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History of the Origin, Formation, and Adoption of the Constitution of the United States, Vol. 1 / With Notices of Its Principle Framers

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A detailed political history that follows the transition from the Confederation to a stronger federal system, analyzing the practical failures—financial strain, weak enforcement, and interstate disputes—that prompted calls for change. It narrates congressional debates, contested territorial and representation claims, and the proposals and refusals that shaped constitutional design, then traces the convention proceedings and ratification process. Short biographical notices sketch the principal framers and their influence on the resulting structure of national government.

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Title: History of the Origin, Formation, and Adoption of the Constitution of the United States, Vol. 1

Author: George Ticknor Curtis

Release date: August 3, 2012 [eBook #40400]
Most recently updated: October 23, 2024

Language: English

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HISTORY

OF THE

ORIGIN, FORMATION, AND ADOPTION

OF THE

CONSTITUTION OF THE UNITED STATES;

WITH

NOTICES OF ITS PRINCIPAL FRAMERS.

BY

GEORGE TICKNOR CURTIS.

IN TWO VOLUMES.

VOLUME I.
NEW YORK:
HARPER AND BROTHERS,
Franklin Square.
1854.

Entered according to Act of Congress, in the year 1854, by
GEORGE T. CURTIS,
in the Clerk's Office of the District Court of the District of Massachusetts

TO

GEORGE TICKNOR, Esq.,

THE HISTORIAN OF SPANISH LITERATURE,

BY WHOSE ACCURATE SCHOLARSHIP AND CAREFUL CRITICISM
THESE PAGES HAVE LARGELY PROFITED,

I DEDICATE THIS WORK,

IN AFFECTIONATE ACKNOWLEDGMENT OF TIES,
WHICH HAVE BEEN TO ME CONSTANT SOURCES OF HAPPINESS
THROUGH MY WHOLE LIFE.

PREFACE.

A special history of the origin and establishment of the Constitution of the United States has not yet found a place in our national literature.

Many years ago, I formed the design of writing such a work, for the purpose of exhibiting the deep causes which at once rendered the Convention of 1787 inevitable, and controlled or directed its course and decisions; the mode in which its great work was accomplished; and the foundations on which our national liberty and prosperity were then deliberately settled by the statesmen to whom the American Revolution gave birth, and on which they have rested ever since.

In the prosecution of this purpose I had, until death terminated his earthly interests, the encouragement and countenance of that illustrious person, whose relation to the Constitution of the United States, during the last forty years, has been not inferior in importance to that of any of its founders during the preceding period.

Mr. Webster had for a long time the intention of writing a work which should display the remarkable state of affairs under whose influence the Constitution was first brought into practical application; and this design he relinquished only when all the remaining plans of his life were surrendered with the solemn and religious resignation that marked its close. It was known to him that I had begun to labor upon another branch of the same subject. In the spring of 1852 I wrote to him to explain the plan of my work, and to ask him for a copy of some remarks made by his father in the Convention of New Hampshire when the Constitution was ratified by that State. I received from him the following answer.

"Washington, March 7th, [1852].

"My Dear Sir,—

"I will try to find for you my father's speech, as it was collected from tradition and published some years ago. If I live to see warm weather in Marshfield, I shall be glad to see you beneath its shades, and to talk of your book.

"You are probably aware that I have meditated the writing of something upon the History of the Constitution and the Administration of Washington. I have the plan of such a work pretty definitely arranged, but whether I shall ever be able to execute it I cannot say:—'the wills above be done.'

"Yours most truly,

"Danl. Webster."

Regarding this kind and gracious intimation as a wish not to be anticipated in any part of the field which he had marked out for himself, I replied, that if, when I should have the pleasure of seeing him, my work should seem to involve any material part of the subject which he had comprehended within his own plan, I should of course relinquish it at once. When, however, the period of that summer's leisure arrived, and brought with it, to his watchful observation, so many tokens that "the night cometh," he seemed anxious to impress upon me the importance of the task I had undertaken, and to remove any obstacle to its fulfilment that he might have suggested. Being with him alone, on an occasion when his physician, after a long consultation, had just left him, he said to me, with an earnestness and solemnity that can never be described or forgotten: "You have a future; I have none. You are writing a History of the Constitution. You will write that work; I shall not. Go on, by all means, and you shall have every aid that I can give you."

