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The Revolutionary War & 
Creating the Republic 
Chapters 5-6
Overview of the Revolutionary War 
• Few observers thought the Americans would win the war 
• Americans lost most of the battles 
• Colonists were of 3 opinions 
• Patriots: favored independence 
• Tories: did not want complete break with Britain 
• No opinion/Undecided/Wait and See 
• Threatened to become a world war when France, Spain and Dutch allied 
against Great Britain 
• Effects of the Revolution: minimal effect on British military; far-reaching 
social and political effects among the former and current British colonies 
• Is the revolution ongoing???
Comparing strengths and weaknesses of 
British and American forces 
• Colonial Militias (Weaknesses) 
• Primarily farmers and tradesmen with little to no military training 
• Militias formed territorially locally 
• Questionable quality of munitions—militias supplied their own weapons 
• Volunteer militias resented military discipline 
• Camp sickness “Sword of the Enemy” 
• Former farmers and frontiersmen often deserted to return to protect families, 
farms and crops 
• Colonial Navy composed of Privateers or former Privateers 
(Weaknesses) 
• Commodores had no experience commanding a fleet of ships
Comparing strengths and weaknesses of 
British and American forces 
• British Army (Weaknesses) 
• Fought on foreign land and terrain which they did not know well 
• Inexperienced with guerrilla tactics 
• Costly to maintain an army on foreign territory across the Atlantic Ocean from 
the homeland and took funds away from other imperial endeavors 
• British forces were composed of 50% mercenary soldiers 
• French, Spanish and Dutch opposed British forces 
• British Navy (Weaknesses) 
• Did not know North American coastal waters as well 
• Ships were larger and slower and heavier making an easy target for smaller, 
faster, lighter American ships
Comparing strengths and weaknesses of 
British and American forces 
• Colonial Army (Strengths) 
• Militias began to coalesce into one force under Generals they knew and trusted 
• Smallpox inoculations 
• Soldiers viewed themselves as defending their homes 
• Knew the terrain better than the British 
• Frontiersmen more experienced and adapted to guerilla tactics 
• British cruelty and alliances with Native Americans led formerly undecided men to join 
Continental Army 
• French reinforcements 
• Americans did not need to win the war—they merely needed to avoid losing it. 
• Colonial Navy (Strengths) 
• Privateers and Former privateers knew coastal waters better and had experience evading 
British ships on patrol 
• American ships could outmaneuver heavier, larger and slower British ships 
• French, Spanish and Dutch harassed British ships
Comparing strengths and weaknesses of 
British and American forces 
• British Navy (Strengths) 
• Most powerful and well-equipped navy in the world 
• British Commodores were experienced in naval warfare 
• British Commodores were experienced leading fleets of ships 
• British navy could impress seamen from captured vessels 
• British Navy had more powerful weapons and more ships
Timeline and Major Events of the 
Revolutionary War 1776-1783 
• July 2, 1776 
• Continental Congress votes to declare independence from Great Britain 
• British forces land on Staten Island 
• Mid-August 1776 
• British General William Howe assembles 32,000 soldiers to oppose American independence 
• George Washington transfers most of his troops to NY: 18,000 soldiers composed of 
volunteer militias and Continental Army soldiers 
• Washington has no experience commanding large force 
• August 27, 1776 Battle of Brooklyn Heights is a humiliating defeat for General 
Washington 
• Washington is surrounded but British fail to press advantage. Local watermen and fishermen 
transfer colonial soldiers across Hudson River to New Jersey where Washington escapes to 
Delaware and Pennsylvania. 
