ch2 am gov

162

Upload: grieffel

Post on 18-Feb-2017

473 views

Category:

Education


0 download

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: Ch2 Am Gov
Page 2: Ch2 Am Gov
Page 3: Ch2 Am Gov
Page 4: Ch2 Am Gov
Page 5: Ch2 Am Gov
Page 6: Ch2 Am Gov
Page 7: Ch2 Am Gov
Page 8: Ch2 Am Gov
Page 9: Ch2 Am Gov
Page 10: Ch2 Am Gov
Page 11: Ch2 Am Gov
Page 12: Ch2 Am Gov
Page 13: Ch2 Am Gov
Page 14: Ch2 Am Gov
Page 15: Ch2 Am Gov
Page 16: Ch2 Am Gov
Page 17: Ch2 Am Gov
Page 18: Ch2 Am Gov
Page 19: Ch2 Am Gov
Page 20: Ch2 Am Gov
Page 21: Ch2 Am Gov
Page 22: Ch2 Am Gov
Page 23: Ch2 Am Gov
Page 24: Ch2 Am Gov
Page 25: Ch2 Am Gov
Page 26: Ch2 Am Gov
Page 27: Ch2 Am Gov
Page 28: Ch2 Am Gov
Page 29: Ch2 Am Gov
Page 30: Ch2 Am Gov
Page 31: Ch2 Am Gov
Page 32: Ch2 Am Gov
Page 33: Ch2 Am Gov

Influences• The Framers were familiar with

the political writings of their time, such as works by Jean Jacques Rousseau and John Locke.

• They also were seasoned, variously, by the Second Continental Congress, the Articles of Confederation and experiences with their own State governments.

Reactions• When the Constitution was complete, the

Framers’ opinions of their work varied. Some were disappointed, like George Mason of Virginia, who opposed the Constitution until his death in 1792.

• Most agreed with Ben Franklin’s thoughts when he said,

“From such an assembly [of fallible men] can a perfect production be expected? It…astonishes me, Sir, to find this system approaching so near to perfection as it does…”

Page 34: Ch2 Am Gov
Page 35: Ch2 Am Gov
Page 36: Ch2 Am Gov
Page 37: Ch2 Am Gov
Page 38: Ch2 Am Gov
Page 39: Ch2 Am Gov

The Burmese opposition leader and former prisoner of the country's junta, (she was under house arrest in Myanmar/Burma for more than 20 years) Aung San Suu Kyi, speaks at the United Nations in Geneva. Suu Kyi says a wide range of reforms in her country are needed to make investment attractive. At a press conference she tells of recent sectarian violence in her country, and calls for the rule of law to be respected. She won the Nobel Peace Prize in 1991.

Page 40: Ch2 Am Gov

Section 1 Review1. All of the following are basic concepts of government brought to the colonies by English settlers EXCEPT

(a) the need for limited government.(b) the need for a representative government.(c) the need for an autocratic government.(d) the need for an ordered social system.

2. Which of the following was not one of the rights granted in the Magna Carta?

(a) The right to private property.(b) The right to a trial by jury.(c) The right to freedom of religion.(d) The right to undergo due process of the law.

Page 41: Ch2 Am Gov
Page 42: Ch2 Am Gov
Page 43: Ch2 Am Gov
Page 44: Ch2 Am Gov
Page 45: Ch2 Am Gov

British Colonial Policies•Until the mid-1700s, the colonies were allowed a great deal of freedom in their governments by the English monarchy.

• In 1760, King George III imposed new taxes and laws on the colonists. Enforced laws that had not been -- Salutary Neglect

•The colonists started a confederation, proposed an annual congress, and began to rebel.

Page 46: Ch2 Am Gov
Page 47: Ch2 Am Gov
Page 48: Ch2 Am Gov
Page 49: Ch2 Am Gov
Page 50: Ch2 Am Gov
Page 51: Ch2 Am Gov
Page 52: Ch2 Am Gov
Page 53: Ch2 Am Gov

Growing Colonial Unity

Early Attempts• In 1643, several New England settlements formed the New England Confederation.

• A confederation is a joining of several groups for a common purpose.

The Albany Plan of Union• In 1754, Benjamin Franklin proposed the Albany Plan of Union, in which an annual congress of delegates (representatives) from each of the 13 colonies would be formed, primarily for the common defense of the colonies on their own.

• It failed.

Page 54: Ch2 Am Gov
Page 55: Ch2 Am Gov
Page 56: Ch2 Am Gov
Page 57: Ch2 Am Gov
Page 58: Ch2 Am Gov
Page 59: Ch2 Am Gov

• In 1765, a group of colonies sent delegates to the Stamp Act Congress in New York.

• These delegates prepared the Declaration of Rights and Grievances against British policies and sent it to the king.

