Washington's First Term - The Election of 1792
Short, Simple, Duty. President Washing accepts his second term.
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Short, Simple, Duty. President Washing accepts his second term.
The French revolution breaks out, then France declares war on England. America is unprepared for war.
We cover the battles to secure the Ohio territory ceded to America in the Treaty of Paris.
We detail the emergence of political parties from Washington's own cabinet.
Secretary Hamilton moves to create the Bank of the United States, in pushing so hard, the national divide over the issue marks the creation of political parties in America.
America still is buried by the accumulation of debt from the revolutionary war. Secretary of Treasury Hamilton has a plan.
We cover the story of the ratification of the Bill of Rights
We cover the creation of the court system and the earliest history of the Supreme Court.
President Washington selects his cabinet and sets the precedent on how cabinet meetings work.
This wasn't really an election... not in the way we think of elections today. This was more like... a coronation by consensus.
We move to Virginia, whose ratification will complete the supermajority required for ratification of the Constitution of the United States of America.
We turn to the debates in the Massachusetts ratification convention.
The first major convention starts in Philadelphia with mobs forcing a vote for the date. Everyone knows, so goes Pennsylvania so goes the small states around them.
The proposed constitution hit the newspapers, and public figures start taking positions and or writing with pen names to argue their points in the public sphere
Without records of all of the debates, I give the context of the materials we will cover in this season.
The completed constitution of the Unite States of America.
The Philadelphia convention will close with a draft of a new American constitution.
The convention settles on the Sherman compromise for the legislature and take up the issue of slavery. Washington will form a committee of detail to draw up all of the points agreed to into a new document.
The convention begins to breakdown, delegates threaten each other, and cannot find compromises on distribution of voting power
The opposition unveils their own plan, and we see the factions of the federalists and anti-federalists break into the open.
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