• Independence supporters flee New York or are forced to hide their sentiments or are jailed 
by the British
Timeline and Major Events of the 
Revolutionary War 1776-1783 
• December, 1776 large numbers of volunteer militias return home or 
desert, leaving Washington with only 3,000 soldiers 
• December 23, 1776 Thomas Paine publishes The American Crisis to 
rally support for the Patriot cause 
• December, 1776: Congress offers land, wages, clothing and blankets 
to soldiers 
• December 26, 1776: Battle of Trenton—Washington leads 2,400 
troops across the Delaware River to Trenton where they attack a 
Hessian Mercenary barracks, of 1,500 soldiers. 500 Hessians are 
killed or captured
Timeline and Major Events of the 
Revolutionary War 1776-1783 
• January 1777 Battle of Princeton: American Victory 
• British Northern Strategy 
• Occupy New York to cut off New England from the Middle Colonies 
• British forces in Quebec to march South 
• British forces from Oswego to march East 
• June 1777 
• British General Burgoyne moves South toward Lake Champlain and is joined by Iroquois allies. Burgoyne’s 
forces head toward Albany and besiege American forces at Fort Stanwix. 
• American General Horatio Gates, who served with Burgoyne in the same regiment of the British army in 1743, 
commands American forces in the region. 
• August 1777: 
• Loyalists and Native Americans ambush American militia who hold them off until reinforcements arrive at Fort 
Stanwix 
• Gates rejects Burgoyne’s demand to surrender 
• Iroquois tire of the siege and desert the British 
• British withdrew siege
Generals Horatio Gates and John Burgoyne
Timeline and Major Events of the 
Revolutionary War 1776-1783 
• September 11, 1777 Battle of Brandywine Creek: Washington suffers 
another humiliating defeat allowing the British to take Philadelphia 
• September 19—October 7, 1777 Battle of Saratoga 
• Colonel John Stark defeated a detachment of Hessians and Loyalist militia and 
forced General Burgoyne back to Saratoga 
• American forces besieged British, Hessian and Loyalists who failed to break 
through the lines. 
• October 17,1777 Burgoyne signed agreement with Gates to leave North 
America. 
• British defeat at Saratoga lead the French to enter the war on American side 
• Winter of 1777-1778 Washington’s forces Winter at Valley Forge
Nation Makers by Howard Pyle 
Brandywine Creek Museum 
(c. before 1911). Public Domain
Timeline and Major Events of the 
Revolutionary War 1776-1783
Timeline and Major Events of the 
Revolutionary War 1776-1783 
• March 1, 1778: Articles of Confederation ratified by all 13 Colonies 
• June 1778: British fire on French ships 
• Spring 1778: Guerilla war on the Frontier 
• British strategy: incite Iroquois and Loyalists to attack Patriot settlements and 
offered a bounty for American scalps 
• George Rogers Clark: Led 150 French and American frontiersmen down Ohio 
River to lay siege to British garrison at Vincennes (in Indiana). 
• Americans capture 5 Iroquois with scalps they believe were Patriot settlers 
• Americans tomahawk all 5 Iroquois in sight of the British garrison 
• British surrender
Timeline and Major Events of the 
Revolutionary War 1776-1783 
• Summer 1778: Pennsylvania Frontier War 
• Washington dispatches 400 soldiers under command of General John Sullivan with 
orders to destroy Iroquois villages accused of raiding Patriot settlements. 
• August 29, 1778: Battle of Newton N.Y. 
• Sullivan burns 40 villages along the PA—NY border along with orchards, fields and crops 
leaving Iroquois women and children without homes or food. 
• Sullivan’s actions break Iroquois federation once and for all 
• 1778-1779 War in the South 
• British Commander is General Sir Henry Clinton who dispatches 3,000 loyalists, 
Hessians and British troops to take Savannah and roll northeast toward Charleston. 
Clinton believed he would recruit additional soldiers and allies among southern 
loyalists and Cherokees 
• By Spring 1779, Clinton defeated 3 American Armies and had taken the ports of 
Savannah and Charleston, killing, wounding or capturing almost 7,000 American 
soldiers
Timeline and Major Events of the 
Revolutionary War 1776-1783 
• Summer 1779 British offensive stalls 
• Only so many Loyalists from which to recruit 
• Cherokees not as willing to fight as had been Iroquois 
• British and Native American actions (atrocities--some real and some fanciful) 
led previously undecided settlers to join the Patriot cause
Timeline and Major Events of the 
Revolutionary War 1776-1783 
• October 7, 1780 Battle of King’s Mountain 
• American militia from Tennessee, North Carolina and Virginia joined forces 
and marched to South Carolina to battle British troops. 
