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Unit 4 Part 1 Articles of Confederation SSCG1 The student will demonstrate knowledge of the political philosophies that shaped the development of United States constitutional government
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Unit 4 Part 1 Articles of Confederation SSCG1 The student will demonstrate knowledge of the political philosophies that shaped the development of United.

Dec 14, 2015

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Everett French
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Page 1: Unit 4 Part 1 Articles of Confederation SSCG1 The student will demonstrate knowledge of the political philosophies that shaped the development of United.

Unit 4 Part 1Articles of

Confederation

SSCG1

The student will demonstrate knowledge of the political philosophies that shaped the

development of United States constitutional government

Page 2: Unit 4 Part 1 Articles of Confederation SSCG1 The student will demonstrate knowledge of the political philosophies that shaped the development of United.

Remember…

Declaration signed in 1776

Revolutionary War fought (France helped Americans)

British are defeated

Now we must set up our government…

Page 3: Unit 4 Part 1 Articles of Confederation SSCG1 The student will demonstrate knowledge of the political philosophies that shaped the development of United.

Articles of Confederation

In 1777 a committee appointed by congress presented a plan called the Articles of Confederation.

Basically continued the structure and operation of gov’t as established under the Second Continental Congress

The Articles of Confederation called for a unicameral or single chamber, which they called Congress.

The Articles gave each state one vote in congress.

Page 4: Unit 4 Part 1 Articles of Confederation SSCG1 The student will demonstrate knowledge of the political philosophies that shaped the development of United.

The states wanted a confederation, or “league of friendship” among the 13 independent states rather than a strong national government.

By March 1781 all 13 colonies had ratified the Articles of Confederation

Page 5: Unit 4 Part 1 Articles of Confederation SSCG1 The student will demonstrate knowledge of the political philosophies that shaped the development of United.

Government under the Articles

Congress had only these powers:

1)      Make war and peace

2)      Send and receive ambassadors

3)      Enter into treaties

4)      Raise and equip a navy

5)      Maintain an army by requesting troops from the states

Page 6: Unit 4 Part 1 Articles of Confederation SSCG1 The student will demonstrate knowledge of the political philosophies that shaped the development of United.

6)      Appoint senior military officers

7)      Fix standing of weights and measures

8)      Regulate Indian affairs

9)      Establish post offices

10)      Decided certain disputes among states

Basically, job of the congress was to make laws and settle disputes

Page 7: Unit 4 Part 1 Articles of Confederation SSCG1 The student will demonstrate knowledge of the political philosophies that shaped the development of United.

FYI…

3.1 vocab due tomorrow!

Page 8: Unit 4 Part 1 Articles of Confederation SSCG1 The student will demonstrate knowledge of the political philosophies that shaped the development of United.

Unit 4 Part 2

Strengths and Weaknesses of the Articles of Confederation

Page 9: Unit 4 Part 1 Articles of Confederation SSCG1 The student will demonstrate knowledge of the political philosophies that shaped the development of United.

What the A of C accomplished:

The greatest achievement was the establishment of a fair policy for the development of the lands west of the Appalachians.

The North – west ordinance of 1787 established the principal that the territories were to be developed for statehood on an equal basis with the older states.

The Articles established a peace treaty with Great Britain signed in 1783.

New land was acquired to Miss. River, up to Great Lakes, and down to FL border

Page 10: Unit 4 Part 1 Articles of Confederation SSCG1 The student will demonstrate knowledge of the political philosophies that shaped the development of United.

Weaknesses of the Articles:

Congress could not levy taxes or regulate trade

Congress could not compel a state to obey its decisions

Laws needed approval of 9/13 states

Amending, or changing the Articles, required the consent of every state, and unanimous agreement on any issue did not exist.

No executive branch

No court system

Page 11: Unit 4 Part 1 Articles of Confederation SSCG1 The student will demonstrate knowledge of the political philosophies that shaped the development of United.

Need a Stronger Gov’tAfter the war the states began to quarrel over boundary lines and tariffs.

The new nation had money problems: The government owed $40 million to foreign governments and to American soldiers sill unpaid after the Revolutionary War.

By 1786 America was in an economic depression

This would lead to Shays’s Rebellion

Page 12: Unit 4 Part 1 Articles of Confederation SSCG1 The student will demonstrate knowledge of the political philosophies that shaped the development of United.

Shays’s Rebellion - 1787

Massachusetts government tried to foreclose on farms and jailed many for debt

Former solider Daniel Shays led farmers against Massachusetts Militia and took over court house and freed the prisoners.

Massachusetts called for national government to help.

Government requested troops from other states…no one would help

Page 13: Unit 4 Part 1 Articles of Confederation SSCG1 The student will demonstrate knowledge of the political philosophies that shaped the development of United.

Shays’s Rebellion

Massachusetts Militia finally put down rebellion

Shays’s rebellion showed the states the need to address the weaknesses of the AoC

Page 14: Unit 4 Part 1 Articles of Confederation SSCG1 The student will demonstrate knowledge of the political philosophies that shaped the development of United.
Page 15: Unit 4 Part 1 Articles of Confederation SSCG1 The student will demonstrate knowledge of the political philosophies that shaped the development of United.

