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The Confederation and the Constitution

Explore the impact of the American Revolution on society, including changes in voting requirements, the rise of Patriot elites, the shift in religious establishments, the challenge to slavery, women's rights, and the creation of a new nation through the Articles of Confederation.

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The Confederation and the Constitution

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  1. The Confederation and the Constitution

  2. American revolution more of an evolution • Many people went on with their daily lives • Some striking changes came about that affected every aspect of society • 80,000 loyalists left • Weakens aristocratic upper crust • Allowed Patriot elites to emerge

  3. The Pursuit of Equality

  4. Equality the watchword • States lowered voting requirements • Mr. And Mrs. Used • Ridiculed the lordly Continental Army officers (Society of the Cincinnati) • Trade organization grew and stimulate democracy • Ended primogeniture

  5. Anglican Church humbled • Associated with Church of England • Becomes the Protestant Episcopal Church and disestablished in the South • Congregational Church still established in New England • Separation of Church and State won a victory with Jefferson’s Virginia Statue for Religious Freedom

  6. The Anglican Church

  7. Slavery challenged by egalitarian movement • Quakers founded first anti-slavery society • Call for complete abolition of slave trade • Some northern states either abolished or gradually abolished slavery • Some even in South free their slaves

  8. Slave children

  9. Anti Slavery movement weak • No southern states freed slaves • Discrimination in north and south • Interracial marriage prohibited

  10. Why did abolition not go further in an egalitarian movement? • Fight over slavery would have broken weak unity between states • would be left to later generations to fight it out

  11. Equality for women lacking • Women served in military • New Jersey allowed women to vote for a while • Abigail Adams the leading spokeswomen of her age on women’s rights • Most women still doing traditional women’s work

  12. Women were affected by the Revolution • Republican ideology counted on civic virtue • Women could cultivate this in their young • Entrusted with moral education of young • “Republican motherhood”- • Elevates women to a new prestigious level in society • Educational opportunities for women expand to better cultivate good citizens • Responsible for survival of nation

  13. Constitution Making in the States

  14. Continental Congress calls on states to redo their constitutions in republican fashion • Power rests with people • Became new sovereign states • Make significant contributions

  15. Massachusetts • Calls special convention and submits draft to people for ratification • Imitated in drafting of US Constitution

  16. Many features in common among states • 1. Written contracts with that defined government’s powers but got their power from the people • 2. Represents fundamental law superior to arbitrary law • 3. Most include bills of rights • 4. Annual election of legislatures • 5. Weak executive and judicial • 6. Legislatures given the most power • Thomas Jefferson says that 173 can be as oppressive as 1

  17. Western, poor districts represented in new constitutions • Several state capitals moved to west • These also show a political shift • New Hampshire, North Carolina, New York, Virginia, South Carolina

  18. Economic Crosscurrents

  19. Changes noteworthy but not overwhelming • States seize former crown’s lands • Confiscated loyalists land • Excesses of French Revolution avoided • Because cheap land was available • Economic democracy preceded political democracy

  20. Stimulus to manufacturing • Goods from Britain were cut off during war • Americans forced to make their own • Some manufacturing was growing but very slowly

  21. Economic independence has its drawbacks • Trade with Britain restricted • Fisheries disrupted • Bounties for ships’ store gone

  22. Compensated with new commercial outlets • America could now trade freely • Empress of China in 1784 made its way to Far East • Ginseng • Economic problems existed • Speculation • Profiteering • Prices high • Inflation • Average citizens worse off after Revolution

  23. Atmosphere unhealthy • New rich profiteer class become noisily conspicuous • Distaste for law in general and taxes

  24. How to create a new nation? • New government hard and new type of government even harder • American’s suspicious of aristocracy and authority

  25. Disruptive forces • Tory groups leave and those left promote experimentation • Common cause gone after war is won

  26. Hard times hit America after the war • Britain dumps its surpluses on American shores • Under cut American business

  27. Hopeful signs • 13 Colonies basically alike in government • Rich political heritage • Blessed with great political leaders (Washington, Jefferson, Madison, Adams)

  28. Creating a Confederation

  29. 2nd Continental Congress did not have much political power • Foreign affairs and military • States pretty much sovereign • Did all their own governing

  30. Articles of Confederation • Drawn up shortly after 1776 • Adopted in 1777 • To convince France we had a legitimate government • Adopted by states in 1781

  31. Biggest concern and fight over western lands • 6 States had no holdings beyond Allegheny • Some states had tremendous holdings • Landless states said they fought for this land too • Argue that they could sell land and pay off debts easily • Turn land over to central government

  32. States finally surrender western land claims in 1781 • Dispose these areas for “common benefit” • Proposed to form new states from these areas • Shows move away from colonial feelings

  33. Moving western lands to central government provides a bonding experience • Had to remain to get share of benefits • Frontiersman looked to federal capital rather than states for land and protection • Made a national uniform land policy

  34. The Articles of Confederation: America’s First Constitution

  35. Loose friendship of states • 13 independent states joined together to tackle common problems • Headed by Congress • No executive branch • Judicial left to states

  36. Congress hobbled • Each state had only 1 vote • All bills need 9 states to approve • Amendments require all 13 states • Almost impossible to amend

  37. Purposely designed to be weak • States did not want to yield hard fought liberties to a central government

  38. Other handicaps that crippled Congress • 1. Could not regulate commerce • States had conflicting laws regarding tariffs and navigation • 2. Congress could not enforce tax laws • Had tax quota for each state • Share was voluntary

  39. Relations with states • Could only advise or appeal • Could not demand • Could not act directly upon individual of state • Congress threatened by Pennsylvania soldiers for back pay and had to leave Philadelphia

  40. Proved to be a landmark in government • Model for confederations • Praised by Jefferson • Times demanded a strong government • States had to give up their power

  41. Great stepping stone to the present Constitution • Outlined general powers exercised by a central government • Kept alive idea of union despite weak government • Intermediary jump

  42. Landmark in Land Laws

  43. Passed farsighted legislation regarding land • Old Northwest • Northwest of Ohio River, east of Miss River and south of Great Lakes

  44. Land Ordinance of 1785 • Acreage of NW Territory sold money to pay national debt • Surveyed before being sold • Divided into townships • 6 square miles • Each split into 36 sections • 16 section for public schools • Provided for orderly settlement • Not like the South

  45. Northwest Ordinance of 1787 • How the nation should deal with its colonies • Temporary tutelage, and permanent equality • 1. Territorial stage • 2. 60,000 people and could apply for statehood • On equal basis with rest • No slavery

  46. System worked well • Could have been a problem if they forced the area into submission • Carried over to all the frontier

  47. The World’s Ugly Duckling

  48. Relations with Britain troubled • Britain refused to send minister to America for 8 years • Send 1 it would have to send 13

  49. No treaties nor did it repeal its Navigation Laws • Figured they would win back American trade anyhow • Cut off American trade with West Indies • Smuggling got around this

  50. British agents on American frontier • Sought to annex Vermont into British Canada • Held chain of forts along northern border on US soil • Americans did not honor their commitments to loyalists after war • Maintained fur trade with Indians • Really want to keep an ally against the Americans

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