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Chapter 8 Forming a Government Name ____________________ Section ____ Chapter 8 Lesson 8.1 The Articles of Confederation Ideas about Government 1. After declaring their Independence from _____________ in July 1776, the next step was to form a new ____________________ even though they were in the middle of a war. 2. Their ideas for government came from a wide range of ____________________________. Complete the chart below using by filling in ideas that were used to influence our government. American Government European Ideas Things that had taken place in Europe that they liked American Practices Things they were already doing in the colonies o _____ __________ town meetings o Legislative assemblies already in place such as the ___________ __________ ______ _________________ o Christian traditions like the ___________ ___________________ o The ______________ _________ signed by the Pilgrims o The _______________________ Orders of _________________________ o ____________________________________ that set up ideas of what we thought a government should include. o Magna ____________ o English ___________ ____ _____________ o Ideas of the _______________ and philosopher ________ ________ (Jefferson got some ideas that he used in the Declaration of Independence from these same sources) The State Constitutions 3. During the Revolution almost every colony wrote a ____________ _______________ that showed a belief in Republicanism (support for a republic - a government where the _____________ elect representatives of the people). 4. To keep one person from gaining too much power, each state created a __________ government where all leaders are expected to _______ the laws. 1 Chapter 8 5. The rights of _________________ were protected by most state constitutions (like trial by jury and freedom of the press – sound familiar???). 6. Many state constitutions also protected ____________________ of _________________. 7. The Virginia Statute for Religion Freedom made it law to separate ___________ and __________ (which means religion and government). Other states followed this decision so that no state government supported an _______________________. 8. ___________________, or voting rights were also expanded. All states allowed ___________ men to vote, but some had stricter requirements to limit which ____________ men could vote. Initially, even free ______________ _________________ men were allowed to vote in seven states. Forming a Union 9. Although each state had established its own government, many ________________ Congress members thought a _________________ government was needed to hold the country together. 10. By June of 1776 a group of ________ members, one from each ____________, met to create the ________________________________________. This document created a new national ________________. This early form of government did not have a ______________ or _________________. Its powers were very ____________________. 11. The new Confederation Congress could (this isn’t much of a list, is it?): a. ________ coins and borrow _________ b. Make and negotiate ___________ c. Settle conflicts between _____________ d. Could ASK for __________ and ____________ from states. They could not require states to provide them! 12. In order for Articles of Confederation to take effect, all ________ states had to ratify (or ______________) it. The Northwest Territory 13. What two problems did the new central government have to deal with? a. ______________________________________________________________________ b. ______________________________________________________________________ How did they hope to solve these problems? __________________________________ 14. The ____________________________________ set up a system for dividing public territory into __________________. Each township was then divided into 36 _____ that were _______ acres each. 2 Chapter 8 15. The Confederation Congress passed the Northwest Ordinance of 1787 to govern the land north _______________________________. In doing so it created land called the __________________________. 16. Look at the map below, which states are included in this territory? ______________________, _________________________, ________________________, ______________________, _________________________, and part of what is now ______________________. 17. As new states were allowed to enter the Union they had to wait until they had a population of ____________________ to draft their own __________________ and then needed permission from ________________ to join as part of the United States of America. 18. Once a territory became a state it needed to provide _________________ for the citizens and prohibited (outlawed) __________________. 3 Chapter 8 Lesson 8.2 Problems in the New Nation A Lack of Respect 1. The Articles of Confederation were very weak. Due to these weaknesses, Congress had no ___________. Because they had no ___________, they couldn’t _______________ citizens and enforce __________________________________. 2. Because of these weaknesses, other countries like __________________ and _________ took advantage of the United States. 3. For example, Great Britain did not leave their _________________ on the U.S. side of the Great Lakes and Spain closed the lower _________________________________ to U.S. shipping. If you haven’t already done so, go back and read the very beginning of the lesson titled “The Story Continues” to get an idea of what Spain did to U.S. citizens like Thomas Amis. 4. Citizens and leaders grew frustrated with the limits that the ___________________ ___________________ had. They wanted the national government to have more _______________ than the Articles of Confederation gave it. Trouble with Trade 5. Britain also created a lot of ________________ problems with the new United States. They wouldn’t allow any trade in the British __________ ____________ (islands in the Caribbean) and they put really high ____________ on goods like rice that colonial merchants wanted to sell in Britain. 6. American businesses were hurt by the ____________ trade with Great Britain (the fact that more British goods were coming into America and less American goods were going to Great Britain). 