330 likes | 566 Vues
Unit 2: Foundations of United States Government. Chapter 2: Origins of United States Government. Chapter 2: Origins of the United States Government. Section 1: Early Influences. 4 English Ideas Explained. 1. Limited gov. One person does NOT have all the power Magna Carta
E N D
Unit 2: Foundations of United States Government Chapter 2: Origins of United States Government
Chapter 2: Origins of the United States Government Section 1: Early Influences
4 English Ideas Explained • 1. Limited gov. • One person does NOT have all the power • Magna Carta • 1215 England • Citizens force King John to sign • Limited power of king • Rule of law—gov leaders must act according to a set of laws • 2. Representative gov • Bicameral • Two houses of legislative branch • 3. Petition of Right • 1628 • Parliament forces Charles I to sign it • Limited power of the monarch • Parliament (elected by people) had more power • 4. English Bill of Rights • Citizens rights from gov violations
English Documents Explained • Magna Carta webpage • Petition of Right • English Bill of Rights
Colonies • Charters • English monarchs gave settlers right to establish a colony • Most charters included limited and rep gov. • Governments • As number of colonies grew, each developed limited and rep gov.
Chapter 2: Origins of United States Government Section 2: Independence
Searching for Unity • a. Tough to unite • i. Colonies formed for different reasons • 1. Profit • 2. Religion • 3. Georgia: refuge for debtors • ii. Different economies and geography • 1. New England: fishing and lumber • 2. South: crops
An Ocean Apart • a. Anger over British taxes unite the colonies • b. First Continental Congress • i. Protest British policies • ii. Send King George III the Declaration and Resolves of the First Continental Congress • iii. British tighten control • iv. Colonists declare independence in 1776 • Schoolhouse Rock: No More King
Chapter 2: Origins of United States Government Section 3: The First National Government
Articles of Confederation DID NOT WORK • Reasons: • 1. each colony was very different including issue of slavery • 2. size of new nation was large/communication was slow • 3. states did their own thing—ignored federal laws and taxes • 4. Aritcles of Confederation HAD NO POWER!
What next? • Many felt we needed a strong federal government • Otherwise, we would have no country! • Example: Shays’s Rebellion
Articles of Confederation Video (7 minutes) • Articles of Confederation video
Chapter 2: Origins of the United States Government Section 4: The Constitutional Convention
General Info • *Delegates met in Philadelphia in 1787 to revise the Articles of Confederation • *However, delegates moved quickly to form a stronger national gov. • *worked 4 months in a hot Phila summer in secrecy
Key People • George Washington • Benjamin Franklin • Alexander Hamilton • James Madison
Finalizing the Constitution • Most signed the new Constitution, even though many still opposed.
Chapter 2: Origins of the United States Government Section 5: Ratifying the Constitution
Federalists vs. Anti Federalists a. Federalists i. Constitution would protect rights and was necessary to hold nation together b. Antifederalists i. Did not want the new gov. ii. Constitution would create a gov. that would threaten people’s rights and state’s rights
RATIFICATION! • After a lot of debate, all states eventually ratified (passed) the Constitution