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1754-1800
French & Indian War
Historical Context
End of 17th century – America is valuable real estate
People in Canada and America were pawns in a larger chess
game.
Wars in Europe
English & French fight over fur trade and control of the Ohio
River Valley.
French & Indian War
Starts in America.
Called the Seven Years War in Europe.
Lasts nine years in America.
French Canadians & native allies VS. British & their
allies.
1754
French built Ft. Duquesne in the Ohio River Valley
Some wealthy planters owned the land
George Washington - 22 years old
Sent to deliver a message to the French- fighting
breaks out and GW is forced to retreat to Ft.
Necessity
Surrender July 4, 1754
North America Before the War
Albany Plan of Union
• Benjamin Franklin organized a
colonial assembly
• 7 colonies attend
• Colonial defense & unified war
effort
–Taxes, Troops
• Want Iroquois to help the British
• Plan fails - don’t want to work
together
• Becomes a model for the future
cooperation
Join or Die
On May 9, 1754, Join, or Die, considered the first American
political cartoon, was printed in The Pennsylvania Gazette.
The impetus for the cartoon, which is believed to have been devised
by Benjamin Franklin, was concern about increasing French
pressure along the western frontier of the colonies.
William Pitt
- Population - Distance
- Navy - Leadership
- Slaves - French
- Amerindians - Factions
- Army
American Strengths & Weaknesses
- Marksmen - Morale
d. The U.S. did not comply with many of these concessions and it
later became a partial cause of the War of 1812 against Britain.
Results for Europeans
a. Britain lost colonies and other territories.
b. France became bankrupt which led to the French
Revolution.
c. Spain gained little.
Changes After the War
Social
- Amerindians
- Rise of anti-slavery societies occurred during and after the
Revolution in all northern states
- Stronger emphasis on equality was inspired by Enlightenment
ideas
- Women did not enjoy increased rights
Political
- Further reduction of land-holding requirements for voting
occurred in the 1820s.
Religious
- Separation of church and state
- State governments
Gordon Wood, The Radicalism of
the American Revolution, 1991
Thesis: Revolution was the most radical and far-reaching event in
American history.
1. Made the interests and prosperity of ordinary people -- the
pursuit of happiness -- the goal of government
2. Changed the personal and social relationships of people
a. Destroyed aristocracy
b. Made possible egalitarian thinking: subsequent anti-slavery
and women's rights movements
3. Brought respectability and even dominance to ordinary people
long held in contempt Gave dignity to menial labor in a way
unprecedented in history
Gordon Wood (Continued)
4. Brought about an entirely new kind of popular politics and a new
kind of democratic officeholder
5. Inspired powerful popular entrepreneurial and commercial
energies: transformation occurred without the industrial revolution,
urbanization, and railroads (as was the case in Europe)
Articles of Confederation
Under the Articles
States had almost all the power - a weak national government was
unable to deal with the problems.
Constitution
Constitutional Convention
• May 1787, in Philadelphia, PA
• 55 delegates attended
• All states represented except RI
• Some influential figures did not attend, including
Thomas Jefferson and Patrick Henry
About the Delegates
• Most delegates were wealthy
• Nearly two-thirds were lawyers
• Forty had served in Confederation Congress
• Over half had been officers in the Continental Army
• Seven former state governors
• Eight signers of the Declaration of Independence
• Average age of 42
How Does the
1. Federalism
Constitution
Guard Against 2. Separation of
Tyranny? Powers
3. Checks &
Balances
Federalism
Powers are shared between the state and national
governments.
Separation of Powers
Checks & Balances
Compromises at
the Consitutional 1. Great Compromise
Convention 2. 3/5ths Compromise
3. Trade Compromise
4. Presidency
Compromise
Supremacy Clause
Establishes that the federal constitution, and federal
law generally, take precedence over state laws, and
even state constitutions.
Commerce Clause
• Allows the government to
regulate trade with foreign
countries
• Also interstate commerce
(trade between states)
• Used along with the elastic
clause to expand federal
authority:
The landmark 1824 commerce clause – Interstate navigation
case Gibbons v. Ogden dealt with
steamboats sailing from New Jersey to
– Modern civil rights law
New York harbor (shown here)
Necessary & Proper Clause
Congress has the power "to make all Laws which shall
be necessary and proper for carrying into Execution
the foregoing Powers, and all other Powers vested by
this Constitution in the Government of the United
States, or any Department or Officer thereof".
