Saturday, Sept. 17, is Constitution Day. Constitution Day commemorates the drafting of
the U.S. Constitution and the 39 statesmen who signed it that day in 1787.
For more information
and fun activities, go to www.constitutionfacts.com.
Fascinating Facts about the U.S. Constitution
The U.S. Constitution has 4,400 words. It is the oldest
and shortest written Constitution of any major government in the world."
Of the spelling errors in the Constitution, “Pensylvania”
above the signers’ names is probably the most glaring.
Thomas Jefferson did not sign the Constitution. He was in
France during the Convention, where he served as the U.S. minister. John Adams
was serving as the U.S. minister to Great Britain during the Constitutional
Convention and did not attend either.
The Constitution was “penned” by Jacob Shallus, A
Pennsylvania General Assembly clerk, for $30 ($726 today).
Since 1952, the Constitution has been on display in the
National Archives Building in Washington, DC. Currently, all four pages are
displayed behind protective glass framed with titanium. To preserve the
parchment’s quality, the cases contain argon gas and are kept at 67 degrees Fahrenheit
with a relative humidity of 40 percent.
Constitution Day is celebrated on September 17, the
anniversary of the day the framers signed the document.
The Constitution does not set forth requirements for the
right to vote. As a result, at the outset of the Union, only male
property-owners could vote. African Americans were not considered citizens, and
women were excluded from the electoral process. Native Americans were not given
the right to vote until 1924.
James Madison, “the father of the Constitution,” was the
first to arrive in Philadelphia for the Constitutional Convention. He arrived
in February, three months before the convention began, bearing the blueprint
for the new Constitution.
Of the forty-two delegates who attended most of the
meetings, thirty-nine actually signed the Constitution. Edmund Randolph and
George Mason of Virginia and Elbridge Gerry of Massachusetts refused to sign
due in part due to the lack of a bill of rights.
When it came time for the states to ratify the
Constitution, the lack of any bill of rights was the primary sticking point.
The Great Compromise saved the Constitutional Convention,
and, probably, the Union. Authored by Connecticut delegate Roger Sherman, it
called for proportional representation in the House, and one representative per
state in the Senate (this was later changed to two.) The compromise passed
5-to-4, with one state, Massachusetts, “divided.”
Patrick Henry was elected as a delegate to the
Constitutional Convention, but declined, because he “smelt a rat.”
Because of his poor health, Benjamin Franklin needed help
to sign the Constitution. As he did so, tears streamed down his face.
Gouverneur Morris was largely responsible for the
“wording” of the Constitution, although there was a Committee of Style formed
in September 1787.
The oldest person to sign the Constitution was Benjamin
Franklin (81). The youngest was Jonathan Dayton of New Jersey (26).
When the Constitution was signed, the United States’
population was 4 million. It is now more than 309 million. Philadelphia was the
nation’s largest city, with 40,000 inhabitants.
A proclamation by President George Washington and a
congressional resolution established the first national Thanksgiving Day on
November 26, 1789. The reason for the holiday was to give “thanks” for the new
Constitution.
The first time the formal term “The United States of
America” was used was in the Declaration of Independence.
It took one hundred days to actually “frame” the
Constitution.
There was initially a question as to how to address the
President. The Senate proposed that he be addressed as “His Highness the
President of the United States of America and Protector of their Liberties.”
Both the House of Representatives and the Senate compromised on the use of
“President of the United States.”
James Wilson originally proposed the President be chosen
by popular vote, but the delegates agreed (after 60 ballots) on a system known
as the Electoral College. Although there have been 500 proposed amendments to
change it, this “indirect” system of electing the president is still intact.
George Washington and James Madison were the only
presidents who signed the Constitution.
In November of 1788 the Congress of the Confederation
adjourned and left the United States without a central government until April
1789. That is when the first Congress under the new Constitution convened with
its first quorum.
James Madison was the only delegate to attend every
meeting. He took detailed notes of the various discussions and debates that
took place during the convention. The journal that he kept during the
Constitutional Convention was kept secret until after he died. It (along with
other papers) was purchased by the government in 1837 at a price of $30,000
(that would be $629,000 today). The journal was published in 1840.
