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5 min read•june 18, 2024
Dalia Savy
James Glackin
Dalia Savy
James Glackin
The weak factors within the Articles made many people feel as though the Articles of Confederation needed to be replaced by a set of laws with a more central authority and a federal government with enforcement power.
To review what could be done about the country's inability to overcome critical problems, George Washington hosted a conference at his home in Mt. Vernon, Virginia. Representatives agreed that the problems were serious enough to hold a meeting later in Annapolis, Maryland so that all the states could be represented. Only five states sent representatives to the Annapolis Convention. Despite the limited attendance, the convention did produce a report recommending that a new convention be held the following year in Philadelphia "for the sole and express purpose of revising the Articles of Confederation."
The convention was attended by 55 delegates from 12 of the 13 states. Rhode Island did not send any representatives. The convention lasted for 4 months, and the delegates, many of them experienced and prominent leaders, engaged in intense and prolonged debate. In the end, they proposed a new framework for government, known as the Constitution of the United States.
The delegates knew they needed a new set of laws, but there were debates about how to go about making them. How would power be divided?
During the convention, several different plans for representation in Congress were proposed:
The Virginia Plan was proposed by James Madison, Edmund Randolph, and others from the state of Virginia:
After much debate, the Great Compromise, also known as the Connecticut Compromise, was negotiated:
Now that a framework for Congress was established, the delegates at the Constitutional Convention discussed the representation of slave states.
The Three-Fifths Compromise determined how enslaved people would be counted in terms of representation and taxation. The compromise was reached between the northern states, which were generally more industrialized and had fewer enslaved people, and the southern states, which were more agrarian and had more enslaved people.
The Constitutional Convention did not deal with the question of the slave trade directly, but the Constitution itself included a provision that prohibited Congress from ending the international slave trade until 1808. However, in 1807, the U.S. Congress passed the Act Prohibiting Importation of Slaves, which banned the importation of enslaved people from Africa and the foreign slave trade, effectively ending it on January 1, 1808. This is important to note that this did not end slavery itself in the U.S. and it was still legal for people to own enslaved people within the states, it just limited the importing of enslaved people from Africa.
The Convention delegates also agreed to establish a system of electing the president, which was later known as the Electoral College. The purpose of this was to give smaller states some representation in the presidential election, while also allowing the election to be conducted more efficiently. Under this system, each state is allotted a number of electors based on its representation in Congress, and the candidate who receives a majority of electoral votes (270 or more) becomes president.
The Constitution was finished on September 17, 1787, and then sent to the states for ratification.
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5 min read•june 18, 2024
Dalia Savy
James Glackin
Dalia Savy
James Glackin
The weak factors within the Articles made many people feel as though the Articles of Confederation needed to be replaced by a set of laws with a more central authority and a federal government with enforcement power.
To review what could be done about the country's inability to overcome critical problems, George Washington hosted a conference at his home in Mt. Vernon, Virginia. Representatives agreed that the problems were serious enough to hold a meeting later in Annapolis, Maryland so that all the states could be represented. Only five states sent representatives to the Annapolis Convention. Despite the limited attendance, the convention did produce a report recommending that a new convention be held the following year in Philadelphia "for the sole and express purpose of revising the Articles of Confederation."
The convention was attended by 55 delegates from 12 of the 13 states. Rhode Island did not send any representatives. The convention lasted for 4 months, and the delegates, many of them experienced and prominent leaders, engaged in intense and prolonged debate. In the end, they proposed a new framework for government, known as the Constitution of the United States.
The delegates knew they needed a new set of laws, but there were debates about how to go about making them. How would power be divided?
During the convention, several different plans for representation in Congress were proposed:
The Virginia Plan was proposed by James Madison, Edmund Randolph, and others from the state of Virginia:
After much debate, the Great Compromise, also known as the Connecticut Compromise, was negotiated:
Now that a framework for Congress was established, the delegates at the Constitutional Convention discussed the representation of slave states.
The Three-Fifths Compromise determined how enslaved people would be counted in terms of representation and taxation. The compromise was reached between the northern states, which were generally more industrialized and had fewer enslaved people, and the southern states, which were more agrarian and had more enslaved people.
The Constitutional Convention did not deal with the question of the slave trade directly, but the Constitution itself included a provision that prohibited Congress from ending the international slave trade until 1808. However, in 1807, the U.S. Congress passed the Act Prohibiting Importation of Slaves, which banned the importation of enslaved people from Africa and the foreign slave trade, effectively ending it on January 1, 1808. This is important to note that this did not end slavery itself in the U.S. and it was still legal for people to own enslaved people within the states, it just limited the importing of enslaved people from Africa.
The Convention delegates also agreed to establish a system of electing the president, which was later known as the Electoral College. The purpose of this was to give smaller states some representation in the presidential election, while also allowing the election to be conducted more efficiently. Under this system, each state is allotted a number of electors based on its representation in Congress, and the candidate who receives a majority of electoral votes (270 or more) becomes president.
The Constitution was finished on September 17, 1787, and then sent to the states for ratification.
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