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The United States in 1783 America’s 1st national government was the Articles of Confederation ( ) The Articles established a weak national government.

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Presentation on theme: "The United States in 1783 America’s 1st national government was the Articles of Confederation ( ) The Articles established a weak national government."— Presentation transcript:

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2 The United States in 1783 America’s 1st national government was the Articles of Confederation ( ) The Articles established a weak national government in order to protect state power.

3 Some of the successes of the Articles
The Articles established a good system of settling western lands The Land Ordinance of 1785 established an orderly process for laying out western townships The Northwest Ordinance of 1787 allowed for local government, statehood, & outlawed slavery in the Northwest

4 Major Weaknesses of the Articles of Confederation

5 Constitutional Reform
By 1787, the major flaws of the Articles of Confederation were exposed: Shays’ Rebellion broke out among desperate Massachusetts farmers who faced losing their farms or being sent to debtor’s prison. Congress called for a meeting in Philadelphia to discuss revising the Articles and improving the national government. Shays’ Rebellion gave nationalists like Washington, Madison, Hamilton the urgency to call for a stronger national government 18

6 Shay’s Rebellion Farmers,

7 A Constitutional Convention was held in Philadelphia to try and fix the Articles of Confederation.
However, they ended up scrapping the entire thing and a new government was created instead James Madison helped negotiate many of the compromises that made the Constitution possible & is referred to as the “father of the Constitution”

8 The influence of Enlightenment Ideas
Members of the convention drew upon numerous enlightenment ideas, such as Montesquieu’s “separation of powers,” which argued that, to avoid tyranny, the three branches of government (legislature, executive, and judiciary) should be separated as far as possible, and their relationships should be governed by a system of checks and balances. 3, checks

9 The Constitutional Convention

10 The Constitutional Convention
Virginia Plan: Two-house legislature in which the number of representatives for each state would depend on the number of people in the state. (Benefit larger states) New Jersey Plan: Single-house Congress in which each state was equally represented.

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12 Connecticut Compromise (Great Compromise): Two houses of Congress:
The House of Representatives (based on population) The Senate (equal representation)

13 The Constitutional Convention
Each state would elect one member to the House of Representatives for every 40,000 people in the state. This led to a conflict between Northern and Southern states. Southern states wanted to count slaves as part of the population. Northern states said no because slaves could not vote and if they were counted for representation then they should also be counted for taxation.

14 The Constitutional Convention
Three-Fifths Compromise: every five enslaved people in a state would count as three free persons. Another compromise targeted the slave trade: Congress would not ban the slave trade until 1808.

15 The Federalist Papers The Federalist Papers were a series of 85 articles supporting the ratification of the new United States Constitution. The articles were written by John Jay, James Madison, and Alexander Hamilton. Constitution, Hamilton

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17 FEDERALISTS ANTI-FEDERALISTS

18 Federalist vs. Anti-federalist
Favored a strong National government. Believed in a loose interpretation of the Constitution that resulted in a national government that was strong enough to do the will of the people George Washington, John Adams, and Alexander Hamilton were Federalists Anti-federalist Favored a weak national government and strong state governments. They believed in a strict interpretation of the Constitution. Demanded a Bill of Rights be added to the Constitution. Patrick Henry, Samuel Adams, and Thomas Paine were Anti-Federalists. National, strong, Adams; state, strict, rights, Paine

19 Federalists & Anti-Federalists
Supported approval for the Constitution. Were well-organized and educated. Used Federalist Papers to argue for ratification and gain public support. Anti-Federalists Against approving the Constitution. Distrusted a government that removed power from control of the people. Wanted more protection of personal liberties. 26

20 To win approval of the Constitution, the Federalists agreed to add a Bill of Rights to protect the people’s liberty. By 1788, all states except Rhode Island and North Carolina had ratified the Constitution. Nine states were all that were necessary for ratification All 13 states ratified the Constitution by 1790.

21 Effects of the Constitutional Convention

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32 The Bill of Rights

33 The Bill of Rights

34 The Bill of Rights

35 The Bill of Rights

36 The Bill of Rights

37 The Bill of Rights

38 The Bill of Rights

39 The Bill of Rights

40 The Bill of Rights

41 The Bill of Rights


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