The event of which these words were ominous was then only four weeks distant. Many times, during those short remaining weeks, I sought "the shades of Marshfield"; but now it was for the offices and duties, not for the advantages, of friendship;—and no part of my work was ever submitted to him to whose approbation, sympathy, and aid I had so long looked forward, as to its most important stimulus and its most appropriate reward.

But the solemn injunction which I had received became to me an ever-present admonition, and gave me—if I may make such a profession—the needful fidelity to my great subject. Whatever may be thought of the manner in which it has been treated, a consciousness that the impartial spirit of History has guided me will remain, after every ordeal of criticism shall have been passed.

And here, while memories of the earlier as well as of the later lost crowd upon me with my theme, I cannot but think of him, jurist and magistrate, friend of my younger as well as riper years, who was called from all human sympathies before I had conceived the undertaking which I have now completed. Fortunate shall I be, if to those in whom his blood flows united with mine I can transmit a work that may be permitted to stand near that noble Commentary, which is known and honored wherever the Constitution of the United States bears sway.

The plan of this work is easily explained. The first volume embraces the Constitutional History of the United States from the commencement of the Revolution to the assembling of the Convention of 1787, together with some notices of the principal members of that body. The second volume is devoted to the description of the process of forming the Constitution, in which I have mainly followed, of course, the ample Record of the Debates preserved by Mr. Madison, and the official Journal of the proceedings.[1]

The period of our history from the commencement of the Revolution to the beginning of Washington's administration is the period when our State and national institutions were formed. With the events of the Revolution, its causes, its progress, its military history, and its results, the people of this country have long been familiar. But the constitutional history of the United States has not been written, and few persons have made themselves accurately acquainted with its details. How the Constitution of the United States came to be formed; from what circumstances it arose; what its relations were to institutions previously existing in the country; what necessities it satisfied; and what was its adaptation to the situation of these States,—are all points of the gravest importance to the American people, and all of them require to be distinctly stated for their permanent welfare.

For the history of this Constitution is not like the history of a monarchy, in which some things are obsolete, while some are of present importance. The Constitution of the United States is a living code, for the perpetuation of a system of free government, which the people of each succeeding generation must administer for themselves. Every line of it is as operative and as binding to-day as it was when the government was first set in motion by its provisions, and no part of it can fall into neglect or decay while that government continues to exist.

The Constitution of the United States was the means by which republican liberty was saved from the consequences of impending anarchy; it secured that liberty to posterity, and it left it to depend on their fidelity to the Union. It is morally certain that the formation of some general government, stronger and more efficient than any which had existed since the independence of the States had been declared, had become necessary to the continued existence of the Confederacy. It is equally certain, that, without the preservation of the Union, a condition of things must at once have ensued, out of which wars between the various provinces of America must have grown. The alternatives, therefore, that presented themselves to the generation by whom the Constitution was established, were either to devise a system of republican government that would answer the great purposes of a lasting union, or to resort to something in the nature of monarchy. With the latter, the institutions of the States must have been sooner or later crushed;—for they must either have crumbled away in the new combinations and fearful convulsions that would have preceded the establishment of such a power, or else they must have fallen speedily after its triumph had been settled. With the former alternative, the preservation of the States, and of all the needful institutions which marked their separate existence, though a difficult, was yet a possible result.

To this preservation of the separate States we owe that power of minute local administration, which is so prominent and important a feature of our American liberty. To this we are indebted for those principles of self-government which place their own interests in the hands of the people of every distinct community, and which enable them, by means of their own laws, to defend their own particular institutions against encroachments from without.

Finally, the Constitution of the United States made the people of these several provinces one nation, and gave them a standing among the nations of the world. Let any man compare the condition of this country at the peace of 1783, and during the four years which followed that event, with its present position, and he will see that he must look to some other cause than its merely natural and material resources to account for the proud elevation which it has now reached.

