The creation of the United States
Constitution-John Adams described the Constitutional Convention as
"the greatest single effort of national deliberation that the world
has ever seen"-was a seminal event in the history of human liberty.
The story of that creation in the summer of 1787 is itself a
significant aspect in determining the meaning of the document.
In June 1776, amid growing sentiment
for American independence and after hostilities with the British
army had commenced at Lexington, Massachusetts, Richard Henry Lee
of Virginia introduced a resolution in the Second Continental
Congress for the colonies to collectively dissolve political
connections with Great Britain, pursue foreign alliances, and draft
a plan of confederation. These actions resulted in the Declaration
of Independence of 1776, the Franco-American Alliance of 1778, and
the Articles of Confederation, which were proposed in 1777 and
ratified in 1781.
From its conception, the inherent
weaknesses of the Articles of Confederation made it awkward at best
and unworkable at worst. Each state governed itself through elected
representatives, and the state representatives in turn elected a
weak national government. There was no independent executive, and
the congress lacked authority to impose taxes to cover national
expenses. Because all thirteen colonies had to ratify amendments,
one state's refusal prevented structural reform; nine of thirteen
states had to approve important legislation, which meant five
states could thwart any major proposal. And although the congress
could negotiate treaties with foreign powers, all treaties had to
be ratified by the states.
The defects of the Articles became more
and more apparent during the "critical period" of 1781-1787. By the
end of the war in 1783, it was clear that the new system was, as
George Washington observed, "a shadow without the substance."
Weakness in international affairs and in the face of continuing
European threats in North America, the inability to enforce the
peace treaty or collect enough taxes to pay foreign creditors, and
helplessness in quelling domestic disorder, such as Shays's
Rebellion-all intensified the drive for a stronger national
government.
If that were not enough, the Americans
faced an even larger problem. Absolutely committed to the idea of
popular rule, they knew that previous attempts to establish such a
government had almost always led to majority tyranny-that of the
overbearing many disregarding the rights of the few. In The
Federalist No. 10, James Madison famously described this as the
problem of faction, the latent causes of which are "sown in the
nature of man." Previous solutions usually rendered government
weak, and thus susceptible to all the problems with which the
Founders were most concerned. This was the case in the individual
states, which, dominated by their popular legislatures, routinely
violated rights of property and contract and limited the
independence of the judiciary.
In 1785, representatives from Maryland
and Virginia, meeting at George Washington's Mount Vernon to
discuss interstate trade, requested a meeting of the states to
discuss trade and commerce generally. Although only five states met
at Annapolis in 1786, James Madison and Alexander Hamilton used the
failed conference to issue a clarion call for a general convention
of all the states "to render the constitution of government
adequate to the exigencies of the Union." After several states,
including Virginia and Pennsylvania, chose delegates for the
meeting, the congress acquiesced with a narrower declaration that
the "sole and express purpose" of the upcoming Convention would be
to revise the Articles of Confederation.
The next year, from May 25 to September
17, 1787, state delegates met in what is now called Independence
Hall, in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania-as it says in the
Constitution's Preamble-to "form a more perfect Union." It was an
impressive group. Not only were there leaders in the fight for
independence, such as Roger Sherman and John Dickinson, and leading
thinkers just coming into prominence, such as Madison, Hamilton,
and Gouverneur Morris, but also already-legendary figures, such as
Washington and Benjamin Franklin. Every state was represented,
except for one: Rhode Island, fearful that a strong national
government would injure its lucrative trade, opposed revising the
Articles of Confederation and sent no delegates. Patrick Henry and
Samuel Adams, both of whom opposed the creation of a strong central
government, did not attend. Notably absent were John Jay, who was
then U.S. secretary of foreign affairs, and John Adams and Thomas
Jefferson, who were out of the country on government missions.
Nonetheless, Jefferson described the gathering as "an assembly of
demigods."
The Constitutional
Convention
As its first order of business, the
delegates unanimously chose Washington as president of the
Convention. Having initially hesitated in attending the Convention,
once decided, Washington pushed the delegates to adopt "no
temporizing expedient" but instead to "probe the defects of the
Constitution to the bottom, and provide radical cures." While they
waited in Philadelphia for a quorum, Washington presided over daily
meetings of the Virginia delegation (composed of Washington, George
Mason, George Wythe, John Blair, Edmund Randolph, James McClurg,
and James Madison) to consider strategy and the reform proposals
that would become the plan presented at the outset of the
Convention. Although he contributed to formal debate only once at
the end of the Convention, Washington was actively involved
throughout the three-and-a-half-month proceedings.
