Title: State Constitutions
1State Constitutions Articles of Confederation
- Differing Opinions
- Elite republicans welcomed hierarchical rule,
not based on heredity. Feared democracy as mob
rule. - Working poor people - worried that propertied
elites prospered at their expense - Rural Colonist emphasized decentralization of
power as much as possible
2State Constitutions Articles of Confederation
- From Colonies to States
- Emphasis of State Governments during
Revolutionary War - Intensification of prewar struggle between more
radical democratic elements and elites who would
minimize popular participation - New states continued to retain colonial
precedents that favored the wealthiest elites
3State Constitutions Articles of Confederation
- From Colonies to States
- Colonial Practices in New State Constitutions
- 11 had bicameral legislatures
- Few questioned property requirements for voters
and elected officials - Representatives should use independent judgment
(not just vote the will of the people) - Candidates campaigned on basis of personal
reputation and fitness for office not policies. - 1770s 1780s equal distribution of legislative
seats between cities and counties
4State Constitutions Articles of Confederation
- From Colonies to States
- Colonial Practices in New State Constitutions
(checks on Power) - Colonist changed previously British
constitutions were body of customary arrangements
and practices - Colonists now saw Constitution as written
compacts that defined and limited the powers of
rulers - Constitutions were adopted by popular
ratification and could only be changed if voters
decided to amend.
5State Constitutions Articles of Confederation
- From Colonies to States
- Colonial Practices in New State Constitutions
(checks on Power) - Revolutionary Constitutions spelled out
citizens fundamental rights as final check on
government - 1784 all states included Bill of Rights in state
constitutions
6State Constitutions Articles of Confederation
- From Colonies to States
- After newness of Revolution
- Wealthier landowners, bankers, merchants, and
lawyers, reasserted their desires for centralized
authority and political prerogatives of wealth. - Apportionment according to property values
- Governor with powers to appoint and vetoing
legislation - 1790 Georgia and Pennsylvania substituted
unicameral legislature - Other states raise property qualifications
- Making room for Wisdom, remarkable integrity
7State Constitutions Articles of Confederation
- From Colonies to States
- After newness of Revolution
- Thomas Paine 1782
- The American Revolution was intended to ring in
a new era and give a new turn to human affairs.
8State Constitutions Articles of Confederation
- Articles of Confederation
- 1776 John Dickinson drafted a proposal for the
national Constitution - Congress adopted a weakened version of his
proposal
9State Constitutions Articles of Confederation
- Articles of Confederation
- Ratified by all thirteen states in 1777,
reserved to each state its sovereignty, freedom
and independence and was a very weak and
ineffectual government. - Americans were citizens of state first and nation
second - 1776 Whigs never considered consolidating this
vast continent under one National Government - Confederacy of States, each must have a separate
government
10State Constitutions Articles of Confederation
- Articles of Confederation
- Structure of Government
- Executive there was none
- Congressional Committees oversaw financial,
diplomatic, and military affairs - Judicial there was none
- No system to compel allegiance to its laws
- Legislative all authority held by Congress
11State Constitutions Articles of Confederation
- Articles of Confederation
- Structure of Government
- Legislative all authority held by Congress
- Unicameral congress
- One vote per state (regardless of the number of
delegates sent by each state or population) - No power to tax (without every states approval),
had to request money from states - No power to regulate interstate or foreign
commerce
12State Constitutions Articles of Confederation
- Articles of Confederation
- War-related political issues
- Funding the military
- Establishing military alliance with France
- Negotiating a Treaty
13State Constitutions Articles of Confederation
- Articles of Confederation
- Postwar issues
- Robert Morris U. S. Superintendent of Finance
- U.S. had borrowed funds form abroad and printed
paper money (continentals) - Lack of faith in government destroyed value 98
loss 1776-1781 - Attempted passage of the Import Duty of 1782
Rhodes Island voted against - State versus national control of war debt debate