• Among the troops was Davey Crockett’s father, John Crockett 
• This battle fought primarily between Patriots and Loyalists 
• Patriots won after 3 hour battle in which they charged uphill 
• 290 Loyalists killed, 163 wounded, 668 taken prisoner
Timeline and Major Events of the 
Revolutionary War 1776-1783 
Gathering of the 
Mountain Men at 
Sycamore Shoals 
By Lloyd Branson depicts 
the muster of 
Over 1,000 militia from 
North Carolina, 
Virginia, and Tennessee to 
march to South Carolina 
Against the British in 
1790.
Timeline and Major Events of the 
Revolutionary War 1776-1783 
• 1779: Spain declares War on Britain 
• 1780: Britain declares war on the Dutch for continuing to trade with 
the Americans 
• September 28—October 19, 1781: Battle of Yorktown 
• French Admiral Francois Joseph Paul de Grasse joined his naval forces with 
General Washington’s army to surround British General Cornwallis at 
Yorktown, Virginia. Cornwallis surrendered on October 19, 1781. 
• Cornwallis to London: “I have the mortification to inform your Excellency that 
I have been forced to …surrender the troops under my command.”
Surrender at Yorktown
Treaty of Paris 
(Ratified by both sides April 9, 1784) 
Unfinished painting by Benjamin West. British delegation refused to pose.
Important Points of Treaty of Paris 
• British acknowledged United States to be sovereign nation, free and independent 
• British Crown relinquishes all claims to government, property and territorial 
rights 
• Established boundaries between the United States and British North America 
• Granted fishing rights to the Grand Banks 
• Lawful debts paid to creditors on both sides 
• Congress of the Confederation “earnestly request” restitution for seized property 
• United States will not seize property of Loyalists 
• Release of prisoners of war 
• U.S. and Great Britain given perpetual access to the Mississippi River 
• Territories captured by U.S. returned to Great Britain without compensation
Weaknesses of Articles of Confederation 
• Congress had no power to tax 
• No executive power to enforce laws enacted by Congress 
• Congress had no authority to engage in meaningful diplomacy 
• Trade with West Indies 
• Spanish closed Port of New Orleans 
• Congress could not enforce uniform tax or trade policies among the 
individual states 
• Tariffs differed from state to state 
• Some states paid their debts others did not 
• Some states printed a lot of paper money, others did not
Newburgh Conspiracy 
• Robert Morris: Superintendent of Finance for the Continental Congress 
• Along with other wealthy financiers obtained money to fund the 
Revolutionary War 
• Along with officers in the Continental Army who feared they would not be 
paid, Morris and his financier collaborators formed a conspiracy to 
confront Congress with a Coup d’etat unless the former colonies agreed to 
give Congress more power to raise money 
• Alexander Hamilton who was part of the conspiracy, sought to bring his 
mentor, General George Washington into the group. 
• March, 1783 Washington confronted the officers and argued that a Coup 
threatened the purposes for which the war was being fought, as well as his 
own integrity. 
• The conspiracy was abandoned.
Western Land Cessions, 1781–1802
Shay’s Rebellion 
• Daniel Shays a Revolutionary War veteran of Lexington, Concord, Bunker Hill, Saratoga 
• Shay’s was wounded in action and never paid wages 
• Hauled into court after the war for non-payment of debts 
• John Hancock and Massachusetts war debt 
• Issuance of more currency devalued the money and enabled the debtor to pay off debt 
at a lower price. 
