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Ch. 8 1a. Define and Fears

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Ch. 8 1a. Define and Fears 1st government of the United States. Congress did not want a strong Central Government. Feared it would take the rights of the people away. – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Ch. 8 1a. Define and Fears


1
Ch. 8 1a. Define and Fears
  • 1st government of the United States.
  • Congress did not want a strong Central
    Government.
  • Feared it would take the rights of the people
    away.

2
Into Articles of Confederation (Section 8.1
8.2)
  • 1b. Strengths
  • Declare War
  • Make Treaties
  • Admit New States
  • Manage Indian Affairs.
  • Coin Money.
  • Establish Post Offices.
  • Borrow money.
  • 1c.Weaknesses
  • Continental Dollars worthless.
  • Foreign nations did not respect terr.
  • No way to tax the states, ask.
  • Ask for enlistments.
  • No National Executive.
  • Trade bt/ states could not be controlled.
  • No Court System.

3
2. Early Quarrels and Accomplishments (Section
8.2)
  • 2a. Land Ordinance of 1785
  • Land was bound by the Mississippi R., Ohio R.,
    and Great lakes.
  • Way to divide and sell land to settlers.
  • 2b. Northwest Ordinance of 1787
  • 5000 people could form a government.
  • 60,000 free people, a terr. Can become a state.
  • Same privileges.
  • No slavery in the terr. NW.

4
3. Shays Rebellion and the Need for Change
(Section 8.3)
  • 3a. Shays Rebellion
  • Economy not doing well.
  • Farmers deep in debt.
  • Have to sell land and live stock.
  • Raid gun arsenal.
  • 3b. Call for a Convention.
  • Sign country falling apart.
  • Revise the Articles of Confederation.
  • Make a stronger central government. Make a new
    Constitution.

5
4. Opening the Constitutional Convention
(Section 8.4)
  • 4a. Father of the Constitution.
  • James Madison, bc/ he was the best prepared and
    took great notes.
  • 4b. Shared Beliefs
  • Had to create a stronger central government.
  • 4c. Republic.
  • - Country led by elected representatives.

6
5. How Should States Be Represented (Section
8.5)
  • 5a. Virginia Plan
  • 3 branches of government (same 5c.)
  • 2 house Leg. Branch.
  • Both houses based of Population.
  • Favored the large states.
  • 5b. New Jersey Plan
  • 3 branches of government (same 5c.)
  • 1 house, 1 vote.
  • Favored the small states.

7
6. Resolution The Great Compromise (Section
8.6)
  • 6a. The Great Compromise
  • An agreement between the large and small states
    over representation in congress, legislative
    branch.
  • 2 houses in congress.
  • Senate based on equal (2), small.
  • House of Reps. Based on population, large.

8
6. Resolution The Great Compromise (Section
8.6)
  • 6b. Senate
  • House of congress based of equal representation.
  • 2 from each state.
  • Today 100 senators.
  • 6c. House of Representatives
  • House based on population.
  • Large states get more representatives.
  • Figured every 10 years.
  • Today 435 in the house of reps.

9
7. How should Slaves Count / Three Fifths
Compromise (Section 8.7 and 8.8)
  • 7a. Northern View
  • Did not want count slaves, as this would give
    more representatives to the south.
  • Slaves could not vote.
  • 7b. Southern view
  • Yes, count all the slaves. They are people.
  • People treated as property.

10
7. How should Slaves Count / Three Fifths
Compromise (Section 8.7 and 8.8)
  • 7c. The Compromise / solution
  • 3/5 Compromise.
  • Compromise between the North and the South over
    counting slaves as a part of the population.
  • 3/5 of the slaves (portion) would be counted as a
    part of the total population for determining
    Reps. In the House of Reps.

11
8. How Should the Chief Executive be Elected /
Electoral College (Section 8.9 and 8.10)
  • 8a. One or Three
  • Should they have 1 executive or three, one for
    each branch.
  • The founders decided on one executive for the
    Executive Branch.
  • 8b. Electoral College
  • Every 4 years electors from each state would
    choose the electors who would then vote for the
    President and Vice President.
  • Only position not directly elected by the voters.
  • Only 2 times has the popular vote been different
    than the electoral college vote.

12
9. The Constitution Goes to the States (Section
8.12)
  • 9a. The Federalist
  • They were in favor of the Constitution.
  • Favored a strong central government.
  • 9b. Anti-Federalist
  • They were against the Constitution.
  • Thought the national government had too much
    power.
  • Wanted a bill of rights added to the constitution.

13
9. The Constitution Goes to the States (Section
8.12)
  • 9c. Federal System or Federalism
  • Shared power between the national and state
    governments.
  • Some powers are different and some are the same
    and shared.
  • Examples N trade between the states.
  • S trade with in the state.
  • Both taxes

14
10. Ch. 8 Vocabulary (Exam)
  • 10a. Study the Ch. 8 Notebook Vocabulary page,
    Key Concepts.
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