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Walsingham Academy - SCIENCE 101 CHAPTER 06: STRENGTHENING THE NEW NATION TRUE/FALSE 1)By raising taxes in the early 1780s, the Confederation was able to reduce the national debt
Walsingham Academy - SCIENCE 101
CHAPTER 06: STRENGTHENING THE NEW NATION
TRUE/FALSE
1)By raising taxes in the early 1780s, the Confederation was able to reduce the national debt.
- George Washington recognized Shays’s Rebellion as an indicator of the need for a stronger form of government.
- Delegates to the Constitutional Convention sharply debated whether to establish a monarchy or a republic.
- The New Jersey Plan proposed keeping a unicameral legislature with equal representation for each state.
- The Supreme Court has final interpretive power over the Constitution.
- Under the Constitution, each slave would count as one person for purposes of representation, but as only half a person for taxation.
- The Constitution mentioned the word “slave” (or “slavery”) eighteen times.
- Anti-Federalists favored a decentralized federal system of government.
- George Washington was appointed president without any kind of election process.
- The Bill of Rights originally consisted of twelve amendments to the Constitution.
- On the issue of the assumption of state debts, James Madison agreed with Alexander Hamilton.
- According to Alexander Hamilton, the United States needed a national bank to provide a stable currency and act as an engine of prosperity.
- The XYZ affair came about as part of the so-called Quasi War with France that Adams inherited as president.
- Conflicts with Britain and France in the 1790s created a spirit of national unity.
- The partisan divisions of the 1790s ended the friendship of Adams and Jefferson for an extended period.
MULTIPLE CHOICE
- The phrase “Critical Period” refers to:
- the time of the Revolutionary War
- the summer the Constitution was written
- America under the Articles of Confederation
- George Washington’s presidency
- the years of tension over British taxes
- Which one of the following gave the Confederation government the most trouble?
- finances d. postal service
- Indian affairs e. immigration policy
- land policy
- Under the Articles of Confederation, western lands would be:
- divided up among the existing states
- free of slavery
- recognized as belonging to the Indians
- owned by the national government
- extended to the Pacific
- The 640-acre sections created by the Land Ordinance of 1785:
- would be given to settlers for free
- raised enough money to pay the national debt
- would be reserved for veterans of the Revolution
- would be sold by local banks
- were part of six-square-mile townships
- Which of the following was NOT part of the Northwest Ordinance?
-
- Slavery was prohibited in the territory above the Ohio River.
- Statehood was allowed when a territory had a population of 60,000 people.
- Religious freedom was guaranteed in a “bill of rights.”
- New states formed from the Northwest Territory promised that Indian land would never be taken from them without their approval.
- Territorial governors were to be chosen by Congress.
- The Northwest Ordinance of 1787:
- banned slavery in the Northwest
- made Ohio and Indiana states immediately
- established colonies in the Ohio Valley
- denied self-government to that region
- provided for joint occupation of that area with the British
- After the Revolutionary War, American trade with Britain:
- was illegal
- was limited to the West Indies
- resumed, but without access to the West Indies
- was minimal
- was unrestricted
- One serious economic problem under the Articles of Confederation was:
- a scarcity of good farmland
- shortage of “hard money”
- the impossibility of obtaining credit
- excessively high income taxes
- low wages caused by an oversupply of labor
- Shays’s Rebellion was led by:
- merchants d. indebted farmers
- factory workers e. ambitious politicians
- bankers
- Shays’s Rebellion broke out in:
- Boston d. Rhode Island
- New York City e. Pennsylvania
- Massachusetts
- Shays’s Rebellion:
- spread to several northern states
- was supported by George Washington and other elite figures
- was repressed by state militia
- resulted in massive bloodshed and property destruction
- made Americans more fearful of strong central government
- After Shays’s Rebellion:
- Massachusetts was governed by martial law
- farmers throughout America were watched by local safety committees
- England prepared for the possibility of resuming the war
- there were numerous calls promoting a stronger central government
- taxes were increased
- The convention, which assembled in May 1787, was supposed to:
- write a new constitution
- address the country’s financial crisis
- revise the Articles of Confederation
- nominate someone for president
- discuss better trade relations with Britain
- The delegates who met:
- included John Adams and Thomas Jefferson
- tended to be elderly
- wanted a weaker central government
-
