Chapter 5

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29 Terms

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Daniel Shays
__Poor farmer and veteran from Massachusetts who led hundreds of men in a forced shutdown of the Supreme Court in Springfield__
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George Washington
__President of Const. Convention__
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John Adams
Ambassador to England who was absent from the Constitutional Convention 
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James Madison
 __father of the Constitution; Kept notes at the Const. Convention in 1787__
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Roger Sherman
__Proposed the Great Compromise__
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William Patterson
__Proposed the New Jersey Plan__
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Edmund Randolph
__Proposed the Virginia Plan__
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Articles of Confederation
Under this, Congress would become the single branch of the national government, but it would have limited powers in order to protect the liberties of the people
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Ratification
Official approval
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Northwest Ordinance of 1787
This ordinance established the Northwest Territory, which included areas that are now Illinois, Indiana, Michigan, Ohio, Minnesota, and Wisconsin
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Tariffs
Taxes on imports or exports
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Interstate Commerce
Trade between two or more states
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Inflantion
Occurs when there are increased prices for goods and services combined with the reduced value in money
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Depression
A period of low economic activity combined with a rise in unemployment
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Shays’s Rebellion
The uprising of farmers to protest high taxes and heavy debt
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Constitutional Convention
Held in May 1787 in Philadelphia’s Independence Hall to improve the Articles of Confederation, however, the delegates would leave with an entirely new US constitution
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Virginia Plan
Proposed by Edmund Randolph, this plan proposed a new federal constitution that would give sovereignty, or supreme power, to the central government. It would include a bicameral legislature and the number of representatives and votes of a state would be based on population. Favored by the big states
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New Jersey Plan
Proposed by William Paterson, this plan called for a unicameral legislature, gave each state an equal number of votes/equal voice in the federal government. Favored by the small states
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Great Compromise
Proposed by Roger Sherman as a compromise between the two plans. The legislative branch would have two houses. Each state would have an equal number of representatives in the Senate (2) (upper house). Each state would have a number of representatives based on population in the House of Representatives (lower house)
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Three-Fifths Compromise
Under this agreement, only three-fifths of a state’s slave population would count when determinging representation
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Commerce Compromise
Allowed Congress to levy taxes on imports from foreign countries but not on exports from the US; Stated that interstate commerce would be regulated by the Federal Government; Significance = Encouraged people to buy American (domestically)
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Slave Trade Compromise
Stated that importing slaves could not be restricted or abolished until 1808
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Popular Sovereignty
The idea that political authority belongs to the people
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Federalism
The sharing of power between a central government and the states that make up a country
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Checks and Balances
Keeps any one branch of government from becoming too powerful
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Anti-Federalists
People who opposed the Constitution and wanted a Bill of Rights
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Federalists
Supporters of the Constitution that liked strong central government
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Federalist Papers
Essays supporting the Constitution that were written by James Madison (29), Alexander Hamilton (51) (Primary Author), and John Jay (5). They were published between 1787 - 1789 in New York → big Federalist area
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Bill of Rights
  10 of the proposed amendments intended to protect citizens’ rights; drafted by James Madison; wanted by the Anti-Federalists