<h2><SPAN href="#Contents">CHAPTER V</SPAN></h2>
<h3>DARKNESS BEFORE DAWN</h3>
<p><span class="smcap">John Fiske</span> summed up the prevailing impression
of the government of the Confederation in the title to his volume,
<i>The Critical Period of American History.</i> “The period
of five years,” says Fiske, “following the peace of 1783 was
the most critical moment in all the history of the American people. The
dangers from which we were saved in 1788 were even greater than were the
dangers from which we were saved in 1865.” Perhaps the plight of
the Confederation was not so desperate as he would have us believe, but
it was desperate enough. Two incidents occurring between the signing of
the preliminary terms of peace and the definitive treaty reveal
the danger in which the country stood. The main body of continental troops
made up of militiamen and short-term volunteers—always prone to
mutinous conduct—was collected at Newburg on the Hudson, watching
the British in New York.
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_82" id="Page_82">82</SPAN></span>
Word might come at any day that the treaty had been signed, and the army
did not wish to be disbanded until certain matters had been
settled—primarily the question of their pay. The officers
had been promised half-pay for life, but nothing definite had been done
toward carrying out the promise. The soldiers had no such hope to
encourage them, and their pay was sadly in arrears. In December, 1782, the
officers at Newburg drew up an address in behalf of themselves and their
men and sent it to Congress. Therein they made the threat, thinly veiled,
of taking matters into their own hands unless their grievances were
redressed.</p>
<p>There is reason to suppose that back of this movement—or at least in
sympathy with it—were some of the strongest men in civil as in
military life, who, while not fomenting insurrection, were willing to
bring pressure to bear on Congress and the States. Congress was unable or
unwilling to act, and in March, 1783, a second paper, this time anonymous,
was circulated urging the men not to disband until the question of pay had
been settled and recommending a meeting of officers on the following day.
If Washington’s influence was not counted upon, it was at least
hoped that he would not interfere; but as soon as he learned of
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_83" id="Page_83">83</SPAN></span>
what had been done he issued general orders calling for a meeting of
officers on a later day, thus superseding the irregular meeting that
had been suggested. On the day appointed the Commander-in-Chief appeared
and spoke with so much warmth and feeling that his “little address
… drew tears from many of the officers.” He inveighed against
the unsigned paper and against the methods that were talked of, for they
would mean the disgrace of the army, and he appealed to the patriotism of
the officers, promising his best efforts in their behalf. The effect was
so strong that, when Washington withdrew, resolutions were adopted
unanimously expressing their loyalty and their faith in the justice of
Congress and denouncing the anonymous circular.</p>
<p>The general apprehension was not diminished by another incident in June.
Some eighty troops of the Pennsylvania line in camp at Lancaster marched
to Philadelphia and drew up before the State House, where Congress was
sitting. Their purpose was to demand better treatment and the payment of
what was owed to them. So far it was an orderly demonstration, although
not in keeping with military regulations; in fact the men had broken away
from camp under the lead of
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_84" id="Page_84">84</SPAN></span>
noncommissioned officers. But when they had been stimulated by drink the
disorder became serious. The humiliating feature of the situation was
that Congress could do nothing, even in self-protection. They appealed to
the Pennsylvania authorities and, when assistance was refused, the members
of Congress in alarm fled in the night and three days later gathered in
the college building in Princeton.</p>
<p>Congress became the butt of many jokes, but men could not hide the chagrin
they felt that their Government was so weak. The feeling deepened into
shame when the helplessness of Congress was displayed before the world.