He will see a people ascending, in the comparatively short period of seventy years, from an attitude in which scarcely any nation thought it worth while to treat with them, to a place among the four principal powers of the globe. He will see a nation, once of so little account and so little strength that the corsairs of the Mediterranean could prey unchecked upon its defenceless merchantmen, now opening to their commerce, by its overawing diplomacy and influence, an ancient empire, on the opposite side of the earth we inhabit, which has for countless ages been firmly closed against the whole world. He will first see a collection of thirteen feeble republics on the eastern coast of North America, inflicting upon each other the manifold injuries of rival and hostile legislation; and then again he will behold them grown to be a powerful confederacy of more than thirty States, stretching from the Atlantic to the Pacific, with all their commercial interests blended and harmonized by one superintending legislature, and protected by one central and preponderating power. He will see a people who had at first achieved nothing but independence, and had contributed nothing to the cause of free government but the example of their determination to enjoy it, founding institutions to which mankind may look for hope, for encouragement and light. He will see the arts of peace—commerce, agriculture, manufactures, jurisprudence, letters—now languishing beneath a civil polity inadequate and incompetent, and now expanding through a continent with an energy and force unexampled in the history of our race,—subduing the farthest recesses of nature, and filling the wilderness with the beneficent fruits of civilization and Christianity.

Surveying all this,—looking back to the period which is removed from him only by the span of one mortal life, and looking around and before him, he will see, that among the causes of this unequalled growth stands prominent and decisive, far over all other human agencies, the great code of civil government which the fathers of our republic wrought out from the very perils by which they were surrounded.

It is for the purpose of tracing the history of the period in which those perils were encountered and overcome, that I have written this work. But in doing it, I have sought to write as an American. For it is, I trust, impossible to study the history of the Constitution which has made us what we are, by making us one nation, without feeling how unworthy of the subject—how unworthy of the dignity of History—would be any attempt to claim more than their just share of merit and renown for names or places endeared to us by local feeling or traditionary attachment. Historical writing that is not just, that is not impartial, that is not fearless,—looking beyond the interests of neighborhood, the claims of party, or the solicitations of pride,—is worse than useless to mankind.

Boston, July, 1854.


CONTENTS

OF

VOLUME FIRST.


BOOK I.

THE CONSTITUTIONAL HISTORY OF THE UNITED STATES, FROM THE COMMENCEMENT OF THE REVOLUTION TO THE ADOPTION OF THE ARTICLES OF CONFEDERATION.

CHAPTER I.
1774-1775.

Organization of the First Continental Congress.—Origin of the Union.—Situation of the Colonies before the Revolution.

 Page
Political Organizations of the Colonies3
Provincial Governments4
Proprietary Governments5
Charter Governments5
Causes of the Revolution6
Local Legislatures7
Power of the Colonies to unite, asserted by the Revolution8
Reasons why they were enabled to effect the Union8
A General Congress10
First Step towards it11
Assembling of the Congress13
Delegates14
Method of Voting15
Rights of the Colonies16
Separation from Great Britain not contemplated18
Relations of the Congress to the Country19
Authority of Parliament20
Declaration of Rights22
Cessation of Exports and Imports23
Another Congress proposed25
Royal Government terminated in Massachusetts25
Provincial Congress of Massachusetts26
Battle of Lexington27

CHAPTER II.
1775-1776.

The Second Continental Congress.—Formation and Character of the Revolutionary Government.—Appointment of a Commander-in-chief.—First Army of the Revolution.

New Continental Congress28
Delegates29
Colonies represented29
Duration of this Congress30
War commenced31
Massachusetts and New York apply to the Congress for Direction and Assistance31
The Congress proceeds to put the Country into a State of Defence32
American Continental Army created32
Washington chosen Commander-in-Chief33
Measures to defray the Expenses of War34
Treasury Department established35
General Post-office organized35
Militia35
Relations with Indian Tribes35
Royalists36
The Congress advise Provisional Governments37
Separation from England determined upon38
Suppression of the Royal Authority39
National Union formed before the State Governments39
The Revolutionary Government40
Note on Washington's Appointment as Commander-in-Chief41

CHAPTER III.
1776-1777.

Continuance of the Revolutionary Government.—Declaration of Independence.—Preparations for a New Government.—Formation of the Continental Army.