7. Because the Articles of Confederation did not allow the government to pass any ___________, each state was on its own. The states did not cooperate with each other, which is why the U.S. earned the nickname the _______________________________. Economic Problems at Home 8. Yet another weakness of the Articles of Confederation was the fact that the government could not regulate (control) _____________________ commerce, which means trade between the states. 9. Another problem was that each state could print their own _____________. See an example of Rhode Island’s on the top of this page. When they printed large amounts of money, the result was _____________________. All of these economic problems resulted in a ___________________. 4 Chapter 8 Debt in Massachusetts 10. When Massachusetts was trying to fix their economic problems, which group of people did it hurt significantly? ________________________ 11. Because they couldn’t pay their debts, they were forced to sell their _________________ and serve terms in ____________ ___________________. Others had to become ____________________ _________________. Shays’s Rebellion 12. Angered by how these economic problems were affecting them, some farmers took matters into their own hands and closed down the ______________. 13. They hoped by shutting down the courts, they would prevent __________________ from being taken. The leader of this rebellion was Daniel ________________. 14. Eventually, this resulted in a short _________________. 15. George Washington was very _____________________ by this event. He was afraid of how it made the United States look to other _________________. 16. This rebellion really showed how ___________________ the government was under the Articles of Confederation. People started to want a ______________________ government because they wanted their government to be able to _________________ them. A Push for Change 17. At the Annapolis Convention, it was decided that there should be a meeting in _____________________ called the Constitutional Convention. At this meeting, there should be delegates (representatives) from all __________________. 18. The purpose of this meeting would be to _________________________ the national government. 5 Chapter 8 Who will be in charge? (1781 – 1789) Shifting Balance of Political Power: From Monarchy (1607–1778) to Articles of Confederation (1781–1788) 1. What were the Articles of Confederation? 2. Confederation Congress was designed to be WEAK, why?? 3. Powers and Weaknesses Powers of the Confederation Congress . . . . Declare ________ Make ______________ Manage ___________ affairs Maintain an __________ & navy 4. Coin and borrow ___________ Regulate ____________ & measures Establish a ___________ service Weakness of the Articles of Confederation . . . . 1. No taxing power, no money – 2. inflation – 3. tariff wars – 4. jealousy and quarreling among the states – 5. foreign affairs in shambles – 6. disrespect from other countries – 7. debtor/creditor conflicts, Shays’s Rebellion, 1787 – 5. George Washington, considering the Confederation’s problems, feared the worst. In 1784, had written; “I predict the worst consequences from a half-starved, limping government, always moving on crutches and tottering at every step.” * What do you think he means by this? 7 Chapter 8 Lesson 8.3 The Constitution The Constitutional Convention 1. The purpose of the Constitutional Convention was to do something to the Articles of Confederation. Did they originally want to have the meeting to fix them or to replace them? Circle one: fix replace 2. When and where was this meeting held? When ____________________________________ where ________________________________________________________ 3. We know so much about what happened at this convention because _________________ __________________ took really good notes. 4. _______________________ was elected president of this convention. 5. Because they didn’t have the rights of full citizens and couldn’t really represent other citizens, _______________, ____________________________________________, and __________________________________ were not invited to participate in the meeting. The Great Compromise 6. The delegates were at the convention for different reasons. Some wanted to ___________ the Articles while others wanted to completely ___________________ them. 7. There were many issues on which there were different opinions. These included: a. ________________________________ b. ________________________________ c. ________________________________ d. _______________________________________________________________ 8. Many of these issues were _______________________ issues, which means that depending on where you live, your viewpoint might be different. 9. There were two plans proposed and each one discussed the issue of representation in Congress (How many representatives should each state get? Should some states get more representatives than others? Is that even fair?) The Virginia Plan was also known as the ________________________ plan because it favored the states with larger populations. According to this plan, larger states would have more __________________________ than smaller states. Of course, the delegates from the __________________ states did not like this plan because they felt it was unfair to their states. 10. The New Jersey plan was known as the _________________________ plan because it gave the same number of representatives to all of the states. According to this plan, all states would have an ______________ voice in government because they would have an ________________ number of votes. Of course, the delegates from the _________________ states did not like this plan because they felt it was unfair to their states. 8 Chapter 8 11. Instead of picking one plan or the other, they decided to __________________. This became known as the ______________ _____________________. They decided to use both plans! 