<h2><SPAN href="#Contents">CHAPTER III</SPAN></h2>
<h3>THE CONFEDERATION</h3>
<p><span class="smcap">When</span> peace came in 1783 there were in the
United States approximately three million people, who were spread over
the whole Atlantic coast from Maine to Georgia and back into the interior
as far as the Alleghany Mountains; and a relatively small number of
settlers had crossed the mountain barrier. About twenty per cent of the
population, or some six hundred thousand, were negro slaves. There was
also a large alien element of foreign birth or descent, poor when they
arrived in America, and, although they had been able to raise themselves
to a position of comparative comfort, life among them was still crude and
rough. Many of the people were poorly educated and lacking in cultivation
and refinement and in a knowledge of the usages of good society. Not only
were they looked down upon by other nations of the world; there was
within the United States itself a relatively
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_36" id="Page_36">36</SPAN></span>
small upper class inclined to regard the
mass of the people as of an inferior order.</p>
<p>Thus, while forces were at work favorable to democracy, the gentry
remained in control of affairs after the Revolution, although their
numbers were reduced by the emigration of the Loyalists and their power
was lessened. The explanation of this aristocratic control may be found in
the fact that the generation of the Revolution had been accustomed to
monarchy and to an upper class and that the people were wont to take their
ideas and to accept suggestions from their betters without question or
murmur. This deferential attitude is attested by the indifference of
citizens to the right of voting. In our own day, before the great
extension of woman suffrage, the number of persons voting approximated
twenty per cent of the population, but after the Revolution less than five
per cent of the white population voted. There were many limitations upon
the exercise of the suffrage, but the small number of voters was only
partially due to these restrictions, for in later years, without any
radical change in suffrage qualifications, the proportion of citizens who
voted steadily increased.</p>
<p>The fact is that many of the people did not care to vote. Why should they,
when they were only
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_37" id="Page_37">37</SPAN></span>
registering the will or the wishes of their superiors?
But among the relatively small number who constituted the governing class
there was a high standard of intelligence. Popular magazines were unheard
of and newspapers were infrequent, so that men depended largely upon
correspondence and personal intercourse for the interchange of ideas.
There was time, however, for careful reading of the few available books;
there was time for thought, for writing, for discussion, and for social
intercourse. It hardly seems too much to say, therefore, that there was
seldom, if ever, a people—certainly never a people scattered over
so wide a territory—who knew so much about government as did this
controlling element of the people of the United States.</p>
<p>The practical character, as well as the political genius, of the Americans
was never shown to better advantage than at the outbreak of the
Revolution, when the quarrel with the mother country was manifesting
itself in the conflict between the Governors, and other appointed agents
of the Crown, and the popularly elected houses of the colonial
legislatures. When the Crown resorted to dissolving the legislatures, the
revolting colonists kept up and observed the forms of government. When the
legislature was prevented from meeting, the members
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_38" id="Page_38">38</SPAN></span>
would come together
and call themselves a congress or a convention, and, instead of adopting
laws or orders, would issue what were really nothing more than
recommendations, but which they expected would be obeyed by their
supporters. To enforce these recommendations extra-legal committees,
generally backed by public opinion and sometimes concretely supported by
an organized “mob,” would meet in towns and counties
and would be often effectively centralized where the opponents of the
British policy were in control.</p>
<p>In several of the colonies the want of orderly government became so
serious that, in 1775, the Continental Congress advised them to form
temporary governments until the trouble with Great Britain had been
settled. When independence was declared Congress recommended to all the
States that they should adopt governments of their own. In accordance with
that recommendation, in the course of a very few years each State
established an independent government and adopted a written constitution.