Please turn to pg. 49

On a vocab card, please write down the 13 states

On a separate card, please write down the powers of the sovereign states (inside the states in red) and label the card “States’ powers under the Articles of Confederation”

Please make vocab cards for section 2.3 and 2.4

Page 16: Unit 4 Part 1 Articles of Confederation SSCG1 The student will demonstrate knowledge of the political philosophies that shaped the development of United.

Origins of American Government

Unit 4 Part 3: The Constitutional Convention

Page 17: Unit 4 Part 1 Articles of Confederation SSCG1 The student will demonstrate knowledge of the political philosophies that shaped the development of United.

 The Constitutional Convention

Delegates from 12 states attended the Constitutional Convention.

Delegates originally wanted to revise the Article of confederation.

All favored limited and representative government, separation of powers between legislative, executive, and judicial branches, and a stronger national government.

Page 18: Unit 4 Part 1 Articles of Confederation SSCG1 The student will demonstrate knowledge of the political philosophies that shaped the development of United.

 The Virginia Plan

the delegates soon abandoned the revision; planned to write a new constitution. They first considered the Virginia Plan, which had three components:

A bicameral congress (legislature) based on population - with the power to declare state laws unconstitutional

A strong executive chosen by the legislature

A national judiciary chosen by the legislature

Page 19: Unit 4 Part 1 Articles of Confederation SSCG1 The student will demonstrate knowledge of the political philosophies that shaped the development of United.

The New Jersey Plan

The small states fearing domination by the large states, introduced the New Jersey Plan.

The New Jersey Plan:

Has unicameral legislature based on equality~ One vote per state

Congress has power to tax and regulate trade.

Created a weak executive and national courts with limited powers

Page 20: Unit 4 Part 1 Articles of Confederation SSCG1 The student will demonstrate knowledge of the political philosophies that shaped the development of United.

The Convention The Convention deadlocked over representation. Small states wanted equal representation regardless of population. The Connecticut Compromise broke the stalemate on representation. It called for a Senate based on equality with two members from each state; and a House of Representatives based on the population of the state. (higher pop. = more reps)All revenue laws (those concerning spending and taxing) would originate in the House of Representatives.

Page 21: Unit 4 Part 1 Articles of Confederation SSCG1 The student will demonstrate knowledge of the political philosophies that shaped the development of United.

The Three-Fifths Compromise

Debates over slavery and commerce led to more compromise. Southern states wanted enslaved persons to count

for representation, but not for taxation. Northern states called for representation with

taxation.

Under the Three-Fifths Compromise 3/5 of enslaved people would be counted for both for taxation and representation.

Page 22: Unit 4 Part 1 Articles of Confederation SSCG1 The student will demonstrate knowledge of the political philosophies that shaped the development of United.

Now…

Please work on the vocab assigned Friday, and the cards with the 13 states and the states’ powers.

Also, make cards for all of the plans and Three-Fifths Compromise.

Page 23: Unit 4 Part 1 Articles of Confederation SSCG1 The student will demonstrate knowledge of the political philosophies that shaped the development of United.

Unit 4 Part 4 notes

Constitutional Convention

Page 24: Unit 4 Part 1 Articles of Confederation SSCG1 The student will demonstrate knowledge of the political philosophies that shaped the development of United.

The Convention  To satisfy the divided interests of the North and the South, the delegates agreed that Congress would ban the slave trade in 1808.

They gave Congress the power to regulate foreign and interstate commerce (or trade among the states.)

Page 25: Unit 4 Part 1 Articles of Confederation SSCG1 The student will demonstrate knowledge of the political philosophies that shaped the development of United.

The ConventionIn September 1787 the delegates sent the Constitution to the states for ratification. For the new constitution to take effect nine of the thirteen states had to approve it. The debate divided the public. Supporters of the Constitution ~ the Federalists: argued that only a strong national government could protect the nation from enemies and solve its internal problems. The Opponents of the Constitution ~ Anti Federalists: feared a strong central government. They warned that without the protections of a Bill of Rights, the government could take away liberties won in the Revolution.

Page 26: Unit 4 Part 1 Articles of Confederation SSCG1 The student will demonstrate knowledge of the political philosophies that shaped the development of United.

The Federalist Papers

The Federalist Papers were written and published during the years 1787 and 1788

To persuade New York voters to ratify the proposed constitution.

85 essays outlining how this new government would operate and why this type of government was the best choice for the United States of America

Page 27: Unit 4 Part 1 Articles of Confederation SSCG1 The student will demonstrate knowledge of the political philosophies that shaped the development of United.
Page 28: Unit 4 Part 1 Articles of Confederation SSCG1 The student will demonstrate knowledge of the political philosophies that shaped the development of United.

The Federalist Papers

Alexander Hamilton wrote 52, James Madison wrote 28, and John Jay contributed the remaining five.

Page 29: Unit 4 Part 1 Articles of Confederation SSCG1 The student will demonstrate knowledge of the political philosophies that shaped the development of United.

The Convention The Federalists promised that the new government would immediately add a Bill of Rights to the Constitution. This promise turned the tide in their favor. On June 21, 1788, New Hampshire became the ninth state to ratify, and the Constitution went into effect. By 1790 the new Constitution had the unanimous approval of the thirteen United States of America. It would continue to be the law of the land as the United States spread across the North American continent.

Page 30: Unit 4 Part 1 Articles of Confederation SSCG1 The student will demonstrate knowledge of the political philosophies that shaped the development of United.