Unit 1 Notes 3
Unit 1 Notes 3
Declaration of Independence
In 1776 the colonies declared their independence from Great Britain The document, primarily written by Thomas Jefferson, outlined the reasons for the United States to declare independence, as well as listing several crimes against the British monarchy The Declaration of Independence has served as an inspirational document for democracy in countries all over the world
Articles of Confederation
Now that the US was free from British rule, it set out to create its own government Their main goal was to avoid creating a new monarchy in the Untied States In 1781, the Articles of Confederation was signed into law.
Articles of Confederation
The articles made the individual state governments very strong
Connecticut Compromise
One of the great debates was over whether states should have equal votes in congress Small states wanted equal representation, larger states wanted representation based on population The solution was to create two houses of congress, one based on population (House of Representatives) and one with equal membership (Senate) This became known as the Great Compromise
Federalist Papers
Even with all of the compromising it took heavy debating by Federalists to get the constitution ratified To help persuade others to accept the document James Madison, Alexander Hamilton, and John Jay published several documents known as the Federalist Papers