It was a time when men believed in the social contract or the
“compact theory of the state,” that states originated
through agreement, as the case might be, between king and nobles, between
king and people, or among the people
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_39" id="Page_39">39</SPAN></span>
themselves. In support of this
doctrine no less an authority than the Bible was often quoted, such a
passage for example as II Samuel v, 3: “So all the elders
of Israel came to the King to Hebron; and King David made a covenant with
them in Hebron before the Lord; and they anointed David King over
Israel.” As a philosophical speculation to explain why
people were governed or consented to be governed, this theory went back at
least to the Greeks, and doubtless much earlier; and, though of some
significance in medieval thought, it became of greater importance in
British political philosophy, especially through the works of Thomas
Hobbes and John Locke. A very practical application of the compact theory
was made in the English Revolution of 1688, when in order to avoid the
embarrassment of deposing the king, the convention of the Parliament
adopted the resolution: “That King James the Second, having
endeavored to subvert the Constitution of the Kingdom, by breaking the
original Contract between King and People, and having, by the advice of
Jesuits, and other wicked persons, violated the fundamental Laws, and
withdrawn himself out of this Kingdom, has abdicated the Government, and
that the throne is hereby vacant.” These theories were
developed by Jean
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_40" id="Page_40">40</SPAN></span>
Jacques Rousseau in his <i>Contrat Social</i>—a book so attractively
written that it eclipsed all other works upon the subject and resulted in
his being regarded as the author of the doctrine—and through him
they spread all over Europe.</p>
<p>Conditions in America did more than lend color to pale speculation; they
seemed to take this hypothesis out of the realm of theory and to give it
practical application. What happened when men went into the wilderness to
live? The Pilgrim Fathers on board the Mayflower entered into an agreement
which was signed by the heads of families who took part in the enterprise:
“We, whose names are underwritten … Do by these presents,
solemnly and mutually, in the Presence of God and one another, covenant
and combine ourselves together into a civil Body Politick.”</p>
<p>Other colonies, especially in New England, with this example before them
of a social contract entered into similar compacts or “plantation
covenants,” as they were called. But the colonists were also
accustomed to having written charters granted which continued for a time
at least to mark the extent of governmental powers. Through this
intermingling of theory and practice it was the most
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_41" id="Page_41">41</SPAN></span>
natural thing in the
world, when Americans came to form their new State Governments, that they
should provide written instruments framed by their own representatives,
which not only bound them to be governed in this way but also placed
limitations upon the governing bodies. As the first great series of
written constitutions, these frames of government attracted wide
attention. Congress printed a set for general distribution, and numerous
editions were circulated both at home and abroad.</p>
<p>The constitutions were brief documents, varying from one thousand to
twelve thousand words in length, which established the framework of the
governmental machinery. Most of them, before proceeding to practical
working details, enunciated a series of general principles upon the
subject of government and political morality in what were called
declarations or bills of rights. The character of these declarations may
be gathered from the following excerpts:</p>
<blockquote>
<p>That all men are by nature equally free and independent, and have certain
inherent rights, … the enjoyment of life and liberty, with the
means of acquiring and possessing property, and pursuing and obtaining
happiness and safety.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_42" id="Page_42">42</SPAN></span>
That no man, or set of men, are entitled to
exclusive or separate emoluments or privileges from the community, but
in consideration of public services.</p>
<p>The body politic is formed by a voluntary association of individuals; it
is a social compact by which the whole people covenants with each citizen
and each citizen with the whole people that all shall be governed by
certain laws for the common good.</p>
<p>That all power of suspending laws, or the execution of laws, by any
authority, without consent of the representatives of the people, is
injurious to their rights, and ought not to be exercised.</p>
<p>That general warrants, … are grievous and oppressive, and ought
not to be granted.</p>
<p>All penalties ought to be proportioned to the nature of the offence.</p>
<p>That sanguinary laws ought to be avoided, as far as is consistent with
the safety of the State; and no law, to inflict cruel and unusual pains
and penalties, ought to be made in any case, or at any time hereafter.</p>
<p>No magistrate or court of law shall demand excessive bail or sureties,
impose excessive fines …</p>
<p>Every individual has a natural and unalienable right to worship God
according to the dictates of his own conscience, and reason; …</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_43" id="Page_43">43</SPAN></span>
That the freedom of the press is one of the great bulwarks of liberty,
and can never be restrained but by despotic governments.</p>
</blockquote>
<p>It will be perceived at once that these are but variations of the English
Declaration of Rights of 1689, which indeed was consciously followed as a
model; and yet there is a world-wide difference between the English model
and these American copies. The earlier document enunciated the rights of
English subjects, the recent infringement of which made it desirable that
they should be reasserted in convincing form. The American documents
asserted rights which the colonists generally had enjoyed and which they
declared to be “governing principles for all peoples in all
future times.”</p>
<p>But the greater significance of these State Constitutions is to be found
in their quality as working instruments of government. There was indeed
little difference between the old colonial and the new State Governments.
