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The Constitution and 19thCentury America

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Title: The Constitution and 19thCentury America


1
The Constitution and 19th-Century America
2
Ratification of the Constitution
  • Anti-Federalists
  • republics should be small
  • feared strong central govt like England
  • concern over taxing power
  • Bill of Rights
  • Federalists
  • favored constitution and central govt
  • Redefining republican theory
  • Federalism and popular sovereignty

3
Ratification Debate
  • Federalist Papers
  • Bill of Rights
  • Explaining Ratification Vote
  • Beards thesis
  • Cosmopolitan v. localism
  • Old v. New Revolutionaries
  • geography
  • Federalists support along seaboards, cities
  • merchants, artisans, commercial farmers
  • Anti-Federalists more interior, small farmers
    outside of market

4
Emergence of the Supreme Court
  • Rise of Party Politics
  • Federalists strong in NE and with merchants
  • Demo-Rep. in south/farmers, anti-elitism
  • Revolution of 1800 and Judiciary Act of 1789
  • Judiciary Act of 1801
  • Federalist power play
  • The Judiciary in the Age of Jefferson
  • Judicial review and Marbury v. Madison

Marbury and Marshall
5
Market Revolution and the Constitution
Erie Canal
  • Market Revolution and American Society
  • Embargo and War of 1812
  • stimulated domestic mfg
  • postwar Euro. investment flowed to US
  • war experience change govt policy
  • 2nd Bank of US and protective tariffs
  • Market Economy and Republican Constitutionalism
  • Corporations and the Constitution
  • Dartmouth College v. Woodward (1819)
  • McCulloch v. Maryland (1819)
  • Market and Constitution after Marshall
  • Charles River Bridge Case (1837)

6
Jackson and Indians
  • Indian Law at the time of the Revolution
  • Jackson and Indian Removal Act (1830)
  • Supreme Court and Georgia-Cherokee Disputes
  • Corn Tassel
  • Cherokee Nation v. GA (1831)
  • Domestic dependent nations
  • Worcester v. GA (1832
  • Trail of Tears

7
Slavery in the Early Republic
  • Slavery and Constitution
  • Contradictions/Local institution
  • Early Legal Conflicts
  • Somerset v. Stewart (1772)
  • Must have positive law
  • Personal liberty laws
  • Comity for in transit and free blacks in south
  • Missouri Compromise (1820
  • 36-30 line defines future status of slavery in
    federal territory

8
Slavery and Constitution
  • Abolitionist Theories and the Constitution
  • Garrison Constitution is proslavery
  • Pol. Abol Focus on stopping spread of slavery
    to territories (Free Soil Party)
  • Radicals slavery illegal everywhere because of
    5th amendment due process
  • Fugitive Slave cases
  • Fugitive Slave Law 1793
  • Prigg v. Pennsylvania (1842)
  • PA law conflict federal law yet states not
    compelled to enforce since fed issue
  • 1850s Crises and Road to Dred Scott
  • Secession
  • South argued that north violated original
    constitutional compact that committed nation to
    slavery from personal liberty laws to ignoring
    Dred Scott

9
Fighting a Constitutional War
  • Was Constitutional valid and could it be
    effective in a civil war?
  • Lincoln rejected right to secede
  • Guarantee republican govt (Art. 4, Sect. 4) and
    general welfare clauses
  • Confederate Constitution
  • Compact of states clearly stated
  • Forbid congress power over slavery
  • Lincoln and the war powers
  • Suspended habeas corpus
  • Argued extraordinary but not unconst.
  • Legal Nature of the War
  • Insurrection, rebellion, or international war?
  • Lincoln declares it an insurrection

10
Constitutional Significance of Civil War
  • Maintain constitutional govt with elections
  • Repudiated state sovereignty and compact theory
    of Union
  • No Right of secession
  • Incompatible with nationalization of American
    society in 19th century
  • US not a league but a sovereign nation
  • yet didnt extinguish states rights
  • Emancipated slaves and destroy the Peculiar
    Institution

11
Judiciary and Reconstruction
  • U.S. v. Rhodes (1866)
  • 13th amend guaranteed free institutions not just
    end to chattel slavery
  • Slaughterhouse Cases (1873)
  • Narrowed use of 14th amendment
  • Reflected shift in mood of North towards Recons
  • Civil Rights Cases (1883)
  • Struck down 1875 Civil Rights Act because private
    not state discrimination
  • Significance of Reconstruction
  • Extension of federal power over personal liberty
    and civil rights
  • Tempered by concerns of federalism
  • 13, 14, and 15 Amendment
  • Civil rights nationalized and equal rights
    guaranteed
  • Retreat to Plessy
  • Separate but equal

12
Laissez Faire Constitutionalism
  • Industrialization and Regulation of the Economy
  • Munn v. Illinois (1877)
  • Public interest allows govt reg
  • Substantive Due Process
  • Substantive Due Process holds that the Due
    Process Clause not only requires "due process,"
    that is, basic procedural rights, but that it
    also protects basic substantive rights.
  • Sherman Anti-Trust Act (1890)
  • US v. EC Knight (1895)
  • Production v. commerce
  • Standard Oil v. US (1911)
  • Rule of reason
  • Labor Liberty of contract v. police power
  • Muller v Oregon (1908)
  • Brandeis Brief
  • Lochner v. New York (1905)
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