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Bell Ringer: If you were a colonist who supported the independence of the colonies, what kind of government would you want to create as an independent.

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Presentation on theme: "Bell Ringer: If you were a colonist who supported the independence of the colonies, what kind of government would you want to create as an independent."— Presentation transcript:

1 Bell Ringer: If you were a colonist who supported the independence of the colonies, what kind of government would you want to create as an independent nation? Think of the government systems we learned about in chapter 1

2 In 1777, the Articles of Confederation loosely joined the 13 independent states
After 10 years, the leaders decided the American national government needed to be stronger In Spring 1787 delegates from the states met in Philadelphia to fix the Articles; Rhode Island did not join

3 Characteristics of Delegates at the Constitutional Convention
What kind of jobs/ professions did these men hold? (lawyers, governors, merchants, physicians, college presidents, planters) How many delegates attended? 55 Around what ages were most the delegates? 30-40 What three groups were not considered as part of the political process? Women, African Americans, native Americas

4 The First Decision The delegates chose George Washington to guide the convention Why did they choose him? He was respected for his leadership during the American Revolution

5 Key Decisions Made at the Convention
Each state had one vote no matter how many delegates represented that state A majority would decide an issue Kept the convention a secret Originally wanted to revise the Articles of Confederation. But decided to start over and build new constitution

6 Compromising for the Constitution
The delegates wanted a government plan that all states could accept

7 The Virginia Plan Created by James Madison
Had a president, courts, and congress with two houses State pop would decide how many rep were in each house Larger states more votes then small states Delegates from states with more people liked the plan-MA, PA, VA, NY

8 The New Jersey Plan Created by William Patterson
Based on the Articles of Confederation Kept one house congress Each state= one vote Congress could set taxes and regulate trade Instead of a strong president, a less powerful committee (Congress) would carry out laws Delegates from smaller states liked this plan because they would have the same power as larger states

9 Both Had a legislative Agreed they needed to create a new government

10 The Great Compromise Roger Sherman of Connecticut and a committee created it The committee decided the Congress would have two houses, a Senate and House of Representatives Each state would have two representatives in the Senate Population determined # of people in House All accepted the committee’s plan Connecticut Compromise because known as the Great Compromise

11 The Three-Fifths Compromise:
In 1787 more than 550,000 African Americans were enslaved Most of them lived in southern states. The southern states wanted to count the enslaved people in their population so they would have more votes in the House of Representatives

12 The north had few enslaved persons so they argued enslaved persons did not have a vote because they were owned property The 3/5ths agreement is how this problem was solved It stated that enslaved persons would count as 3/5 of other persons in determining representative in Congress

13 It was also agreed Congress could regulate trade between states and other countries
North agreed Congress could not tax exports

14 Electoral College A group selected by each state legislature to select the president and vice president It would be made up of electors picked from each state It still exists today Voters in each state choose delegates

15 On September 17, 1787 the delegates met for the last time
A committee headed by Gouverneur Morris had written down the Conventions ideas and the Constitution was ready to be signed The next step was to get the states approval Each state would set up a ratifying convention to vote “yes” or “no”

16 9 of the 13 states had to ratify the Constitution in order for it to become the law of the land

17 Taking notes on Federalist and Anti Federalist
On one side write “Federalist” and on the other write “Anti-federalist”

18 Federalist: *write the question and your answer
Who were the federalists? What did the constitution create? Define federalism How did the federalist try to win support? Who were the main leaders of the Federalists? What were the federalist papers?

19 Anti-Federalist Who were the anti federalists? What did they argue?
What did they believe? What weakness did the Antifederalists see?

20 Launching a new nation Federalists to create a bill of rights
This helped win public support New Hampshire was the ninth state to ratify the Constitution In 1788 the Constitution was put into effect 1790-all states became one nation the USA

21 On the back: Bill of Rights:
Federalists agreed to create a bill of rights This helped win public support New Hampshire was the ninth state to ratify the Consitutiton In 1788 the Constitution was put into effect 1790 all states became one nation: the USA


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