Although Benjamin Franklin’s mind remained active, his
body was deteriorating. He was in constant pain because of gout and having a
stone in his bladder, and he could barely walk. He would enter the convention
hall in a sedan chair carried by four prisoners from the Walnut Street jail in
Philadelphia.
As Benjamin Franklin left the Pennsylvania State House
after the final meeting of the Constitutional Convention on September 17, 1787,
he was approached by the wife of the mayor of Philadelphia. She was curious as
to what the new government would be. Franklin replied, “A republic, madam. If
you can keep it.”
On March 24, 1788, a popular election was held in Rhode
Island to determine the ratification status of the new Constitution. The vote
was 237 in favor and 2,945 opposed!
The members of the first Congress of the United States
included 54 who were delegates to the Constitutional Convention or delegates to
the various state-ratifying conventions. The number also included 7 delegates
who opposed ratification.
Benjamin Franklin died on April 17, 1790, at the age of
84. The 20,000 mourners at his funeral on April 21, 1790, constituted the
largest public gathering up to that time.
Vermont ratified the Constitution on January 10, 1791,
even though it had not yet become a state.
The word “democracy” does not appear once in the
Constitution.
There was a proposal at the Constitutional Convention to
limit the standing army for the country to 5,000 men. George Washington
sarcastically agreed with this proposal as long as a stipulation was added that
no invading army could number more than 3,000 troops!
John Adams referred to the Constitution as “the greatest
single effort of national deliberation that the world has ever seen” and George
Washington wrote to the Marquis de Lafayette that “It (the Constitution)
appears to me, then, little short of a miracle.”
The Pennsylvania State House (where the Constitutional
Convention took place) was where George Washington was appointed the commander
of the Continental Army in 1775 and where the Declaration of Independence was
signed in 1776. It was also where the Articles of Confederation were adopted as
our first constitution in 1781.
Rhode Island was the only state not to send delegates to
Philadelphia in 1787. At that time the state legislature was controlled by the
agrarian party and was fearful that a stronger central government would demand
that debts be paid in specie (hard money). It was the last state to ratify the
Constitution on May 29, 1790 (over a year after President George Washington’s
inauguration) by a vote of 34-32.
The delegates were involved in debates from 10 a.m. until
3 p.m. six days a week with only a 10 day break during the duration of the
convention
The Constitution contains 4,543 words, including the
signatures and has four sheets, 28-3/4 inches by 23-5/8 inches each. It
contains 7,591 words including the 27 amendments.
The Constitution was ratified by specially elected
conventions beginning in December 1787. The order in which the thirteen states
accepted the new constitution was Delaware, Pennsylvania, New Jersey, Georgia,
Connecticut, Massachusetts, Maryland, South Carolina, New Hampshire, Virginia,
New York, North Carolina and Rhode Island.
Daniel Webster (1782-1852), of Massachusetts, has been
called the “Expounder of the Constitution”.
From 1804 to 1865 there were no amendments added to the
Constitution until the end of the Civil War when the Thirteenth amendment was
added that abolished slavery. This was the longest period in American history
in which there were no changes to our Constitution.
The text of the Constitution was printed by John Dunlap
and David Claypoole in Philadelphia to then be sent to the various state
constitutional conventions for debate and discussion.
As evidence of its continued flexibility, the
Constitution has only been changed seventeen times since 1791!
The main reason for the meeting in Philadelphia was to
revise the Articles of Confederation. However, the delegates soon concluded
that it would be necessary to write an entirely new Constitution. They agreed
to conduct the meetings in secrecy by stationing guards at the door to the
Pennsylvania state house. When one delegate dropped a convention document,
Chairman George Washington replied, “I must entreat the gentlemen to be more
careful, lest our transactions get into the newspapers and disturb the public
repose.”
At the time of the Constitutional Convention Philadelphia
was the most modern city in America and the largest city in North America. It
had a population of 40,000 people, 7,000 street lamps, 33 churches, 10
newspapers, and a university.
