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AP US History Chapter 9 Flashcards

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5463588673Changes within society in the pursuit of equality- Changed forenames to Mr. and Mrs. - Master replaced with boss - Not many indentured servants - No primogeniture0
5463588674Society of the CincinattiLordly pretensions of the Continental Army officers who formed a hereditary order1
5463588675DisestablishedAnglican church was reformed and was named Protestant Episcopal Church and disestablished as the official religion2
5463588676Virginia Statute for Religious FreedomReligious freedom in Virginia - Established by Thomas Jefferson3
5463588677Abolitionist movements- Continental Congress abolished it with a positive response - No states south of Pennsylvania abolished slavery - discrimination continued - Any major abolitionist movement would have disrupted unity that was already fragile4
5463588678Women's "rights"- New Jersey allowed women to vote for a short time - Some disguised as men and served in the army - Generally didn't have many rights5
5463588679Civic virtue- Democracy depended on the unselfish commitment of each citizen to the public good - Mothers spread this to children6
5463588680Republican motherhood- Mothers taught their children civic virtue early on - People realized women were important and extended education to them7
5463588681Constitution making in the states - what did Congress call for?Called for colonies to rewrite their Constitutions - not everybody did it8
5463588682Massachusetts process for making a new state Constitution- When made - given to the people for ratification - Once adopted, only another specially called constitutional convention could change things - Future process9
5463588683Similarities among state constitutions- Defined government with authority from the people - Documents required annual elections - A bill of rights - A weak judiciary - Little executive power - Legislature had too much power10
5463588684Result of the loyalist estatesThey were cut up into smaller pieces -> spread economic democracy11
5463588685Nonimportation agreement effects on jobsIt stimulated *manufacturing* because there was a higher need for things that were originally supplied by England - *agriculture* was still the *leading* industry12
5463588686Positives and negatives of trading(+) Could trade freely with other countries (+) More items to be traded (-) Couldn't trade with Britain or British West Indies (-) Commercial outlets may have local restrictions13
5463588687Economic and social atmosphere at the time- Rich profiteers present more so than before - The previously rich were left destitute - General disrespect for the majesty of the law14
5463588688Issues with making a new government- No more Tories, which meant no more conservatives to balance and help with government - Patriots didn't have a common cause anymore - Hard to start a new government from scratch15
5463588689What did Britain do to American markets other than cut it off?They flooded it with lowered prices for goods that would cost more locally made16
5463588690Positives of making a new government- Functioned under similar constitutions - Political inheritance from Britain - High order leaders17
5463588691Articles of Confederation- First governing document of the US - Lacked strong central government - Needed 13 states to ratify - Translated into French to show they had a government18
5463588692When was the Articles of Confederation ratified (before what event)?8 months before the victory at Yorktown... coincidence?19
5463588693States that had land West of mountains - characteristics- Seven did - Didn't have to tax heavily - Pay off debt faster - Land-rich20
5463588694States that *didn't* have land West of mountains - characteristics- Had to tax more heavily - Took longer to pay off tax - Main reason states refused to sign the AOC21
5463588695Weaknesses of the Articles of Confederation- Can't maintain armies without Congress' approval - Unanimous agreement needed to get articles passed - 9/13 needed for bills to be passed - One vote for each colony regardless of size - States collect the tax, give money to federal government - *usually "lost"* - No executive branch or strong court system - Congress was intentionally weak22
5463588696Why did most states have to join the Union?They couldn't get advantages of new land sales and couldn't "exist" without them23
5463588697Pioneers going West to get land- Got land from government (directly or indirectly) - Looked at national capital for "guidance" -> weakened local power - Uniform land policy made possible24
5463588698Issues with Congress1) No power to regulate commerce - different tariffs and navigation laws created by different states to attract money 2) No tax collection - *asked* them to contribute but usually only got 1/4 if lucky25
54635886991783 - march to Pennsylvania- Pennsylvania soldiers marched to Independence Hall - Members had to ask state for protection - Fled to Princeton26
5463588700Result of having a federation instead of a *con*federationNeeded to recast local government free to control all domestic affairs27
5463588701Old Northwest28
5463588702Land Ordinance of 1785- Acreage of the Old Northwest should be sold and that the proceeds should be used to pay off national debt - Land surveyed by six square miles per area - 16th district was for education29
5463588703Northwest Ordinance of 1787- Created the Northwest Territory - Allowed an area to be a state when it had 60,000 people in it - Prohibited slavery30
5463588704Lord SheffieldEnglishman who declared that Britain shouldn't have to try to get America to trade with them; commerce would follow old channels naturally31
5463588705British in America- Trading posts with fur trade by redcoats - The main purpose - keep Natives allied on attack on the USA32
5463588706Americans wanted ______ on British Parliament. Why?trade restrictions - because they were restricting their trade vice versa, but Congress couldn't control commerce33
5463588707Spanish in America- Closed Mississippi River in 1784 to Americans - Got land given to US - Schemed with the Natives34
5463588708French in Americademanded repayment of money loaned35