Weeks and even months passed before a quorum could be obtained to ratify
the treaty recognizing the independence of the United States and
establishing peace. Even after the treaty was supposed to be in force the
States disregarded its provisions and Congress could do nothing more than
utter ineffective protests. But, most humiliating of all, the British
maintained their military posts within the northwestern territory ceded to
the United States, and Congress could only request them to retire. The
Americans’ pride was hurt and their pockets were touched as well,
for an important issue at stake was the control of the lucrative fur
trade. So resentment
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_85" id="Page_85">85</SPAN></span>
grew into anger; but the British held on, and the United States
was powerless to make them withdraw. To make matters worse, the
Confederation, for want of power to levy taxes, was facing bankruptcy, and
Congress was unable to devise ways and means to avert a crisis.</p>
<p>The Second Continental Congress had come into existence in 1775. It was
made up of delegations from the various colonies, appointed in more or
less irregular ways, and had no more authority than it might assume and
the various colonies were willing to concede; yet it was the central body
under which the Revolution had been inaugurated and carried through to a
successful conclusion. Had this Congress grappled firmly with the
financial problem and forced through a system of direct taxation, the
subsequent woes of the Confederation might have been mitigated and perhaps
averted. In their enthusiasm over the Declaration of Independence the
people—by whom is meant the articulate class consisting largely of
the governing and commercial elements—would probably have accepted
such a usurpation of authority. But with their lack of experience it is
not surprising that the delegates to Congress did not appreciate the
necessity of such radical action and so were unwilling to take the
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_86" id="Page_86">86</SPAN></span>
responsibility for it. They counted upon the goodwill and support of their
constituents, which simmered down to a reliance upon voluntary grants from
the States in response to appeals from Congress. These desultory grants
proved to be so unsatisfactory that, in 1781, even before the Articles of
Confederation had been ratified, Congress asked for a grant of additional
power to levy a duty of five per cent <em>ad valorem</em> upon all goods
imported into the United States, the revenue from which was to be applied
to the discharge of the principal and interest on debts “contracted
… for supporting the present war.” Twelve States agreed, but
Rhode Island, after some hesitation, finally rejected the measure in
November, 1782.</p>
<p>The Articles of Confederation authorized a system of requisitions
apportioned among the “several States in proportion to the value of
all land within each State.” But, as there was no power vested in
Congress to force the States to comply, the situation was in no way
improved when the Articles were ratified and put into operation. In fact,
matters grew worse as Congress itself steadily lost ground in popular
estimation, until it had become little better than a laughing-stock, and
with the ending of the war its requests were more honored in the
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_87" id="Page_87">87</SPAN></span>
breach than in the observance. In 1782 Congress asked for $8,000,000 and
the following year for $2,000,000 more, but by the end of 1783 less than
$1,500,000 had been paid in.</p>
<p>In the same year, 1783, Congress made another attempt to remedy the
financial situation by proposing the so-called Revenue Amendment,
according to which a specific duty was to be laid upon certain articles
and a general duty of five per cent <i>ad valorem</i> upon all other
goods, to be in operation for twenty-five years. In addition to this it
was proposed that for the same period of time $1,500,000 annually should
be raised by requisitions, and the definite amount for each State was
specified until “the rule of the Confederation” could be
carried into practice. It was then proposed that the article providing
for the proportion of requisitions should be changed so as to be based
not upon land values but upon population, in estimating which slaves
should be counted at three-fifths of their number. In the course of
three years thereafter only two States accepted the proposals in full,
seven agreed to them in part, and four failed to act at all. Congress
in despair then made a further representation to the States upon the
critical condition of the finances and accompanied this with
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_88" id="Page_88">88</SPAN></span>