The median age in America by the end of the 18th century
was 16 years of age (today it is around 34 years of age), 19 of every 20
citizens lived on the land, and 70% of the land was worked by its owners (30%
by tenants).
The national government spent $4.3 million during the
first session of Congress from 1789-1791. During the last year that George
Washington was President of the United States (1796-1797), the entire cost of
running the federal government was $5,727,000.
The election of George Washington as the first President
under the Constitution was not really “unanimous”. In actuality, two electors
from Virginia and two electors from Maryland did not vote. New York was
entitled to eight electoral votes but the state legislature could not decide
how these electors would be chosen, so the state of New York officially did not
vote for the President. The electoral vote in 1789 should have totaled 81 but
only 69 votes were cast.
James Madison of Virginia was responsible for proposing
the resolution to create the various Cabinet positions within the Executive
Branch of our government and twelve amendments to the Constitution of which ten
became the Bill of Rights.
Although the United States Treasury Department stopped
distributing currency denominations of $500, $1,000, $5,000 and $10,000 in
1969, for all intents and purposes the production of each stopped after World
War II. However, these notes are still legal tender and may be found on rare
occasions in circulation. James Madison, the “Father of the Constitution” is on
the $5,000 bill.
At the conclusion of the Constitutional Convention,
Benjamin Franklin observed the symbol of a half-sun on George Washington’s
chair and remarked, “I have the happiness to know that it is a rising and not a
setting sun.”
Benjamin Franklin made a suggestion at the Constitutional
Convention that the sessions be opened with a prayer. The delegates refused to
accept the motion stating that there was not enough money to hire a chaplain.
Of the fifty-five delegates who attended the convention
34 were lawyers, 8 had signed the Declaration of Independence, and almost half
were Revolutionary War veterans. The remaining members were planters,
educators, ministers, physicians, financiers, judges and merchants. About a
quarter of them were large land owners and all of them held some type of public
office (39 were former Congressmen and 8 were present or past governors).
William Few of Georgia was the only member to represent
the yeoman farmer class which comprised the majority of the population of the
country. Nineteen of the members who were chosen to represent their state never
attended a meeting.
Benjamin Franklin of Pennsylvania was known as the “Sage
of the Constitutional Convention.” He was also the mediator at the convention
and often counseled that “we are here to consult, not to contend”.
George Washington and James Madison were the only
Presidents who signed the Constitution.
Elbridge Gerry of Massachusetts was opposed to the office
of vice president. “The close intimacy that must subsist between the President
and Vice President makes it absolutely improper.” However, he put his feelings
aside and became Vice President under James Madison!
When Paul Revere learned that Sam Adams and John Hancock
were reluctant to offer their support for the Constitution during the
ratification fight, he organized the Boston mechanics into a powerful force and
worked behind the scenes for the successful approval by the Massachusetts
convention.
The only other language used in various parts of the
Constitution is Latin.
The term “others” is used in the Constitution to
categorize ethnic minorities.
Four of the signers of the Constitution were born in
Ireland.
John Tyler was the first Vice President to assume the
responsibilities of the Presidency upon the death of William Henry Harrison in
1841. There was nothing in the Constitution that provided for the vice
president to BECOME the president. Article II, Section 6 of the Constitution
states that: “In case of the removal of the President from office, or of his death,
resignation, or inability to discharge the powers and duties of the said
office, the same shall devolve on the Vice President...” The Article did not
state that the vice president would BECOME the President! Tyler immediately
began to refer to himself as the President with no actual Constitutional
authority to do so, and every succeeding vice president in the same position
did the same. It was not until the Twenty-Fifth Amendment was passed in 1967
that the vice president technically BECAME the president. This amendment
legitimatized Tyler’s unconstitutional assumption!
During an event to celebrate the Constitution’s
Sesquicentennial in 1937, Harry F. Wilhelm recited the entire document through
the newly added 21st Amendment from memory. He then obtained a job in the
Sesquicentennial mailroom!
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