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He was the only colonial governer (who still called himself British, not American) that supported American cause in revolution. He was one of the founding fathers.
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Clergyman; represented New Jersey. He was a founding father and later the president of Princeton Univeristy.
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Representative from Massachusetts and the President of the Continental Congress 1775. He was known for being the first to sign the Declaration of Independence very fancily.
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He was a devout catholic and a founding father. He was a representative at the convention for Maryland and one of it's first senators.
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Representative from NY; founding father, He helped negotiate the treaty of Paris in 1783 that ended the American Revolution. He was also a diplomat to England and negotiated Jay's treaty.
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He was from Pennsylvania; treasurer of US Mint, a physician, writer, educator, and founding father. He signed the DOI and attended the continental congress.
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He was a clergyman and a soldier in colnial, revolutionary, and post revolutionary conflict. He was one of the first official elected US congressmen, and a founding father (he also looked a lot like George Washington).
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Composed by Thomas J. and edited by congress, this document announced freedom for colonies from British rule and set forth founding priciples of US, including "all men are created equal".
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The constitution was signed on this date; it was made to structure government, establish basic rules, limit the government, and to be a primary source of nation's policy making power.
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12 of these were drafted by Maddison and 10 ratified by the states. Also known as the "Bill of Limits", but it does not apply to state government. They are the first ten amendments to the constitution and probably the most important.
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A person can be tried for a serious federal crime only if he or she has been charged by a grand jury. No one may be subjected to double jeopardy - that is, tried twice for the same crime.
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"out of many, one " (the motto of the US).
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He was a French Writer and thinker that came to America sometime in 1831 to observe US government and Politics. He stated that these values were crucial to America's success as a constitutional republic: Liberty, Egalitarianism, Individualism, Populism, and Laissez-faire.
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It is the right of a government or its agent to expropriate private property for public use, with payment of compensation.
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The 84th Congress passed a joint resolution "declaring IN GOD WE TRUST the national motto of the United States." The law was signed by President Eisenhower and the motto was progressively added to paper money over a period from 1957 to 1966.