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Published byCaitlin Howard Modified over 9 years ago
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Constitutional Convention pp. 142-148
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The Call to Philadelphia MAIN IDEA Delegates from the colonies met in Philadelphia in 1787 to strengthen the government. SUPPORTING DETAILS Hard to get there Met at place called Independence Hall Washington demanded secrecy Franklin oldest delegate Jefferson, Adams, Henry not there
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Federal Power vs. States’ Rights MAIN IDEA There was tension about the relationships among states and the relationship between the states and federal government. SUPPORTING DETAILS Decided to throw out Articles and start over Madison called “father of the Constitution” Madison and Randolph wanted strong government VA Plan: bicameral legislature based on population NJ Plan: unicameral legislature, one vote per state
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Compromise at the Convention MAIN IDEA Many compromises were needed to balance everyone’s interests. SUPPORTING DETAILS Great Compromise (CT Plan): bicameral, one house with 2 per state, one house based on population 3/5 compromise on counting slaves Tariff debates Slave trade compromise: allowed to end of 1807 Sept 17, 1787--signed
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Federalists and Antifederalists MAIN IDEA Federalists supported the Constitution and a strong central government, but Antifederalists were afraid of giving government too much power. SUPPORTING DETAILS 9 of 13 states had to ratify Constitution to make it official Antifederalists thought convention delegates went too far Feared threat to states’ rights Did not like electoral college idea Federalists published Federalist Papers to get people to support Constitution.
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The Ratification Struggle MAIN IDEA Many states would not ratify the Constitution without a Bill of Rights added. SUPPORTING DETAILS US Constitution did not protect individuals’ rights Demand for Bill of Rights Patrick Henry against the Constitution Big battles in VA and NY Rhode Island last state to ratify, very resistant
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