“the road to the constitution”. failure of the “articles of confederation” by 1787, most...

32
The Road to the The Road to the Constitution” Constitution”

Upload: joseph-hardy

Post on 05-Jan-2016

214 views

Category:

Documents


1 download

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: “The Road to the Constitution”. Failure of the “Articles of Confederation” By 1787, most realized that the “Articles of Confederation” provided for a

““The Road to the Constitution”The Road to the Constitution”

Page 2: “The Road to the Constitution”. Failure of the “Articles of Confederation” By 1787, most realized that the “Articles of Confederation” provided for a

Failure of the Failure of the “Articles of Confederation”“Articles of Confederation”

By 1787, most realized that the “Articles of Confederation” provided for a weak and ineffective system of government.

Under the Articles, the thirteen states operated as a “confederal” government system – whereas, the delegates wanted to create a “federal” system with a strong central government.

Page 3: “The Road to the Constitution”. Failure of the “Articles of Confederation” By 1787, most realized that the “Articles of Confederation” provided for a

Return to Philadelphia Return to Philadelphia Because there were problems

with the Articles of Confederation delegates were sent to Philadelphia to fix it in 1787.

55 delegates from 12 states met to determine the future of the U.S. Government.

Rhode Island did not attend because they opposed the idea of a stronger central government.

Page 4: “The Road to the Constitution”. Failure of the “Articles of Confederation” By 1787, most realized that the “Articles of Confederation” provided for a

America’s “Best and Brightest”America’s “Best and Brightest” The men that attended the

Constitutional Convention are now called our framers because they set up the framework of our government

Who were they?– 8 of the delegates had signed

the “Declaration of Independence”

– 7 of the delegates had been governors.

– 41 of the delegates had served in the “Continental Congress”

Page 5: “The Road to the Constitution”. Failure of the “Articles of Confederation” By 1787, most realized that the “Articles of Confederation” provided for a

George WashingtonGeorge Washington

George Washington was selected as the unanimous choice to preside (be the president) over the convention.

No one in the new “United States” was more respected than him

Page 6: “The Road to the Constitution”. Failure of the “Articles of Confederation” By 1787, most realized that the “Articles of Confederation” provided for a

Benjamin FranklinBenjamin Franklin

Benjamin Franklin was the oldest member of the convention at 81 years old.

His wisdom and advice was invaluable to the members.

Page 7: “The Road to the Constitution”. Failure of the “Articles of Confederation” By 1787, most realized that the “Articles of Confederation” provided for a

At the meeting, it was decided that the Articles of Confederation would be discarded. They realized that the government under the A of C was just too week and that they would need a completely new document.

Page 8: “The Road to the Constitution”. Failure of the “Articles of Confederation” By 1787, most realized that the “Articles of Confederation” provided for a

At the Convention (meeting), there were At the Convention (meeting), there were problems from the Start…………….. problems from the Start……………..

Right away disagreements arose about Right away disagreements arose about how the government would be structured.how the government would be structured.

Page 9: “The Road to the Constitution”. Failure of the “Articles of Confederation” By 1787, most realized that the “Articles of Confederation” provided for a

The Two Plans for a The Two Plans for a LegislatureLegislature

Page 10: “The Road to the Constitution”. Failure of the “Articles of Confederation” By 1787, most realized that the “Articles of Confederation” provided for a

““The Virginia Plan”The Virginia Plan”

Proposed by Edmund Randolph / James Madison

Page 11: “The Road to the Constitution”. Failure of the “Articles of Confederation” By 1787, most realized that the “Articles of Confederation” provided for a

““The Virginia Plan”The Virginia Plan”

Created a “3 branch” government (Legislative, Executive, & Judicial)

Created a two house bicameral government based on population.

Page 12: “The Road to the Constitution”. Failure of the “Articles of Confederation” By 1787, most realized that the “Articles of Confederation” provided for a

““The Virginia Plan”The Virginia Plan”

Representation in the Legislature would be based on POPULATION!

Larger states were in favor of this! (Virginia, Massachusetts, Pennsylvania, & New York)

Smaller states protested because they would lose power due to their populations.

Page 13: “The Road to the Constitution”. Failure of the “Articles of Confederation” By 1787, most realized that the “Articles of Confederation” provided for a

““The New Jersey Plan”The New Jersey Plan”Proposed by William Paterson

Page 14: “The Road to the Constitution”. Failure of the “Articles of Confederation” By 1787, most realized that the “Articles of Confederation” provided for a

““The New Jersey Plan”The New Jersey Plan”

Created a “3 branch” government (Legislative, Executive, & Judicial)

Called for a one house legislature (unicameral).

Page 15: “The Road to the Constitution”. Failure of the “Articles of Confederation” By 1787, most realized that the “Articles of Confederation” provided for a

““The New Jersey Plan”The New Jersey Plan” This plan called for equal

representation -Each state had ONE vote!

Smaller states liked this plan! (New Jersey, Delaware, and Maryland)

This was opposed by larger states who would only have as much power as smaller states despite having larger populations!

Page 16: “The Road to the Constitution”. Failure of the “Articles of Confederation” By 1787, most realized that the “Articles of Confederation” provided for a

Compare & ContrastCompare & Contrast

Virginia Plan and New Jersey PlanVirginia Plan and New Jersey Plan

Page 17: “The Road to the Constitution”. Failure of the “Articles of Confederation” By 1787, most realized that the “Articles of Confederation” provided for a

““Compromise”Compromise”A way to settle

disagreements between two or more groups is a compromise.

