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The Articles of Confederation

The Articles of Confederation. Civics & Economics. Facts. The Articles of Confederation represent the first constitutional agreement made between the 13 colonies. Submitted to the Second Continental Congress on July 12, 1776 Were adopted by the Second Continental Congress on November 15, 1777

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The Articles of Confederation

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  1. The Articles of Confederation Civics & Economics

  2. Facts • The Articles of Confederation represent the first constitutional agreement made between the 13 colonies. • Submitted to the Second Continental Congress on July 12, 1776 • Were adopted by the Second Continental Congress on November 15, 1777 • Created a unicameral legislature

  3. Articles of Confederation cont. Strengths Weaknesses • Congress had the authority to declare war. • Named the United STATES of America • Creation of coin money • Northwest Ordinance • Ordinance of 1785 • Congress had no power to: • Collect taxes • Regulate trade • Enforce its laws • No national court system or single leader or group to direct government policy. • Could not pass laws without 9 states • Could not be changed without the approval of all 13 states. So What??

  4. A Confederacy State Government State Government Federal Government What does this show? State Government State Government

  5. Ordinance of 1785 • Congress created a system for surveying and selling the western lands. • It arranged land into townships, six square miles. • Each township is divided into 36 sections, one square mile each. • Applied to the Northwest Territory, what today is known as Ohio, Indiana, Illinois, Michigan, and Wisconsin.

  6. Northwest Ordinance • In 1787, Congress passed the Northwest Ordinance. • Which laid the basis for the organization of new territorial governments. • Set a precedent for admitting new states to the union.

  7. National Debt • The U.S. was still struggling after the Revolution • They faced serious financial trouble • Congress had to borrow money to pay for the Revolutionary War because they had no power to tax • States heavily taxed their citizens as well as taxing imports from other states

  8. Shay’s Rebellion • Daniel Shays, a farmer from Massachusetts • Fallen into debt because of state taxes • Massachusetts courts threatened to take his farm as payment for his debts. • He felt that they had no right to punish him for a problem he didn’t create • Shays armed 1,200 farmers to attack a federal arsenal • Became known as Shays Rebellion and it sent a wake-up call throughout the country asking for a stronger national government.

  9. The Road to the Constitution • The Philadelphia Convention • Constitutional Convention (Simulation) • The Virginia Plan • The New Jersey Plan • The Great Compromise • The Three-Fifths Compromise • Electoral College • Federalists • Anti-Federalists

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