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Transcript
Unit 1: The Founding of the
Nation
Chapter 1
Essential Question:
Describe how the Enlightenment
and the Great Awakening
philosophies lead to the founding
of the nation?
Early British Colonies
British Power Expands
– The American colonies brought
great wealth to England through
taxation
– They believed taxation without
representation in the British
government was
tyranny(oppression)
– “No Taxation without
Representation”
1-4: The Colonies Come of Age
The South colonies:
– Agriculture
• Depends on large scale
farming(plantations)
• Single Cash Crops
• Slavery provides the labor
• Triangle Trade
– Slaves become part of a
network of trading
between England,
Africa, and the Colonies
The Colonies Come of Age
The North colonies:
– Manufacturing,
Shipping, and Trading
• Slavery existed but
was uncommon since
so many workers
were available
The Colonies Come of Age
The Enlightenment:
– Intellectual movement
– New ideas from Europe caused the
colonists to question Britain's authority
– Used logic and reason
– Followers included: Benjamin Franklin and
Thomas Jefferson
The Great Awakening:
– Religious movement
– In response to the Enlightenment, Jonathan
Edwards tried to bring people back to the
church by preaching “fire and brimstone” in
his “Sinners in the Hands of an Angry God”
sermon
• Both stressed the need to question authority
The Colonies Come of Age
John Locke:
– An Enlightenment thinker,
who believed that people
have natural rights to life,
liberty, and property
̶ He felt that a government
is a social agreement
between the leaders and
the people
Unit 1: The Founding of the
Nation
Chapter 2
Essential Question:
What important events lead to
the development of the American
republic?
2-1: Colonial Resistance and
Rebellion
The Declaration of
Independence:
– Written by Thomas Jefferson
– Based on the ideas of Locke,
the document stated that
• governmental power
comes from the consent
of the people
• A government is to
secure the natural rights
for the people
8
2-3: Confederation and the Constitution
A New government emerges:
Articles of Confederation: Power is
divided between state governments
and a weak central (federal)
government
Shay’s Rebellion: in 1787, a group of
Massachusetts farmers rebelled
against their government in protest
of ever-increasing taxes
• the government of
Massachusetts was unable to
stop the uprising without
outside help
• This demonstrated the A of C
did not work and a stronger
central government was
needed
9
Confederation and the Constitution
Proposed systems of government:
– Virginia Plan:
• Called for a bicameral (twohouse) legislature whose
number would be determined
by the state’s population
• Favored larger states
– New Jersey Plan:
• Called for a unicameral (onehouse) legislature
• Each state would receive a
single vote
• Favored smaller states
10
Confederation and the Constitution
The Solution:
The Great Compromise
(Connecticut Plan):
– Called for a bicameral
legislature
» House of
Representatives based
on state
population(Virginia
Plan)
» Senate would have
equal
representation(New
Jersey Plan)
– Solved the issue of
representation in the
federal legislature
11
Confederation and the Constitution
Separation of Powers:
– The Framers divided the federal
government into 3 branches in order to
prevent any one branch of government
from becoming too powerful
• Legislative Branch
– Create laws
• Executive Branch
– Carry out the laws created by
Congress
• Judicial Branch
– Interpret the laws and settle
disputes between states
12
Confederation and the Constitution
Ratifying the Constitution:
– Two factions formed each with their
own agenda
• Federalists (modern Democrats):
– Those who supported ratifying
the Constitution
• Anti-federalists (modern
Republicans):
– Those who were opposed
ratifying
• Bill of rights are added to the
Constitution to ease the Antifederalist concern over individual
rights
13
Unit 1: The Founding of the
Nation
Chapter 3
Essential Question:
How did Marbury v. Madison
establish the judicial branch of
our government?
3-1: The Jeffersonian Era
Marbury v. Madison:
– an 1803 court case in which
the Supreme Court ruled that it
had the power to abolish
legislative acts by declaring
them unconstitutional; this
power came to be known as
judicial review
– Supreme Court will now review
the Constitutionality of laws
15
Unit 1: The Founding of the
Nation
Chapter 4
Essential Question:
What events led to the American
Civil War and the establishment
of Reconstruction ?
