The delegates of the Constitutional Convention were supposed to revise the Articles of Confederation, not create an entirely new government. This four month convention in Philadelphia lasted from May 25 to September 17, 1787.
The Constitution was written during the Constitutional Conventional and was originally meant to revise the weak Articles of Confederation. However, what the delegates drew up ended up replacing the Articles of Confederation entirely with a republic with three branches of government: a strong executive branch (the president), the legislative branch (Congress), and the judicial branch (the Supreme Court).
The Constitutional Convention (or the Philadelphia Convention, as it was known at the time) was called to amend the Articles of Confederation, the rules for the United States' first independent government. But when the fifty-five delegates attempted to amend the plan, they realized the task was impossible. The delegates scrapped the Articles of Confederation and secretly began working to devise an entirely new framework for government, the US Constitution.
The "original" intention of at least some of the delegates was to "amend" or "improve" the Articles because of the weaknesses of the Confederation (e.g. no elected executive, no taxing power, no standing armed forces, uncoordinated court systems). These made the function of the central government (actually just Congress) difficult and sometimes impossible. After discussions began, the delegates began to see that rewriting the Articles to address these problems was not going to work. What was needed was an entirely new framework for the federal government, unimpeded by the old one. So they began to devise the new US Constitution, based on proven historical models.
It was NOT the Declaration of Independence they met to revise, but the Articles of Confederation. They were supposed to modify the Confederation; instead they came up with an entirely new government, described in the Constitution.oh gosh thank you
Replace the Articles of Confederation with an entirely new document(apex)
Replace the Articles of Confederation with an entirely new document(apex)
To amend the Articles of Confederation
Replace the Articles of Confederation with an entirely new document(apex)
Replace the Articles of Confederation with an entirely new document(apex)
Replace the Articles of Confederation with an entirely new document(apex)
The delegates to the Constitutional Convention originally met to reform the Articles of Confederation. The Articles of Confederation were the guidelines for the first national government of the United States. However, they were weak and did not give enough power to the national government so that it was able to hold all of the separate states together. That is why they wanted to reform it. When they started the convention, they discovered that since the Articles of Confederation were so fundamentally flawed it would be better to just come up with an entirely new form of government. So they created the Constitution of the United States of America, which is still used today.
The delegates of the Constitutional Convention were supposed to revise the Articles of Confederation, not create an entirely new government. This four month convention in Philadelphia lasted from May 25 to September 17, 1787.
The original plan for the 1787 Philadelphia Convention (later called the Constitutional Convention) was to revise the Articles of Confederation, but many delegates sought to eliminate the weaknesses of the Articles of Confederation by creating an entirely new document.
The Constitutional Convention was called to amend the Articles of Confederation, the rules for the United States' first independent government. But when the fifty-five delegates attempted to amend the plan, they realized the task was impossible. The delegates scrapped the Articles of Confederation and secretly began working to devise an entirely new framework for government, the US Constitution.
The Constitutional Convention (or the Philadelphia Convention, as it was known at the time) was called to amend the Articles of Confederation, the rules for the United States' first independent government. But when the fifty-five delegates attempted to amend the plan, they realized the task was impossible. The delegates scrapped the Articles of Confederation and secretly began working to devise an entirely new framework for government, the US Constitution.
The Articles of Confederation were proving unsatisfactory as a basis for a national government. A constitutional Convention was called to propose amendments to improve the Articles of Confederation. However, the Delegates to the Convention concluded that the Articles could not be salvaged and an entirely new document was needed. Therefore they wrote what is not the US Constitution, submitted it to Congress for approval. Congress approved it and submitted it to the states for ratification.