Implied Powers
• Powers not written in the Constitution
• Federal government can exercise them by
assuming the delegated powers
• Stem from the “necessary and proper” (or
“elastic”) clause
• Examples include regulating airlines and
radio and television
The Ratification Debate
The Debate
• Federalist Papers: • Similar to the writers of The
– Written by Federalists Federalist, some wrote
Hamilton, Madison, and urging rejection of the
Jay Constitution:
– Essays explaining and – Letters From the
supporting ratification Federal Farmer (Lee
– Published first in leading and Smith)
newspapers, later in – Observations on the
book form New Constitution
(Warren)
– “Objections to This
Constitution of
Government” (Mason)
Federalist #84
…I go further, and affirm that bills of rights, in the sense and to the
extent in which they are contended for, are not only unnecessary in
the proposed Constitution, but would even be dangerous. They
would contain various exceptions to powers not granted; and, on this
very account, would afford a colorable pretext to claim more than
were granted. For why declare that things shall not be done which
there is no power to do? Why, for instance, should it be said that the
liberty of the press shall not be restrained, when no power is given
by which restrictions may be imposed?
Objections to this Constitution of
Government
There is no Declaration of Rights, and the laws of the general government
being paramount to the laws and constitutions of the several States, the
Declarations of Rights in the separate States are no security. Nor are the
people secured even in the enjoyment of the benefits of the common
law…
George Mason
Virginia
• Crucial to the legitimacy of the new government
• Henry and Mason led the Anti-Federalists
• Washington and Madison led the Federalists
• Federalists won after proposing 20 amendments that the
legislature would consider after ratification
New York
• Anti-Federalists believed NY too large to cede authority
to a central government
• Hamilton’s influence and The Federalist swayed some
Anti-Federalists’ opinion
• Virginia’s ratification tipped the balance in NY
• NC and RI ratified later
Bill of Rights
The Bill of Rights
I – RAPPS (Religion, Assembly, Press, Petition, Speech)
II – right to bear arms
III – no quartering troops during peacetime
IV – no unlawful search and seizure
V – rights of accused persons
VI – right to an attorney and trial by jury
VII – civil suits over $20 get jury trial
VIII – no cruel and unusual punishment or excessive bail
IX – citizens have more rights than are listed here
X – reserved rights of the states
Tenth Amendment
The powers not delegated to the United States by the
Constitution, nor prohibited by it to the states, are
reserved to the states respectively, or to the people.
Washington’s Administration
America in the 1790s
Population nearly 4 million
doubling every 25 years
90% of Americans lived on farms
Public debt large ($52 million) – revenue low,
worthless paper $
Threats from GB and Spain threatened fragile unity
of US
Washington’s Presidency
Election
Unanimously elected President
by Electoral College in 1789
Took oath of office on April 30,
1789 in temporary capital of
NYC.
John Adams had 2nd most votes
and elected VP.
The Cabinet
Constitution does not provide for this.
Only 3 department positions created with appointments
Cabinet shaped by ideological feud between Jefferson &
Hamilton
State – Thomas Jefferson
Treasury – A. Hamilton
War – Henry Knox
Attorney General – Edmund Jennings Randolph (after passage of
Judiciary Act of 1789)
Hamilton vs. Jefferson
Citizen Genet
French diplomat in US who felt Neutrality Proclamation not a
true reflection of US feelings towards France
Went to people directly to ask for money and supplies for war
cause
George Washington booted him out of country.
Second Test: Problems with
Britain
Great Britain was a thorn in US side
constantly harassing US frontier settlers
Seized 300 US ships and impressed (stole) US
sailors.
Remained in posts in violation of 1783 peace
treaty
Sold firearms and alcohol to Natives who
attacked US settlers.
Federalists did NOT want war (75% of import duties
from British trade)
Jeffersonians wanted embargo
Jay’s Treaty
Washington sent Jay to negotiate a
treaty in 1794
Provisions
GB renewed pledge to leave
posts
GB would pay for recent
seizures of ships, sailors
GB did not guarantee they
would not do it in the
future though
AND US forced to pay
PRE-Revolution debts
owed to GB