1 / 41

The New Nation - APUSH – Mr. Hesen

The New Nation - APUSH – Mr. Hesen. Changes in American Society. Due mainly b/c of Amer. Rev. 80,000 conservative Loyalists left the U.S. Paved the way for more democratic reforms within the states. Changes in American Society. Issue of Slavery

zia
Download Presentation

The New Nation - APUSH – Mr. Hesen

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. The New Nation - APUSH – Mr. Hesen

  2. Changes in American Society • Due mainly b/c of Amer. Rev. • 80,000 conservative Loyalists left the U.S. • Paved the way for more democratic reforms within the states

  3. Changes in American Society • Issue of Slavery • Rise in anti-slavery societies in all northern states (including Virginia) • Quakers were the first to found these societies • Slavery was eradicated from most northern states • PA was the first in 1780 – gradual emancipation • Quok Walker case (1781) – ended slavery b/c slaves could no longer be protected as property under MA law

  4. Changes in American Society • Slavery was not allowed above the Ohio Valley and in the western territories • Northwest Ordinance (1787) • OH, MI, IN, IL, and some others would be free states, not slave states

  5. Changes in American Society • Thousands of slaves freed after the Amer. Rev. • Many in the South were not freed due to the cotton gin • Eli Whitney (1793)

  6. Changes in American Society • Thousands of slaves freed after the Amer. Rev. • Many in the South were not freed due to the cotton gin • Eli Whitney (1793)

  7. Changes in American Culture • Separation of Church and State • Jefferson’s Virginia Statute on Religious Freedom (1786)– influenced 1st Amendment • Anglican Church replaced by Episcopal Church • Congregational churches slow to establish in New England “Be it enacted by General Assembly that no man shall be compelled to frequent or support any religious worship, place, or ministry whatsoever, nor shall be enforced, restrained, molested, or burthened in his body or goods, nor shall otherwise suffer on account of his religious opinions or belief.”

  8. Changes in American Culture • State Governments • Three branches: weak executives; strong legislatures; judicial branch • Sovereignty of states – Republicanism • Most states had a bill of rights

  9. Changes in American Culture Amerindians • No longer had British protection • Became subjects of American expansionism • Iroquois were the worst hit by this

  10. Changes in American Culture • Stronger emphasis on equality • Commoners often criticized aristocratic organizations (Cincinnati Society) • Farmers were still at the bottom of food chain • Women • Primogeniture – eldest son received father’s estate • Entail – estates could not be sold in pieces

  11. Changes in American Culture Women’s Rights • Women were second-class citizens • Feme Covert – women could not hold property • “Republican Motherhood”

  12. Articles of Confederation Second Continental Congress • Weakened by Amer. Rev • Focus was on foreign and military issues • Domestic issues were lacking • No constitutional authority

  13. Articles of Confederation • Ratified in 1781 – first constitutional government • Western lands were major point of contention • Would larger western states be given more privileges? • Larger states could sell off lands to pay off war debts – smaller states had to tax themselves

  14. Articles of Confederation • Unanimous support was needed to ratify AoC • Maryland held out until 1781 b/c of NY and VA landholdings

  15. Articles of Confederation • Provisions: • Thirteen states banded together to solve common problems • Congress was chief agency • Each state had a single vote • Bills required a 2/3 vote • Amendments required unanimous consent

  16. Articles of Confederation • Weak Form of Government • Gave individual states more power • Two crippling limitations: • Could not regulate commerce • Could not regulate tax collection

  17. Articles of Confederation Newburgh Conspiracy (1783) • Cause: Continental Army soldiers not paid during the war • Soldiers threatened to take over if there wasn’t a push for stronger national government • George Washington stepped in and appealed to the soldiers to stop

  18. Articles of Confederation • Failures of AoC • Problems were continuous • Couldn’t raise money from states • Interest on debt piling up • State quarreled over boundaries • States placed tariffs on other states • No uniformed currency

  19. Articles of Confederation

  20. Articles of Confederation Annapolis Convention (1786) – major blunder • Purpose: Improve interstate commerce • Only 5 of 13 states showed up • Alexander Hamilton pushed for convention the following year • Overhaul the Articles of Confederation!!!

