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Chapter 9 - The Confederation and the Constitution Flashcards

Chapter 9 - The Confederation and the Constitution (1776-1790)

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507520152Society of the CincinnatiThe Continental Army officers formed an exclusive hereditary order.
507520153Virginia Statue for Religious Freedomcreated in 1786 by Thomas Jefferson and his co-reformers; stated that religion should not be imposed on anybody and that each person decided his/her own faith.
507520154Philadelphia Quakersin 1775 founded the first anti-slavery society.
5075201551st Continental Congresscalled for the complete abolition of the slave trade in 1774. Several northern states went further and either abolished slavery altogether or provided the gradual emancipation of slaves. No states south of Pennsylvania abolished slavery.
5075201562nd Continental Congresscalled upon the colonies in 1776 to draft new constitutions. Massachusetts called a special convention to draft its constitution and then submitted the final draft to the people.
507520157State ConstitutionsAs written documents, they were intended to represent a fundamental law, superior to the short-lived impulses of ordinary legislation.
507520158Capitals in Revolutionary erathe capitals of New Hampshire, New York, Virginia, North Carolina, South Carolina, and Georgia were all moved westward.
507520159Economic democracypreceded political democracy. Due to the independence from Britain, the United States had to make everything on its own which it no longer imported from Britain. Many Americans were poor because the economy was so bad.
507520160Articles of ConfederationShortly before declaring independence in 1776, the 2nd Continental Congress appointed a committee to draft a written constitution for the new nation. It was adopted by Congress in 1777 and it convinced France that America had a genuine government in the making. The Articles of Confederation wasn't ratified by all 13 colonies until 1781.
507520161The Articles of ConfederationAmerica's First Constitution. The 13 colonies were joined together for joint action in dealing with common problems such as foreign affairs.
507520162Congress had 2 major handicapsIt had no power to regulate commerce, and this loophole left the states free to establish conflictingly laws regarding tariffs and navigation. Congress couldn't enforce its tax collection program. The states were NOT required to pay the government taxes, they were merely asked.
507520163Land Ordinance of 1785stated that the acreage of the Old Northwest should be sold and the proceeds should be used to help pay off the national debt.
507520164Northwest Ordinance of 1787a uniform national land policy; created the Northwest Territories and gave the land to the government, the land could then be purchased by individuals; when a territory had 60,000 people, it might be admitted by Congress as a state, with all the privileges of the 13 other states.
507520165Lord SheffieldBritain declined to make any commercial treaty with the colonies or to repeal its Navigation Laws. Lord Sheffield argued in his pamphlet that Britain could win back America's trade.
507520166The British remained in the Americaswhere they maintained their fur trade with the Indians. The American states did not honor the treaty of peace in regard to debts and Loyalists. The British stayed primarily to keep the Indians on the side of the British so to defend against future attacks on Canada by the Americans.
507520167Spainwas openly unfriendly to the Americans. It closed off the Mississippi river to commerce in 1784.
507520168Shay's Rebellionin western Massachusetts in 1786; when impoverished back-country farmers, who were losing their farms through mortgage foreclosures and tax delinquencies, attempted to enforce their demands of cheap paper money, lighter taxes, and a suspension of property takeovers; led by Captain Daniel Shays. The uprising was crushed but it left fear in the propertied class of mobs.
5075201691786Virginia called for a convention at Annapolis, Maryland. There, Alexander Hamilton saved the convention from collapsing - delegates from only 5 states showed up. He called upon Congress to summon a convention to meet in Philadelphia the next year, not to deal with just commerce, but to fix then entire fabric of the Articles of Confederation.
507520170Alexander Hamiltonwas an advocate of a super-powerful central government.
507520171May 25, 178755 representatives from all of the states except for Rhode Island were sent to Philadelphia to talk of the government in the future of the country.
507520172Constitutional ConventionGeorge Washington was elected as the leader. The delegates hoped to save the revolutionary idealism and make it into a strong political structure. Some of the delegates decided they would scrap the old Articles of Confederation, contradicting instructions from Congress to revise it.
507520173Large-State Planwas proposed by Virginia and was first pushed forward as the framework of the Constitution. It said that the arrangement in Congress should be based upon a state's population.
507520174Small-State Planpresented by New Jersey. It centered on equal representation in Congress without regards to a state's size or population.
507520175Great Compromiseof the convention was hammered out and finally agreed upon. It called for representation by population in the House of Representatives, and equal representation in the Senate. Each state would have 2 senators. The new Constitution also called for a President. Because of arguments over if the slaves would count towards the general population of the state, the "three-fifths compromise" was created. The new Constitution also called for the end of the slave trade by the end of 1807. All new state constitutions except Georgia's forbade overseas slave trade.
507520176Rhode Islandwas not present at the Constitutional Convention.
507520177Safeguards for ConservatismThe members of the Constitutional Convention agreed economically-demanded sound money and the protection of private property; and politically-favored a stronger government with 3 branches and with checks and balances among them.
507520178Anti-federalistswere led by Samuel Adams, Patrick Henry, and Richard Henry Lee. The followers consisted of states' rights devotees, back country dwellers, and one-horse farmers - in general, the poorest class.
507520179Federalistswere led by George Washington and Benjamin Franklin. Most of the Federalists lived in the settled areas along the seaboard. Overall, they were wealthier than the Anti-federalists, more educated, and better organized. They also controlled the press.
507520180First 9 statesDelaware, Pennsylvania, New Jersey, Georgia, Connecticut, Massachusetts, Maryland, South Carolina, and New Hampshire were the first 9 states to sign it.
5075201814 Laggard StatesVirginia, New York, North Carolina, and Rhode Island were the only states to not sign the Constitution. They all ratified the Constitution before it was put into effect. Rhode Island was the last state to ratify it and it did so only after the new government had been in operation for a few months. These 4 states did not ratify the Constitution because they wanted to but because they had to. They could not safely exist outside the fold.
5075201823 BranchesThe architects of the Constitution contented that every branch-executive, judiciary, and legislative-effectively represented the people. By imbedding the principle of self-rule in a self-limiting system of checks and balances among these 3 branches, the Constitution settled the conflicting doctrines of liberty and order.

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