The Constitutional Convention of 1787

The Issues:  Why was the Convention called?  Did it do what it was expected to do?  Who were the major players at the Convention?  What were the key compromises that were made in Philadelphia?

Introduction

By 1786, Americans recognized that the Articles of Confederation, the foundation document for the new United States adopted in 1777, had to be substantially modified.  The Articles gave Congress virtually no power to regulate domestic affairs--no power to tax, no power to regulate commerce.  Without coercive power, Congress had to depend on financial contributions from the states, and they often time turned down requests.  Congress had neither the money to pay soldiers for their service in the Revolutionary War or to repay foreign loans granted to support the war effort.  In 1786, the United States was bankrupt.  Moreover, the young nation faced many other challenges and threats.  States engaged in an endless war of economic discrimination against commerce from other states.  Southern states battled northern states for economic advantage.  The country was ill-equipped to fight a war--and other nations wondered whether treaties with the United States were worth the paper they were written on.  On top of all else, Americans suffered from injured pride, as European nations dismissed the United States as "a third-rate republic."

America's creditor class had other worries.  In Rhode Island (called by elites "Rogue Island"), a state legislature dominated by the debtor class passed legislation essentially forgiving all debts as it considered a measure that would redistribute property every thirteen years.  The final straw for many came in western Massachusetts where angry farmers, led by Daniel Shays, took up arms and engaged in active rebellion in an effort to gain debt relief. 

Troubles with the existing Confederation of States finally convinced the Continental Congress, in February 1787, to call for a convention of delegates to meet in May in Philadelphia "to devise such further provisions as shall appear to them necessary to render the constitution of the Federal Government adequate to the exigencies of the Union." 

Across the country, the cry "Liberty!" filled the air.  But what liberty? Few people claim to be anti-liberty, but the word "liberty" has many meanings.  Should the delegates be most concerned with protected liberty of conscience, liberty of contract (meaning, for many at the time, the right of creditors to collect debts owed under their contracts), or the liberty to hold property (debtors complained that this liberty was being taken by banks and other creditors)?  Moreover, the cry for liberty could mean two very different things with respect to the slave issue--for some, the liberty to own slaves needed protection,  while for others (those more able to see through black eyes), liberty meant ending the slavery.

Convention in Philadelphia


The room in Independence Hall (formerly the State House) in Philadelphia
where debates over the proposed Constitution took place (photo by Doug Linder)

On May 25, 1787, a week later than scheduled, delegates from the various states met in the Pennsylvania State House in Philadelphia.  Among the first orders of business was electing George Washington president of the Convention and establishing the rules--including complete secrecy concerning its deliberations--that would guide the proceedings.  (Several delegates, most notably James Madison, took extensive notes, but these were not published until decades later.)

The main business of the Convention began four days later when Governor Edmund Randolph of Virginia presented and defended a plan for new structure of government (called the "Virginia Plan") that had been chiefly drafted by fellow Virginia delegate, James Madison.  The Virginia Plan called for a strong national government with both branches of the legislative branch apportioned by population.  The plan gave the national government the power to legislate "in all cases in which the separate States are incompetent" and even gave a proposed national Council of Revision a veto power over state legislatures. 

Delegates from smaller states, and states less sympathetic to broad federal powers, opposed many of the provisions in the Virginia Plan.  Charles Pinckney of South Carolina asked whether proponents of the plan "meant to abolish the State Governments altogether."  On June 14, a competing plan, called the "New Jersey Plan," was presented by delegate William Paterson of New Jersey.  The New Jersey Plan kept federal powers rather limited and created no new Congress.  Instead, the plan enlarged some of the powers then held by the Continental Congress.   Paterson made plain the adamant opposition of delegates from many of the smaller states to any new plan that would deprive them of equal voting power ("equal suffrage") in the legislative branch. 

Over the course of the next three months, delegates worked out a series of compromises between the competing plans.  New powers were granted to Congress to regulate the economy, currency, and the national defense, but provisions which would give the national government  a veto power over new state laws was rejected.  At the insistence of delegates from southern states, Congress was denied the power to limit the slave trade for a minimum of twenty years and slaves--although denied the vote and not recognized as citizens by those states--were allowed to be counted as 3/5 persons for the purpose of apportioning representatives and determining electoral votes.  Most importantly, perhaps, delegates compromised on the thorny issue of apportioning members of Congress, an issue that had bitterly divided the larger and smaller states.  Under a plan put forward by delegate Roger Sherman of Connecticut ("the Connecticut Compromise"), representation in the House of Representatives would be based on population while each state would be guaranteed an equal two senators in the new Senate.