Page 18: “The Road to the Constitution”. Failure of the “Articles of Confederation” By 1787, most realized that the “Articles of Confederation” provided for a

The “Great Compromise”The “Great Compromise”

Page 19: “The Road to the Constitution”. Failure of the “Articles of Confederation” By 1787, most realized that the “Articles of Confederation” provided for a

The “Great Compromise”The “Great Compromise”

“The Great Compromise” was proposed by Roger Sherman of Connecticut.– Also called the

“Connecticut Compromise”.

This created a two house government – bicameral legislature.

Page 20: “The Road to the Constitution”. Failure of the “Articles of Confederation” By 1787, most realized that the “Articles of Confederation” provided for a

The “Great Compromise”The “Great Compromise”

Created the “Senate” Each state had two (2)

votes, both equal. Pleased the smaller

states (put them on equal footing with larger states in this house).

Created the “House of Representatives”.

Each state’s voting status was based on population.

Pleased the larger states (gave them more power in this house).

Page 21: “The Road to the Constitution”. Failure of the “Articles of Confederation” By 1787, most realized that the “Articles of Confederation” provided for a

Other CompromisesOther Compromises

Page 22: “The Road to the Constitution”. Failure of the “Articles of Confederation” By 1787, most realized that the “Articles of Confederation” provided for a

Question of Counting Slaves?Question of Counting Slaves? Southern states wanted to

count their slave populations (nearly 550,000) for representation purposes – the Northern states disagreed

The “3/5th Compromise” settled the issue.

It was agreed to count each slave as 3/5ths of a person for representation AND taxation purposes.

Page 23: “The Road to the Constitution”. Failure of the “Articles of Confederation” By 1787, most realized that the “Articles of Confederation” provided for a

““Slave Trade Compromise”Slave Trade Compromise” Northern states wanted the

U.S. Government to regulate trade between both states AND foreign nations.

Southern states feared this would impact their exports of rice, cotton, & tobacco.

It was agreed that slavery would be left alone for 20 years in terms of commerce and trade. They would revisit the issue in 1808.

Was this really a fix????

Page 24: “The Road to the Constitution”. Failure of the “Articles of Confederation” By 1787, most realized that the “Articles of Confederation” provided for a

““How to Elect the President?”How to Elect the President?” Some delegates wanted Congress to

choose the president. Why? Others felt that the people should elect

him. They decided each state legislature

would chose their electors, known as the electoral college, who would elect the President and Vice President.

We still use the Electoral College today, but now, voters choose who the electors will vote for.

Page 25: “The Road to the Constitution”. Failure of the “Articles of Confederation” By 1787, most realized that the “Articles of Confederation” provided for a

Ratifying the Ratifying the “U.S. Constitution”“U.S. Constitution”

The remaining 42 delegates gathered for the final time on September 17, 1787.

They had finished their task…….and now the Constitution would become law if 9 out of the 13 states would ratify it at their ratifying conventions. (did Rhode Island matter???)

Page 26: “The Road to the Constitution”. Failure of the “Articles of Confederation” By 1787, most realized that the “Articles of Confederation” provided for a

Debate Breaks Out:Debate Breaks Out:“Federalists vs. Anti-Federalists”“Federalists vs. Anti-Federalists”

Each wrote a series of papers in support of their side!!!Each wrote a series of papers in support of their side!!!

Page 27: “The Road to the Constitution”. Failure of the “Articles of Confederation” By 1787, most realized that the “Articles of Confederation” provided for a

““Federalists”Federalists” “Federalists” were

supporters of the Constitution as it was written.

They believed in a strong central government and wanted the document ratified (approved) as it was written.

Page 28: “The Road to the Constitution”. Failure of the “Articles of Confederation” By 1787, most realized that the “Articles of Confederation” provided for a

““Federalists”Federalists”

In essays entitled “The Federalist Papers”, they argued that the U.S. could not survive without a strong federal government.

They were led by Alexander Hamilton, James Madison, & John Jay

Page 29: “The Road to the Constitution”. Failure of the “Articles of Confederation” By 1787, most realized that the “Articles of Confederation” provided for a

““Anti-Federalists”Anti-Federalists” “Anti-Federalists” felt that it

gave too much power to the national government and took too much power from the states.

They opposed the Constitution as it was written.

Page 30: “The Road to the Constitution”. Failure of the “Articles of Confederation” By 1787, most realized that the “Articles of Confederation” provided for a

““Anti-Federalists”Anti-Federalists”

The Anti-Federalists also wrote papers and in the “Anti-Federalists Papers” they demanded that the new Constitution protect the basic individual rights of the people – they wanted a “bill of rights” added.

They were led by Patrick Henry

Page 31: “The Road to the Constitution”. Failure of the “Articles of Confederation” By 1787, most realized that the “Articles of Confederation” provided for a

““Federalists vs. Anti-Federalists”Federalists vs. Anti-Federalists”

The Federalist Papers made it clear that we needed a stronger government and the Anti-Federalist Papers made it clear that the rights of the people must be protected in a “Bill of Rights”.

Page 32: “The Road to the Constitution”. Failure of the “Articles of Confederation” By 1787, most realized that the “Articles of Confederation” provided for a

““The U.S. Constitution”The U.S. Constitution” On June 21, 1788, New

Hampshire became the 9th state to ratify the Constitution. Why was that important???– Rhode Island was the 13th.

The 13 independent states became one nation, the “United States of America.” For the first time it was written with a capital “U.”