(and the need to establish financial credit,
attract capital, and establish a strong national
government)
14State Constitutions Articles of Confederation
- Articles of Confederation
- Postwar issues
- Newburgh Conspiracy 1783 Robert Morris and
Alexander Hamilton - Persuaded army officers, to threaten a coup
detat unless the treasury obtain the taxation
authority needed to raise their pay - George Washington stopped the plot
- 1783 war ends and contributions from states
decreasing - Late 1780s states 80 behind requested funds to
operate and honor national debt
15State Constitutions Articles of Confederation
- Articles of Confederation
- Postwar issues
- Economic Depression 1784
- North East hit the hardest poor land for
farming, high taxes, and tightening credit - Mid-Atlantic ship farm goods to Europe (famine)
- Southern Planters switch crops (hemp)
- 1770 2/3 of exports originated in the South
- 1790 less than ½ came form the South
- British Trade restrictions Confederation could
not pry trade concessions from Great Britain - Before war 60 of Northern exports went to West
Indies - Half of all American exports went to Great
Britain or its colonies - Great Britain had halted trade during the war
16State Constitutions Articles of Confederation
- Articles of Confederation
- Postwar issues
- Western territories Northwest Territories
states surrendered claims to more that 160
million acres north of the Ohio River, 1780-1786 - Ordinance of 1785 Congress established uniform
procedures for surveying this land - Law established a township six miles square as a
basic unit of settlement. - Etc.
- Northwest Ordinance of 1787 congress defined
the steps to become a state - it forbade slavery while a territory, but after
becoming a state it could be legalized - These two ordinances laid procedures for
territory farther west
17State Constitutions Articles of Confederation
- Articles of Confederation
- Postwar issues
- Indian Affairs Dec of Ind. Described the
natives as merciless Indian savages - Most available land from Appalachians to
Mississippi River was occupied by Native
Americans - 1789 divided into more than 80 tribes 150,000
people - Confederation commissioners declared You are a
subdued peoplewe claim the country by conquest.
18State Constitutions Articles of Confederation
- Articles of Confederation
- Postwar issues
- Indian Affairs
- Northwestern Indians gave in under threats of
continued warfare - Iroquois lost about ½ of their land in NY and
Pennsylvania in the second treaty of Fort
Stanwix, 1784 - Delaware Shawnee leaders were forced to
recognize American sovereignty over their lands
at Fort McIntosh Treaty, 1785 and Fort Finny
Treaty, 1786
19State Constitutions Articles of Confederation
- Articles of Confederation
- Postwar issues
- Indian Affairs
- Most Indians reacted with outrage
- Repudiated Treaties
- Natives felt British still present in the west,
would supply arms to resist - Mohawk Joseph Brant
- Leader of Indian resistance
- Translated book of Mark and Anglican Prayers
- Became minor celebrity in London
20State Constitutions Articles of Confederation
- Articles of Confederation
- Postwar issues
- Shayss Rebellion 1786
- Jay Gardoqui Treaty -
- opened up valuable Spanish markets to eastern
merchants - Renounced Spanish claims to disputed southwestern
lands - Relinquished American export rights through New
Orleans for another 20 years - Treaty rejected by Americans
21State Constitutions Articles of Confederation
- Articles of Confederation
- Postwar issues
- Shayss Rebellion 1786
- The depression of the 1780s in New England not
fully recovered - Competing political interests in the issue of
national government powers - New England Farmers taxes, etc
- Mid-Atlantic and southern farmers open markets
for goods, - Massachusetts bankers strong government for
confidence - Merchants and shippers secure shipping abroad
to ensure economic stability and Americas
standing in Atlantic Econ - Land speculators more activist policy against
Spain, Britain and Natives - Western settlers more activist policy against
Spain, Britain, and Natives - Urban artisans Govt that would impose a
uniformly high tariff as protection from foreign
competition
22State Constitutions Articles of Confederation
- Articles of Confederation
- Postwar issues
- Shayss Rebellion 1786
- Daniel Shays and the farmers protest
- Created fear of mobocracy vulnerability
- Rumored threats by Spanish
- Widespread public awareness of the weaknesses of
the national government - The Annapolis Convention and the call for a
convention to revise the Articles of
Confederation