There were three basic rules of the
Convention: voting was to be by state, with each state, regardless
of size or population, having one vote; proper decorum was to be
maintained at all times; and the proceedings were to be strictly
secret. To encourage free and open discussion and debate, the
Convention shifted back and forth between full sessions and
meetings of the Committee of the Whole, a parliamentary procedure
that allowed informal debate and flexibility in deciding and
reconsidering individual issues. Although the Convention hired a
secretary, the best records of the debate-and thus the most
immediate source of the intended meaning of the clauses-are the
detailed notes of Madison, which, in keeping with the pledge of
secrecy, were not published until 1840.
As soon as the Convention agreed on its
rules, Edmund Randolph of the Virginia delegation presented a set
of fifteen resolutions, known as the Virginia Plan, which set aside
the Articles of Confederation and created in its stead a supreme
national government with separate legislative, executive, and
judicial branches. This was largely the work of James Madison, who
came to the Convention extensively prepared and well-versed in the
ancient and modern history of republican government. (See his
memorandum on the "Vices of the Political System of the United
States.") The delegates generally agreed on the powers that should
be lodged in a national legislature, but disagreed on how the
states and popular opinion should be reflected in it. Under the
Virginia Plan, population would determine representation in each of
the two houses of Congress.
To protect their equal standing,
delegates from less-populous states rallied around William
Paterson's alternative New Jersey Plan to amend the Articles of
Confederation, which would preserve each state's equal vote in a
one-house Congress with slightly augmented powers. When the
delegates rejected the New Jersey Plan, Roger Sherman proffered
what is often called "the Great Compromise" (or the Connecticut
Compromise, after Sherman's home state) that the House of
Representatives would be apportioned based on population and each
state would have an equal vote in the Senate. A special Committee
of Eleven (one delegate from each state) elaborated upon the
proposal, and then the Convention adopted it. As a precaution
against having to assume the financial burdens of the smaller
states, the larger states exacted an agreement that revenue bills
could originate only in the House, where the more populous states
would have greater representation.
In late July, a Committee of Detail
(composed of John Rutledge of South Carolina, Edmund Randolph of
Virginia, Nathaniel Gorham of Massachusetts, Oliver Ellsworth of
Connecticut, and James Wilson of Pennsylvania) reworked the
resolutions of the expanded Virginia Plan into a draft
Constitution; the text now included a list of eighteen powers of
Congress, a "necessary and proper" clause, and a number of
prohibitions on the states. Over most of August and into early
September, the Convention carefully worked over this draft and then
gave it to a Committee of Style (William Johnson of Connecticut,
Alexander Hamilton of New York, Gouverneur Morris of Pennsylvania,
James Madison of Virginia, and Rufus King of Massachusetts) to
polish the language. The notable literary quality of the
Constitution, most prominently the language of the Preamble, is due
to Morris's influence. The delegates continued revising the final
draft until September 17 (now celebrated as Constitution Day), when
delegates signed the Constitution and sent it to the Congress of
the Confederation, and the Convention officially adjourned.
Some of the original fifty-five
delegates had returned home over the course of the summer and were
not present at the Convention's conclusion. Of the forty-one that
were, only three delegates-Edmund Randolph and George Mason of
Virginia and Elbridge Gerry of Massachusetts-opposed the
Constitution and chose not to sign. Randolph (who had introduced
the Virginia Plan) thought in the end that the Constitution was not
sufficiently republican, and was wary of creating a single
executive. Mason and Gerry (who later supported the Constitution
and served in the First Congress) were concerned about the lack of
a declaration of rights. Despite these objections, George
Washington thought that it was "little short of a miracle" that the
delegates had agreed on a new Constitution. Thomas Jefferson, who
was also concerned about the lack of a bill of rights, nevertheless
wrote that the Constitution "is unquestionably the wisest ever yet
presented to men."
On September 28, Congress sent the
Constitution to the states to be ratified by popular conventions.
See Article VII (Ratification). Delaware was the first
state to ratify the Constitution, on December 7, 1787; the last of
the thirteen original colonies to ratify was Rhode Island, on May
29, 1790, two-and-a-half years later. It was during the
ratification debate in the state of New York that Hamilton,
Madison, and John Jay wrote a series of newspaper essays under the
pen name of Publius, later collected in book form as The
Federalist, to refute the arguments of the Anti-Federalist
opponents of the proposed Constitution. With the ratification by
the ninth state-New Hampshire, on June 21, 1788-Congress passed a
resolution to make the new Constitution operative, and set dates
for choosing presidential electors and the opening session of the
new Congress.
There had been some discussion among
the delegates of the need for a bill of rights, a proposal that was
rejected by the Convention. The lack of a bill of rights like that
found in most state constitutions, however, became a rallying cry
for the Anti-Federalists, and the advocates of the Constitution
(led by James Madison) agreed to add one in the first session of
Congress. Ratified on December 15, 1791, the first ten
amendments-called the Bill of Rights-include sweeping restrictions
on the federal government and its ability to limit certain
fundamental rights and procedural matters. The Ninth and Tenth
Amendments briefly encapsulate the twofold theory of the
Constitution: the purpose of the Constitution is to protect rights,
which stem not from the government but from the people themselves;
and the powers of the national government are limited to only those
delegated to it by the Constitution on behalf of the people.
