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The Constitutional Convention
The Constitutional Convention

It seems like anywhere you go on social media it's not hard to find people engaged in a heated debate about the “dangers of big government.” Is its size too big? Are there too many government programs? Is Uncle Sam secretly putting tracking devices in your breakfast cereal?  The “Big Government” debate is as American as double bacon cheeseburgers and reality TV. 

   

When the fifty-five delegates showed up in Philadelphia in the sweltering summer of 1787 to amend the Articles of Confederation, nobody was sure what was going to come out of it. The Great Convention was a who’s who of 18th Century American society. Gathered in Philadelphia were the wealthiest, most famous, and most powerful men in the nation. Historian James MacGregor called the convention a meeting of the “well-bred, well-fed, well-read, and the well-wed.”

​Ironically, the fathers of American democracy spent a lot of time wrangling over what role the people would play in this new government. Men like Roger Sherman and Elbridge Gerry had little faith in the people when it came to participating in politics. Sherman believed that ordinary people were easily misled. Men like Gerry saw the average Joe as too ignorant to participate in government and would better off being represented by their “betters.” Of course, in his defense, most people in those days didn’t have more than a fifth-grade education. This fear of the ignorant masses is why we have the Electoral College.

 

Others like George Mason and Benjamin Franklin were quick to point out the hypocrisy of the situation. Didn’t we just fight a war for democracy and equality? How could the new government turn around and lock the people out of government after the people had fought to overthrow tyranny? With so many conflicting opinions, it is nothing short of a miracle that a new government was created at all.


For the first two months, hardly anything was accomplished. Things were becoming so desperate that Benjamin Franklin proposed that the group adopt a measure to pray for a solution, but only two people supported him on the motion. The delegates were worried what it might look like if word got out that that they had to appeal to God to step in to help solve the deadlock.

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In "We the People" Howard Christy recreated what he thought the Constitutional Convention may have looked like. Completed in 1937, this 20 by 30 foot painting now hangs in U.S Capitol building.

The Battle of the Plans: New Jersey v. Virginia

The next critical issue that kept the delegates divided was the over how power would be shared under the new government. James Madison and Alexander Hamilton, being the overachievers of the group, had come to the Philadelphia already having written their own draft of the of the Constitution. Under Madison’s plan, which would become known as the Virginia Plan, the national government would be divided into three branches: Legislative, Executive, and Judicial. The Legislative Branch, i.e., Congress, would be bicameral (that is it would have two houses); with the lower house elected by the people and an upper house whose members chosen by the state legislatures. Representation in both houses would be based on population. Madison and Hamilton, being federalists who believed in a strong central government, wanted Congress to have the power to choose the president and members of the Supreme Court. Had this system been adopted America would have had a Parliamentary system almost identical to Britain’s… minus the king. 

 

The Virginia Plan was extremely unpopular with the small states because in a world where size matters, the small states would always be outvoted. Small states like New Jersey and Delaware countered with the New Jersey Plan. Basically, their version was the Articles of Confederation with a facelift. Like the current government, there would be a unicameral (one-house) legislature where each state would have an equal vote in Congress. The New Jersey Plan supported the idea of a three-branch system of government where Congress selected the President and the President chose members of the Supreme Court. Both plans agreed that Congress should be given the power to tax and regulate trade between the states. The Constitution that we know and love was inching closer to becoming a reality.

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New Jersey

The Great Compromise

Under the Constitution the new government would have three branches that were separated from each other. Each branch would have it's own unique powers as well as limitations of things it could not do. 

The Legislative Branch

After much wrangling, speechifying, and debating, the delegates reached a compromise that established a legislative branch that had a little of everything mixed in. Sorta like a fruitcake, but without that bloated feeling. The new Congress would have a bi-cameral legislature with the lower house (House of Representatives) elected based on the size of a state’s population and elected directly by the people. The upper house (The Senate) would elect two members (Ben Franklin’s idea) from each state and would be chosen by the state legislatures. This last rule would remain in effect until 1913 when the Seventeenth Amendment allowed people to vote for their Senators directly.

 

The Executive Branch

The next big issue was what powers the Executive Branch would have under the new government?  Madison was in favor of the POTUS being a life-long position similar to a king– and would be chosen by Congress.  Most wanted to have a president elected for a single term of seven years. What they settled on is what we have today. The President elected to a four-year term with the possibility of re-election. There were no term limits until 1951, but every president followed George Washington’s example and served for only two terms. Franklin D. Roosevelt who served from 1933-1945 broke this tradition by being elected to an unprecedented four terms in office; which led to the twenty-first amendment which placed a two-term cap on the executive branch.

