1 / 16

Starter

Starter. Answer these on a scrap sheet of paper: 1) Who are your top 5 presidents (i.e. the best ones) 2) What are the qualities of a leader?. Critical Thinking.

mmorris
Télécharger la présentation

Starter

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Starter Answer these on a scrap sheet of paper: 1) Who are your top 5 presidents (i.e. the best ones) 2) What are the qualities of a leader?

  2. Critical Thinking • If you were in charge of starting a new government what departments would you create. Give a brief description of each. (ANSWER IN COMPLETE SENTENCES)

  3. A New NationWashington’s Presidency

  4. George Washington Becomes President • George Washington had no desire to be the president after the Constitutional Convention; he wanted to retire to his home in Mt. Vernon, Virginia. • The American people had different ideas and Washington was the unanimous choice for the first presidential election in 1789. He reluctantly accepted.1stPresident chosen by Electoral College • Inaugurated (sworn in) on April 30, 1789

  5. One of the 1st things that Washington and Congress did was to create a judicial system. • Precedents: • Adds the words “so help me God” to the oath • Called “Mr. President” • Served two terms • Neutrality

  6. Judiciary Act of 1789 • The Judiciary Act of 1789provided for a Supreme Court with 6 judges, federal circuit courts, and federal district courts. • Section 25 of the act allowed state court decisions to be appealed to a federal court when constitutional issues were raised. • It also stated that federal laws were the “supreme law of the land” in cases involving state disputes of constitutional issues.

  7. Washington’s Cabinet- another precedent! Vice President: John Adams Secretary of State: Thomas Jefferson Secretary of the Treasury: Alexander Hamilton Secretary of War: Henry Knox

  8. Hamilton and Jefferson were both brilliant men, but both had very different political views and often disagreed.

  9. Alexander Hamilton’s Plan Needed to pay off debts and stabilize economy Pay off debts and interest Create national currency and bank Impose whiskey tax and tariffs Federal government assumes state debts

  10. Hamilton vs. Jefferson Alexander Hamilton Thomas Jefferson Jefferson distrusted a strong nat’l gov’t. He favored strong state and local gov’ts. He favored a society based on farmer-citizens. Jefferson’s views won support in the Southern and Western states. • Hamilton believed that gov’t should be led by the prosperous, educated, upper-class. • He believed that trade and industry were the keys to a strong nation with a strong nat’l gov’t. • He also proposed a plan to manage the country’s debts and established a nat’l banking system. • Hamilton found favor with Northern states.

  11. Establishing the Courts • The Judiciary Act of 1789 established a federal system of courts.

  12. ACTIVITY Jefferson versus Hamilton • Thomas Jefferson and Alexander Hamilton had very different views about how the new United States government should operate in relation to state and local governments. Hamilton supported a strong federal government and believed that government could assume certain powers even if those powers were not expressly (written word for word) stated in the Constitution. Jefferson, on the other hand, believed that if the Constitution did not specifically grant a power to the federal government and did not specifically deny it to the states, that power should be granted to the states or to the people.

  13. Directions - You will be creating a double-bubble thinking map comparing and contrasting Jefferson and Hamilton. Use the links below to gather your information. The bubbles in the center between the two names are the similarities. The bubbles on the outside are the differences. Do one bubble at a time. You do not need to make the bubble map look exactly like the one below. Below are more examples of what it should look like.

  14. Exit Slip Questions • What did the Judiciary Act of 1789 establish? • What departments did Washington create and whom did he appoint to head them?

More Related