- Albany Plan
The Albany Plan was proposed by
Benjamin Franklin at theAlbany Congress in 1754. It was an early attempt at forming a union of colonies that would unite English colonists with mainland England to assist in defending the New World during theFrench and Indian War . The plan was never effected, though after the Revolutionary War, the Albany Plan of Union was used to help write theArticles of Confederation . It established an elected intercoloniallegislature without the power totax .Background
Benjamin Franklin took many of the ideas from the
Iroquois Confederacy of what is now UpstateNew York .Bruce Johnson, "Haudenosaunee-U.S. History: Haudenosaunee Influences on the U.S. Government," from "Neighbor to Neighbor, Nation to Nation", published by Neighbors of the Onandaga Nation, n.d., see [http://www.peacecouncil.net/noon/articles/government.html Neighbors of the Onandaga Nation website] . Accessed September 2, 2008.] He visited the Iroquois in 1744 and 1753, and at least once, in an 1751open letter , held up the Native American Confederacy as a model for colonial government. The visit in 1753 was at least partial inspiration for Franklin:quote|A year later, at a joint meeting of Iroquois and colonial delegates in Albany, Franklin proposed his “Albany Plan,” the first attempt to unite the colonies, a combination of Iroquois and European elements. The Albany Plan failed to gain ratification by the colonies, but served as a rough draft for later federal designs of Franklin for the Articles of Confederation, as well as his part in debates over the Constitution.|Bruce Johnson, "Haudenosaunee-U.S. History...."}The Plan
The Albany Plan of Union called for an act of the
Parliament of Great Britain to establish a general government, administered by a crown-appointed President-General and a Grand Council representing the people of the colonies, with each colony's representation being based on wealth.ee also
*
Articles of Confederation
*Ganondagan State Historic Site
*Iroquois References
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