Two plans were developed • Virginia Plan • New Jersey Plan • Compromise was needed • Connecticut Compromise also known as the Great Compromise
Virginia Plan • Written by James Madison • Proposed a bicameral (two house) legislature with membership based on each state’s population • Lower house would be elected by the people, the upper house by the lower house • Had three levels of government that shared powers (executive, legislative, and judicial)
New Jersey Plan • Written by William Paterson • Proposed a unicameral (one house) legislature with each state being given one vote in Congress regardless of size • Had three levels of government that shared powers (executive, legislative, and judicial
The Great Compromise • Also known as the Connecticut Compromise • Written by Roger Sherman • Proposed a bicameral (two house) legislature • The upper house (Senate) would have equal representation – 2 votes per state who were elected by the state legislatures. • The lower house (House of Representatives) would have representation based on population of the state elected by the voters. • Had three levels of government that shared powers (executive, legislative, and judicial)
Three-Fifths Compromise • Northern v. Southern States • Northern states did not want slaves counted when figuring representation in the House of Representatives • Northern states wanted slaves counted when levying taxes • Southern states wanted slaves counted when figuring representation in the House of Representatives • Southern states did not want slaves counted when levying taxes
Three-Fifths Compromise • The Compromise • 3 out of every 5 slaves would be counted for representation in the House of Representatives as well as for tax purposes • This settled the political issue but not the economic issue of slavery
Division of Powers • Strong Central Government v. Strong State Governments • Strong Central Government • Authority derives power from the people • The central government should be stronger than the states • Strong State Government • Authority derives from the states • The states should remain stronger than the central government
Division of Powers • Federalism • A new system of government in which powers are divided between the national government and state governments • Delegated (enumerated) powers are powers given to the national government by the Constitution • Concurrent powers are those shared by the national and state governments • Reserved powers are those only given to the states
Division of Powers • Delegated Powers • Print money • Regulate interstate (between states) and international trade • Make treaties and conduct foreign policy • Declare war • Provide an army and navy • Establish post offices • Make laws necessary and proper to carry out these powers • Reserved Powers • Issue licenses • Regulate intrastate (within the state) businesses • Conduct elections • Establish local governments • Ratify amendments to the Constitution • Take measures for public health and safety • May exert powers the Constitution does not delegate to the national government or prohibit the states from using
Separation of Powers • Three Branches of Government • Executive • Headed by the President • Enforces the laws • Legislative • Headed by Congress • Makes the laws • Judicial • Headed by the Supreme Court • Interprets the laws
Checks and Balances • This system was established to prevent any one branch from dominating the others. • Each branch is given powers so that they may check to make sure the others are not abusing the powers given to them.