  21. The Economy in the 1780s America Suffered a Major Depression • Revolution racked up huge debts • Excessive use of credit to secure war goods • Lack of currency • Foreclosures on farms • Inflation • British companies shipped goods at cheap prices

  22. The Economy in the 1780s Economic democracy preceded political democracy • Land was readily available and very cheap • American manufacturing was bolstered by nonimportation agreements • Shays’ Rebellion – 1786-87

  23. Landmark Land Laws • Land Ordinance of 1785 • A law that divided much of the United States into a system of townships • Goal: to facilitate the sale of land to settlers and raise money • Northwest Ordinance of 1787 • Dealt with the sale of public lands in the Northwest Territory • Goal: established a plan for the admission of new states to the Union.

  24. Constitution Making in the States Continental Congress in 1776 called for colonies to draft new constitutions • Sovereignty of the states would rest on the authority of the people according to the theory of republicanism

  25. Constitution Making in the States Features of State Constitutions • Most included a bill of rights – protected liberties • Annual election of officers • All created a weak executive and judicial branches • All legislatures were given strong powers • Western districts had best representation

  26. Creation of the Constitution Constitutional Convention (May 25, 1787) • Each state sent members (except RI) • Leaders all appointed by state legislatures • 55 delegates in all • Most men were of high prestige and conservative • George Washington elected chairmen – presided over proceedings • Sessions were held in complete secrecy

  27. Creation of the Constitution James Madison – “Father of the Constitution” • Three major Madisonian concepts: • National principle – national govt. should be stronger than states • Separation of powers • “Extended republic” – limit negative impact of self-serving politicians

  28. Creation of the Constitution Issue of Representation • Biggest issue of the Convention • “The Large State Plan” - Virginia Plan (James Madison) • Called for a bicameral legislature • “The Small State Plan” - New Jersey Plan • Called for a unicameral legislature • The “Great Compromise” (Connecticut Compromise) – Roger Sherman • House and Senate – elect members of each

  29. Creation of the Constitution Office of the President • Independent executive headed by a “president” NOT a KING • Presidential powers: • Military commander in chief • Wide powers to appoint domestic offices • Veto legislation

  30. Creation of the Constitution Electoral College • Used to elect the president • Not a direct form of voting • Electors would be chosen by the states; electors would cast their votes for president • Vast majority of people did not take place in voting • Many were excluded

  31. Creation of the Constitution • North/South Issues at Convention • “Three-Fifths Compromise” • Northern states argued that slaves shouldn’t be counted as part of population • Southern states argued that larger populations would dominate • Compromise – slaves would count as 3/5 of a person for representation

  32. Creation of the Constitution Equality was sacrificed for preservation of the union • Most northerners and southerners thought that slavery would die out • Most northerners thought that blacks were menial laborers

  33. Creation of the Constitution African slave trade was set to end in 1808 • Most states wanted end to slavery • By 1779 most states except deep south outlawed importation • SC and GA protested – claimed need for slaves due to rice production • Fugitive Slave Laws – allowed for white slave owners to reclaim “property” if they reached northern states

  34. Creation of the Constitution Commerce Compromise • Resolved conflict between agricultural and industrial states • Congress could tax imports not exports • South gave power to North because it thought it would have larger population • North gave up slavery because it thought it would die out

  35. Creation of the Constitution Checks and Balances – Separation of Powers • Baron de Montesquieu – Spirit of Laws • His view: Separate govt. based on class NOT function • Our view: Three branches of govt. • Executive – enforces the laws • Legislative – makes the laws • Judicial – interprets the laws

  36. Creation of the Constitution The “Elastic Clause” • Art. I, Sec. 8, Paragraph 18 • Congress shall have the power to…make laws which shall be necessary and proper… • Clause has given power to Congress to keep up with major changes over 200 years

  37. Creation of the Constitution “Supremacy Clause” • “Supreme law of the Land” • Federal power supersedes states’ powers Ratification would take 9 states • Constitution would be the law of the land in ratified states • Some states ratified it right away (DE, NJ, GA, CT)

  38. Creation of the Constitution Last four states ratified it because they had to • Virginia held out – strongly anti-federalist • George Mason – “Father of the Bill of Rights” • Many wouldn’t sign without individual freedoms listed

  39. Creation of the Constitution New York • Only state to have manhood suffrage vote for members of ratifying convention • The Federalist Papers • Alexander Hamilton, John Jay, and Madison wrote influential essays • Published in New York newspapers • Most important commentary on Constitution – Federalist X

  40. Historiography “…the juxtaposition of historical sources used to create meaning from those sources and to interpret historical arguments over time…” Mr. Hesen says: “Reading several historical sources about a topic and witnessing the interpretive changes over time.”

More Related