• Rebels attempted to shut down courts engaging in actions to collect debts and foreclose 
on farms 
• Western (rural Massachusetts) vs. Eastern Massachusetts (urban Boston and Coast) 
• Private militias and federal armories (January 25, 1787) 
• Cannon fire 
• 4 dead; 20 wounded
Shay’s Rebellion
Adopting the Constitution 
• The Constitutional Convention 
• Delegates in attendance 
• The emergence of James Madison 
• Differing political philosophies and plans 
• The Virginia Plan 
• The New Jersey Plan
Adopting the Constitution 
• The Great Compromise 
• Principles incorporated into the Constitution 
• Separation of powers 
• Nature of the presidency 
• Nature of the judicial branch 
• Examples of countervailing forces in the new government 
• Ratification provisions
The Fight for Ratification 
• September 17, 1787: Majority of delegates to the Constitutional 
Convention approve the Constitution 
• The Constitution “laid before the United States in Congress 
assembled” on September 20. 
• September 26 & 27 Congress debated the document and whether or 
not to censure the delegates to the Constitutional Convention for 
exceeding their authority.
The Fight for Ratification 
• Federalists vs. Anti-Federalists 
• Arguments for ratification 
• Size and diversity of the expanding United States required a strong federal framework and would make 
it impossible for any one faction to dominate. 
• Without a federal framework the means for expansion and prosperity, repayment of debt and national 
defense would be compromised 
• Madison promised George Mason and Patrick Henry that if they agreed to ratify the Constitution, he 
would make sure that a Bill of Rights was passed as the first order of business of Congress. 
• Arguments against ratification 
• Delegates had exceeded their authority and document was illegal 
• Document worked for the privileged few but not for the majority 
• Too much power to Federal government at expense of the states 
• Constitution did not include a Bill of Rights
The Fight for Ratification 
• Nine States had to ratify for Constitution to become law 
• The decision of the states 
• Delaware: first state to ratify the Constitution: December 7, 1787 
• North Carolina ratified the Constitution only after the Bill of Rights was passed in 
Congress in 1789 
• By May, 1789 Nine states had ratified the Constitution 
• Rhode Island: last state to ratify the Constitution. After initially rejecting 
ratification in a referendum and being threatened with treatment as a foreign 
government, Rhode Island ratified the Constitution by two votes on May 29, 
1790. 
• October 2, 1789 Congress approved of 12 amendments (only the first 10 were 
adopted by the States). 
• Bill of Rights ratified by ¾ of the states by December 15, 1791.
Virginia Ratifies the U.S. 
Constitution, June 25, 1789 
By Louis Glanzman (1987). 
Vote: 89 in favor, 79 opposed.

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His 121 ch 5 6 the revolutionary war & creating the republic

  • 1. The Revolutionary War & Creating the Republic Chapters 5-6
  • 2. Overview of the Revolutionary War • Few observers thought the Americans would win the war • Americans lost most of the battles • Colonists were of 3 opinions • Patriots: favored independence • Tories: did not want complete break with Britain • No opinion/Undecided/Wait and See • Threatened to become a world war when France, Spain and Dutch allied against Great Britain • Effects of the Revolution: minimal effect on British military; far-reaching social and political effects among the former and current British colonies • Is the revolution ongoing???
