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CHAPTER 7 Founding A Nation, 1783-1789 Chapter Study Outline
CHAPTER 7 Founding A Nation, 1783-1789 Chapter Study Outline
CHAPTER 7
1. Nation builders like James Madison and Alexander Hamilton called for increased
national authority.
2. The concerns voiced by critics of the Articles found a sympathetic hearing among men
who had developed a national consciousness during the Revolution.
3. At a meeting in Annapolis (September 1786), delegates called for a convention to amend
the Articles of Confederation in order to avoid anarchy and monarchy.
3. A New Constitution
1. The Structure of Government
2. Prominent wealthy and well-educated men took part in the Constitutional Convention.
3. Delegates quickly agreed the Constitution would create a legislature, an executive, and a
national judiciary.
4. The key to stable, effective republican government was finding a way to balance the
competing claims of liberty and power.
5. A compromise over the shape of Congress emerged from debates over the Virginia and
New Jersey Plans.
1. Virginia Plan (favored by more populous states): two-house legislature where
state's population determined representation in both houses
2. New Jersey Plan (favored by smaller states): one-house legislature in which
each state cast one vote
3. Compromise: two-house Congress consisting of Senate (each state had two
members) and House of Representatives (apportioned according to states'
populations)
2. The Limits of Democracy
1. The Constitution left the determination of voter qualifications to the states.
2. The new government was based on a limited democracy.
3. Federal judges would be appointed by the president.
4. The president would be elected by an electoral college, or, in the case of a tie in that
body, by the House of Representatives.
3. The Division and Separation of Powers
1. The Constitution embodies federalism and a system of checks and balances.
1. Federalism refers to the relationship between the national government and
the states.
2. The separation of powers, or the system of checks and balances, refers to the
way the Constitution seeks to prevent any branch of the national government
from dominating the other two.
4. The Debate over Slavery
1. Slavery divided the delegates.
2. The words "slave" and "slavery" did not appear in the Constitution, but it did provide for
slavery.
3. The South Carolinian delegates proved very influential in preserving slavery within the
Constitution.
5. Slavery in the Constitution
1. The Constitution prevented Congress from prohibiting the slave trade until 1808.
2. The fugitive slave clause made clear that the condition of bondage remained attached to
a person even if he or she escaped to a free area, and it required all states to help police
the institution of slavery.
3. The federal government could not interfere with slavery in the states.
1. Slave states had more power due to the three-fifths clause.
6. The Final Document
1. Delegates signed the final draft on September 17, 1787.
2. The Constitution created a new framework for American development.
4. The Ratification Debate and the Origin of the Bill of Rights
1. The Federalist
1. Nine of the thirteen states had to ratify the document.
2. The Federalist was published to generate support for ratification.
1. Hamilton argued the Constitution had created "the perfect balance between
liberty and power."
2. "Extend the Sphere"
1. Madison had a new vision of the relationship between government and society in
Federalist no. 10 and no. 51.
2. Madison argued that the large size of the United States was a source of stability, not
weakness.
3. Madison helped to popularize the liberal idea that men are generally motivated by
self-interest and that the good of society arises from the clash of these private interests.
3. The Anti-Federalists
1. Anti-Federalists, who opposed ratification, argued that the republic had to be small and
warned that the Constitution would result in an oppressive government.
2. "Liberty" was the Anti-Federalists' watchword.
1. They argued for a Bill of Rights.
3. Federalists tended to be men of substantial property, urban dwellers seeking prosperity,
and rural residents tied to the commercial marketplace.
4. Anti-Federalists drew support from small farmers in more isolated rural areas (e.g., New
York's Hudson Valley, western Massachusetts, the southern backcountry).
5. Federalists dominated the press, which helped them carry the day.
6. Madison won support for the Constitution by promising a bill of rights later.
7. By mid-1788, the required nine states had ratified.
8. Only Rhode Island and North Carolina voted against ratification, but they eventually
joined the new government.
4. The Bill of Rights
1. Madison believed the Constitution would protect liberty without the addition of a bill of
rights.
2. Still, to satisfy the Constitution's critics, Madison introduced a bill of rights to the first
Congress.
3. Some rights, such as the prohibiting of excessive bail and cruel and unusual
punishments, reflected English roots, while others, such as the recognition of religious
freedom, were uniquely American.
4. Among the most important rights were freedom of speech and of the press, vital building
blocks of a democratic public sphere.
5. "We the People"
1. National Identity
1. The Constitution identifies three populations inhabiting the United States:
1. Indians
2. "Other persons," which meant slaves
3. "People," who were the only ones entitled to American freedom
2. Indians in the New Nation
1. Indian tribes had no representation in the new government.
2. The treaty system was used with Indians, and Congress forbade the transfer of Indian
land without federal approval.
3. The U.S. victory at the Battle of Fallen Timbers led to the Treaty of Greenville in 1795.
1. Under this treaty, twelve Indian tribes ceded most of Ohio and Indiana to the
United States.
2. The treaty established the annuity system-yearly grants of federal money to
Indian tribes that led to continuing U.S. government influence in tribal
affairs.
4. Some prominent Americans believed that Indians could assimilate into society.
1. Assimilation meant transforming traditional Indian life.
3. Blacks and the Republic
1. The status of citizenship for free blacks was left to individual states.
2. Crèvecoeur's Letters from an American Farmer described America as a melting pot of
Europeans.
3. Like Crèvecoeur, many white Americans excluded blacks from their conception of the
American people.
1. The Naturalization Act of 1790 limited naturalization (the process by which
immigrants become citizens) to "free white persons."
4. Jefferson, Slavery, and Race
1. John Locke and others maintained that reason was essential to having liberty.
1. Many white Americans did not consider blacks to be rational beings.
2. Jefferson's Notes on the State of Virginia claimed blacks lacked self-control,
reason, and devotion to the larger community.
2. Jefferson did not think any group was fixed permanently in a status of inferiority.
3. Some prominent Virginians believed black Americans could not become part of the
American nation.
5. Principles of Freedom
1. The Revolution widened the divide between free Americans and those who remained in
slavery.
2. "We the people" increasingly meant white Americans.