• Taxes in America were not all that high! Average Londoner was paying much more.

• Taxes were placed on tea, playing cards, licenses, deeds, alcohol, any imported good or finished product.

• England needed the $$$-foreign wars cost big bucks!

• It was just that we had gotten away without paying these taxes before, or we had smuggled in goods and had avoided paying any at all. Now that England was enforcing her laws—we cry foul!

The Stamp Act Congress

Page 60: Ch2 Am Gov

In March 1765, the British Parliament announced a new 1 cent stamp tax.

Page 61: Ch2 Am Gov
Page 62: Ch2 Am Gov

The Death of Miss Anne Stamp

Page 63: Ch2 Am Gov

“The Bostonians paying the excise-man, or tarring and feathering,” Philip Dawe [?], 1774 .

This tinted engraving depicts the tarring and feathering of John Malcolm, a Commissioner of Customs, by the Sons of Liberty a little less than a decade after the Stamp Act protests.

Page 64: Ch2 Am Gov

Propaganda—”spin” intentional information slanting to enlist support and sympathy.

Political cartoon drawn by Paul RevereLocation in Boston—notice Old North Church and Faneuil HallEvil faces on British RedcoatsFear and horror as civilians are fired onAnd are killed/wounded.

Notice the dog! Awwww!

THIS COULD HAPPEN TO YOU!

The Boston Massacre—March 5, 1770

Page 65: Ch2 Am Gov

More graphic and brutal!

The first to fall isCrispus Attucks—a free African-American dock worker; a first hero of the American Revolution!

Page 66: Ch2 Am Gov

Boycott = non=importationRefusal to buy from a companywho does not treat its consumers properly.

Page 67: Ch2 Am Gov
Page 68: Ch2 Am Gov

In 1837, in his Concord Hymn, Ralph Waldo Emerson immortalized the events at Old North Bridge:

“By the rude bridge that arched the flood,Their flag to April’s breeze unfurled;Here once the embattled farmers stood;And fired the shot heard round the world”.

Page 69: Ch2 Am Gov
Page 70: Ch2 Am Gov
Page 71: Ch2 Am Gov
Page 72: Ch2 Am Gov
Page 73: Ch2 Am Gov
Page 74: Ch2 Am Gov

American Independence•On July 4, 1776, the Second Continental

Congress adopted the Declaration of Independence.

•Between 1776 and 1777, most of the States adopted constitutions instead of charters.

Page 75: Ch2 Am Gov

Virginian Thomas Jefferson is credited with principal authorship of the document, with help from John Adams, Benjamin Franklin, Roger Sherman and Robert Livingston. The document affirms Congress‘ July 2 decision to part with Great Britain.

The Declaration Committee:

Look at the re-writes

Ben Franklin offered wit and serious revisions: “life, liberty, and property”….was changed to life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness” since it sounded more noble and less greedy!

Page 76: Ch2 Am Gov
Page 77: Ch2 Am Gov
Page 78: Ch2 Am Gov
Page 79: Ch2 Am Gov
Page 80: Ch2 Am Gov
Page 81: Ch2 Am Gov
Page 82: Ch2 Am Gov
Page 83: Ch2 Am Gov
Page 84: Ch2 Am Gov
Page 85: Ch2 Am Gov

Section 2 Review1. The Declaration of Independence was signed in

(a) 1765. (c) 1781.(b) 1776. (d) 1787.

2. The Stamp Act of 1765 was a law enacted by the British that(a) increased the colonists’ taxes.(b) was repealed by the Magna Carta.(c) the colonists ratified one year later.(d) raised the price of postage stamps by two cents.

Page 86: Ch2 Am Gov
Page 87: Ch2 Am Gov
Page 88: Ch2 Am Gov
Page 89: Ch2 Am Gov
Page 90: Ch2 Am Gov
Page 91: Ch2 Am Gov
Page 92: Ch2 Am Gov
Page 93: Ch2 Am Gov
Page 94: Ch2 Am Gov
Page 95: Ch2 Am Gov
Page 96: Ch2 Am Gov
Page 97: Ch2 Am Gov
Page 98: Ch2 Am Gov
Page 99: Ch2 Am Gov
Page 100: Ch2 Am Gov
Page 101: Ch2 Am Gov
Page 102: Ch2 Am Gov
Page 103: Ch2 Am Gov
Page 104: Ch2 Am Gov

Section 3 Review1. The government set up by the Articles of Confederation had

(a) the power to make treaties and build a navy.(b) a bicameral congress.(c) separation of powers.(d) a President to carry out its laws.

2. Which of the following was a weakness of the Articles of Confederation?(a) Congress could not make treaties or tax.(b) Congress could not borrow money.(c) The States did not agree to obey the Articles.(d) Congress could levy or collect taxes or duties.