  • 3. Comparing strengths and weaknesses of British and American forces • Colonial Militias (Weaknesses) • Primarily farmers and tradesmen with little to no military training • Militias formed territorially locally • Questionable quality of munitions—militias supplied their own weapons • Volunteer militias resented military discipline • Camp sickness “Sword of the Enemy” • Former farmers and frontiersmen often deserted to return to protect families, farms and crops • Colonial Navy composed of Privateers or former Privateers (Weaknesses) • Commodores had no experience commanding a fleet of ships
  • 4. Comparing strengths and weaknesses of British and American forces • British Army (Weaknesses) • Fought on foreign land and terrain which they did not know well • Inexperienced with guerrilla tactics • Costly to maintain an army on foreign territory across the Atlantic Ocean from the homeland and took funds away from other imperial endeavors • British forces were composed of 50% mercenary soldiers • French, Spanish and Dutch opposed British forces • British Navy (Weaknesses) • Did not know North American coastal waters as well • Ships were larger and slower and heavier making an easy target for smaller, faster, lighter American ships
  • 5. Comparing strengths and weaknesses of British and American forces • Colonial Army (Strengths) • Militias began to coalesce into one force under Generals they knew and trusted • Smallpox inoculations • Soldiers viewed themselves as defending their homes • Knew the terrain better than the British • Frontiersmen more experienced and adapted to guerilla tactics • British cruelty and alliances with Native Americans led formerly undecided men to join Continental Army • French reinforcements • Americans did not need to win the war—they merely needed to avoid losing it. • Colonial Navy (Strengths) • Privateers and Former privateers knew coastal waters better and had experience evading British ships on patrol • American ships could outmaneuver heavier, larger and slower British ships • French, Spanish and Dutch harassed British ships
  • 6. Comparing strengths and weaknesses of British and American forces • British Navy (Strengths) • Most powerful and well-equipped navy in the world • British Commodores were experienced in naval warfare • British Commodores were experienced leading fleets of ships • British navy could impress seamen from captured vessels • British Navy had more powerful weapons and more ships
  • 7. Timeline and Major Events of the Revolutionary War 1776-1783 • July 2, 1776 • Continental Congress votes to declare independence from Great Britain • British forces land on Staten Island • Mid-August 1776 • British General William Howe assembles 32,000 soldiers to oppose American independence • George Washington transfers most of his troops to NY: 18,000 soldiers composed of volunteer militias and Continental Army soldiers • Washington has no experience commanding large force • August 27, 1776 Battle of Brooklyn Heights is a humiliating defeat for General Washington • Washington is surrounded but British fail to press advantage. Local watermen and fishermen transfer colonial soldiers across Hudson River to New Jersey where Washington escapes to Delaware and Pennsylvania. • Independence supporters flee New York or are forced to hide their sentiments or are jailed by the British
  • 8. Timeline and Major Events of the Revolutionary War 1776-1783 • December, 1776 large numbers of volunteer militias return home or desert, leaving Washington with only 3,000 soldiers • December 23, 1776 Thomas Paine publishes The American Crisis to rally support for the Patriot cause • December, 1776: Congress offers land, wages, clothing and blankets to soldiers • December 26, 1776: Battle of Trenton—Washington leads 2,400 troops across the Delaware River to Trenton where they attack a Hessian Mercenary barracks, of 1,500 soldiers. 500 Hessians are killed or captured
  • 9. Timeline and Major Events of the Revolutionary War 1776-1783 • January 1777 Battle of Princeton: American Victory • British Northern Strategy • Occupy New York to cut off New England from the Middle Colonies • British forces in Quebec to march South • British forces from Oswego to march East • June 1777 • British General Burgoyne moves South toward Lake Champlain and is joined by Iroquois allies. Burgoyne’s forces head toward Albany and besiege American forces at Fort Stanwix. • American General Horatio Gates, who served with Burgoyne in the same regiment of the British army in 1743, commands American forces in the region. • August 1777: • Loyalists and Native Americans ambush American militia who hold them off until reinforcements arrive at Fort Stanwix • Gates rejects Burgoyne’s demand to surrender • Iroquois tire of the siege and desert the British • British withdrew siege