The inhabitants of each of the Thirteen States had been accustomed to a
large measure of self-government, and when they took matters into their
own hands they were not disposed to make any radical changes in the forms
to which they had become accustomed. Accordingly the State Governments
that were adopted
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_44" id="Page_44">44</SPAN></span>
simply continued a framework of government almost
identical with that of colonial times. To be sure, the Governor and other
appointed officials were now elected either by the people or the
legislature, and so were ultimately responsible to the electors instead of
to the Crown; and other changes were made which in the long run might
prove of far-reaching and even of vital significance; and yet the
machinery of government seemed the same as that to which the people were
already accustomed. The average man was conscious of no difference at all
in the working of the Government under the new order. In fact, in
Connecticut and Rhode Island, the most democratic of all the colonies,
where the people had been privileged to elect their own governors, as well
as legislatures, no change whatever was necessary and the old charters
were continued as State Constitutions down to 1818 and 1842, respectively.</p>
<p>To one who has been accustomed to believe that the separation from a
monarchical government meant the establishment of democracy, a reading of
these first State Constitutions is likely to cause a rude shock. A shrewd
English observer, traveling a generation later in the United States, went
to the root of the whole matter in remarking of
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_45" id="Page_45">45</SPAN></span>
the Americans that,
“When their independence was achieved their mental condition
was not instantly changed. Their deference for rank and for judicial and
legislative authority continued nearly unimpaired.” ¹
They might declare that “all men are created equal,”
and bills of rights might assert that government rested upon the consent
of the governed; but these constitutions carefully provided that such
consent should come from property owners, and, in many of the States,
from religious believers and even followers of the Christian faith.
“The man of small means might vote, but none save well-to-do
Christians could legislate, and in many states none but a rich
Christian could be a governor.” ² In South Carolina, for
example, a freehold of £10,000 currency was required of the
Governor, Lieutenant Governor, and members of the Council;
£2,000 of the members of the Senate; and, while every elector was
eligible to the House of Representatives, he had to acknowledge the being
of a God and to believe in a future state of rewards and punishments, as
well as to hold “a freehold at least of fifty acres of land,
or a town lot.”</p>
<div class="footer">
<SPAN name="footer_45-1" name="footer_45-1"></SPAN>
<p class="footer">
¹ George Combe, <i>Tour of the United States,</i>
vol. i, p. 205.</p>
<SPAN name="footer_45-2" name="footer_45-2"></SPAN>
<p class="footer">
² McMaster, <i>Acquisition of Industrial, Popular, and
Political Rights of Man in America</i>, p. 20.</p>
</div>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_46" id="Page_46">46</SPAN></span>
It was government by a property-owning class, but in comparison with other
countries this class represented a fairly large and increasing proportion
of the population. In America the opportunity of becoming a property-owner
was open to every one, or, as that phrase would then have been understood,
to most white men. This system of class control is illustrated by the fact
that, with the exception of Massachusetts, the new State Constitutions
were never submitted to the people for approval.</p>
<p>The democratic sympathizer of today is inclined to point to those first
State Governments as a continuance of the old order. But to the
conservative of that time it seemed as if radical and revolutionary
changes were taking place. The bills of rights declared, “That no
men, or set of men, are entitled to exclusive or separate emoluments or
privileges from the community, but in consideration of public
services.” Property qualifications and other restrictions on
office-holding and the exercise of the suffrage were lessened. Four States
declared in their constitutions against the entailment of estates, and
primogeniture was abolished in aristocratic Virginia. There was a fairly
complete abolition of all vestiges of feudal tenure in the holding of
land, so that it may be said that in this period full ownership of
property was established. The further separation of church and state was
also carried out.</p>
<p>Certainly leveling influences were at work, and the people as a whole had
moved one step farther in the direction of equality and democracy, and it
was well that the Revolution was not any more radical and revolutionary
than it was. The change was gradual and therefore more lasting. One finds
readily enough contemporary statements to the effect that,
“Although there are no nobles in America, there is a class of men
denominated ‘gentlemen,’ who, by reason of their wealth,
their talents, their education, their families, or the offices they hold,
aspire to a preëminence,” but, the same observer adds, this
is something which “the people refuse to grant them.”