Page 105: Ch2 Am Gov

Influences• The Framers were familiar with

the political writings of their time, such as works by Jean Jacques Rousseau and John Locke.

• They also were seasoned, variously, by the Second Continental Congress, the Articles of Confederation and experiences with their own State governments.

Reactions• When the Constitution was complete, the

Framers’ opinions of their work varied. Some were disappointed, like George Mason of Virginia, who opposed the Constitution until his death in 1792.

• Most agreed with Ben Franklin’s thoughts when he said,

“From such an assembly [of fallible men] can a perfect production be expected? It…astonishes me, Sir, to find this system approaching so near to perfection as it does…”

Page 106: Ch2 Am Gov
Page 107: Ch2 Am Gov
Page 108: Ch2 Am Gov
Page 109: Ch2 Am Gov

Framers of the ConstitutionLeaders of the Philadelphia Convention

James Madison was the co-author of the Articles of Confederation. Gouverneur Morris was a lawyer who helped develop the U.S. system of

money. Alexander Hamilton was a lawyer who favored a strong central

government. George Washington was the successful leader of the Continental Army.

Some famous leaders who were NOT at the PhiladelphiaConvention

Patrick Henry said he “smelt a rat” and refused to attend. Samuel Adams and John Hancock were not selected as delegates by

their states. Thomas Jefferson and Thomas Paine were in Paris. John Adams was on diplomatic missions to England and Holland.

Page 110: Ch2 Am Gov
Page 111: Ch2 Am Gov
Page 112: Ch2 Am Gov
Page 113: Ch2 Am Gov
Page 114: Ch2 Am Gov
Page 115: Ch2 Am Gov
Page 116: Ch2 Am Gov
Page 117: Ch2 Am Gov
Page 118: Ch2 Am Gov
Page 119: Ch2 Am Gov
Page 120: Ch2 Am Gov
Page 121: Ch2 Am Gov
Page 122: Ch2 Am Gov
Page 123: Ch2 Am Gov
Page 124: Ch2 Am Gov
Page 125: Ch2 Am Gov
Page 126: Ch2 Am Gov
Page 127: Ch2 Am Gov
Page 128: Ch2 Am Gov
Page 129: Ch2 Am Gov
Page 130: Ch2 Am Gov
Page 131: Ch2 Am Gov
Page 132: Ch2 Am Gov

• The Connecticut Compromise Delegates agreed on a bicameral Congress, one segment with equal representation for States, and the other with representation proportionate to the States’ populations.

• The Three-Fifths CompromiseThe Framers decided to count a slave as three-fifths of a person when determining the population of a State.

• The Commerce and Slave Trade CompromiseCongress was forbidden from taxing exported goods, and was not allowed to act on the slave trade for 20 years.

Page 133: Ch2 Am Gov
Page 134: Ch2 Am Gov

Section 4 Review1. The first national government for the United States was

• (a) the First Continental Congress.• (b) the Second Continental Congress.• (c) the Articles of Confederation.• (d) the Constitution of the United States.

2. The Constitutional Convention in Philadelphia involved delegates from each of the following states except

• (a) Maryland. (c) Rhode Island.• (b) New York. (d) Virginia.

Page 135: Ch2 Am Gov
Page 136: Ch2 Am Gov
Page 137: Ch2 Am Gov
Page 138: Ch2 Am Gov
Page 139: Ch2 Am Gov
Page 140: Ch2 Am Gov
Page 141: Ch2 Am Gov
Page 142: Ch2 Am Gov
Page 143: Ch2 Am Gov
Page 144: Ch2 Am Gov
Page 145: Ch2 Am Gov
Page 146: Ch2 Am Gov
Page 147: Ch2 Am Gov
Page 148: Ch2 Am Gov
Page 149: Ch2 Am Gov
Page 150: Ch2 Am Gov
Page 151: Ch2 Am Gov
Page 152: Ch2 Am Gov
Page 153: Ch2 Am Gov
Page 154: Ch2 Am Gov
Page 155: Ch2 Am Gov

Inaugurating the Government• The new Congress met for the first time on March 4,

1789.• Congress finally attained a quorum (majority) on April

6 and counted the electoral votes. Congress found that George Washington had been unanimously elected President. He was inaugurated on April 30.

Page 156: Ch2 Am Gov
Page 157: Ch2 Am Gov

Precedents:

Page 158: Ch2 Am Gov
Page 159: Ch2 Am Gov
Page 160: Ch2 Am Gov
Page 161: Ch2 Am Gov
Page 162: Ch2 Am Gov

Section 5 Review1. The debate over the ratification of the Constitution was won by the

(a) Anti-Federalists. (c) Whigs.(b) Federalists. (d) Tories.

2. The temporary capital of the United States where Congress met in 1789 was

(a) Washington, D.C. (c) Philadelphia.(b) New York. (d) Mount Vernon.