an urgent appeal, which resulted in all the States except New York
agreeing to the proposed impost. But the refusal of one State was
sufficient to block the whole measure, and there was no further hope for
a treasury that was practically bankrupt. In five years Congress had
received less than two and one-half million dollars from
requisitions, and for the fourteen months ending January 1, 1786, the
income was at the rate of less than $375,000 a year, which was not enough,
as a committee of Congress reported, “for the bare maintenance of
the Federal Government on the most economical establishment and in time of
profound peace.” In fact, the income was not sufficient even to
meet the interest on the foreign debt.</p>
<p>In the absence of other means of obtaining funds Congress had resorted
early to the unfortunate expedient of issuing paper money based solely on
the good faith of the States to redeem it. This fiat money held its value
for some little time; then it began to shrink and, once started on the
downward path, its fall was rapid. Congress tried to meet the emergency by
issuing paper in increasing quantities until the inevitable happened: the
paper money ceased to have any value and practically disappeared from
circulation. Jefferson said that
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_89" id="Page_89">89</SPAN></span>
by the end of 1781 one thousand dollars of Continental scrip was worth
about one dollar in specie.</p>
<p>The States had already issued paper money of their own, and their
experience ought to have taught them a lesson, but with the coming of hard
times after the war, they once more proposed by issuing paper to relieve
the “scarcity of money” which was commonly supposed to be one
of the principal evils of the day. In 1785 and 1786 paper money parties
appeared in almost all the States. In some of these the conservative
element was strong enough to prevent action, but in others the movement
had to run its fatal course. The futility of what they were doing should
have been revealed to all concerned by proposals seriously made that the
paper money which was issued should depreciate at a regular rate each
year until it should finally disappear.</p>
<p>The experience of Rhode Island is not to be regarded as typical of what
was happening throughout the country but is, indeed, rather to be
considered as exceptional. Yet it attracted widespread attention and
revealed to anxious observers the dangers to which the country was subject
if the existing condition of affairs were allowed to continue. The
machinery of the State Government
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_90" id="Page_90">90</SPAN></span>
was captured by the paper-money party in the spring election of 1786. The
results were disappointing to the adherents of the paper-money cause, for
when the money was issued depreciation began at once, and those who tried
to pay their bills discovered that a heavy discount was demanded. In
response to indignant demands the legislature of Rhode Island passed an
act to force the acceptance of paper money under penalty and thereupon
tradesmen refused to make any sales at all—some closed their shops,
and others tried to carry on business by exchange of wares. The farmers
then retaliated by refusing to sell their produce to the shopkeepers, and
general confusion and acute distress followed. It was mainly a quarrel
between the farmers and the merchants, but it easily grew into a division
between town and country, and there followed a whole series of town
meetings and county conventions. The old line of cleavage was fairly well
represented by the excommunication of a member of St. John’s
Episcopal Church of Providence for tendering bank notes, and the expulsion
of a member of the Society of the Cincinnati for a similar cause.</p>
<p>The contest culminated in the case of Trevett <i>vs.</i> Weeden, 1786,
which is memorable in the judicial
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_91" id="Page_91">91</SPAN></span>
annals of the United States. The legislature, not being satisfied with
ordinary methods of enforcement, had provided for the summary trial of
offenders without a jury before a court whose judges were removable by the
Assembly and were therefore supposedly subservient to its wishes. In the
case in question the Superior Court boldly declared the enforcing act to
be unconstitutional, and for their contumacious behavior the judges were
summoned before the legislature. They escaped punishment, but only one of
them was re¨elected to office.</p>
<p>Meanwhile disorders of a more serious sort, which startled the whole
country, occurred in Massachusetts. It is doubtful if a satisfactory
explanation ever will be found, at least one which will be universally
accepted, as to the causes and origin of Shays’ Rebellion in 1786.