Another contemporary contributes the observation that there was not
so much respect paid to gentlemen of rank as there should be, and that the
lower orders of people behave as if they were on a footing of equality
with them.</p>
<p>Whether the State Constitutions are to be regarded as property-conserving,
aristocratic instruments, or as progressive documents, depends upon the
point of view. And so it is with the spirit of union or of nationality in
the United States. One
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_48" id="Page_48">48</SPAN></span>
student emphasizes the fact of there being
“thirteen independent republics differing … widely in
climate, in soil, in occupation, in everything which makes up the social
and economic life of the people”; while another sees
“the United States a nation.” There is something to
be said for both sides, and doubtless the truth lies between
them, for there were forces making for disintegration as well as for
unification. To the student of the present day, however, the latter seem
to have been the stronger and more important, although the possibility was
never absent that the thirteen States would go their separate ways.</p>
<p>There are few things so potent as a common danger to bring discordant
elements into working harmony. Several times in the century and a half of
their existence, when the colonies found themselves threatened by their
enemies, they had united, or at least made an effort to unite, for mutual
help. The New England Confederation of 1643 was organized primarily for
protection against the Indians and incidentally against the Dutch and
French. Whenever trouble threatened with any of the European powers or
with the Indians—and that was frequently—a plan would be
broached for getting the colonies to combine their efforts, sometimes
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_49" id="Page_49">49</SPAN></span>
for the immediate necessity and sometimes for a broader purpose. The best
known of these plans was that presented to the Albany Congress of 1754,
which had been called to make effective preparation for the inevitable
struggle with the French and Indians. The beginning of the troubles which
culminated in the final breach with Great Britain had quickly brought
united action in the form of the Stamp Act Congress of 1765, in the
Committees of Correspondence, and then in the Continental Congress.</p>
<p>It was not merely that the leaven of the Revolution was already working to
bring about the freer interchange of ideas; instinct and experience led
the colonies to united action. The very day that the Continental Congress
appointed a committee to frame a declaration of independence, another
committee was ordered to prepare articles of union. A month later, as soon
as the Declaration of Independence had been adopted, this second
committee, of which John Dickinson of Pennsylvania was chairman, presented
to Congress a report in the form of Articles of Confederation. Although
the outbreak of fighting made some sort of united action imperative, this
plan of union was subjected to debate intermittently for over sixteen
months
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_50" id="Page_50">50</SPAN></span>
and even after being adopted by Congress, toward the end of 1777,
it was not ratified by the States until March, 1781, when the war was
already drawing to a close. The exigencies of the hour forced Congress,
without any authorization, to act as if it had been duly empowered and in
general to proceed as if the Confederation had been formed.</p>
<p>Benjamin Franklin was an enthusiast for union. It was he who had submitted
the plan of union to the Albany Congress in 1754, which with modifications
was recommended by that congress for adoption. It provided for a Grand
Council of representatives chosen by the legislature of each colony, the
members to be proportioned to the contribution of that colony to the
American military service. In matters concerning the colonies as a whole,
especially in Indian affairs, the Grand Council was to be given extensive
powers of legislation and taxation. The executive was to be a President or
Governor-General, appointed and paid by the Crown, with the right of
nominating all military officers, and with a veto upon all acts of the
Grand Council. The project was far in advance of the times and ultimately
failed of acceptance, but in 1775, with the beginning of the troubles with
Great Britain, Franklin took his Albany plan and, after modifying
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_51" id="Page_51">51</SPAN></span>
it in
accordance with the experience of twenty years, submitted it to the
Continental Congress as a new plan of government under which the colonies
might unite.</p>
<p>Franklin’s plan of 1775 seems to have attracted little attention in