By September, the final compromises were made, the final clauses polished, and it came time to vote.  In the Convention, each state--regardless of its number of delegates-- had one vote, so a state evenly split could not register a vote for adoption.  In the end, thirty-nine of the fifty-five delegates supported adoption of the new Constitution, barely enough to win support from each of the twelve attending state delegations. (Rhode Island, which had opposed the Convention, sent no delegation.)  Following a signing ceremony on September 17, most of the delegates repaired to the City Tavern on Second Street near Walnut where, according to George Washington, they "dined together and took cordial leave of each other."

THE CONSTITUTION AS PROPOSED IN PHILADELPHIA


George Washington presides over the Constitutional Convention



Who were the the 55 Delegates to the Convention?
The delegates to the Constitutional Convention did not represent a cross-section of 1787 America.  The Convention included no women, no slaves, no Native Americans or racial minorites, no laborers.  As one historian noted, it was a "Convention of the well-bred, the well-fed, the well-read, and the well-wed."  The delegates included some  very well-known figures from American history, such as George Washington, James Madison, Benjamin Franklin, and Alexander Hamilton.  Other prominent Americans of the time, who might be expected to have been in Philadelphia, did not attend for various reasons.  Prominent non-attendees include John Adams and Thomas Jefferson.  The links below offer more information on the delegates.

The Theory Behind Madison's Plan

James Madison
James Madison believed that protection for liberty lay in the structure of government, not in a listing of "parchment" guarantees.  As he saw it, the primary threat to liberty in the past had come from oppressive majorities capturing the reigns of power.  Madison's solution, as he proposed it in Philadelphia, was to "enlarge the sphere" by  transferring much power to the federal government.  Because the nation is comprised of many more and more diverse communities of interests than are individual states, it becomes much more difficult for any one interest group to become a majority and capture control of power.  Rather than see competing factions as a danger, Madison saw the saving multiplicity of interests as a protection for liberty: "Ambition must be made to counteract ambition."  Madison further aimed to block the ability of an oppressive majority from working its will against minorities by dividing power within the national government into three relatively co-equal branches, each of which would be given weapons to fight the other.  Even if a majority were to capture one branch, Madison reasoned, it could only do limited harm if the other branches remained out of its domination.


Philadelphia in 1787
Map of Philadelphia
in 1787
(TeachingAmericanHistory.org)
Visit the above map and explore the Philadelphia of the delegates.  Click on the images of Independence Hall,  Mary House's Boarding House, and the Indian Queen Tavern.

Questions for Class Discussion
1. Did the Convention exceed its authority?  How to you begin to answer such a question?
2.  If the Convention did exceed its authority, should it have anyway?  Does it matter whether the Convention acted beyond the powers given to it?
3.  Would the United States have been better off if the Virginia Plan had been adopted as presented?  If the New Jersey Plan had been adopted?
4.   Has our constitutional system worked more or less as Madison hoped it would?  In what respects, if any, do you think Madison would be disappointed?
5.  What was the greatest failing of the Constitutional Convention?  Why?


Signing of the Constitution, September 17, 1787
Ben Franklin's Comments on the Signing,
As Reported in the Notes of James Madison

Doctor Franklin, looking toward the President's chair, at the back of which a rising sun happened to be painted, observed to a few members near him, that painters had found it difficult to distinguish in their art a rising sun from a setting sun.  I have, said he, often in the course of this session, and the vissitudes 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 at length I have the happiness to know that it is a rising and not a setting sun.

Battle for Ratification: The Federalists vs the Anti-Federalists
Ratification came only after a hard-fought battle between those favoring adoption of the new Constitution (the Federalists) and those opposed (the Anti-Federalists).  The Anti-Federalists had many complaints.  They argued that the national government, and especially the president, had too much power.  They complained that the six-year terms of senators were far too long.  They demanded to know why delegates failed to include a declaration of individual rights.  The Federalists tried to answer each of these objections, and one such attempt to do so, The Federalists Papers, stands as major work of political philosophy.  After easy victories in a few states, the Federalists carried the day by winning close votes for ratification in Massachusetts (187-168) with the able assistance of Samuel Adams, in Virginia (88-80) over the strenuous arguments of Patrick Henry, and in New York (30-27).
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