- included many participants in the Revolution
- arrived knowing what they wanted
- The convention’s most gifted political philosopher and the man who emerged as its central figure was:
- Alexander Hamilton d. Patrick Henry
- George Washington e. James Madison
- Benjamin Franklin
- Madison’s Virginia Plan:
- would create a president for life
- would create a two-house Congress
- was most favored by the small states
- would simply amend the Articles of Confederation
- would abolish the state governments
- The Great Compromise:
- was negotiated by Benjamin Franklin
- showed the South’s determination to protect slavery
- listed the explicit powers of Congress
- created a four-year term for president
- settled the question of congressional representation
- The Founding Fathers viewed the most democratic branch of the government as the:
- presidency d. cabinet
- Senate e. House of Representatives
- Supreme Court
- According to the Constitution, the president has the authority to do all of the following EXCEPT:
- veto acts of Congress
- resign and choose his successor
-
- serve a four-year term
- act as commander in chief of the armed forces
- appoint diplomats and judges
- The Constitution addressed slavery by:
- referring numerous times to “slaves” or “slavery”
- counting slaves as three fifths of a person for the purposes of apportionment
- requiring that all slaves count toward a state’s congressional representation
- making it legal in every state
- requiring that slaves have full legal protections
- On the question of women’s rights, the proposed Constitution:
- denied the vote to females
- was surprisingly progressive for its time
- defined women as the property of their husbands
- accepted the advice of prominent women
- said nothing
- The Constitution was to be considered ratified as soon as it had been approved by:
- the Constitutional Convention d. nine of the states
- the Continental Congress e. a majority popular vote
- all thirteen states
- The Federalist essays were written by:
- Madison and Washington d. Hamilton, Madison, and Jay
- John Jay e. John Adams
- Patrick Henry
- Who among the following was an anti-Federalist?
- Alexander Hamilton d. James Madison
- John Jay e. George Washington
-
- George Mason
- Federalist essay Number 10 explains how a republic can:
- defend itself
- become a democracy
- create a just society
- pay its debts
- be successful in a large, diverse society
- The Federalist argued that:
- the size and diversity of the large new country would make it impossible for any one faction to control the government
- the Constitution was necessary to prevent one faction from taking control of the nation
- a republican form of government could not work in a nation as large as the United States and therefore the Constitution was necessary
- the Constitution would promote control of the government by one faction, which would be
good for the nation
-
- if the Constitution failed, the country could always go back to the Articles of Confederation
- The first of these states to ratify the Constitution was:
- Delaware d. Virginia
- New York e. Massachusetts
- Rhode Island
- In early 1789, the new Congress gathered in the national capital, which was:
- Philadelphia d. Washington, D.C.
- New York City e. Baltimore
- Boston
- In his inaugural address, President Washington emphasized:
- his economic plans d. relations with Britain
- party politics e. his cabinet selections
- national unity
- The Bill of Rights did all of the following EXCEPT:
- safeguard freedoms such as press, speech, and assembly
- appease some initial critics of the Constitution
- constitute the first ten amendments to the Constitution
- protect against “cruel and unusual” punishment
- settle all questions about federal versus state authority
- In regard to religion, the Constitution:
- makes the United States a Christian nation
- reflects the atheism of the Founding Fathers
- prohibits the states from having official churches
- expresses hostility toward religion
- prevents Congress from establishing an official religion
- Alexander Hamilton’s basic vision of America was to make it:
- a vibrant capitalist power
- a democratic model for the world
- a mighty empire like ancient Rome
- committed to limited government and social equality
- an example of racial tolerance and diversity
- One key element of Hamilton’s program to encourage manufacturing was his proposal for:
- a cutoff of trade with Britain
- high protective tariffs
- government-owned factories
- importation of cheap foreign labor
- government colleges for industrial education
- Madison decided to support Hamilton’s debt proposals in return for an agreement to:
- give more money to the original bondholders
- make the states pay their own debts
- cut taxes
- limit future federal spending
- relocate the nation’s capital southward
- The Bank of the United States:
- would be totally owned by the federal government
- had unanimous support in Congress
- was specifically authorized by the Constitution