12. In the upper house of the legislature (we call this the Senate), each state would be ____________________________ in representation. In the lower house (we call this the House of Representatives), the number of representatives the state had would be determined by how large their ______________________________ was. The idea worked and was passed! The Three-Fifths Compromise 13. That didn’t solve all their problems there were other problems to work out now. Remember that in the House of Representatives, the larger the population of the state was, the more _________________________ they would get. Well, when a state has more representatives, they get more votes (each representative = a vote). More votes mean that the laws they want have a better chance of passing. The South wanted to count their ______________________ as part of their population. Why do you think the Northern states objected to this idea? There can be more than one answer _________________________ ______________________________________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________________________________ 14. One side wanted to count each slave as a person, the other side didn’t think the slaves should be counted at all. They compromised and decided that they would count _______________________________ of the slave population toward determining representation. For example, if there were 500 slaves, they would be counted at ______________. 1000 slaves would be ______________. 15. Another issue which resulted in a compromise was the slave trade. Some wanted to keep it, others wanted it to ______________. The compromise: _______________________ ______________________________________________________________________________ Our Living Constitution 16. When writing the Constitution, they wanted the national government to be ______________ but not too strong. They used the idea of federalism, which means that the central government and the ______________ will share the power. (More about this later, if you can’t wait, look at the chart on page 257) 17. Basically, the national government (also called the central government) controls the things that are mentioned in the Constitution, everything else is controlled by the states. Who controls education? _______________________ 9 Chapter 8 A Delicate Balance 18.Our government has ________ branches and each has its own responsibilities. 19.Fill in the chart about each branch Legislative Branch Executive Branch Judicial Branch o Also known as o Includes the o All the national ___________________ _________________ and ______________ o Responsible for departments that run the o They ________________ proposing and passing government the laws, ___________ __________ o Makes sure the ________ criminals and settle o Made up of ____ houses are carried out but doesn’t disputes between o Senate has _____ make the laws ______________ members from each state o House of Representatives is based on ___________________ 20. Checks and balances are designed to make sure that no branch of government becomes too _______________________. President can _________ or reject the laws that Congress passes Congress can propose and pass __________________ (laws) Checks & Balances Supreme Court can review the laws and find them __________________ 21. After ___________ long weeks, the Constitutional Convention finally was over when they signed the final draft of the Constitution in ___________________ of 1787. 10 Chapter 8 Study Questions for Quiz 8.3 Constitutional Convention Where was it? Constitutional Convention What was the purpose of it? Constitutional Convention Who was elected President of it? Constitutional Convention Who was there? Constitutional Convention What groups of people weren’t there and why were they not included? The Great Compromise What was the New Jersey Plan? Focus on how they determined representation The Great Compromise What was the Virginia Plan? Focus on how they determined representation The Great Compromise Which plan was for the big states? The Great Compromise Which plan was for the small states? 11 Chapter 8 The Great Compromise What did the Great Compromise do? Branches of Government What does the judicial branch do? Branches of Government What does the executive branch do? Branches of Government What does the legislative branch do? Branches of Government What was created to keep any branch from becoming too powerful? What is Federalism? What did they decide to do about the slave trade? 12 Chapter 8 Lesson 8.4 Ratification of the Constitution Federalists and Antifederalists 1. __________________________: people who opposed the Constitution a. many thought the Constitutional Convention went too far in creating a new _____________________ b. they thought the Constitution gave the ________________________ too much power c. _______________________ was an antifederalist: like many others, he opposed the ______________________ because it did not include a ____________ __________ ___________________. d. many antifederalists were small ___________ and ___________ e. Other antifededralists included: Richard Henry __________, Samuel __________ and Patrick ______________________. (surprising that some of these people are opposed to the Constitution when we generally consider them to be some of the founding fathers, isn’t it?) 2. _____________________: people who support the Constitution a. Federalists included people like James _____________________, George ______________________, Benjamin _________________, Alexander __________________ and John ________________. b. They thought the Constitution offered a good balance of _______________. The Federalist Papers 1. A series of anonymously written essays supporting the Constitution were widely read. They have become known as the ______________________________. 2. There were ________ essays, 50 of which we know were written by ______________ ___________________, and the others by James Madison and John Jay. Why do you think the essays were written under the name Publius instead of using their real names? ______________________________________________________________________________ 3. The purpose of the Federalist Papers was to convince everyone that the Constitution was a good thing and would not ________________ the states. What arguments did it make to defend the Constitution? It said: _______________________________________________ The Ratification Fight 4. The Constitution needed _______ states approval to pass a. _______________________ became the first state to ratify the Constitution (and therefore the first state to join the union. Think about what it says on their license plates!) b. _________________________ was the second state. 