A+++ Compromise of 1850
What was the series of Henry Clay's proposals that were adopted by Congress called?
The series of Henry Clay's proposals that was adopted by Congress was called the American System. It included measures such as a high protective tariff, a national bank, and internal improvements funded by the federal government. The American System aimed to promote economic growth and development in the United States.
compromise of 1850 nyicca BAM
The series of proposals put forth by Henry Clay that were adopted by Congress is known as the "Compromise of 1850." This legislative package aimed to address the tensions between slave and free states following the Mexican-American War. It included measures such as the admission of California as a free state and the establishment of territorial governments in the newly acquired lands, along with a stricter Fugitive Slave Act. The Compromise sought to maintain a delicate balance between North and South in an increasingly divided nation.
Proposals for an amendment to the Constitution can be made by Congress or by a national convention called by two-thirds of the state legislatures. This process is outlined in Article V of the Constitution. Once proposed, amendments must be ratified by three-fourths of the state legislatures or by conventions in three-fourths of the states.
Democratic Republicans (also called Old Republicans)
a National Convetion
Why, Anne Boleyn of course! (-:
bills
It was called the Olive Branch Petition.
Henry 8th had a daughter called Mary, a daughter called Elizabeth and a son called Edward.
Yes, most of the time anyway, and when the Congress was meeting in Philadelphia. The building had just been built to be the new state house of Pennsylvania. Today it is called Independence Hall. The Second Continental Congress met there beginning in 1775, and continued meeting there, except when run out of town by the British, for several years until the Second Continental Congress morphed into the Confederation Congress after the Articles of Confederation were adopted. They signed the Declaration of Independence there. In 1787, when the Constitutional Convention met, it was in the same building that it did its work.