Part 4 Ratifying the Constitution

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
The Bill of Rights and Good Citizenship. Just because the majority of the members of the Constitutional Convention had signed the document didn’t mean.
Advertisements

THE BILL OF RIGHTS AMENDING THE CONSTITUTION SINCE 1791.
CONSTITUTION By. Jenna Marshall, Andie Vera, Elizabeth Stich, Marielle Holdsworth, Chris Spears.
Amendments and the Bill of Rights
RATIFYING THE CONSTITUTION.
MORE Fun Filled Constitution Info!!!. Federalists and Anti-Federalists When the Constitution was signed in September 1787, not everyone hoped it would.
The Constitution of the United States. This is the Preamble (or introduction) of the Constitution.
Belief that “WE the PEOPLE” hold the power of government.
The Constitution: Federalists v. Anti-Federalists
Mr. Clifford US 1.  Special convention were organized to determine whether or not they supported the Constitution.  -Citizens of each state were elected.
CHAPTER 5 REVIEW 8 TH GRADE AMERICAN HISTORY
Amendment process.
Creating a Republic Part 4 The Bill of Rights and Good Citizenship.
The New Republic Begins. A. Terms A document that sets out the laws and principles of a government A document that sets out the laws and principles of.
Ratifying the Constitution
Ratifying the Constitution and the Bill of Rights
Chapter 3, Section 3 Debating the Constitution p The states approve the Constitution, but many of the states insist that it include a bill of rights.
The US Constitution. Constitutional Convention  When? May 25, 1787  Where? Philadelphia in Independence Hall  Lasted several months in hot summer conditions.
The Constitution :  The Constitution is the highest law in the United States  Each state also has a Constitution  the highest law for that state  The.
Section 7.5: State Conventions Are Organized. When 9 of the 13 states approved, or ratified the Constitution, it would become the supreme law of the land.
Some Challenges of the Convention 1787 –Most people wanted a government that could keep order in a country filled with conflict –Strong enough to protect.
RATIFYING THE CONSTITUTION CHAPTER 5 SECTION 3.
Creating a Republic Part 4 The Bill of Rights and Good Citizenship.
A New United States U.S. Constitution English democratic tradition Framers of the Constitution were intelligent/schooled men limit powers Magna.
FEDERALIST & ANTI-FEDERALIST AND THE BILL OF RIGHTS Ratifying the Constitution.
CH 5 Section 3 The Fight Over the Constitution. Federalists: led by George Washington and James Madison Argued that the division of powers and the system.
The Philosophies, Arguments, and the Men Who Achieved It Ratifying the US Constitution Ratifying the US Constitution.
2 pt 3 pt 4 pt 5 pt 2 pt 3 pt 4 pt 5 pt 1 pt 2 pt 3 pt 4 pt 5 pt 1 pt 2 pt 3 pt 4 pt 5 pt 1 pt Definitions Important People Bill of Rights First 5 Bill.
Knowledge Connections Definition Picture Term Vocabulary 
RATIFYING THE CONSTITUTION. OBJECTIVES Identify/Define: Ratification, Federalists, Antifederalists, The Federalist, The Bill of Rights Explain what the.
Constitutional Amendments Read pages Read pages Answer question #2, page 77 Answer question #2, page 77 Answer question #5, page 77 Answer.
Debating the Constitution
Ratifying the Constitution
Ratifying the Constitution
Ratifying Our Constitution…
Debating the Constitution
Writing the Constitution
Let Freedom Ring Bill of Rights – Written by James Madison
8.3 Ratification and the bill of rights
The Bill of Rights   The Bill of Rights are the first 10 amendments to the ___________________. The idea behind the Bill of Rights was to insure certain.
Ratifying the Constitution
Creating A Constitution
Ch. 8.3: Ratifying the Constitution
The Bill of Rights.
Debating the Constitution
Warm up Electoral College Ratification Federalists Antifederalists
The Federalist and Anti-Federalist
The approval of the U.S. Constitution
The Constitution: Federalists v. Anti-Federalists
Part 4 Ratifying the Constitution
Ratification Students will identify the process and debates associated with the ratification of the Constitution.
Debating the Constitution
Ratifying the Constitution
Debating the Constitution Page 92
Ratification Students will identify the process and debates associated with the ratification of the Constitution.
The US Constitution 1787 Ratified 1789.
Creating A New Republic.
The United States Constitution
Civics 1.7 – Federalists & Anti-Federalists
Ratifying the Constitution
Debate and Adoption.
The Constitution Chapter 10.
7 Principles of the Constitution
Unit 6: The Constitution
Ratification and the Bill of Rights
Terms and People ratify – approve
Federalists vs Antifederalists
Ratifying the Constitution Constitutional Framework
American History I - Unit 3 Ms. Brown
Aim: How was the U.S. Constitution ratified?
Presentation transcript:

Part 4 Ratifying the Constitution Creating a Republic Part 4 Ratifying the Constitution

Just because the majority of the members of the constitutional convention had signed the document didn’t mean it automatically became the law. At least 9 out of the 13 original states had to RATIFY or approve it.

Many people in the states broke into two groups: Federalists Anti-Federalists

Federalists Favored a strong national government. Thought the Constitution would protect the basic rights of people. Were led by men such as James Madison, Alexander Hamilton, and John Jay who wrote “The Federalist Papers”, which defended the Constitution.

Anti-Federalists Feared the Constitution would make the national government too strong, and would weaken state governments. Thought Congress and the President would be too strong. Were concerned that there was not a Bill of Rights.

A tense battle developed in some states between the two sides.

One by one the states debated the Constitution and began to ratify it One by one the states debated the Constitution and began to ratify it. By June of 1788, 9 out of the 13 states had ratified the Constitution, so it could now become the law of the land. However, two large states, Virginia and New York, had not yet approved it. Fortunately, they eventually did, and the country was more unified.

The Nation Celebrated Americans voted, and Washington was elected to be the President. Congress had 59 Representatives and 22 Senators New York City was the first capital.

The Bill of Rights Some states were hesitant to accept the Constitution unless a Bill of Rights was included. A Bill of Rights is a document that lists freedoms the government must protect. The creators of the Constitution created the Amendment process in case changes ever needed to be made.

The Amendment Process Either 2/3 of both houses of Congress propose the amendment, or 2/3 of states can have special conventions. Then, 3/4 of the states must approve the amendment. In over 200 years, there have only been 27 amendments. Of those, the first 10 were passed shortly after the Constitution was ratified.

The first 10 amendments to the Constitution are called the Bill of Rights. They were created to ensure basic freedom, and to make sure the government treated citizens fairly.

Amendment #1 Freedoms of Religion, Speech, the Press, Assembly, and Petition

Amendment #2 The Right to Keep and Bear Arms

Amendment #3 Lodging Troops in Private Homes

Amendment #4 Search and Seizure

Amendment #5 Rights of the Accused

Amendment #6 Right to a Speedy Trial by Jury

Amendment #7 Jury Trial in Civil Cases

Amendment #8 Bail and Punishment

Amendment #9 Powers Reserved to the People

Amendment #10 Powers Reserved to the States