U.S. History Ch 7, Sec. 7.2
tariffs
fees on imported goods
George Washington
the Founding Father who presided over the Constitutional Convention
William Paterson
the delegate who presented the New Jersey Plan to the Convention
Edmund Randolph
the delegate who proposed the Virginia Plan to the Convention
Upper House (Senate)
the division of Congress in which each state receives two seats, and representatives are selected by state legislatures
Lower House (House of Representatives)
the division of Congress in which the number of representatives is based upon state population and members are elected by the voters of their respective states
Rhode Island
the last of the 13 states to ratify the Constitution
Philadelphia
the location of the Constitutional Convention
Commerce and Slave Trade Compromise
the measure that empowered Congress to regulate commerce with certain limitations
55
the number of delegates that attended the Constitutional Convention
the Federalist
85 essays giving sound arguments in favor of the Constitution, published by Alexander Hamilton with the help of James Madison and John Jay, which helped the Federalists win support for the Constitution in New York
George Washington Ben Franklin
the 2 most famous Americans to attend the Constitutional Convention
Pennsylvania New Jersey Georgia Connecticut Massachusetts
the 5 states that followed Delaware in ratifying the Constitution *in* *1787*
Maryland South Carolina New Hampshire Virginia New York
the 5 states that ratified the Constitution *in* *1788*
the Great Compromise or, the Connecticut Compromise
the agreement that reconciled the Virginia Plan and the New Jersey Plan by having the national government consist of two houses: an upper house with equal representation for each state, and a lower house with representation based on state population; this arrangement satisfied both the larger and smaller states
the "Great Decision"
the bold decision of the Convention delegates to put aside the Articles and draft a brand new Constitution
Independence Hall
the building in Philadelphia where the Declaration of Independence was signed and where the Constitutional Convention was held
Three-fifths Compromise
the compromise between northern and southern states at the Constitutional Convention that three-fifths of the *slave* *population* would be counted for determining direct taxation and representation in the House of Representatives
Constitutional Convention
the convention held in *Philadelphia* in the summer of 1787 to revise the Articles; produced the Constitution of the United States
George Washington
the first President of the United States
Delaware
the first state to ratify the Constitution
North Carolina, 1789 Rhode Island, 1790
the last 2 states to ratify the Constitution
Virginia Plan
the plan for representation in Congress which called for a *bicameral* legislature with *representation* *based* *on* *state* *population*; also called for the creation of executive and judicial departments and gave a number of specific powers to the national government
New Jersey Plan
the plan for representation in Congress which called for a *unicameral* legislature with *equal* *representation* *for* *all* *states* and for the creation of executive and judicial branches; in essence, the governmental system would continue as it did under the Articles of Confederation, but the national government would have power to tax and regulate commerce
Connecticut
the state whose delegates negotiated the "Great Compromise" which settled the debate over representation in Congress
1787
the year in which the Constitutional Convention was held
Jonathan Dayton
the youngest delegate at the Constitutional Convention, at age 26
Anti-Federalists
those who *opposed* the Constitution
Federalists
those who *supported* the Constitution
Annapolis Convention
a convention held in September 1786 to consider problems of trade and navigation; attended by five states and important because it issued the call to Congress and the states for what became the Constitutional Convention
Alexander Hamilton
a delegate of New York who attended the Annapolis Convention and the Constitutional Convention
James Madison
a delegate of Virginia who attended the Annapolis Convention and the Constitutional Convention; known as the "*Father* *of* *the* *Constitution*" due to being the most important member of the Convention
Mount Vernon Convention
a meeting called by George Washington at his home in Virginia in 1785 to discuss a disagreement between Virginia and Maryland over commercial navigation on the Potomac River
"a bundle of compromises"
a nickname for the Constitution which acknowledges the fact that nearly every provision of it was a compromise among various viewpoints, made possible because the delegates to the Constitutional Convention resolved to put aside local interests to produce a document that would be acceptable to people from all sections of the country for all time