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The Confederation and the Constitution, 1776– 1790
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Page 1: The Confederation and the Constitution, 1776–1790.

The Confederation and the Constitution, 1776–1790

Page 2: The Confederation and the Constitution, 1776–1790.

Warm up-

• What were some issues facing the country right after the Revolutionary War?

• Quiz on ch 9&10– 10/9&10• Quiz on ch 11 & 12– 10/15&16• Test 10/19-22

Page 3: The Confederation and the Constitution, 1776–1790.

• Chapter Themes• Theme: The American Revolution was not a radical transformation

like the French or Russian revolutions, but it did produce political innovations and some social change in the direction of greater equality and democracy.

• Theme: Compromise on a number of important issues was required in order to create the new federal Constitution. Adopting the new document required great political skill and involved changing the ratification process defined in the Articles of Confederation, writing persuasively in support of the stronger central government, and promising to add amendments to protect individual liberty and states' rights.

• Theme: The federal Constitution represented a moderately conservative reaction against the democratic and decentralizing effects of the Revolution and the Articles of Confederation. In effect, it embedded the revolutionary ideals of liberty and popular government within a strong framework designed to advance national identity and interests against the dangers of fragmentation and disorder.

Page 4: The Confederation and the Constitution, 1776–1790.

• CHAPTER SUMMARY• The American Revolution did not overturn the social order, but it did

produce substantial changes in social customs, political institutions, and ideas about society and government. Among the changes were the separation of church and state in some places, the abolition of slavery in the North, written political constitutions, and a shift in political power from the eastern seaboard toward the frontier.

• The first weak national government, the Articles of Confederation, was unable to exercise real authority, although it did successfully deal with the western lands issue. The Confederation’s weaknesses in handling foreign policy, commerce and the Shays rebellion spurred the movement to alter the Articles.

• Instead of revising the Articles, the well-off delegates to the Constitutional Convention created a permanent charter for a whole new government. In a series of compromises, the convention produced a plan that provided for a vigorous central government, a strong executive, and protection for property, while still upholding republican principles and states’ rights. The pro-Constitution Federalists, generally representing wealthier and more commercial forces, frightened other groups who feared that the new government would undermine their rights and their interests.

• The Federalists met their strongest opposition from Anti-Federalists in Virginia and New York, but through effective organization and argument, as well as promises to incorporate a bill of rights into the document, they succeeded in getting the Constitution ratified. By establishing the new national government, the Federalists checked the Revolutionary movement, but their conservative regime embraced the central Revolutionary values of popular republican government and liberty.

Page 5: The Confederation and the Constitution, 1776–1790.

Defining Republican Culture

• Republicanism—new core ideology– Uncompromising commitment to liberty and

equality– Evangelical notions of high public morality

• Post-Revolutionary divisions– Balancing individual liberty with social order– Balancing property rights with equality

• Varying answers resulted in variety of republican governments

Page 6: The Confederation and the Constitution, 1776–1790.

Living in the Shadow of Revolution

• Revolution introduced unintended changes into American society

• Hierarchical social relations challenged

• Fundamental questions raised about the meaning of equality

Page 7: The Confederation and the Constitution, 1776–1790.

African Americans in the New Republic

• Abolitionist sentiment spread in wake of the Revolution– John Woolman

• African Americans embraced Declaration’s stress on natural rights

• African American intellectual success made it hard to deny their equality– Benjamin Banneker, math and astronomy– Phyllis Wheatley, poetry

Page 8: The Confederation and the Constitution, 1776–1790.

African Americans in the New Republic: Emancipation

• Northern states– By 1800, slavery legally dying in North– Racism and segregation remained

• Southerners debated abolition– Some individuals freed slaves– Economic motives overcame republican

ideals – Cotton gin (1793) breathed new life into

slavery

Page 9: The Confederation and the Constitution, 1776–1790.

The Challenge of Women’s Rights

• Pre-Revolutionary trend ended tyranny in the family– Locke, Some Thoughts Concerning Education

• Women demanded the natural right of equality

• Nurtured proper values through “Republican Motherhood”

• Women raise children to be good citizens and look for greater good

• Denied political and legal rights

Page 10: The Confederation and the Constitution, 1776–1790.

The States: Experiments in Republicanism

• Revolutionary state constitutions served as experiments in republican government

• Insights gleaned from state experiences later applied to constructing central government

Page 11: The Confederation and the Constitution, 1776–1790.