- would provide a stable national currency
- was ultimately opposed by President Washington
- In his debate with Jefferson over the national bank’s constitutionality, Hamilton:
- emphasized states’ rights d. emphasized the Tenth Amendment
- strictly interpreted the Constitution e. had Madison’s support
- used the doctrine of implied powers
- The emergence of political parties:
- was anticipated by the writers of the Constitution
- was strongly encouraged by President Washington
- resulted from a division between monarchists and republicans
- brought the United States to the brink of civil war
- reflected basic philosophical differences between Jefferson and Hamilton
- When Britain and France went to war in 1793, the United States:
- supported Britain because of its conservative government
- supported France because of the Franco-American alliance
- expressed neutrality, warning Americans not to aid either side
- allied with other nations to oppose both Britain and France
-
- sharply increased its military spending
- Edmond-Charles Genêt:
- came to the United States to escape the revolutionary excesses of the French Revolution
- encouraged Americans to attack English and Spanish vessels
- quickly won the sympathy of Alexander Hamilton and the Federalists
- was deeply involved in the XYZ affair
- became a leading member of the Republican party
- Jay’s Treaty:
- shut American merchants out of the West Indies
- ended a war with the British
- was most strongly opposed in New England
- infuriated Republicans for its concessions to the British
- forced Hamilton’s resignation from the cabinet
- Opposition to Hamilton’s excise tax on whiskey was strongest among:
- merchants d. frontier farmers
- Federalists e. churchgoers
- veterans
- Pinckney’s Treaty resulted in:
- American ownership of the Mississippi River
- expulsion of the Indians from the Southwest
- American trade access to Spanish New Orleans
- Spain’s withdrawal from Florida
- the right of Americans to settle in Texas
- Daniel Boone’s route into Kentucky was the:
- Fincastle Turnpike d. Warriors’ Path
- Great Valley Road e. Wilderness Road
- Appalachian Trail
- Washington’s farewell address:
- praised the emerging party system
- urged greater involvement in Europe
- was soon forgotten since Washington was a poor speaker
- was pessimistic about the nation’s future
- opposed permanent alliances
- Under President Adams, a war between the United States and France:
- was an undeclared naval conflict
- was ended by the XYZ affair
- halted partisan divisions
- ended in American victory
- led to French attacks on the U.S. coast
- The Sedition Act was aimed primarily at:
- foreign immigrants d. French spies
- anti-war Federalists e. draft-evaders
- Republican newspaper editors
- The Virginia and Kentucky Resolutions argued that:
- states could nullify federal laws
- taxes imposed by Congress were unconstitutional
- immigrants should be expelled from the country if they were not loyal to the American cause
- the “freedom of speech” clause in the Bill of Rights did not apply to purely political
rhetoric
-
- new western states should be admitted as quickly as possible
- Jefferson’s election in 1800:
- continued the Federalist domination of the U.S. government
- had to be settled by the House of Representatives
- was assured when Aaron Burr agreed to withdraw as a candidate for president
- was assured when George Washington announced his support of Jefferson just three weeks
before the election
-
- ended party divisions
- The Judiciary Act of 1801:
- created three new positions on the Supreme Court
- was the first act passed by the Republicans
- allowed federal judges to be impeached under the Sedition Act
- was the legacy of the Federalists as they left office
- was vetoed by President Jefferson
- Just before he left office, Adams:
- repealed Hamilton’s tax policies
- questioned the fair outcome of the election
- cemented Federalism within the judiciary
- destroyed his official records
- renewed his friendship with Jefferson
MATCHING
- Match each description with the item below.
- was the oldest member of the Constitutional Convention
- issued a neutrality proclamation in 1793 in response to pressure to enter European conflicts
- drafted the land ordinance of 1784
- diplomat who sought to undermine American policy relative to the French Revolution
- briefly represented New York at the Constitutional Convention
- claimed to “smell a rat” at the Constitutional Convention
- defined the United States through his tenure as chief justice of the Supreme Court
- arrived in Philadelphia having spent months preparing for the convention
- led American troops at the Battle of Fallen Timbers
- negotiated the extremely popular treaty with Spain
- James Madison
- Benjamin Franklin
- Alexander Hamilton
- Patrick Henry
- Thomas Jefferson
- John Marshall
- Thomas Pinckney
- Anthony Wayne
- George Washington
- Edmond-Charles Genêt
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