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5.1 Changing the Law of the Land

5.1 Changing the Law of the Land. Changing the Law of the Land. After the Bill of Rights only 17 other amendments are ratified Originally states only allowed white, land owning, men to be citizens How has the idea of “We the People” changed over time?. Abolishing Slavery.

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5.1 Changing the Law of the Land

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  1. 5.1 Changing the Law of the Land

  2. Changing the Law of the Land • After the Bill of Rights only 17 other amendments are ratified • Originally states only allowed white, land owning, men to be citizens • How has the idea of “We the People” changed over time?

  3. Abolishing Slavery • Why did we allow slavery in the Constitution? • It would not have been approved otherwise • Southern economy (according to the plantation owners) would have collapsed • Counted slaves as 3/5 for population

  4. Tension between North and South • Each side feared the growing power of the other • New states and territory were the battle ground • Missouri Compromise (1820) divided the territories into slave and free territories • Later they tried the idea of majority rule in the territories • But this leads to bloody conflict especially in Kansas

  5. A Controversial Court Decision • Dred Scott Case • Dred Scott was a slave in Mizzu • Since he travelled to free states with his owner he claimed he was now free • The court however decided that slave owners were allowed to travel with their property

  6. XIII Amendment • After the Civil War the 13th Amendment abolished slavery (1865) African Americans and the Right to Vote • States still had the right to decide who was considered a citizen • Most (even in the north) still denied Afr. Amer. The right to vote

  7. XIV Amendment • 2 Parts • “All persons born in or naturalized in the U.S.” are citizens • No state may deny the rights of citizens with out due process of law • This is often called the 2nd Bill of Rights because it requires the states to do what the Bill of Rights does for the Constitution • It did not automatically mean equal treatment

  8. XV Amendment • May not deny the right to vote based on “race, color, or” having been a slave XXIV Amendment • Made poll taxes illegal • 100 years after the Civil War citizenship was becoming real

  9. Women and the Right to Vote • Women were also left out of “We the People” • Traditionally many men thought women belonged at home • These people disagreed with women having the right to vote

  10. Changing that view • As more women took jobs in 1800s they became active in social and political issues • Including abolitionism • The Seneca Falls Resolution of 1848 mimicked the Declaration of Independence “…that all men and women are created equal.” • Supporters of women’s right to vote, suffragists proposed an amendment to the Constitution almost every year from 1878-1918

  11. Changing that view • Wyoming was the 1st state to grant women the right to vote • Others followed, including NY in 1917 • In 1918 the Amendment was approved by Congress • In 1920 it was ratified by the states

  12. Youth and the Right to Vote • XXVI Amendment 1971 • Lowered the voting age to 18 • Much of the reason for this is due to the large #s of 18-21 year olds that served in wars like WWII, Korea, and Vietnam

  13. The Voice of the People • The Constitution is flexible enough to change as society changes • But written well enough that there are only 27 (15) Amendments

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