Download presentation
Presentation is loading. Please wait.
Published byRodney Garrett Modified over 8 years ago
1
2 pt 3 pt 4 pt 5pt 1 pt 2 pt 3 pt 4 pt 5 pt 1 pt 2pt 3 pt 4pt 5 pt 1pt 2pt 3 pt 4 pt 5 pt 1 pt 2 pt 3 pt 4pt 5 pt 1pt Vocabulary Articles of Confederation Constitution Hodge Podge More Hodge Podge
2
a document stating the rules under which a government will operate.
3
Constitution
4
A system of courts to interpret the law.
5
Judicial Branch
6
To approve something, usually used when talking about the Constitution.
7
Ratify (Ratification also acceptable)
8
In a government, the this person runs the government and sees that the laws are carried out
9
Executive
10
A period when business activity slows, prices and wages drop, and unemployment rises.
11
Economic Depression
12
This was the most important accomplishment of the Articles of Confederation
13
NW Ordinance
14
The Articles of Confederation were designed to make the central government….
15
Weak
16
Under the Articles, Congress was given the power to create and approve treaties, but no power to….
17
Enforce treaties
18
This incident was the reason that the Articles of Confederation were changed.
19
Shay’s Rebellion
20
The NW ordinance affected all areas west of the Appalachian Mountains, all the way east to this geographic feature.
21
Mississippi River
22
This was the year the Constitution was approved.
23
1789
24
This group supported the Constitution and believed a strong central government was needed
25
Federalists
26
This group disapproved of the Constitution and believed power should stay with individual states
27
Antifederalists
28
During the Convention, this idea called for Congress to consist of one house and that representation should be equal among all states.
29
New Jersey Plan
30
During the Convention, this idea called for Congress to consist of two houses and that representation should be based upon population.
31
Virginia Plan
32
A series of letters designed to convince citizens to vote for the Constitution
33
Federalist Papers
34
This Law established the composition of the Supreme Court and the lower courts
35
Judiciary Act of 1789
36
This incident, started because of unpopular taxes, showed that the new Federal Government was capable of handling domestic uprisings
37
Whiskey Rebellion
38
These two laws, often studied together, made it easy for the President to deport aliens without cause, and more difficult to print anything in newspapers that criticized the government
39
Alien and Sedition Acts
40
Shay’s Rebellion occurred in this state, and the Whiskey Rebellion was mostly in this state...
41
Shays = Massachusetts Whiskey = W. Pennsylvania
42
This agreement stated that Congress would consist of two houses; one with equal representation and the other would be based upon population
43
Great Compromise
44
Ratification of the Constitution required that this many states approve it.
45
9 of the 13
46
This event was the international scandal during Adams’ administration…it caused most Americans to become “Anti-French” as it relates to international relations…
47
XYZ Affair
48
This was a compromise between the Federalists and Antifederalists; without it, the Constitution wouldn’t have been ratified
49
Bill of Rights
50
He is often called the “Father of the Constitution” as he was its principle author
51
James Madison
52
Final Jeopardy Category: Articles
53
There are several documented weaknesses to the Articles of Confederation. Provide as many as you can; the student with the most correct wins their wager; the others will loose theirs.
54
- No Chief Executive - No National Court System - No Power to Draft Soldiers - No Power to Control Interstate Commerce - No Power to Enforce Treaties - No Power to Collect Taxes from the States - Difficult to Pass Laws (2/3 vote) - No National Currency - Difficult to Amend (Unanimous Vote to Change Articles)
Similar presentations
© 2024 SlidePlayer.com. Inc.
All rights reserved.