Nearly as well. And what is nearly? The specifics of the war are very important,
and more interesting than the social conditions in the Article of Confederation.
At the beginning NOT ALL of the delegates in the Constitutional Convention favored a total overhaul.
Neither was Shay's Rebellion. If you recall (maybe you don't), in many states the ratification BARELY passed.
In the Federalist Papers they didn't mention anything about putting down rebellions.
In no. 1, Hamilton writes, "Among the most formidable of the obstacles which the new Constitution will have to encounter, may readily be distinguished the obvious interest of a certain class of men in each State to reisist all changes which may hazard a dimunition of the power, emolument and consequence of the offices they hold under the State-establishments - and the perverted ambition of another class of men, who will hope to aggrandise themselves by the confusions of their country, or will flatter themselves with fairer prospects of elevation from the subdivision of the empire into several partial confederacies, than from its union under one government."
In no. 9, Hamilton writes, "Should a popular insurrection happen, in one of the confederate States, the others are able to quell it."
In no. 10, Madison basically argues that the new political system would neturalize class conflicts.
There's probably more, but I can't come with any other papers off the top of my head.
Regardless, the Federalist papers only represented the views and arguments of Hamilton, Madison, and Jay. On the floor of the Constitutional Convention, Shay's Rebellion was one of the most important arguments. Washington, for instance, said of Shay's Rebellion that "there could be no stronger evidence of the want of energy in our governments than these disorders."
It was because of homogenized trade and coinage. Enough legislaters in the states saw what happens when you have seperate coinage and tariffs, and THAT is why they voted to ratify. Shay's Rebellion is simply something that has been thrown in, in hindsight.
It basically did. People are wrong to say it started with Fort Sumter. It started with the first battles in Northern Virginia.
background. Every student should know that the Civil War lasted until 1865, and then Reconstruction lasted until 1877. The span between dates shows things. It's provides the background.
I don't give a **** if students don't know exactly when Fort Sumter was stormed or when Lee surrendered at Appomattox Courthouse or when the Compromise of 1877 was agreed upon.
If it has been forgotten, it probably wasn't worth talking about.
You're seriously arguing that important events aren't forgotten?
That's bigger bull****. People don't give a damn about social history. Ask a normal high school student if they'd want to learn about the Civil War or the state of women in the antebellum South, and I bet they'd overwhelmingly vote for Civil War... even the women among them.
Rough dates... like the US Civil War was fought in the mid-1800s? And the Dred Scott decision was also in the mid-1800s? Rough dates don't cut it.
What does it do for them? It helps them memorize dates. Doesn't exercise the mind? Where do you think memory is stored, Ramo? The kidneys?
Why should they memorize historical dates when they aren't learning the historical background in which these events occur? It's a waste.
Doesn't inspire them to learn history? Doesn't give them an appreciation for current events? I think not knowing the facts does far more to discourage the desire to learn history than you assume, Ramo, because who wants to look like an idiot by discussing a subject that one knows nothing about.
Honestly, how can one discuss history if one is ignorant of even the basic facts of it?
Honestly, how can one discuss history if one is ignorant of even the basic facts of it?
P.S. Social history is the meat and potatos, military history is the story of how the meat and potatos gets from the farm to the kitchen table.
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