Title: THE CONFEDERATION AND THE CONSTITUTION
1THE CONFEDERATION AND THE CONSTITUTION
2Changes In Society Caused By Revolution
- Exodus of loyalists/conservatives
- New Patriot elite
- Ethic of democracy
- Gains in separation of church and state
- Slavery started to be challenged
- More equality for women
- Republican Motherhood
3Early Emancipation in the North
4Constitution Making In The States
- 1776, Continental Congress called on colonies to
draft new constitutions - Why?
- Common features of state constitutions
- Intended to represent fundamental law
- All deliberately had weak executive and judicial
branches - All legislatures had great powers
- Most legislatures elected annually
5Economic Crosscurrents
- Most Americans worse off economically
- Runaway inflation
- Heavy state and national debt
- Economic Democracy.
- Manufacturing stimulated. Why?
- New Markets
- Empress of China
6A Shaky Start Towards Union
- America was much more a name than a real country.
- ChallengeBind the 13 states together
- Economy didnt help
- Hopeful signs
- Similar governments
- Similar culture
- Great Leaders
7Articles of Confederation
- Nature of Second Continental Congress
- Locus of Sovereignty.
- in 1776, Congress appointed a committee to draft
a written constitution for the new nation - Articles of Confederation was the result
- adopted by Congress in 1777
- ratified by all 13 colonies in 1781
- Western Land Dispute holds up ratification
8Western Land Cessions
9Defects in the Articles
- Articles of Confederation destined for failure.
- States no longer completely independent, but
central government had little power over them. - National government dealt only with common
affairs such as trade and foreign relations. - What are major defects?
10Landmarks In Land Laws
- Art. of Confed. Congress passed important
legislation that dealt with the Old Northwest. - Territory of Ohio Valley ceded by the states to
Nat. government. - Land Ordinance of 1785
- Survey and Sale
- Northwest Ordinance of 1787
- governance
11Land Ordinance of 1785
- Old Northwest to be sold and the proceeds used to
pay off the national debt. - Land surveyed.
- Land divided into townships 6 miles squared.
- Each split into 36 sections of 1 square mile each
(640 acres). - Land to be sold for not less than 1 an acre.
Had to buy a minimum of 640 acres (1 section). - 16th section of each township was set aside to be
sold with proceeds used for benefit of public
schools.
12Surveying the Old Northwest
13Northwest Ordinance of 1787
- Divided the land into five areas (Ohio, Illinois,
Michigan, Wisconsin and Indiana). - Basic premise Could become states equal to
original 13. - Two evolutionary territorial stages
- When territory had 60,000 inhabitants, it could
draft state Constitution and petition for
admission as state by Congress - Slavery prohibited
14The Worlds Ugly Duckling
- England a thorn in US side. How?
- refused to enter into a trade treaty,
- Refused to repeal the navigation Laws.
- shut off their West Indian trade from the U.S.
- refused to abandon its forts in NW along border.
- Reasons stated
- Real reasons
- Why doesnt Congress impose trade restrictions?
15Spain and France
- Spain was also hostile to United States.
- New Orleans right to deposit issue
- Spain and South Eastern Indians
- Disputed Territory
- France also getting hostile over debt.
- North African pirates raid our shipping
16The Horrid Specter Of Anarchy
- During the mid-1780s, the economic situation in
America was in dire straits. Examples - Nations credit was going bad.
- Interest on debt accumulating.
- States not paying their share of taxes.
- Fed. Govt broke.
- Other problems?
- States try two things to raise money.
- Create inflation by printing more dollars
- Raise property taxes
17Shays Rebellion
- Shays Rebellion
- Who is most frightened by Shays Rebellion and
other outbreaks? - What are their concerns?
- Fear of Mobocracy.
- Need stronger federal government.
- Perception that civic virtue not working
- Perception that civil authority not sufficient to
control the people. - Perception that government too closely controlled
by the people is ineffective.
