Home > Lectures > Creating a Constitution

Creating a Constitution

By Joanne Freeman - Yale
get flash player

Lecture Description

Professor Freeman discusses the debate over the Constitution at the Federal Convention of 1787 - a convention that by no means had an inevitable outcome. Indeed, even attending the Convention at all was a subject of debate in the individual states; many people feared that the Convention would produce a pseudo-monarchical form of government that would abandon the true significance of the Revolution. Ostensibly called to revise the Articles of Confederation, the meeting ultimately produced an entirely new form of government, in part, thanks to the influence of James Madison's "Virginia Plan" of government. Professor Freeman focuses on three subjects of debate among the many that occupied the Convention: the debates over representation, slavery, and the nature of the executive branch.

Course Description

Course Index

  1. Introduction: Freeman's Top Five Tips for Studying the Revolution
  2. Being a British Colonist
  3. Being a British American
  4. "Ever at Variance and Foolishly Jealous": Intercolonial Relations
  5. Outraged Colonials: The Stamp Act Crisis
  6. Resistance or Rebellion? (Or, What the Heck is Happening in Boston?)
  7. Being a Revolutionary
  8. The Logic of Resistance
  9. Who Were the Loyalists?
  10. Common Sense
  11. Independence
  12. Civil War
  13. Organizing a War
  14. Heroes and Villains
  15. Citizens and Choices: Experiencing the Revolution in New Haven
  16. The Importance of George Washington
  17. The Logic of a Campaign (or, How in the World Did We Win?)
  18. Fighting the Revolution: The Big Picture
  19. War and Society
  20. Confederation
  21. A Union Without Power
  22. The Road to the Constitutional Convention
  23. Creating a Constitution
  24. Creating a Nation
  25. Being an American: The Legacy of the Revolution