Independence proposed49
Committee to prepare the Declaration50
Instructions to the Delegates51
Declaration adopted51
Consequences of its Adoption51
The Title "United States of America" first used52
Articles of Confederation proposed53
The Revolutionary Congress, the Real Government54
Power of the Congress55
General Washington's Position55
Difficulties which he had to encounter56
Machinery of Government defective57
Formation of the Army58
Remodelling of the Army59
Difficulties attending it59
Committee appointed to confer with General Washington60
Error of Short Enlistments60
Washington does not concur in their Expediency60
Powers of the National Government62
Difficulties attending their Exercise63
Popular Feeling about the Grievances64
Tories65
Officers of the Royal Government in New Hampshire seized66
General Lee's Offer to seize the Tories of New York66
He prepares to defend New York67
Orders to disarm the Tories in Queen's County68
Orders countermanded68
Washington's Regret69
His Directions to Lee70
Tories of Queen's County arrested71
Inhabitants of New York alarmed71
Congress compelled to submit the Subject to the Colonial Authorities72
Questions of Prize73
Origin of the American Navy73
Vessels fitted out to intercept the Enemy's Supplies73
Falmouth burned74
Letters of Marque and Reprisal75
Prizes captured75
Adjudication of Prizes76
Delay in obtaining Decisions77
Means of defraying the Public Expenses77
Paper Money issued78
Delay in Signing the Bills79
Pressing Wants of the Army79
Washington borrows Money of the Province of Massachusetts Bay80
Defects of the Revolutionary Government80
Jealousy of Standing Armies80
Note on the Authorship of the Declaration of Independence81

CHAPTER IV.
July, 1776-November, 1777.

Consequences of the Declaration of Independence.—Reorganization of the Continental Army.—Flight of the Congress from Philadelphia.—Plan of the Confederation Proposed.

Effect of the Declaration of Independence89
More vigorous and decisive Measures adopted by the Congress90
Mischievous Adhesion to State Interests90
History of the Army91
General Washington abandons the City of New York91
Writes to the President of Congress91
He retreats to the Heights of Haerlem, and again appeals to Congress92
The Congress organizes a new Army92
Number of Battalions raised by each State93
Inducements to enlist93
Serious Defects in the Plan93
Washington suggests a Remedy94
Promotion of the Officers provided for95
Another Defect in the Plan95
Massachusetts and Connecticut offer further Pay to their Men95
Washington remonstrates96
Congress augments the Pay of the Army96
Ill Effects of the System96
Number of the American Forces near New York96
Washington's Discouragement97
His Situation and Trials97
His Retreat through New Jersey98
Loss of Philadelphia threatened99
Washington asks for Extraordinary Powers from the Congress100
Powers intrusted to him100
Unsettled Condition of the Political System101
The Congress apologizes to the Governors of the States102
Inaccuracy of their Position103
The States acquiesce in the Powers granted to Washington104
Articles of Confederation pending in Congress104
Eminent Men retire from Congress104
Delegations of the States renewed105
Striking Instance of State Jealousy106
Washington requires an Oath of Allegiance to the United States107
The Requisition denounced as improper107
Its Propriety108
Formation of a new Army110
Embarrassments in the Formation of the Army110
Persistence of the States in giving Extra Bounties110
Bounty offered by Massachusetts111
Army greatly reduced111
Washington hindered in his Efforts to plan and carry out a Campaign112
Applications for Troops to defend particular Neighborhoods112
Battle of the Brandywine113
The Congress leaves Philadelphia113
Sir William Howe takes Possession of it113
The Congress removes to Yorktown113
They resolve to consider the Articles of Confederation114
The Plan of a Confederacy submitted to the several Legislatures114
Necessity for a National Government114
End of the Revolutionary Government approaching115
Want of a Civil Executive115
States engaged in forming Governments116
Colonies accustomed to the Business of Government116
Practice of Representation familiar117
Previous Political Training of the People118
Distinctions between the Departments of Government119
Ideas not yet applied to a General Government120
Union of the People of the United States, as distinguished from a Union of the States, learned by a bitter Experience122
First Stage in the Constitutional History of the Country123

CHAPTER V.
November, 1777-March, 1781.

Adoption of the Articles of Confederation.—Cessions of Western Territory.—First Political Union of the States.