Some historians maintain that the uprising resulted primarily from a
scarcity of money, from a shortage in the circulating medium; that,
while the eastern counties were keeping up their foreign trade
sufficiently at least to bring in enough metallic currency to relieve the
stringency and could also use various forms of credit, the western
counties had no such remedy. Others are inclined to think that the
difficulties of
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_92" id="Page_92">92</SPAN></span>
the farmers in western Massachusetts were caused largely by the return to
normal conditions after the extraordinarily good times between 1776 and
1780, and that it was the discomfort attending the process that drove them
to revolt. Another explanation reminds one of present-day charges against
undue influence of high financial circles, when it is insinuated and even
directly charged that the rebellion was fostered by conservative interests
who were trying to create a public opinion in favor of a more strongly
organized government.</p>
<p>Whatever other causes there may have been, the immediate source of trouble
was the enforced payment of indebtedness, which to a large extent had been
allowed to remain in abeyance during the war. This postponement of
settlement had not been merely for humanitarian reasons; it would have
been the height of folly to collect when the currency was greatly
depreciated. But conditions were supposed to have been restored to normal
with the cessation of hostilities, and creditors were generally inclined
to demand payment. These demands, coinciding with the heavy taxes, drove
the people of western Massachusetts into revolt. Feeling ran high against
lawyers who prosecuted suits for creditors, and this antagonism was easily
transferred
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_93" id="Page_93">93</SPAN></span>
to the courts in which the suits were brought. The rebellion in
Massachusetts accordingly took the form of a demonstration against the
courts. A paper was carried from town to town in the County of Worcester,
in which the signers promised to do their utmost “to prevent the
sitting of the Inferior Court of Common Pleas for the county, or of any
other court that should attempt to take property by distress.”</p>
<p>The Massachusetts Legislature adjourned in July, 1786, without remedying
the trouble and also without authorizing an issue of paper money which the
hard-pressed debtors were demanding. In the months following mobs
prevented the courts from sitting in various towns. A special session of
the legislature was then called by the Governor but, when that special
session had adjourned on the 18th of November, it might just as well have
never met. It had attempted to remedy various grievances and had made
concessions to the malcontents, but it had also passed measures to
strengthen the hands of the Governor. This only seemed to inflame the
rioters, and the disorders increased. After the lower courts a move was
made against the State Supreme Court, and plans were laid for a concerted
movement against the cities in the eastern
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_94" id="Page_94">94</SPAN></span>
part of the State. Civil war
seemed imminent. The insurgents were led by Daniel Shays, an officer in
the army of the Revolution, and the party of law and order was represented
by Governor James Bowdoin, who raised some four thousand troops and placed
them under the command of General Benjamin Lincoln.</p>
<p>The time of year was unfortunate for the insurgents, especially as
December was unusually cold and there was a heavy snowfall. Shays could
not provide stores and equipment and was unable to maintain discipline. A
threatened attack on Cambridge came to naught for, when preparations were
made to protect the city, the rebels began a disorderly retreat, and in
the intense cold and deep snow they suffered severely, and many died from
exposure. The center of interest then shifted to Springfield, where the
insurgents were attempting to seize the United States arsenal. The local
militia had already repelled the first attacks, and the appearance of
General Lincoln with his troops completed the demoralization of
Shays’ army. The insurgents retreated, but Lincoln pursued
relentlessly and broke them up into small bands, which then wandered
about the country preying upon the unfortunate inhabitants. When spring
came, most
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_95" id="Page_95">95</SPAN></span>
of them had been subdued or had taken refuge in the neighboring States.</p>
<p>Shays’ Rebellion was fairly easily suppressed, even though it
required the shedding of some blood. But it was the possibility of further
outbreaks that destroyed men’s peace of mind. There were similar
disturbances in other States; and there the Massachusetts insurgents found
sympathy, support, and finally a refuge. When the worst was over, and
Governor Bowdoin applied to the neighboring States for help in capturing
the last of the refugees, Rhode Island and Vermont failed to respond to
the extent that might have been expected of them. The danger, therefore,
of the insurrection spreading was a cause of deep concern. This feeling
was increased by the impotence of Congress. The Government had sufficient
excuse for intervention after the attack upon the national arsenal in
Springfield. Congress, indeed, began to raise troops but did not dare to
admit its purpose and offered as a pretext an expedition against the