America, and possibly it was not generally known; but much was made of it
abroad, where it soon became public, probably in the same way that other
Franklin papers came out. It seems to have been his practice to make, with
his own hand, several copies of such a document, which he would send to
his friends with the statement that as the document in question was
confidential they might not otherwise see a copy of it. Of course the
inevitable happened, and such documents found their way into print to the
apparent surprise and dismay of the author. Incidentally this practice
caused confusion in later years, because each possessor of such a document
would claim that he had the original. Whatever may have been the procedure
in this particular case, it is fairly evident that Dickinson’s
committee took Franklin’s plan of 1775 as the starting point of its
work, and after revision submitted it to Congress as their report; for
some of the most important features of the Articles of Confederation
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_52" id="Page_52">52</SPAN></span>
are
to be found, sometimes word for word, in Franklin’s draft.</p>
<p>This explanation of the origin of the Articles of Confederation is helpful
and perhaps essential in understanding the form of government established,
because that government in its main features had been devised for an
entirely different condition of affairs, when a strong, centralized
government would not have been accepted even if it had been wanted. It
provided for a “league of friendship,” with the primary
purpose of considering preparation for action rather than of taking the
initiative. Furthermore, the final stages of drafting the Articles of
Confederation had occurred at the outbreak of the war, when the people of
the various States were showing a disposition to follow readily
suggestions that came from those whom they could trust and when they
seemed to be willing to submit without compulsion to orders from the same
source. These circumstances, quite as much as the inexperience of Congress
and the jealousy of the States, account for the inefficient form of
government which was devised; and inefficient the Confederation certainly
was. The only organ of government was a Congress in which every State was
entitled to one vote and was represented by a
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_53" id="Page_53">53</SPAN></span>
delegation whose members
were appointed annually as the legislature of the State might direct,
whose expenses were paid by the State, and who were subject to recall.
In other words, it was a council of States whose representatives had
little incentive to independence of action.</p>
<p>Extensive powers were granted to this Congress “of determining
on peace and war, … of entering into treaties and
alliances,” of maintaining an army and a navy, of establishing
post offices, of coining money, and of making requisitions upon the States
for their respective share of expenses “incurred for the common
defence or general welfare.” But none of these powers could be
exercised without the consent of nine States, which was equivalent to
requiring a two-thirds vote, and even when such a vote had been obtained
and a decision had been reached, there was nothing to compel the
individual States to obey beyond the mere declaration in the Articles
of Confederation that, “Every State shall abide by the
determinations of the United States in Congress assembled.”</p>
<p>No executive was provided for except that Congress was authorized
“to appoint such other committees and civil officers as may be
necessary for managing the general affairs of the
<ins title="Transcriber's Note: Removed period after United States.">
United States</ins>
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_54" id="Page_54">54</SPAN></span>
under their direction.” In judicial matters, Congress was to
serve as “the last resort on appeal in all disputes and
differences” between States; and Congress might
establish courts for the trial of piracy and felonies committed on the
high seas and for determining appeals in cases of prize capture.</p>
<p>The plan of a government was there but it lacked any driving force.
Congress might declare war but the States might decline to participate in
it; Congress might enter into treaties but it could not make the States
live up to them; Congress might borrow money but it could not be sure of
repaying it; and Congress might decide disputes without being able to make
the parties accept the decision. The pressure of necessity might keep the
States together for a time, yet there is no disguising the fact that the
Articles of Confederation formed nothing more than a gentlemen’s
agreement.</p>
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