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Articles of Confederation
First written plan of government for the United States; the states were given more power than the national government; Congress had no power to tax and no power to raise an army (1781)
Land Ordinance of 1785
Successful plan for selling western lands in order to collect revenue as a result of the debt of the Revolution. Also set aside lands for the creation of public schools in America
Northwest Ordinance of 1787
Successful plan for admitting new states to the Union. Also prevented slavery from existing in the Northwest Territory
Critical Period
Time between 1781- 1789 in which the new United States had many challenges to overcome because we were the first democracy in the modern world
Shay’s Rebellion
Daniel Shays led a group of farmers in Massachusetts in a protest against debt collection after the Revolution; stopped by Massachusetts militia, but revealed the weaknesses of the Articles of Confederation because the U.S. had no power to raise an army to stop the rebellion. This rebellion led to the Constitutional Convention (1787)
Constitutional Convention
Meeting in Philadelphia May- September 1787 in which delegates from the new United States met to revise the Articles of Confederation in order to give more power to the central government
“A Bundle of Compromises”
The Constitution is often referred to as this because many compromises were made between large and small states as well as North and South in order to create it
Virginia Plan
Plan at the Constitutional Convention that proposed Congress be a bicameral legislature and representation by state being based on population only
New Jersey Plan
Plan at the Constitutional Convention that proposed Congress as a unicameral legislature and representation by state be equal regardless of state population
The Great Compromise
Compromise at Constitutional convention that created Congress- bicameral legislature: the House of Representatives would be based on population, the Senate would be based on equal representation (2 Senators per state)
Census
An official count of the population taken every 10 years in each state to determine representation in the House of Representatives and the Electoral college
Three-Fifths Compromise
Compromise between Northern and Southern states; slaves would count as ⅗ of a person for representation purposes
Commerce Compromise
Compromise in which Congress would have sole power of regulation of interstate commerce, Congress could not tax a state’s exports, Congress could not interfere in the slave trade for 20 years
Ratification
Official method of approving the Constitution; Nine out of 13 states would have to approve it to become law
The Federalist/The Federalist Papers
A series of 85 essays written anonymously by Alexander Hamilton, James Madison and John Jay defending the Constitution in order to persuade Virginia and New York to ratify it (1788)
Federalists
Group of individuals led by Hamilton and Madison who believed that a strong central government was necessary and that a Bill of Rights was not necessary to protect the people; they were pro- ratification of the Constitution
Antifederalists
Group of individuals led by Jefferson who believed that a strong central government was tyranny and that a Bill of Rights was necessary to protect the people; they were anti- ratification of the Constitution without the addition of a Bill of Rights
The Bill of Rights
First 10 amendments to the constitution that guarantee basic rights to all Americans; added as a compromise to ensure ratification