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Period 3: 1754–1800 Videos 20 videos

AP U.S. History 1.1 Period 3: 1754–1800
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AP U.S. History 1.1 Period 3: 1754–1800. Why was the power to declare war granted to Congress by the Articles of Confederation ineffectual?

AP U.S. History 1.2 Period 3: 1754-1800
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AP U.S. History 1.2 Period 3: 1754-1800. The structure of the government that the Articles of Confederation established most clearly reflects the R...

AP U.S. History 1.3 Period 3: 1754-1800
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AP U.S. History 1.3 Period 3: 1754-1800. In the Articles of Confederation, the issue of slavery was...what?

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AP U.S. History 1.3 Period 3: 1754-1800 247 Views


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AP U.S. History 1.3 Period 3: 1754-1800. In the Articles of Confederation, the issue of slavery was...what?

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English Language

Transcript

00:00

[ musical flourish ]

00:03

And here's your Shmoop du jour, brought to you by punting,

00:06

the best way to get rid of a problem. Yeah.

00:09

Give this excerpt a read.

00:11

[ mumbles ]

00:14

[ mumbling continues ]

00:19

[ mumbles ]

00:21

All right, and now the question:

00:22

In the Articles of Confederation,

00:24

the issue of slavery was... what?

00:27

And here are your potential answers. [ meow ]

00:29

Settled... settled... not settled... not settled... Hmm.

00:32

All right, our biggest clue here is the date

00:35

that the Articles of Confederation was written.

00:37

So remember that year - 1781 -

00:40

as we check out these answers.

00:42

Did the Articles of Confederation A -

00:44

settle the issue of slavery by allowing the practice

00:47

but prohibiting the importation of new slaves?

00:50

Well, let's see.

00:51

International slave trading wasn't banned until 1808.

00:54

That's almost 30 years later. So that eliminates A.

00:57

And what about B?

00:58

They settled slavery by establishing that all new states

01:01

would be free states.

01:03

Well, does the Missouri Compromise

01:05

ring a bell? It should, because that 1820 act

01:07

attempted to resolve the issue of whether or not

01:09

new states would allow slavery.

01:11

And even that didn't fix things.

01:13

In fact, it took another 45 years

01:15

for the government to settle things once and for all.

01:18

And it was bloody when they did.

01:19

So it's not B, either.

01:21

So then maybe the issue of slavery was C -

01:24

not settled by the Articles but was later settled

01:26

by the ratification of the Constitution.

01:29

Well, that sure would have saved everyone a lot of trouble down the road,

01:32

but the Constitution also failed to

01:34

clarify the government's position on slavery.

01:36

That knocks out C, as well.

01:38

Which means that slavery was D -

01:40

not settled in the Articles

01:42

and continued to be an issue in later years.

01:45

And did it ever. Slavery was

01:47

the giant elephant in the room in the early days of the country.

01:50

Nobody wanted to talk about it because it always

01:52

ended in a big disagreement.

01:54

So rather than talk about the problem,

01:56

they just ignored it. So the correct answer is D.

01:59

And we all know that when you ignore

02:00

your problems, well, they just go away, right?

02:03

[ umm... ]

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