Auxiliary
Precautions
In addition to the provisions of the
document, three important unstated mechanisms are at work in the
Constitution: the extended Republic, the separation of powers, and
federalism. The Founders believed that citizen virtue was crucial
for the success of republican government but they knew that passion
and interest were permanent parts of human nature and could not be
controlled by parchment barriers alone. "A dependence on the people
is, no doubt, the primary control on the government," Madison
explained in The Federalist No. 51, "but experience has taught
mankind the necessity of auxiliary precautions." Rather than hoping
for the best, the Founders designed a system that would harness
these opposite and rival interests to supply "the defect of better
motives."
The effect of representation-of
individual citizens being represented in the government rather than
ruling through direct participatory democracy-is to refine and
moderate public opinion through a deliberative process. Extending
the Republic, literally increasing the size of the nation, would
take in a greater number and variety of opinions, making it harder
for a majority to form on narrow interests contrary to the common
good. The majority that did develop would be more settled and, by
necessity, would encompass (and represent) a wider diversity of
opinion. This idea that bigger is better reversed the prevailing
assumption that republican government could work only in small
states.
The Founders also knew, again as
Madison explained in The Federalist No. 48, that "the accumulation
of all powers, legislative, executive, and judiciary, in the same
hands, whether of one, a few, or many, and whether hereditary,
self-appointed, or elective, may justly be pronounced the very
definition of tyranny." In order to distribute power and prevent
its accumulation, they created three separate branches of
government, each performing its own functions and duties and
sharing a few powers-as when the President shares the legislative
power through the veto-so that they would have an incentive to
check each other. Jefferson called the "republican form and
principles of our Constitution" and "the salutary distribution of
powers" in the Constitution the "two sheet anchors of our Union."
"If driven from either," he predicted, "we shall be in danger of
foundering."
And although national powers were
clearly enhanced by the Constitution, the federal government was to
exercise only delegated powers, the remainder being reserved to the
states or the people. Despite the need for additional national
authority, the Framers remained distrustful of government in
general and of a centralized federal government in particular. "The
powers delegated by the proposed Constitution to the federal
government are few and defined," Madison wrote in The Federalist
No. 45. "Those which are to remain in the State governments are
numerous and indefinite." To give the states more leverage against
the national government, equal state representation in the Senate
was blended into the national legislature (and guaranteed in
Article V). "This balance between the National and State
governments ought to be dwelt on with peculiar attention, as it is
of the utmost importance," Hamilton argued at the New York state
ratifying convention. "It forms a double security to the people. If
one encroaches on their rights they will find a powerful protection
in the other. Indeed, they will both be prevented from overpassing
their constitutional limits by a certain rivalship, which will ever
subsist between them."
A Momentous Work
When the Constitutional Convention
assembled on the morning of September 17, 1787, the completed
document was read aloud to the delegates for one last time.
Thereupon Benjamin Franklin, the eighty-one-year-old patriarch of
the group, rose to speak. He declared his support for the new
Constitution-"with all its faults, if they are such"-because he
thought a new government was necessary for the young nation.
Franklin continued:
I doubt too whether any other
convention we can obtain may be able to make a better Constitution.
For when you assemble a number of men to have the advantage of
their joint wisdom, you inevitably assemble with those men, all
their prejudices, their passions, their errors of opinion, their
local interests, and their selfish views. From such an Assembly can
a perfect production be expected? It therefore astonishes me, Sir,
to find this system approaching so near to perfection as it does;
and I think it will astonish our enemies. . . . Thus I consent,
Sir, to this Constitution because I expect no better, and because I
am not sure, that it is not the best.
As the delegates came forward, one at a
time, to sign their names to the final document, Madison recorded
Franklin's final comment, just before the Constitutional Convention
was dissolved. Referring to the sun painted on the back of
Washington's chair, Franklin said that he had
often in the course of the Session, and
the vicissitudes of my hopes and fears as to its issue, looked at
that behind the President without being able to tell whether it was
rising or setting. But now at length I have the happiness to know
that it is a rising and not a setting Sun.
"The business being thus closed,"
George Washington recorded in his private diary, the delegates
proceeded to City Tavern, where they
dined together and took a cordial leave
of each other; after which I returned to my lodgings, did some
business with and received the papers from the Secretary of the
Convention, and retired to meditate on the momentous work which had
been executed. . . .
Matthew Spalding,
Ph.D., is Director of the B. Kenneth Simon Center for American
Studies at The Heritage Foundation. This essay is excerpted from
The Heritage Guide to the Constitution, a line-by-line analysis of
the original meaning of each clause of the United States
Constitution, edited by David Forte and Dr. Spalding.