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Creating the Constitution Chapter 3 Section 1 and 2.

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Presentation on theme: "Creating the Constitution Chapter 3 Section 1 and 2."— Presentation transcript:

1 Creating the Constitution Chapter 3 Section 1 and 2

2 State Legislature  New Hampshire was the first state with a constitution  Soon all 13 states adopted a constitution  Constitution- written plan for government  Each state had a legislature, most were bicameral  Bicameral- divided into 2 parts  Each state had a governor- elected by the citizens or legislature

3 Articles of Confederation  2 nd Continental Congress wrote the Articles of Confederation (1 st constitution)  Confederation- group of individual state government that bind together for a common purpose  By 1781 all 13 states ratified the AofC  Ratified- approve  Set up 1 house legislature

4 Strengths  Ordinance of 1785  Prior to American Revolution few people lived West of Appalachian Mountains  Congress created a system of taking detailed measurements of land and selling it  Northwest Ordinance  Congress created this to set basis for new governments in new territory, precedent for admitting states to the union, and outlawed slavery in new territory These acts spread settlement West

5 Weaknesses  Congress couldn’t enforce laws  Congress couldn’t tax  Congress couldn’t make states do anything!  Congress couldn’t pass a law without the approval of 9 of 13 state  AofC could not be changed without agreement of all 13 states  No single leader or group over government  No national court system  Congress had to borrow money since it couldn’t tax  States went deeply in debt and had to tax citizens

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7 Rebellion  Shay’s Rebellion  Riots broke because states heavily taxed citizens  Daniel Shay was a farmer and Massachusetts tried to take away his farm to pay for his debt  He argued that the state couldn’t punish him because they created the problem  He armed 1,200 men who attacked a federal arsenal  Rebellion was eventually put down, but it showed the need for a strong central government

8 Shay’s Rebellion Video

9 AofC  AofC lasted for 10 years  1787 delegates from the 13 states were sent to Philadelphia to write a new constitution  Delegates unanimously choose George Washington to preside over the convention

10 Virginia Plan  President, court system, and bicameral legislature  Representatives were based on a state’s population  Larger states favored  Larger population = larger say in government  Smaller states hated  Feared they would not have a voice

11 New Jersey Plan  Government has the power to tax and regulate trade  Unicameral legislature and the number of representatives is equal from each state  Smaller states favored  Thought they would have an equal say in government  Larger states hated  Thought since they are larger they should get more of a say in government

12 The Great Compromise  Delegates couldn’t agree on VA or NJ Plan  Decided to combine plans  Bicameral legislature  One house with representatives based on population (House of Representatives)  Pleased larger states  One house with equal number of representatives (Senate)  Pleased smaller states

13 3/5 ths Compromise  Southern states wanted to count slaves in their population to increase their power in the HofR  Northern states opposed this because the South shouldn’t count them if they don’t let them vote  Agreed that for every 5 slaves, they would count as 3 people

14 Commerce and Slave Trade Compromises  Northerners wanted Congress to regulate foreign and interstate trade  Southerners feared Congress would tax exports and stop the slave trade  Both sides agreed that Congress could regulate foreign and interstate trade, but could not tax exports or stop the slave trade until 1808

15 Electoral College Compromise  Some delegates thought Congress should choose the President, others thought the citizens should vote for it  They compromised that a group of Electors from each state would meet together to vote for the President (based on who the majority of their state wanted)

16 Finishing the Constitution  Delegates finished the Constitution by September 1787  All but 3 delegates agreed and signed it  Now they had to get the states to ratify it  If 9 of 13 ratified the constitution, it would become law

17 AofC and Constitution Video

18 Federalists vs. Antifederalists  Federalists  Supported the Constitution  Supported strong central/federal government  Said US wouldn’t survive without strong central government (remember AofC?)  They wrote The Federalist Papers in which they defended the Constitution

19 Federalists vs. Antifederalists  Antifederalists  Opposed the Constitution  Opposed a strong central/federal government  Thought it would take away liberties (remember the King of England?)  Lacked a Bill of Rights to protect personal freedoms

20 Bill of Rights  Both Federalists and Antifederalists came to an agreement with the Bill of Rights  First 10 Amendments to the Constitution  Protect personal liberties (ex. Freedom of speech, religion, the press, to own a gun, to a fair trial, no cruel punishment)  9 states ratified it, making it law  Eventually the other 4 states ratified it as well

21 Bill of Rights Video

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