Northwestern Indians. The rebellion was over before any assistance could
be given. The inefficiency of Congress and its lack of influence were
evident. Like the disorders in Rhode Island, Shays’ Rebellion in
Massachusetts helped to bring
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_96" id="Page_96">96</SPAN></span>
about a reaction and strengthened the
conservative movement for reform.</p>
<p>These untoward happenings, however, were only symptoms: the causes of the
trouble lay far deeper. This fact was recognized even in Rhode Island, for
at least one of the conventions had passed resolutions declaring that, in
considering the condition of the whole country, what particularly
concerned them was the condition of trade. Paradoxical as it may seem, the
trade and commerce of the country were already on the upward grade and
prosperity was actually returning. But prosperity is usually a process of
slow growth and is seldom recognized by the community at large until it is
well established. Farsighted men forecast the coming of good times in
advance of the rest of the community, and prosper accordingly. The
majority of the people know that prosperity has come only when it is
unmistakably present, and some are not aware of it until it has begun to
go. If that be true in our day, much more was it true in the eighteenth
century, when means of communication were so poor that it took days for a
message to go from Boston to New York and weeks for news to get from
Boston to Charleston. It was a period of adjustment, and as we look back
after the event we can see that the American
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_97" id="Page_97">97</SPAN></span>
people were adapting
themselves with remarkable skill to the new conditions. But that was not
so evident to the men who were feeling the pinch of hard times, and when
all the attendant circumstances, some of which have been described, are
taken into account, it is not surprising that commercial depression should
be one of the strongest influences in, and the immediate occasion of,
bringing men to the point of willingness to attempt some radical changes.</p>
<p>The fact needs to be reiterated that the people of the United States were
largely dependent upon agriculture and other forms of extractive industry,
and that markets for the disposal of their goods were an absolute
necessity. Some of the States, especially New England and the Middle
States, were interested in the carrying trade, but all were concerned in
obtaining markets. On account of jealousy interstate trade continued a
precarious existence and by no means sufficed to dispose of the surplus
products, so that foreign markets were necessary. The people were
especially concerned for the establishment of the old trade with the West
India Islands, which had been the mainstay of their prosperity in colonial
times; and after the British Government, in 1783, restricted
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_98" id="Page_98">98</SPAN></span>
that trade to
British vessels, many people in the United States were attributing hard
times to British malignancy. The only action which seemed possible was to
force Great Britain in particular, but other foreign countries as well, to
make such trade agreements as the prosperity of the United States
demanded. The only hope seemed to lie in a commercial policy of reprisal
which would force other countries to open their markets to American goods.
Retaliation was the dominating idea in the foreign policy of the time. So
in 1784 Congress made a new recommendation to the States, prefacing it
with an assertion of the importance of commerce, saying: “The
fortune of every Citizen is interested in the success thereof; for it is
the constant source of wealth and incentive to industry; and the value of
our produce and our land must ever rise or fall in proportion to the
prosperous or adverse state of trade.”</p>
<p>And after declaring that Great Britain had “adopted regulations
destructive of our commerce with her West India Islands,” it was
further asserted: “Unless the United States in Congress assembled
shall be vested with powers competent to the protection of commerce,
they can never command reciprocal advantages in trade.” It was
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_99" id="Page_99">99</SPAN></span>
therefore proposed to give
to Congress for fifteen years the power to prohibit the importation or
exportation of goods at American ports except in vessels owned by the
people of the United States or by the subjects of foreign governments
having treaties of commerce with the United States. This was simply a
request for authorization to adopt navigation acts. But the individual
States were too much concerned with their own interests and did not or
would not appreciate the rights of the other States or the interests of
the Union as a whole. And so the commercial amendment of 1784 suffered the
fate of all other amendments proposed to the Articles of Confederation. In
fact only two States accepted it.</p>
<p>It usually happens that some minor occurrence, almost unnoticed at the
time, leads directly to the most important consequences. And an incident
in domestic affairs started the chain of events in the United States that
ended in the reform of the Federal Government. The rivalry and jealousy
among the States had brought matters to such a pass that either Congress
must be vested with adequate powers or the Confederation must collapse.