4-1: The Divisive Politics of Slavery
Popular Sovereignty:
• The residents of the territory decided
whether they would be a free or slave
state
The Missouri Compromise(GEOGRAPHY):
•
•
•
•
•
Settlers in Missouri requested admission to
the union as a state
Arguments between whether or not it
should be admitted as a Free or Slave state
divided Congress
A compromise was reached admitting
Missouri into the union as a slave state
The rest of the territories were divided
along the 36th parallel
States located North of the line would be
admitted as free states, those below, slave
17
The Divisive Politics of Slavery
The Dred Scott Decision:
– A slave who attempted to use the
courts as a means of earning his
freedom. Scott lost the decision
and the Supreme Court declared
no slave or descendant of a slave
could be a U.S. citizen.
The outcome
– Being in a free state while you
were a slave did not make you free
18
The Divisive Politics of Slavery
Differences between the North and
South
North
– Cooler and harsher climate
– More industrial and less agricultural
– Fishing and trading
– Large cities
– Economy not based on slavery
South
– Rich and fertile soil
– Economy based on Agriculture(single
and large cash crops)
– Plantation system
– Economy relied on slave labor
19
The Divisive Politics of Slavery
Issues that led to the Civil
War
– Arguments over whether
new states should enter
the Union as Free or
Slave states
– Fugitive Slave Laws
– Political and economic
Differences
– Election of Abraham
Lincoln
20
The Divisive Politics of Slavery
Secession :
The years of 1860
and 1861 when eleven
southern states each
declared themselves
seceded from the
United States and
joined together to
form the Confederate
States of America.
21
The Civil War
The Civil War:
Lincoln’s main goal was
to restore the Union
– Lasted for 4 years
(1861-1865)
– 620,000 soldiers died ,
417,000 deaths were
from diseases while
203,000 were killed in
combat
– The Union(North) won
the war
22
The Civil War
The Emancipation Proclamation
– Although he was opposed to
slavery, Lincoln did not believe
that he had the power as
President to outlaw slavery
– However, once the war ended
he found a way to free the
slaves and ordered the
Emancipation Proclamation
23
4-4: Reconstruction and Its Effects
Key Events:
Civil War Amendments:
– Passage of the Thirteenth
Amendment
• Congress passes a
Constitutional Amendment
that would officially outlaw
slavery in the United States
– Lincoln’s Assassination
• Just days after the South
surrenders, Lincoln is killed
by John Wilkes Booth, a
Southern sympathizer
24
Reconstruction and Its Effects
Civil War Amendments (cont.):
– In order to speed up the process of
reconstruction and to ensure the
end of slavery forever, Congress
passed the 14th & 15th Amendments
– Fourteenth Amendment:
• Changed the language of the
Constitution to guarantee citizenship
to all freed slaves
– Fifteenth Amendment:
• Prevented states from denying the
voting rights of citizens because of
race
The federal government now protected
the rights of A.A.s(minorities)
25
Segregation and Discrimination
Formal (Legal)
Discrimination
continued
Plessy v. Ferguson
• Supreme Court case that
supported the idea of
racial segregation as fair
(legal) under the
Constitution
• Created the separate-butequal doctrine
– Racial segregation was
legal as long as the
facilities provided equal
service
26
Segregation and Discrimination
Informal Discrimination
– Jim Crow Laws/ Black Codes
• Southern states passed racial
segregation laws that created separated
White and Black facilities such as
schools, hospitals, and transportation
– Racial Etiquette
• AA’s had to be very careful with how
they behaved around Whites
• AA’s were expected to act timid around
Whites such as never shaking hands,
giving way on the sidewalk, and
removing their hats when speaking to a
White person
• Failure to follow the racial etiquette
rules could lead to arrest or death
27