13 Chapter 8 c. ___________ was the 9th state to ratify the Constitution, which meant that it became in effect even though there were still 4 states that didn’t approve it yet! d. The very last state to ratify it was _____________________________ in May 1790. Demanding a Bill of Rights 5. Several __________ ratified the Constitution only after it was promised that a _______________________________________ would be added. They wanted to make sure personal _____________________ would be protected. 6. In Congress’s first session _______________________ encouraged legislators to put together a Bill of Rights even though he didn’t really think it was necessary. a. The rights would then be added to the Constitution as _____________________: official changes, correction, or additions b. In September 1789 Congress proposed ______ amendments for ratification, only ______were ratified. c. The ____________________________________ are known as the Bill of Rights. 7. The Constitution has survived for more than _________ years and is the world’s _________ written national constitution. BONUS: Answer is found somewhere in the chapter, not necessarily in this particular lesson. The Bald Eagle is the national bird, but Ben Franklin had another bird in mind. What was Ben Franklin’s choice of bird? ____________________________ 14 Chapter 8 Chapter Tutorial IDENTIFYING TERMS Choose the term or name that correctly matches each definition. ____ 1. set of laws that determine the powers and duties of the government a. ratification b. Federalism ____ 2. official approval c. constitution ____ 3. period of low economic activity and high unemployment d. Federalist Papers ____ 4. distribution of power between states and the central e. depression government ____ 5. series of essays that supported the Constitution UNDERSTANDING MAIN IDEAS 1. Where did Americans base their political ideas for government? (at least 3) Examples can include English laws and American ideas and practices. ________________________________________________________________________________ ________________________________________________________________________________ ________________________________________________________________________________ 2. How could new states be created under the Northwest Ordinance? ____________________________________________________________________________ ________________________________________________________________________________ 3. How did the Articles of Confederation interfere with interstate commerce? ________________________________________________________________________________ ________________________________________________________________________________ 4. What were the concerns of the Antifederalists and how did the writers of the Constitution address these concerns? Concerns of Antifederalists How it was addressed 18 Chapter 8 REVIEWING THEMES 1. How did England and Spain take advantage of the weaknesses of the United States? What problems did the United States have with these two countries? ________________________________________________________________________________ ________________________________________________________________________________ 2. Why did some people insist on the addition of a bill of rights to the Constitution? Who? ________________________________________________________________________________ ________________________________________________________________________________ 3. How does the Constitution protect citizens’ rights? ________________________________________________________________________________ ________________________________________________________________________________ THINKING CRITICALLY 1. Why might some people have thought of the new nation as the “Dis-United States” in 1787? Explain. ________________________________________________________________________________ ________________________________________________________________________________ ________________________________________________________________________________ 2. Would you have been a Federalist or an Antifederalist if you had been a citizen when the Constitution was presented for ratification? Explain. ________________________________________________________________________________ ________________________________________________________________________________ ________________________________________________________________________________ 19 Chapter 8 Study Topics – Chapter 8 People Vocabulary Federalists Anti-Federalists George Washington James Madison Thomas Jefferson inflation Federalism debtors amendments ratification republic creditors suffrage interstate commerce constitution Virginia Plan New Jersey Plan Land Ordinance of 1785 Northwest Ordinance of 1787 Three-Fifths Compromise Events Constitutional Convention Shay’s Rebellion Be able to . . . . Describe the problems that the United States faced under the Articles of Confederation. Describe the 3/5 Compromise. List where ideas for creating the American Government came from (at least 5). Describe the difference between a Federalist and an Anti-Federalist. Give an example (name) for each. Describe the Virginia Plan and the New Jersey Plan. Describe the Great Compromise. 20 Chapter 8 Name _________________________________ Social Studies Section _____________ Study Questions for Test 1. Describe the problems that the United States faced under the Articles of Confederation. 2. Describe the 3/5 Compromise. 3. List where ideas for creating the American Government came from (at least 5). 1. 5. 2. 6. 3. 7. 4. 8. 21 Chapter 8 4. Describe the difference between a Federalist and an Anti-Federalist. Give an example (name of a person) for each. Difference: A Federalist: An Antifederalist: 5. Describe the Virginia Plan and the New Jersey Plan. Virginia Plan: New Jersey Plan: 6. Describe the Great Compromise. 22 Chapter 8