The Founding Period Revolutionary War and the Articles of Confederation Overview • Review Declaration and Revolution • Forms of Government – Unitary – Confederal • Articles of Confederation Review • Early Colonial History – Different religious, cultural, ethnic groupings • Geopolitical balance of power in New World – England, France, Spain, Dutch all have presence plus native American populations Review • French & Indian War* (1754-1763) • Clash based on competing claims as English and French seek to expand colonial claims and native American populations try to resist the European expansion *referred to as the “7 Years War” in UK and Canada; as the “Guerre de la conquete” by the French Review Principal areas of engagement in the French & Indian War Review • Parliament levies taxes to help defray cost of war • Colonists reject taxation without representation and the response of the King Review • Colonial unrest begins to get violent • 13 colonies agree to hold meeting to discuss the deteriorating situation • First Continental Congress meets in Philadelphia in 1774 • Drafts “Articles of Association,” the first document unifying the 13 colonies and outlining a policy of trade embargoes Review • Second Continental Congress (May 1775) • Declaration of Independence (1776) • Revolution (17751781) Review • Treaty of Paris (1783) • Negotiated by John Adams, Benjamin Franklin, and John Jay • Negotiated and signed 3 September 1783; approved by the Continental Congress on 14 January 1784. Treaty of Paris signatory page Review • Need to develop plan for government after the war is over • 1777-1781 begin to draft the Articles of Confederation and Perpetual Union • 1783 Articles are ratified (approved) Forms of Government: Unitary Government Sovereign Government Forms of Government: Confederations States B A C D Forms of Government: Confederations SG SG SG SG SG = Sovereign Governments Forms of Government: Confederations SG SG National Government SG SG National Government is not Sovereign Articles of Confederation • First post-revolution government of the United States • Decentralized with power dispersed throughout the states • Weak national government Articles of Confederation • Basic Structure • Powers of National Government • Powers of State Government Articles of Confederation • Basic Structure of National Government – Unicameral Legislature • Each state equal • Delegations of 2 to 7 members, 1 vote per delegation • Delegates may serve no more than 3 of every 6 years Articles of Confederation • No independent executive – i.e., no president, king, prime minister – Congress elects a “presiding officer” • No national judiciary – each state is responsible for its own judicial system • Amendment required the approval of all 13 state legislatures Articles of Confederation • Powers of National Government – – – – – – Foreign Policy/National Defense Maintain roads and postal system Coin money Borrow Money Levy taxes Standardize weights and measures Articles of Confederation • Powers Denied National Government – – – – – Collect Taxes Force states to contribute Force states to meet military quotas Force states to respect treaties signed Force states to enforce laws enacted Articles of Confederation • Powers of State Governments – – – – – Regulate Intrastate commerce Maintain state militia Collect Taxes Print Money Enforce the law Articles of Confederation • Real political power devolves to state governments • State governments redraw constitutions and reconfigure their colonial governments – 10 of the 13 had new constitutions drafted in 1776 • All state governments had bills of rights either as separate parts of the constitution or integrated directly into the constitution – PA, VA, MA all began with the bill of rights Articles of Confederation • State Constitutions – limited executive power • short terms; chosen by state legislature • “Collegial” executive in PA – strengthened legislative power • Closer to the people Post Revolutionary U.S. • Economic Problems – Depression/Recession – Inflation – Increasing Bankruptcy • Political Problems – Shays’ Rebellion (1786) Post Revolutionary US "Rebellion against a king may be pardoned, or lightly punished, but the man who dares to rebel against the laws of a republic ought to suffer death.“ -- Samuel Adams “Fixing” the Articles • Annapolis Convention (September 11, 1786) – work on the economic problems of the new government – strengthen national government “Fixing” the Articles • Philadelphia Convention (May 1787) – Aim is to “revise” the Articles of Confederation – Twelve of the 13 states send delegates to the Convention – Convention opens officially on 25 May