Between 1776 and 1789, the United States emerged as an
independent country, creating and ratifying its new constitution, and
establishing its national government. In order to
assert their traditional rights, American Patriots seized control of the
colonies and launched a war for independence. The
Americans declared independence on July 1776, proclaiming "all men are
created equal." Congress raised the Continental Army under the command of
General George Washington, forged a
military alliance with France, and captured the two main British invasion
armies. Nationalists replaced the governing Articles of Confederation to
strengthen the federal government's powers of defense and taxation with the
Constitution of the United States in 1789, still in effect today.
THE FORMATION OF NATIONAL GOVERNMENT (1776-1812)
1. State Constitutions
The success of
the Revolution gave Americans the opportunity to give legal form to their
ideals as expressed in the Declaration of Independence, and to remedy some of
their grievances through state constitutions. As early as May 10, 1776,
Congress had passed a resolution advising the colonies to form new governments
"such as shall best conduce to the happiness and safety of their
constituents." Some of them had already done so, and within a year after
the Declaration of Independence, all but three had drawn up constitutions.
BUILDING UNITY, POLITICAL PROCESS AND WESTWARD EXPANSION (1812-1850)
The War of
1812 was, in a sense, a second war of independence, for before that time the
United States had not been accorded equality in the family of nations. With its
conclusion, many of the serious difficulties that the young republic had faced
since the Revolution now disappeared. National union under the Constitution
brought a balance between liberty and order. With a low national debt and a
continent awaiting exploration, the prospect of peace, prosperity and social
progress opened before the nation.
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