Blueprints for State Government

• State constitution writers insisted on preparing written documents

• Precedents in colonial charters, church covenants

• Major break with England’s unwritten constitution (YES I know what you are going to say….1215 Magna Carta is a loose collection of 37 laws which limited King’s power)

Page 12: The Confederation and the Constitution, 1776–1790.

Natural Rights and the State Constitutions

• State constitutions guaranteed natural rights– Freedom of religion– Freedom of speech– Freedom of the press– Private property– Trial by jury

• Governors weakened

• Elected legislatures given most power

Page 13: The Confederation and the Constitution, 1776–1790.

Power to the People

• Procedure for adoption of Constitution pioneered by Massachusetts – Constitution written by a special convention – Ratification by referendum of the people

• Dangers to the new constitutions– Population succumbed to material temptation

and greed– Personal liberty threatened property

Page 14: The Confederation and the Constitution, 1776–1790.

Stumbling Toward a New National Government

• War for independence required coordination among states

• Central government first created to meet wartime need for coordination

Page 15: The Confederation and the Constitution, 1776–1790.

Articles of Confederation

• John Dickinson’s plan for central government– Proposed cession of West to Congress

opposed– Proposed equality in state representation

opposed

• Articles of Confederation severely limited central government’s authority over states

Page 16: The Confederation and the Constitution, 1776–1790.

Articles of Confederation: Central Government Structure and Power

• Each state had one vote– Could send two to seven representatives

• No executive• No taxing power• Amendments required unanimity• In charge of foreign and Native American

relations, military, and disputes between states

• No western lands

Page 17: The Confederation and the Constitution, 1776–1790.

Western Land: Key to the First Constitution

• Native Americans lost out when British left• Maryland’s ratification of Articles delayed

for Virginia’s renunciation of western claims

• 1781—Virginia took lead in ceding western claims to Congress

• Other states ceded claims to Congress• Congress gained ownership of all land

west of Appalachians

Page 18: The Confederation and the Constitution, 1776–1790.

Western Land Claims Ceded by the States

Page 19: The Confederation and the Constitution, 1776–1790.

Northwest Ordinance: The Confederation’s Major Achievement• Land Ordinance

– Orderly division of land into sections and townships

– One section set aside to finance school system

– Land to sell for minimum of $1 gold per acre• Speculation

– Manasseh Cutler and the Ohio Company

Page 20: The Confederation and the Constitution, 1776–1790.

Northwest Ordinance: The Confederation’s Major Achievement• Northwest Ordinance, 1787

– Created three to five new territories in Northwest– Population of 5000 may elect Assembly– Population of 60,000 may petition for statehood– Bill of Rights provided– Slavery outlawed

• South of the Ohio River• Settlement more chaotic

– Daniel Boone and Kentucky– State of Franklin

Page 21: The Confederation and the Constitution, 1776–1790.

Northwest Territory

Page 22: The Confederation and the Constitution, 1776–1790.

Land Ordinance of 1785

Page 23: The Confederation and the Constitution, 1776–1790.

Strengthening Federal Authority

• Dissatisfaction with Confederation• Economic recovery after the Revolution

slow• People thought stronger central

government would restore economic growth

Page 24: The Confederation and the Constitution, 1776–1790.

The Nationalist Critique

• Restoration of trade with Britain caused trade deficit and hard currency shortage

• Congress unable to address trade, inflation, and debt

• Congress had no power to tax• Nationalists versus localists• Failure to pay soldiers sparked “Newburgh

Conspiracy” (squelched by Washington)• Failure of reform prompted nationalists to

consider Articles hopelessly defective

Page 25: The Confederation and the Constitution, 1776–1790.

Diplomatic Humiliation

• Congress failed to get states to collect debts owed British merchants

• In retaliation, British refused to evacuate Ohio River Valley

• Spain closed New Orleans to American commerce in 1784– John Jay to negotiate re-opening Mississippi – Instead signed treaty favoring Northeast– West and South denounced, Congress

rejected Jay-Gardoqui Treaty

Page 26: The Confederation and the Constitution, 1776–1790.

“Have We Fought for This?”

• By 1785, the country seemed adrift• Washington: “Was it with these

expectations that we launched into a sea of trouble?”

Page 27: The Confederation and the Constitution, 1776–1790.

