property qualification
Examples of property qualification in the following topics:
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From Property to Democracy
- At the time of ratification of the Constitution, most states used property qualifications to restrict franchise.
- At the time of ratification of the Constitution, most states used property qualifications to restrict franchise.
- At the same time, convention delegates relaxed religious and property qualifications for whites.
- This extremely sharp rise was caused by the removal of property qualifications from the right to vote.
- This extremely sharp rise was caused by the removal of property qualifications from the right to vote.
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Enfranchisement and Its Limits
- At the time of ratification of the Constitution, most states used property qualifications to restrict franchise.
- New states adopted constitutions that did not contain property qualifications for voting, a move designed to stimulate migration across their borders.
- Alabama, admitted to the Union in 1819, eliminated property qualifications for voting in its state constitution.
- Indeed, race replaced property qualifications as the criterion for voting rights.
- At the same time, convention delegates relaxed religious and property qualifications for whites.
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State Constitutions
- Substantial property qualifications for voting and even more substantial requirements for elected positions (though New York and Maryland lowered property qualifications)
- Universal white male suffrage, or minimal property requirements for voting or holding office (New Jersey enfranchised some property-owning widows, a step it retracted 25 years later)
- The new constitution substantially reduced universal white-male suffrage, gave the governor veto power and patronage appointment authority, and added to the unicameral legislature an upper house with substantial wealth qualifications.
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The Stamp Act
- Thomas Whately enunciated this theory in a pamphlet that readily acknowledged that there could be no taxation without consent, but the facts were that at least 75% of British adult males were not represented in Parliament because of property qualifications or other factors.
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The Right to Vote
- Property gave a man "a stake in society, made him responsible, worthy of a voice. " Enough taxable property and the right religion made him further eligible for office holding.
- Relative to other societies of the time, many could vote because most property was held as family farms.
- States also counted slaves as property for purposes of voter qualification.
- Three states already favored abolishing property requirements.
- To allow all states their own rules of suffrage, the Constitution was written with no property requirements for voting.
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The Soul of a Republic
- Republicanism idealized those who owned enough property to be both independently wealthy and staunchly committed to liberty and property rights.
- Property gave the adult white male "a stake in society, made him responsible, worthy of a voice."
- Enough taxable property and the right religion made him further eligible to hold office.
- States also counted slaves as property for voter-qualification purposes.
- Three states already favored abolishing property requirements.
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The Legal Ramifications for Slavery
- Property gave a man "a stake in society, made him responsible, worthy of a voice".
- With enough taxable property and the right religion, most men could be eligible for office holding.
- Relative to other societies of the time, many people could vote, because most property was held as family farms.
- States also counted slaves as property for voter qualifications.
- However, three states were already in favor of abolishing property requirements.
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Jackson's Democratic Agenda
- By 1820, universal white male suffrage was the norm, and by 1850, nearly all voting requirements to own property or pay taxes had been dropped.
- However, it often lead to the hiring of incompetent and sometimes corrupt officials due to the emphasis on party loyalty above any other qualification.
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Women in the Republic
- She could not conduct business or buy and sell property.
- Her husband controlled any property she brought to the marriage, though he could not sell it without her agreement.
- The only directly elected body created by the original Constitution was the House of Representatives, for which voter qualifications were explicitly delegated to the individual states.
- The New Jersey constitution of 1776 enfranchised all adult inhabitants who owned a specified amount of property.
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The Democratization of the Political Arena
- By 1820, universal white male suffrage was the norm, and by 1850 nearly all requirements to own property or pay taxes had been dropped.
- However, it often led to the hiring of incompetent and sometimes corrupt officials due to the emphasis on party loyalty above any other qualifications.
- Those older states that had property requirements all dropped them; new states never had them.