But the Articles of Confederation provided no remedy, and it had been
found that amendments to that
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_100" id="Page_100">100</SPAN></span>
instrument could not be obtained. It was
necessary, therefore, to proceed in some extra-legal fashion. The Articles
of Confederation specifically forbade treaties or alliances between the
States unless approved by Congress. Yet Virginia and Maryland, in 1785,
had come to a working agreement regarding the use of the Potomac River,
which was the boundary line between them. Commissioners representing both
parties had met at Alexandria and soon adjourned to Mount Vernon, where
they not only reached an amicable settlement of the immediate questions
before them but also discussed the larger subjects of duties and
commercial matters in general. When the Maryland legislature came to act
on the report, it proposed that Pennsylvania and Delaware should be
invited to join with them in formulating a common commercial policy.
Virginia then went one step farther and invited all the other States to
send commissioners to a general trade convention and later announced
Annapolis as the place of meeting and set the time for September, 1786.</p>
<p>This action was unconstitutional and was so recognized, for James Madison
notes that “from the Legislative Journals of Virginia it appears,
that a vote to apply for a sanction of Congress was
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_101" id="Page_101">101</SPAN></span>
followed by a vote against a communication of the Compact to
Congress,” and he mentions other similar violations of the
central authority. That this did not attract more attention was
probably due to the public interest being absorbed just at that
time by the paper money agitation. Then, too, the men concerned
seem to have been willing to avoid publicity. Their purposes are
well brought out in a letter of Monsieur Louis Otto, French
Chargé d’Affaires, written on October 10, 1786,
to the Comte de Vergennes, Minister for Foreign Affairs, though
their motives may be somewhat misinterpreted.</p>
<blockquote>
<p>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 preeminence which the people refuse to grant them; and,
although many of these men have betrayed the interests of their order to
gain popularity, there reigns among them a connection so much the more
intimate as they almost all of them dread the efforts of the people to
despoil them of their possessions, and, moreover, they are creditors, and
therefore interested in strengthening the government, and watching over
the execution of the laws.</p>
<p>These men generally pay very heavy taxes, while the small proprietors
escape the vigilance of the collectors.
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_102" id="Page_102">102</SPAN></span>
The majority of them being
merchants, it is for their interest to establish the credit of the United
States in Europe on a solid foundation by the exact payment of debts, and
to grant to congress powers extensive enough to compel the people to
contribute for this purpose. The attempt, my lord, has been vain, by
pamphlets and other publications, to spread notions of justice and
integrity, and to deprive the people of a freedom which they have so
misused. By proposing a new organization of the federal government all
minds would have been revolted; circumstances ruinous to the commerce of
America have happily arisen to furnish the reformers with a pretext for
introducing innovations.</p>
<p>They represented to the people that the American name had become
opprobrious among all the nations of Europe; that the flag of the United
States was everywhere exposed to insults and annoyance; the husbandman, no
longer able to export his produce freely, would soon be reduced to want;
it was high time to retaliate, and to convince foreign powers that the
United States would not with impunity suffer such a violation of the
freedom of trade, but that strong measures could be taken only with the
consent of the thirteen states, and that congress, not having the
necessary powers, it was essential to form a general assembly instructed
to present to congress the plan for its adoption, and to point out the
means of carrying it into execution.</p>
<p>The people, generally discontented with the obstacles in the way of
commerce, and scarcely suspecting the secret motives of their opponents,
ardently embraced this measure, and appointed commissioners, who were to
assemble at Annapolis in the beginning of September.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_103" id="Page_103">103</SPAN></span>
The authors of this proposition had no hope, nor even desire, to see the
success of this assembly of commissioners, which was only intended to
prepare a question much more important than that of commerce. The measures
were so well taken that at the end of September no more than five states
were represented at Annapolis, and the commissioners from the northern
states tarried several days at New York in order to retard their arrival.</p>
<p>The states which assembled, after having waited nearly three weeks,
separated under the pretext that they were not in sufficient numbers to
enter on business, and, to justify this dissolution, they addressed to the
different legislatures and to congress a report, the translation of which
I have the honor to enclose to you. ¹</p>
</blockquote>
<div class="footer">
<SPAN name="footer_103-1" name="footer_103-1"></SPAN>
<p class="footer">
¹ Quoted by Bancroft, <i>History of the Formation of the
Constitution,</i> vol. ii, Appendix, pp. 399-400.</p>
</div>
<p>Among these “men denominated ‘gentlemen’”
to whom the French Chargé d’Affaires alludes, was James
Madison of Virginia. He was one of the younger men, unfitted by
temperament and physique to be a soldier, who yet had found his
opportunity in the Revolution. Graduating in 1771 from Princeton,
where tradition tells of the part he took in patriotic demonstrations
on the campus—characteristic of students then as now—he
had thrown himself heart and soul into the American cause. He was a
member of the convention to
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_104" id="Page_104">104</SPAN></span>
frame the first State Constitution for Virginia in
1776, and from that time on, because of his ability, he was an important
figure in the political history of his State and of his country. He was
largely responsible for bringing about the conference between Virginia and
Maryland and for the subsequent steps resulting in the trade convention at
Annapolis. And yet Madison seldom took a conspicuous part, preferring to
remain in the background and to allow others to appear as the leaders.