18Prelude to Constitution
- What power did conservatives most want national
government to have? - Annapolis Convention 1786
- Only 5 states showed up
- Alexander Hamilton saves with his report calling
for a Constitutional Convention the next year to
amend the Articles.
19Constitutional Convention
- Congress not eager to call a constitutional
convention - Finally called a convention for the sole and
express purpose of revising the Articles of
Confederation - Every state but Rhode Island chose a
representative - 55 delegates from 12 states met in Philadelphia
on May 25, 1787 - All selected by the state legislatures who
themselves were chosen only by landowners - Sessions held in complete secrecy. Why?
20Constitutional Convention
- Nature of the Delegates
- George Washington was unanimously elected
chairman - Ben Franklin was the elder statesman and the
oldest at 81 - James Madison dubbed Father of Constitution
because of his contributions to the constitution.
21Characteristics of Delegates
- Delegates were conservative and well off
- Young but experienced statesmen
- Nationalists
- Wanted a strong government so that could have
unified trade laws - Wanted to stop unrestrained democracy
22Hammering Out A Bundle Of Compromises
- Decided to completely scrap Articles and start
fresh - Most significant issue?
- Large States Plan (Virginia Plan)
- Small States Plan (New Jersey Plan)
- Great Compromise (Connecticut Plan)
- Revenue Bills
- Presidency
- 3/5 Compromise
- Slave Trade Compromise
23Safeguards For Conservatism
- Delegates agreed that unbridled democracy should
be limited. - Constitution was designed to be a bulwark against
Mobocracy. Examples - Federal judges were to be appointed for life
- President elected indirectly by Electoral College
- Senators to be chosen indirectly by state
legislatures - House the only part of federal government chosen
directly by the people
24Checks On The Power Of Government
- People voted
- Powers of National Government were limited.
- It could only exercise power in those areas that
the constitution specified. - All other governmental functions reserved to
states.
25Signers of the Constitution
26Federalists And Anti-federalists
- Framers knew that would be difficult to get
national acceptance of the Constitution. - Number of states necessary to ratify?
- Ratification through state conventions. States
themselves decided how delegates to convention
selected. - Why were many people against the Constitution?
27Federalists And Anti-federalists
- Federalists
- Anti-Federalists
- Characteristics of Federalists
- supported a strong central govt. and, thus, the
Constitution. - more respectable, mostly propertied people,
educated - lived in settled areas along seaboard mostly
conservative - George Washington, James Madison, John Marshall.
28Anti-federalists
- Characteristic of Anti-Federalists
- Advocates of states rights
- Believed that strong central government was a
threat to individual liberty - Back country people, less educated, and
illiterate. - Wanted a bill of rights to protect the few
individual freedoms they had. - believed that state sovereignty was being
submergedIt was!!
29The Struggle over Ratification
30Great Debate In The States
- Four states accepted right away Delaware
(first), Pennsylvania, New Jersey, Georgia, then
Connecticut - Massachusetts was 6th but VIP. Why?
- Maryland, South Carolina, New Hampshire next
- New Hampshire made it official with nine
31Four Laggard States
- Even though Nine had ratified, two most populous
states, New York and Virginia, had not. - These states were critical to the new nation
- New York the toughest battle. Convention had an
anti-federalist majority. - Federalist papers written to try to turn the tide
in New York
32Federalist Papers
- Written by John Jay, Alexander Hamilton, James
Madison. - Written anonymously
- 85 Federalist papers give lasting insights into
the meaning of the constitution by those who
drafted it.
33Ratification
- New York Ratified in part because of federalist
papers, in part because Va. and New York
recognized that it couldnt go it alone. - North Carolina and Rhode Island, the two
cantankerous states, are the last to ratify.
34A Conservative Triumph
- Sovereignty still with people, but now checks on
mobocracy - Moved power from the states, where embodied in
one strong branch of government, to the national
government were embodied equally in three
branches of government - All 3 branches represent the people, and the
system of checks and balances protects them. - Constitution as peaceful counter-revolution.