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American Government Chapter 2
Basic Concepts of Government Ordered Government The first English colonists saw a need for orderly regulation Many offices needed then are still in existence today Sheriff Juries Townships Justice of the Peace
Basic Concepts of Government Limited Government Government is limited; each individual has rights the government cannot take away Representative Government Government should serve the will of the people People should have a voice We elect our representatives
Landmark English Documents Magna Carta (1215) “ The Great Charter” signed by King John Protected against the arbitrary taking of life, liberty, or property Petition of right (1628) Limited the king’s power Kings could not imprison political critics without a trial by jury Challenged the “divine right” of kings
Landmark English Documents English Bill of Rights (1688) Prohibited a standing army in peacetime, except with the consent of Parliament Must be fair and have a speedy trial
Government in Colonies Royal Colonies (8) Bicameral legislature (2 houses) New Hampshire, Massachusetts, New York, New Jersey, Virginia, North Carolina, South Carolina, and Georgia
Government in Colonies Proprietary Colonies (3) Unicameral (1 House) legislature Maryland, Pennsylvania, and Delaware
Government in Colonies Charter Colonies (2) Governors elected by the white, male property owners in each colony Connecticut and Rhode Island became charter colonies in 1662 and 1663, respectively.
Royal Control All 13 colonies were separately controlled under the king Objected to taxes they had no part in levying French and Indian War (1754-1763)
Growing Colonial Unity Several attempts to unity occurred in the early 1770s Early attempts 1643 “League of Friendship” between Plymouth Bay, Mass and New Haven, CT 1696 William Penn and his inter-colonial coop.
Growing Colonial Unity Albany Plan (1754) Included the colonies of Connecticut, Maryland, Massachusetts, New Hampshire, New York, Pennsylvania, and Rhode Island
The Stamp Act Congress 1765- Stamp Act passed by the British Required the use of tax stamps on all legal documents, business arrangements, and newspapers Nine colonies sent delegates to the SA Congress in New York, except for (Georgia, New Hampshire, North Carolina, and Virginia Boycott- refusal to buy or sell English goods
First Continental Congress 1774- 55 delegates from every colony except Georgia Met in Philadelphia on September 5, 1774
Second Continental Congress 1774-75 (winter) British government refused to compromise its political policies 13 colonies sent reps to congress John Hancock was chosen President 2 nd  Continental Congress became the nations first national government
Declaration of Independence A group of five men were selected to prepare a Proclamation for Independence July 4, 1776 Ben Franklin John Adams Roger Sherman Robert Livingston Thomas Jefferson
The First State Governments January 1776 New Hampshire adopted a constitution to replace its royal charter Constitutions- bodies of fundamentals
Common Features of New States Popular Sovereignty Government can exist and function only with the consent of the governed Limited Government The powers delegated to the government were
Common Features of New States Civil Rights and Liberties Separation of Powers/Checks & Balances Executive branch Legislative branch Judicial branch
The Critical Period
The First National Constitution ratification- formal approval Articles of Confederation Established “a firm league of friendship” Government Structure Unicameral- made up of delegates chosen yearly by the states No judicial or executive branches (it was handled by congressional committees
Powers of Congress Make war and peace Send & receive ambassadors Make treaties Borrow money Set up monetary system Build a navy Raise an army by asking the states for troops Fix uniform standards of weights and measures Settle disputes among the states
State Obligations Submit their disputes Allow open travel and trade
Weaknesses No power to tax Could not regulate trade between states Had no power to make states obey
Critical Period- 1780s Revolutionary War ended October 19, 1781 (Treaty of Paris-1783) They refused to support the new central government financially States printed their own money and banned some trade
Meetings at Mount Vernon and Annapolis Maryland and Virginia took the first step for change Representatives from the two states met on March of 1785 and January of 1786 Compromises in the Constitution Great Compromise (Conn) 3/5 compromise Slave Trade compromise
The Framers 12 of 13 states sent delegates to Philadelphia (Rhode Island did not) Main “framers” George Washington James Madison Edmund Randolph George Mason
Organization and Procedure Meeting to establish rules on May 25 and May 28 Secretary William Jackson kept the convention’s journal The framers met on 89 of the 116 days from May 25 to Sept 27 The decision to write a new constitution was made at the Philadelphia condition
The Virginia Plan Bicameral government Congress- Legislative Branch President- Executive Branch Courts- Judicial Branch
The New Jersey Plan Keep unicameral Congress States should be equally represented
The Connecticut Compromise Congress compromised of two houses Senate- equal representation House- based on population
3/5 Compromise “free persons” be counted Slaves and “non citizens” be counted 3/5
Sources of Constitution William Blackstone’s- Commentaries on the Laws of England John Locke
Convention Completes It’s Work September 8, 1787 Revising of articles were agreed upon. September 17, 1787 39 names were placed on the finished document
Ratification The new document was sent to the states on September 28, 1787
Federalists and Anti-Federalists Federalists- favored ratification James Madison, Alexander Hamilton Anti-federalists- opposed ratification Patrick Henry, Richard Lee, Samuel Adams, John Hancock They thought the articles were too weak Greatly increased powers of the central government Lack of a bill or rights
Success June 21, 1788- nine states ratified the new constitution Inauguration of new government September 13, 1788 Convened on March 5, 1789 in Federal Hall on Wall Street in New York

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GOVChapter2

  • 2. Basic Concepts of Government Ordered Government The first English colonists saw a need for orderly regulation Many offices needed then are still in existence today Sheriff Juries Townships Justice of the Peace
  • 3. Basic Concepts of Government Limited Government Government is limited; each individual has rights the government cannot take away Representative Government Government should serve the will of the people People should have a voice We elect our representatives
  • 4. Landmark English Documents Magna Carta (1215) “ The Great Charter” signed by King John Protected against the arbitrary taking of life, liberty, or property Petition of right (1628) Limited the king’s power Kings could not imprison political critics without a trial by jury Challenged the “divine right” of kings
  • 5. Landmark English Documents English Bill of Rights (1688) Prohibited a standing army in peacetime, except with the consent of Parliament Must be fair and have a speedy trial
  • 6. Government in Colonies Royal Colonies (8) Bicameral legislature (2 houses) New Hampshire, Massachusetts, New York, New Jersey, Virginia, North Carolina, South Carolina, and Georgia
  • 7. Government in Colonies Proprietary Colonies (3) Unicameral (1 House) legislature Maryland, Pennsylvania, and Delaware
  • 8. Government in Colonies Charter Colonies (2) Governors elected by the white, male property owners in each colony Connecticut and Rhode Island became charter colonies in 1662 and 1663, respectively.