  • 10. Generals Horatio Gates and John Burgoyne
  • 11. Timeline and Major Events of the Revolutionary War 1776-1783 • September 11, 1777 Battle of Brandywine Creek: Washington suffers another humiliating defeat allowing the British to take Philadelphia • September 19—October 7, 1777 Battle of Saratoga • Colonel John Stark defeated a detachment of Hessians and Loyalist militia and forced General Burgoyne back to Saratoga • American forces besieged British, Hessian and Loyalists who failed to break through the lines. • October 17,1777 Burgoyne signed agreement with Gates to leave North America. • British defeat at Saratoga lead the French to enter the war on American side • Winter of 1777-1778 Washington’s forces Winter at Valley Forge
  • 12. Nation Makers by Howard Pyle Brandywine Creek Museum (c. before 1911). Public Domain
  • 13. Timeline and Major Events of the Revolutionary War 1776-1783
  • 14. Timeline and Major Events of the Revolutionary War 1776-1783 • March 1, 1778: Articles of Confederation ratified by all 13 Colonies • June 1778: British fire on French ships • Spring 1778: Guerilla war on the Frontier • British strategy: incite Iroquois and Loyalists to attack Patriot settlements and offered a bounty for American scalps • George Rogers Clark: Led 150 French and American frontiersmen down Ohio River to lay siege to British garrison at Vincennes (in Indiana). • Americans capture 5 Iroquois with scalps they believe were Patriot settlers • Americans tomahawk all 5 Iroquois in sight of the British garrison • British surrender
  • 15. Timeline and Major Events of the Revolutionary War 1776-1783 • Summer 1778: Pennsylvania Frontier War • Washington dispatches 400 soldiers under command of General John Sullivan with orders to destroy Iroquois villages accused of raiding Patriot settlements. • August 29, 1778: Battle of Newton N.Y. • Sullivan burns 40 villages along the PA—NY border along with orchards, fields and crops leaving Iroquois women and children without homes or food. • Sullivan’s actions break Iroquois federation once and for all • 1778-1779 War in the South • British Commander is General Sir Henry Clinton who dispatches 3,000 loyalists, Hessians and British troops to take Savannah and roll northeast toward Charleston. Clinton believed he would recruit additional soldiers and allies among southern loyalists and Cherokees • By Spring 1779, Clinton defeated 3 American Armies and had taken the ports of Savannah and Charleston, killing, wounding or capturing almost 7,000 American soldiers
  • 16. Timeline and Major Events of the Revolutionary War 1776-1783 • Summer 1779 British offensive stalls • Only so many Loyalists from which to recruit • Cherokees not as willing to fight as had been Iroquois • British and Native American actions (atrocities--some real and some fanciful) led previously undecided settlers to join the Patriot cause
  • 17. Timeline and Major Events of the Revolutionary War 1776-1783 • October 7, 1780 Battle of King’s Mountain • American militia from Tennessee, North Carolina and Virginia joined forces and marched to South Carolina to battle British troops. • Among the troops was Davey Crockett’s father, John Crockett • This battle fought primarily between Patriots and Loyalists • Patriots won after 3 hour battle in which they charged uphill • 290 Loyalists killed, 163 wounded, 668 taken prisoner
  • 18. Timeline and Major Events of the Revolutionary War 1776-1783 Gathering of the Mountain Men at Sycamore Shoals By Lloyd Branson depicts the muster of Over 1,000 militia from North Carolina, Virginia, and Tennessee to march to South Carolina Against the British in 1790.
  • 19. Timeline and Major Events of the Revolutionary War 1776-1783 • 1779: Spain declares War on Britain • 1780: Britain declares war on the Dutch for continuing to trade with the Americans • September 28—October 19, 1781: Battle of Yorktown • French Admiral Francois Joseph Paul de Grasse joined his naval forces with General Washington’s army to surround British General Cornwallis at Yorktown, Virginia. Cornwallis surrendered on October 19, 1781. • Cornwallis to London: “I have the mortification to inform your Excellency that I have been forced to …surrender the troops under my command.”
  • 21. Treaty of Paris (Ratified by both sides April 9, 1784) Unfinished painting by Benjamin West. British delegation refused to pose.