The Genius of James Madison

• Recognition by 1780s of shortcomings in small state republics– Ordinary citizens not virtuous enough for a republic– Majority did not preserve the property rights of the

minority• Stronger central government gained support• James Madison persuaded Americans that large

republics could be free and democratic– Competing factions would neutralize each other– Federalist #10

Page 28: The Confederation and the Constitution, 1776–1790.

Constitutional Reform

• May 1786—Annapolis Convention agreed to meet again, write a new constitution

• Shay’s Rebellion, 1787– Tax revolt of indebted veterans– Symbolized breakdown in law and order as

perceived by propertied classes• Crisis strengthened support for new

central government

Page 29: The Confederation and the Constitution, 1776–1790.

The Philadelphia Convention

• Convened May 1787 • Fifty-five delegates from all states except

Rhode Island• Delegates possessed wide practical

experience• Secrecy rule imposed• Vote by state, needed only a majority

instead of nine states

Page 30: The Confederation and the Constitution, 1776–1790.

Inventing a Federal Republic: The Virginia Plan

• Central government may veto all state acts• Bicameral legislature of state representatives

– One house elected, the other appointed– Larger states would have more

representatives • Chief executive appointed by Congress• Small states objected to large-state dominance

Page 31: The Confederation and the Constitution, 1776–1790.

Inventing a Federal Republic: The New Jersey Plan

• Congress given greater taxing and trade regulation powers

• Each state would have one vote in a unicameral legislature

• Articles of Confederation otherwise untouched

Page 32: The Confederation and the Constitution, 1776–1790.

Compromise Saves the Convention

• Each state given two delegates in the Senate—a victory for the small states

• House of Representatives based on population—a victory for the large states– All money bills must originate in the House

• Three-fifths of the slave population counted toward representation in the House

Page 33: The Confederation and the Constitution, 1776–1790.

Compromising with Slavery

• Issue of slavery threatened Convention’s unity– Northerners tended to be opposed– Southerners threatened to bolt if slavery

weakened• Slave trade permitted to continue to 1808

“Great as the evil is, a dismemberment of the Union would be worse.”

—James Madison

Page 34: The Confederation and the Constitution, 1776–1790.
Page 35: The Confederation and the Constitution, 1776–1790.

The Last Details

• July 26—Committee of Detail formed to prepare rough draft

• Revisions to executive– Electoral College selects president– Executive given a veto over legislation– Executive may appoint judges

• Decision that Bill of Rights unnecessary

Page 36: The Confederation and the Constitution, 1776–1790.

We, the People

• Convention sought to bypass vested interests of state legislatures

• Power of ratification to special state conventions

• Constitution to go into effect on approval by nine state conventions

• Phrase “We the People” made Constitution a government of the people, not the states

Page 37: The Confederation and the Constitution, 1776–1790.

Whose Constitution?Struggle for Ratification

• Supporters recognized the Constitution went beyond the Convention’s mandate

• Document referred to states with no recommendation

Page 38: The Confederation and the Constitution, 1776–1790.

Federalists

• Supported the Constitution• Name suggests they supported less of a

strong central government than they did• Well-organized• The Federalist Papers

Page 39: The Confederation and the Constitution, 1776–1790.

Anti-Federalists

• Opposed to the Constitution• Distrusted any government removed from

direct control of the people• Suspected the new Constitution favored

the rich and powerful • Their ideas later reflected in the age of

Andrew Jackson

Page 40: The Confederation and the Constitution, 1776–1790.

Progress of Ratification

• No clear correlation between social status and support for Constitution

• Succeeded in winning ratification in eleven states by June 1788

• North Carolina ratified November 1789• Rhode Island ratified May 1790• Americans closed ranks behind the

Constitution

Page 41: The Confederation and the Constitution, 1776–1790.

Adding the Bill of Rights

• The fruit of anti-Federalist activism• Adding Bill of Rights forestalled Second

Constitutional Convention• Purpose was to protect individual rights from

government interference• Rights included:

– Freedom of assembly, speech, religion, the press, and bearing arms

– Speedy trial by a jury of peers– No unreasonable searches

• First ten amendments added by December 1791

Page 42: The Confederation and the Constitution, 1776–1790.

Success Depends on the People

• Some Americans complained that the new government had a great potential for despotism

• Others were more optimistic and saw it as a great beginning for the new nation