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  • Founding Documents of America: Documents Decoded

    Founding Documents of America by Vile, John R.;

    Documents Decoded

    Series: Documents Decoded;

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    Product details:

    • Publisher ABC-CLIO
    • Date of Publication 9 September 2015
    • Number of Volumes Hardback

    • ISBN 9781440839283
    • Binding Hardback
    • No. of pages384 pages
    • Size 279x215 mm
    • Weight 1304 g
    • Language English
    • Illustrations 3 bw illus
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    Long description:

    Written by a renowned expert on the American Founding period, this book examines selections of key documents from 1215 through 1791 that were instrumental to the development of the U.S. Constitution and the American political tradition.

    The latest addition to ABC-CLIO's popular Documents Decoded series, John R. Vile's Founding Documents of America presents historic documents key to the foundations of our nation's government accompanied by introductions that supply background information and analysis that highlights key provisions and provide historical context. The coverage extends beyond the Declaration of Independence, the Constitution, and the Bill of Rights to provide contextual understanding of a wide range of other documents, such as private diary entries and political polemics, that will further readers' understanding of the United States' founding and early political development.

    The documents are organized chronologically into four sections: constitutional antecedents; the revolutionary and confederal periods; calling and convening the Constitutional Convention; and debating, ratifying, implementing, and amending the new Constitution. Through its more than 50 primary source documents-from the Magna Carta of 1215 through the Bill of Rights, which was adopted in 1791-this book will serve high school and college students seeking to understand the documents that laid the foundations for the U.S. Constitution and Bill of Rights, and provide opportunities for student readers to build critical thinking skills.

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    Table of Contents:

    Introduction,

    SECTION I. CONSTITUTIONAL ANTECEDENTS
    The Law of the Land,
    Magna Carta
    1215
    Against Common Right and Reason,
    Sir Edward Coke's Dr. Bonham's Case
    1610
    A Civill Body Politick,
    The Mayflower Compact
    1620
    No Man Be Compelled,
    The Petition of Right
    1628
    "A Model of Christian Charity,"
    John Winthrop's Sermon
    1630
    An Orderly and Decent Government,
    Fundamental Orders of Connecticut
    1639
    The Free Fruition of Such Liberties,
    Massachusetts Body of Liberties
    1641
    The Peace, Safety, and Public Good of the People,
    John Locke's Second Treatise of Government
    1689
    The Rights and Liberties of the Subject,
    English Bill of Rights
    1689
    There Is No Such Thing as Slavery,
    Samuel Sewall's The Selling of Joseph: A Memorial
    1701
    Liberty of Conscience,
    Charter of Privileges Granted to the Inhabitants of Pennsylvania and Territories
    October 28, 1701
    Proclaim Liberty,
    Liberty Bell Inscription
    1751
    Join, or Die,
    Benjamin Franklin's Sketch
    May 9, 1754
    Mutual Defence and Security,
    The Albany Plan of Union
    July 10, 1754

    SECTION II: THE REVOLUTIONARY AND CONFEDERAL PERIODS
    Life, Liberty, and Property,
    Declaration and Resolves of the First Continental Congress
    October 14, 1774
    So Void of Common Sense,
    Washington Forbids Soldiers from Celebrating Guy Fawkes Day
    November 5, 1775
    'Tis Time to Part,
    Thomas Paine's Common Sense
    1776
    Remember the Ladies,
    Abigail and John Adams, Correspondence on Women's Issues
    March-August 1776
    Adopt Such Government,
    Resolution of Second Continental Congress
    May 10, 1776
    Absolved from All Allegiance,
    Richard Henry Lee's Resolutions
    June 7, 1776
    The Basis and Foundation of Government,
    The Virginia Declaration of Rights
    Ratified on June 12, 1776
    We Hold These Truths,
    The Declaration of Independence
    July 4, 1776
    The Natural Rights of Mankind,
    A Bill for Establishing Religious Freedom
    Introduced June 18, 1779; adopted 1786
    Mutual Friendship and Intercourse,
    Articles of Confederation
    Written in 1776; adopted in 1781
    E Pluribus Unum,
    Great Seal of the United States
    1782
    The Interest of the Community,
    George Washington's Circular to the States
    June 8, 1783
    A Firm and Perpetual Peace,
    Treaty of Paris
    September 3, 1783
    An Affectionate Farewell,
    George Washington's Address on Resigning His Commission
    December 23, 1783
    No Powers but What Were Given,
    Thomas Jefferson's Notes on the State of Virginia
    1785
    The Sole and Exclusive Right,
    Congressional Proposal for Revising the Articles of Confederation
    August 7, 1786

    SECTION III: CALLING AND CONVENING THE CONSTITUTIONAL CONVENTION
    Defects in the System,
    Annapolis Convention Resolution
    1786
    As a Mean to Remedy,
    Congressional Endorsement of Annapolis Convention Resolution
    February 21, 1787
    An Aggregate View,
    James Madison Discusses Vices of the Political System of the United States
    April 1787
    A House to Do Business,
    Rules for the Constitutional Convention
    May 28, 1787
    The Infancy of the Science of Constitutions,
    The Virginia Plan
    May 29, 1787
    Adequate to the Exigencies of Government,
    The New Jersey Plan
    June 15, 1787
    Blessings on Our Deliberations,
    Debates over State Representation Lead to a Call for Prayer
    June 28, 1787
    Articles of Compact,
    Northwest Ordinance
    July 13, 1787
    This Infernal Trafic,
    Debates at the Convention over Slavery
    August 1787
    Experience Must Be Our Only Guide,
    John Dickinson Emphasizes the Need for Experience in Governing
    August 13, 1787
    Cabal and Corruption,
    Debates over the Presidency
    September 4, 1787
    Make Manifest Our Unanimity,
    Benjamin Franklin's Final Speech at the Constitutional Convention
    September 17, 1787
    We the People,
    The Constitution of the United States
    1787
    The Consolidation of Our Union,
    George Washington Transmits the Constitution to Congress
    September 17, 1787
    In Conformity to the Resolves,
    Resolution of Congress Submitting the Constitution to the Several States
    September 28, 1787

    SECTION IV: DEBATING, RATIFYING, IMPLEMENTING, AND AMENDING THE NEW CONSTITUTION
    The Instrument of the Union,
    James Wilson Comments on Ratifying the Proposed Constitution
    October 6, 1787
    Our Freedom We've Won,
    "The Grand Constitution" Song
    October 1787
    The Destruction of Your Liberties,
    Brutus Issues His Anti-Federalist Essay
    1787
    The Mischiefs of Faction,
    Federalist Papers, No. 10 & No. 51
    1787-1788
    The Tyranny of Rulers,
    Patrick Henry's Speech at Virginia's Ratifying Convention
    June 5, 1788
    The Great National Dome,
    The Federal Pillars
    1788
    Ratification and the Bill of Rights,
    Letters between Madison and Jefferson
    1787-1789
    Summoned by My Country,
    George Washington's Inaugural Address
    April 30, 1789
    To Administer Justice,
    Judiciary Act of 1789
    September 24, 1789
    To Bigotry No Sanction,
    Correspondence between Moses Seixas and President George Washington
    1790
    Amendments to the Constitution,
    The Bill of Rights
    Proposed by Congress in 1789; ratified in 1791

    Timeline of Events,
    Further Reading,
    Index,
    About the Author,

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