  • 22. Important Points of Treaty of Paris • British acknowledged United States to be sovereign nation, free and independent • British Crown relinquishes all claims to government, property and territorial rights • Established boundaries between the United States and British North America • Granted fishing rights to the Grand Banks • Lawful debts paid to creditors on both sides • Congress of the Confederation “earnestly request” restitution for seized property • United States will not seize property of Loyalists • Release of prisoners of war • U.S. and Great Britain given perpetual access to the Mississippi River • Territories captured by U.S. returned to Great Britain without compensation
  • 23. Weaknesses of Articles of Confederation • Congress had no power to tax • No executive power to enforce laws enacted by Congress • Congress had no authority to engage in meaningful diplomacy • Trade with West Indies • Spanish closed Port of New Orleans • Congress could not enforce uniform tax or trade policies among the individual states • Tariffs differed from state to state • Some states paid their debts others did not • Some states printed a lot of paper money, others did not
  • 24. Newburgh Conspiracy • Robert Morris: Superintendent of Finance for the Continental Congress • Along with other wealthy financiers obtained money to fund the Revolutionary War • Along with officers in the Continental Army who feared they would not be paid, Morris and his financier collaborators formed a conspiracy to confront Congress with a Coup d’etat unless the former colonies agreed to give Congress more power to raise money • Alexander Hamilton who was part of the conspiracy, sought to bring his mentor, General George Washington into the group. • March, 1783 Washington confronted the officers and argued that a Coup threatened the purposes for which the war was being fought, as well as his own integrity. • The conspiracy was abandoned.
  • 25. Western Land Cessions, 1781–1802
  • 26. Shay’s Rebellion • Daniel Shays a Revolutionary War veteran of Lexington, Concord, Bunker Hill, Saratoga • Shay’s was wounded in action and never paid wages • Hauled into court after the war for non-payment of debts • John Hancock and Massachusetts war debt • Issuance of more currency devalued the money and enabled the debtor to pay off debt at a lower price. • Rebels attempted to shut down courts engaging in actions to collect debts and foreclose on farms • Western (rural Massachusetts) vs. Eastern Massachusetts (urban Boston and Coast) • Private militias and federal armories (January 25, 1787) • Cannon fire • 4 dead; 20 wounded
  • 28. Adopting the Constitution • The Constitutional Convention • Delegates in attendance • The emergence of James Madison • Differing political philosophies and plans • The Virginia Plan • The New Jersey Plan
  • 29. Adopting the Constitution • The Great Compromise • Principles incorporated into the Constitution • Separation of powers • Nature of the presidency • Nature of the judicial branch • Examples of countervailing forces in the new government • Ratification provisions
  • 30. The Fight for Ratification • September 17, 1787: Majority of delegates to the Constitutional Convention approve the Constitution • The Constitution “laid before the United States in Congress assembled” on September 20. • September 26 & 27 Congress debated the document and whether or not to censure the delegates to the Constitutional Convention for exceeding their authority.
  • 31. The Fight for Ratification • Federalists vs. Anti-Federalists • Arguments for ratification • Size and diversity of the expanding United States required a strong federal framework and would make it impossible for any one faction to dominate. • Without a federal framework the means for expansion and prosperity, repayment of debt and national defense would be compromised • Madison promised George Mason and Patrick Henry that if they agreed to ratify the Constitution, he would make sure that a Bill of Rights was passed as the first order of business of Congress. • Arguments against ratification • Delegates had exceeded their authority and document was illegal • Document worked for the privileged few but not for the majority • Too much power to Federal government at expense of the states • Constitution did not include a Bill of Rights
  • 32. The Fight for Ratification • Nine States had to ratify for Constitution to become law • The decision of the states • Delaware: first state to ratify the Constitution: December 7, 1787 • North Carolina ratified the Constitution only after the Bill of Rights was passed in Congress in 1789 • By May, 1789 Nine states had ratified the Constitution • Rhode Island: last state to ratify the Constitution. After initially rejecting ratification in a referendum and being threatened with treatment as a foreign government, Rhode Island ratified the Constitution by two votes on May 29, 1790. • October 2, 1789 Congress approved of 12 amendments (only the first 10 were adopted by the States). • Bill of Rights ratified by ž of the states by December 15, 1791.
  • 33. Virginia Ratifies the U.S. Constitution, June 25, 1789 By Louis Glanzman (1987). Vote: 89 in favor, 79 opposed.