When the Annapolis Convention assembled, for example, he suffered
Alexander Hamilton of New York to play the leading rôle.</p>
<p>Hamilton was then approaching thirty years of age and was one of the
ablest men in the United States. Though his best work was done in later
years, when he proved himself to be perhaps the most brilliant of American
statesmen, with an extraordinary genius for administrative organization,
the part that he took in the affairs of this period was important. He was
small and slight in person but with an expressive face, fair complexion,
and cheeks of “almost feminine rosiness.” The usual
aspect of his countenance was thoughtful and even severe, but in
conversation his face lighted up with a remarkably attractive smile. He
carried himself
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_105" id="Page_105">105</SPAN></span>
erectly and with dignity, so that in spite of his small
figure, when he entered a room “it was apparent, from the
respectful attention of the company, that he was a distinguished
person.” A contemporary, speaking of the opposite and almost
irreconcilable traits of Hamilton’s character, pronounced a
bust of him as giving a complete exposition of his character:
“Draw a handkerchief around the mouth of the bust, and the remnant of
the countenance represents fortitude and intrepidity such as we have often
seen in the plates of Roman heroes. Veil in the same manner the face and
leave the mouth and chin only discernible, and all this fortitude melts
and vanishes into almost feminine softness.”</p>
<p>Hamilton was a leading spirit in the Annapolis Trade Convention and wrote
the report that it adopted. Whether or not there is any truth in the
assertion of the French chargé that Hamilton and others thought it
advisable to disguise their purposes, there is no doubt that the Annapolis
Convention was an all-important step in the progress of reform, and its
recommendation was the direct occasion of the calling of the great
convention that framed the Constitution of the United States.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_106" id="Page_106">106</SPAN></span>
The recommendation of the Annapolis delegates was in the form of a report
to the legislatures of their respective States, in which they referred to
the defects in the Federal Government and called for “a
convention of deputies from the different states for the special purpose
of entering into this investigation and digesting a Plan for supplying
such defects.” Philadelphia was suggested as the place of
meeting, and the time was fixed for the second Monday in May of the
next year.</p>
<p>Several of the States acted promptly upon this recommendation and in
February, 1787, Congress adopted a resolution accepting the proposal and
calling the convention “for the sole and express purpose of revising the
Articles of Confederation and reporting … such alterations …
as shall … render the Federal Constitution adequate to the
exigencies of Government and the preservation of the Union.”
Before the time fixed for the meeting of the Philadelphia Convention, or
shortly after that date, all the States had appointed deputies with the
exception of New Hampshire and Rhode Island. New Hampshire was favorably
disposed toward the meeting but, owing to local conditions, failed to act
before the Convention was well under way. Delegates, however, arrived in
time to share
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_107" id="Page_107">107</SPAN></span>
in some of the most important proceedings. Rhode Island
alone refused to take part, although a letter signed by some of the
prominent men was sent to the Convention pledging their support.</p>
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