The New Jersey Plan was debated for two weeks until the delegates took a day off for the 4th of July. During this time, they worked on "The Great Compromise," which would be the solution to the arguments over the New Jersey Plan.
That said, they are very linked terms but are not the same.
The great compromise.
Either the Great Compromise or the Virginia Plan
because it brought together both the Virginia Plan and the New Jersey Plan.
= (During the Constitutional Convention) The great compromise was a mixture of the Virginia plan which gave states with more population more rep. and the New Jersey plan which gave each state equal votes. This is where the U.S got the Senate (New Jersey plan) and the House of Representatives (Virginia plan) =
The Great Compromise, also known as the Connecticut Compromise, was a combination of the Virginia Plan and the New Jersey Plan. The Virginia Plan proposed a bicameral legislature with representation based on population, favoring larger states, while the New Jersey Plan called for a unicameral legislature with equal representation for each state, favoring smaller states. The compromise established a bicameral Congress, with the House of Representatives based on population and the Senate providing equal representation for each state.
connecticut compromise
The new Jersey plan and the Virginia plan
The great compromise.
The Great Compromise
The Connecticut Compromise
The Great Compromise was signed in 1787 after the propositions of the Virginia Plan and the New Jersey Plan
Yes, the Virginia Plan was written before the Great Compromise along with the New Jersey plan. The Congress decided to take some ideas from the Virginia Plan and some from the New Jersey Plan to create a plan that worked for both of them, and as a result, the Great Compromise was created.
The bigger states opposed the New Jersey plan and the smaller states opposed the Virginia plan. IDK which states liked/dislike the great compromise.
The Great Compromise.
The Great Compromise
The Great compromise was made between larger and smaller states. Also known as the Connecticut Compromise, it asserted the bicameral legislature which made a house based on population and a house based on statehood equally weighted.
Maybe the Great Compromise by Roger Sherman.