A New America: HST 210: The US Experience
A New America: HST 210: The US Experience
A New America: HST 210: The US Experience
4. Political equality
Slavery in the Republic
“All men are created equal” = was a revolutionary battle cry
• following the revolution: 1/5 of the new American population
was enslaved
• following the revolution every state except South Carolina
and Georgia outlawed the slave trade because of three
factors:
1. A reduced need for slave labor i
2. A natural increase
3. The anxiety over rebellion
Articles of Confederation 1777-1788
• deliberately weak central government
• there was a congress, only one body
1. Borrow money
2. Settle interstate disputes
3. Conduct foreign relations
4. Deal with Indian trade
• lacked the ability to collect taxes
• taxes were a state decision
• change = unanimous among all states, a single state could block
reform.
• Western land claims = serious problem
Voting Rights
• property requirements to vote
• about ½ of all white men were disenfranchised
• women, Indians, and African Americans were excluded
Shay's Rebellion 1787
• farmers
• western massachussetts depression
• 1780s - 1/3 of all male heads of household were sued for debt
• petitions for help
• Daniel Shays led a rebellion
• January 1787 the government was forced to raise a force of 4000
• 1500 of Shays supporters attacked a federal building i
• rebels were prohibited from voting, holding public office, being
school teachers and owning taverns.
Constitutional Convention
May 1787 in Philadelphia
• 55 elites met there to overhaul the articles
• poor, uneducated, were not represented
• the plans were to revise the articles but new ideas quickly emerged
Federalists vs. Anti-Federalists
Federalists
• professionals, wealthy, educated
• men of wealth
• great skills and training
• able to speak to the needs of the population
Anti-Federalists
• small farmers and debtors
• deeply suspicious of political power
• believed various public servants were always scheming
• stronger control from federal government would threaten states
• the larger the country the greater chance for corruption
Proposals
Virginia Plan
• James Madison
• three branches of government
• -smaller states objected
New Jersey Plan
• William Patterson
• congress right to tax and trade regulation
• each state would have equal representation