  • 9. Royal Control All 13 colonies were separately controlled under the king Objected to taxes they had no part in levying French and Indian War (1754-1763)
  • 10. Growing Colonial Unity Several attempts to unity occurred in the early 1770s Early attempts 1643 “League of Friendship” between Plymouth Bay, Mass and New Haven, CT 1696 William Penn and his inter-colonial coop.
  • 11. Growing Colonial Unity Albany Plan (1754) Included the colonies of Connecticut, Maryland, Massachusetts, New Hampshire, New York, Pennsylvania, and Rhode Island
  • 12. The Stamp Act Congress 1765- Stamp Act passed by the British Required the use of tax stamps on all legal documents, business arrangements, and newspapers Nine colonies sent delegates to the SA Congress in New York, except for (Georgia, New Hampshire, North Carolina, and Virginia Boycott- refusal to buy or sell English goods
  • 13. First Continental Congress 1774- 55 delegates from every colony except Georgia Met in Philadelphia on September 5, 1774
  • 14. Second Continental Congress 1774-75 (winter) British government refused to compromise its political policies 13 colonies sent reps to congress John Hancock was chosen President 2 nd Continental Congress became the nations first national government
  • 15. Declaration of Independence A group of five men were selected to prepare a Proclamation for Independence July 4, 1776 Ben Franklin John Adams Roger Sherman Robert Livingston Thomas Jefferson
  • 16. The First State Governments January 1776 New Hampshire adopted a constitution to replace its royal charter Constitutions- bodies of fundamentals
  • 17. Common Features of New States Popular Sovereignty Government can exist and function only with the consent of the governed Limited Government The powers delegated to the government were
  • 18. Common Features of New States Civil Rights and Liberties Separation of Powers/Checks & Balances Executive branch Legislative branch Judicial branch
  • 20. The First National Constitution ratification- formal approval Articles of Confederation Established “a firm league of friendship” Government Structure Unicameral- made up of delegates chosen yearly by the states No judicial or executive branches (it was handled by congressional committees
  • 21. Powers of Congress Make war and peace Send & receive ambassadors Make treaties Borrow money Set up monetary system Build a navy Raise an army by asking the states for troops Fix uniform standards of weights and measures Settle disputes among the states
  • 22. State Obligations Submit their disputes Allow open travel and trade
  • 23. Weaknesses No power to tax Could not regulate trade between states Had no power to make states obey
  • 24. Critical Period- 1780s Revolutionary War ended October 19, 1781 (Treaty of Paris-1783) They refused to support the new central government financially States printed their own money and banned some trade
  • 25. Meetings at Mount Vernon and Annapolis Maryland and Virginia took the first step for change Representatives from the two states met on March of 1785 and January of 1786 Compromises in the Constitution Great Compromise (Conn) 3/5 compromise Slave Trade compromise
  • 26. The Framers 12 of 13 states sent delegates to Philadelphia (Rhode Island did not) Main “framers” George Washington James Madison Edmund Randolph George Mason
  • 27. Organization and Procedure Meeting to establish rules on May 25 and May 28 Secretary William Jackson kept the convention’s journal The framers met on 89 of the 116 days from May 25 to Sept 27 The decision to write a new constitution was made at the Philadelphia condition
  • 28. The Virginia Plan Bicameral government Congress- Legislative Branch President- Executive Branch Courts- Judicial Branch
  • 29. The New Jersey Plan Keep unicameral Congress States should be equally represented
  • 30. The Connecticut Compromise Congress compromised of two houses Senate- equal representation House- based on population
  • 31. 3/5 Compromise “free persons” be counted Slaves and “non citizens” be counted 3/5
  • 32. Sources of Constitution William Blackstone’s- Commentaries on the Laws of England John Locke
  • 33. Convention Completes It’s Work September 8, 1787 Revising of articles were agreed upon. September 17, 1787 39 names were placed on the finished document
  • 34. Ratification The new document was sent to the states on September 28, 1787
  • 35. Federalists and Anti-Federalists Federalists- favored ratification James Madison, Alexander Hamilton Anti-federalists- opposed ratification Patrick Henry, Richard Lee, Samuel Adams, John Hancock They thought the articles were too weak Greatly increased powers of the central government Lack of a bill or rights
  • 36. Success June 21, 1788- nine states ratified the new constitution Inauguration of new government September 13, 1788 Convened on March 5, 1789 in Federal Hall on Wall Street in New York