 

The Judicial Branch

Under the A.O.C legal disputes were left up to the state’s to decide. No national court system existed. What happened when an argument broke out between the states? Well, that turned out to be the biggest failure of the government laid out by the A.O.C. Congress was supposed to play referee between the squabbling states but didn’t have the power to enforce its decisions. Under the new Constitution, a federal court system was set up with both a national (federal) court system and a state court system sharing power. Criminal and civil cases would be tried based on whose laws were broken. For example, a traffic ticket in Maryland is dealt with by the Maryland court. A case involving a guy that robs a store in Kentucky and then crosses the state line and does the same thing in Ohio would be considered a national crime and be handled by the Federal Courts. Article III of the Constitution set up a tiered pyramid of justice with lower district courts being able to hear cases first, but with the chance of an appeal to a higher court. At the top of this pyramid is the Supreme Court (one for each state and one for the nation) who makes a final decision on all cases if the lower courts couldn't resolve the problem.

The Great Compromise
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Federalist v. Anti-Federalist  

 On September 17th, 1789 the delegates at the Philadelphia Convention said goodbye to 149 days of intense debate and headed home. Now the hard part began–getting nine of the thirteen states to actually approve the document. Once word got out that the delegates were not just revising the Articles of Confederation, Americans quickly divided into two camps. The Federalists felt that the Constitution, even with its flaws, couldn’t get any better. The Anti-Federalists, as their name implies, felt that Federalists had gone too far and had completely exceeded their authority. Talk of the Constitution dominated the newspaper headlines, church sermons, and state house debates for the next ten months.

   

The Anti-Federalists on average were poor, uneducated, farmers who lived in the western parts of their states. Farmers who didn’t take a prominent role in government, to begin with, and were against the government getting up in their business. Many complained that the Federalists were creating an American monarchy. The Anti-Federalists had some influential voices, men like Patrick "give me liberty or give me death" Henry, Samuel Adams, and Thomas Paine (the guy who wrote ‘Common Sense.')  

In December, Delaware became the first state to approve (unanimously, no less) the Constitution- earning it the right to stamp its license plates with the motto “The First State”. On June 17, 1788, New Hampshire became the ninth state to vote in favor of making the Constitution the law of the land. Technically, Congress had all the support it needed to move forward on creating a new government. But the framers knew that the Constitution and the United States couldn’t stay together without its two powerhouses– New York and Virginia who were the two biggest holdouts. In these two states, the political fur flew. In the end, both Virginia and New York ended up ratifying the Constitution but only after being promised that a Bill of Rights would be included in the final version. 

Federalists
Anti-Federalists

The Three-Fifths Compromise

While delegates in Philadelphia were busy arguing over how to balance power between large and small states, another heated debate erupted over how enslaved people would be counted for representation and taxation. Southern states wanted enslaved populations included when determining how many seats each state would get in the House of Representatives, even though enslaved people had no rights or political voice. Northern delegates objected, arguing that if enslaved people couldn’t vote, they shouldn’t increase a state’s representation in Congress. The argument dragged on for weeks until both sides settled on an uneasy bargain known as the Three-Fifths Compromise.

The compromise declared that each enslaved person would count as three-fifths of a person for both taxation and representation purposes. This deal gave southern states more seats in Congress than if only free people had been counted, but less than if enslaved people had been fully included. The decision was a clear reminder that the new nation, while built on the language of liberty, still tolerated slavery. It set the stage for future conflict between North and South and revealed how the framers’ drive for unity came at the cost of confronting slavery directly.

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Why It Matters

The Constitutional Convention of 1787 shaped the foundation of the U.S. government and continues to impact every aspect of American life today. The delegates didn’t just rewrite the rules—they scrapped the old system under the Articles of Confederation and created an entirely new framework that balanced power between the states and the federal government. This system introduced checks and balances, ensuring no single branch of government could dominate.

The Constitution also established the idea that government power comes from the people, not kings or nobles. It’s the reason Americans vote for their leaders, have guaranteed rights like free speech, and can challenge unfair laws in court. Even debates about representation, taxation, and states' rights that started in 1787 still shape modern political battles.

Without this convention, the United States might not have survived as a unified nation. The compromises made, like the Great Compromise and Three-Fifths Compromise, reflected the tensions of the time but also showed a willingness to negotiate for the greater good. While imperfect, the Constitution became a living document, allowing future generations to amend it and expand rights.

In short, the Constitutional Convention didn’t just create a government—it created a system that has lasted more than 230 years and remains a model for democracies around the world.

Lesson Plan Available!

Constitution Quest
Step into the chaotic world of Constitution Quest, where Madam Fillabusta—cranky, snarky, and endlessly dramatic—tries to stop your students from learning the Constitution. Between her eye-rolls and sarcastic jabs, students race to solve puzzles and crack codes on the powers of each branch of government, checks and balances, and the Bill of Rights. It’s part civics, part escape room, and all mischief—making government lessons unforgettable.

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