5463588709Dey of AlgiersNorth African pirates - Destroyed commerce and enslaved Yankees - Yankees came and forged British papers to pretend they were Britain36
5463588710Issues with some states in the mid 1780s- Some states refused to pay anything - Boundary issues caused minor battles, and there was no judicial branch - Making paper money - some states sanctioned making it37
5463588711Shays' Rebellion- West Massachusetts in 1786 - Backcountry farmers were losing property because of foreclosure and tax delinquencies - Captain Daniel Shays - leader - Wanted paper money, lighter taxes, and suspend property takeovers - Massachusetts made a small army in order to defend against them38
5463588712Results of Shays' Rebellion- Massachusetts passed debtor relief laws - Caused fear among elites - Created a mobocracy - civic virtue became insignificant *-Showed that America needed a strong central government that was not provided by the AOC*39
5463588713Biggest issue at the timeControlling commerce40
5463588714Annapolis Convention- Met because of controlling commerce - Virginia called for a meeting in Annapolis - 5 state reps - Alexander Hamilton called for a convention in Philadelphia the following year - Congress called a convention to *revise* A.O.C.41
5463588715Constitutional Convention- All states chose representatives by state legislatures and people — except Rhode Island - Met in secrecy in 1787 - Sentinels outside - Made men drop personal pursuits and focus on the country's needs - GW became chairman42
5463588716James Madison's nickname"Father of the Constitution"43
5463588717Goals of the Constitutional Convention- Wanted a firm, dignified, and respected government - Wanted to preserve the union - Forestall anarchy - Ensure security of life and property against dangerous uprisings by the mobocracy44
5463588718What did the Constitutional Convention do with the Articles of Confederation (AOC)?Scraped it completely45
5463588719Virginia PlanKnown as large-state plan - Both houses of Congress should be based on population - Gave big states the advantage46
5463588720New Jersey PlanKnown as the small-state plan - Equal representation of a one-branched Congress regardless of size and population - Feared larger states would override them47
5463588721The Great CompromiseKnown as the Connecticut Compromise - House of Representatives - representative assembly based on the number of districts in a state (all tax bills must originate from here - population counted more heavily) - Senate - Two representatives from each state48
5463588722Common LawUnnecessary to be specific about every conceivable detail49
5463588723Civil LawElaborate lengthy legal codes50
5463588724The new Constitution provided for an __________ branchexecutive51
5463588725Difference between powers of war in the president and CongressPresident could wage war, but Congress could declare war52
5463588726Electoral College"a body of people representing the states of the US, who formally cast votes for the election of the president and vice president" - Large states had advantage in first round of popular voting - Small states would get a larger voice if no candidate got majority of electoral votes and given to House of Representatives53
5463588727Three-Fifths Compromise- South wanted slaves to be voters - North didn't and would logically require more representation - Slaves would count as 3/5 of a person54
5463588728Agreements that were mutual among states- Demanded established money and private property - Strong government with three branches and having checks & balances - Suffrage for men55
5463588729Safeguards for conservatism- Barriers and safeguards against the mob - President indirectly elected by Electoral College - Senators were indirectly chosen by state legislatures - Judges appointed for life - Only House of Reps was direct56
5463588730End of Constitutional Convention- 17 weeks - Feared if the Constitution would be acceptable to the country57
5463588731How many states needed to ratify the Constitution for it to be accepted? Why9/13 because the Framers foresaw that hesitant states wouldn't comply58
5463588732Antifederalists- Consisted of poorer people, like debtors who feared to pay back all of their money - Opposed stronger federal government - Freedom of individuals was compromised, wanted annual elections, no standing army, feared no ref. to God, and disliked the ratification of 2/3 states needed59
5463588733Federalists- Favored stronger federal government - Wealthier, more organized, and had the press on their side - 100+ newspapers, only 12 supported anti-feds60
5463588734Massachusetts in the ratification of the Constitution- Originally majority antifederalist - Feds assured Bill of Rights to Constitution - Ratification - 187 to 16861
5463588735New Hampshire in the ratification of the Constitution- Originally anti fed - Feds arranged an adjournment and won waverers62
5463588736Virginia in the ratification of the Constitution- Fierce antifederalist opposition - Strong leaders influenced them - New Hampshire was about to ratify, so the Union would be made anyway - couldn't continue as independent - 89-79 ratification63
5463588737New York in the ratification of the Constitution- Anti-fed majority convention - Articles used as propaganda - State couldn't prosper without the Union - 30-27 - Approved 32 proposed amendments64
5463588738North Carolina in the ratification of the ConstitutionAdjourned convention without a vote65
5463588739Rhode Island in the ratification of the ConstitutionDidn't even call a convention and rejected it popularly66
5463588740T/F: All white males votedFalse, only about 1/467
5463588741The FederalistA book with Adams, Madison, and Jay's influential propaganda writings promoting the ratification of the Constitution68
5463588742Slave Trade CompromiseSlave trade can continue slave trade until the end of 1807 - Meant slaves increase more by procreation69
5463588743The Elastic ClauseCongress shall have the power to make all laws which shall be necessary and proper for carrying into execution the foregoing powers70
5463588744Why did anti-feds later adopt the Constitution?The Federalists promised to add a Bill of Rights71
5463588745BicameralHaving two branches of a type of government72
5463588746UnicameralHaving one branch of a type of government73

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