Sunday, April 20, 2025

ARP350: Signing the Convention


For the past few weeks we have covered the Constitutional convention in Philadelphia, primarily the powers of Congress, that made up Article I and the powers of the presidency, laid out in Article II.  This week, we’ll go through all the rest.

Judiciary

The final branch of government to consider was the judiciary.  The Virginia plan called for a judiciary to be chosen by the legislature and to hold offices during good behavior.  The New Jersey plan called for a federal court to be chosen by the executive, but did not see the need for trial courts.

Signing the Constitution
In debate, the delegates generally agreed by consensus that there should be a court to hear certain matters.  Some delegates opposed the idea of creating inferior courts, arguing that state courts could handle most cases, and that needed appeals could then go to the federal Supreme Court.  Roger Sherman of Connecticut,, John Mason of Virginia, and John Rutledge of South Carolina spoke in favor of leaving trials to the state courts, with only an appeal to the Supreme court.   Nationalists like Madison, however, wanted federal courts to try issues involving federal law. The convention punted on this issue, establishing a Supreme Court, but leaving it up to the US Congress to decide what inferior courts, if any, should be established.

After some debates, the delegates determined that federal courts would have jurisdiction over issues that involved federal treaties, collection of federal revenue, and impeachments of federal officers.  They would also handle admiralty cases and cases where a foreigner was a party to the case.

Later, the delegates took away the power of trying impeachments, leaving that to Congress.  They also added that the federal courts would handle cases that involved disputes between states.  

The selection of judges was also a matter of debate.  Although Madison’s Virginia plan initially proposed judges be selected by the legislature, the convention rejected that idea pretty decisively early on.  Madison then pivoted his arguments at the convention toward giving that appointment power to the president.  This ended up being included in the larger debate over the appointment of executive branch officials.  In the end, judicial appointments ended up being the same as other appointment: the president would appoint and the Senate would confirm.

In the colonial era, many judges were appointed by crown authorities, and sat at the pleasure of those authorities.  Most Americans did not like that practice since it made judges dependent on those who could remove them.  In fact, one of the reasons for breaking with Great Britain in the Declaration of Independence “[the king] has made Judges dependent on his Will alone, for the tenure of their offices, and the amount and payment of their salaries.”

To help protect judicial independence from political leaders, the convention opted to give judges lifetime tenure.  They gave some consideration to judges having a term of office, but the general consensus was that judges might try to curry favor if they had to be reappointed at some time.  Delegates also explicitly added that judicial salaries could not be reduced during their tenure.  If you could reduce a judge’s pay to almost nothing, it was the same as firing him as most could not afford to remain as judges without pay.

John Dickinson of Pennsylvania proposed giving the executive the ability to remove judges, subject to some confirmation by Congress.  Sherman supported this.  But several others, who had served as judges, men like Rutledge, and John Randolph of Virginia, argued that the power to remove judges for political reasons would destroy judicial independence.  In the end, the convention decided that removal of judges had to be only for the same standards as removing the president, that is issues of treason, corruption, bribery, and other high crimes and misdemeanors.  Removal would also require a two-thirds vote in the Senate to prevent factional majorities from misusing the impeachment process.

James Wilson of Pennsylvania advocated to give judges some power to review new laws.  In Britain, a Council of jurists could block a new law from taking effect.  This would ensure that all three branches had some say in laws before they went into effect.  Nationalists like Madison disagreed.  Judges were supposed to be arbiters of the law.  If they had a say in making the laws, that would bias them when cases questioning the law came before the courts.

When I talked about presidential powers last week, I neglected to talk about veto authority.  Much of the veto discussion involved either using judges or some special council to review and veto laws.  In the end, that power was given to the president.  Many argued that a veto should be absolute.  The King in Britain had the power to veto any law and that would be the end of the discussion.  Although several delegates, including Wilson, Hamilton, and Morris, supported this absolute veto, Opponents argued that it gave the president too much power.  They allowed Congress to override a veto with a two-thirds vote in both houses.  So if Congress overwhelmingly supported a measure, the president could not stand in the way.

Delegates also debated the idea of judicial review.  Should judges be able to strike down an unconstitutional law?  Gouverneur Morris and Madison, as well as others argued that it had to be an inherent power of judges.  Madison used the example of ex post facto laws, that is making something a crime and then convicting a person who committed the act before it was a crime.  The Constitution clearly barred that.  If Congress tried to create an ex post facto law, the court certainly could not enforce it.

Others, like John Dickinson, argued against this power.  It could be subject to abuse, giving judges an effective veto power of all laws. In the end, the final language did not explicitly address the question either way.  However, only a couple of delegates ever spoke against judges having this authority.

For the most part, the convention did not get into the details of defining any crimes.  The one exception to this was treason.  Delegates feared that factions would arise so that those in the majority would accuse their rivals of treasons.  Under British law, treason could mean a whole range of things that generally displeased the king.  The framers tried to avoid that by explicitly defining treason as making war against the United States or giving aid or comfort to its enemies.  At Benjamin Franklin’s suggestion, conviction would require testimony of at least two witnesses or a confession in open court.  Further, punishment of treason would only apply to the individual, not his family, another break from British custom.

Full Faith and Credit

So, the three branches of government were set up in the first three articles of the Constitution, at least that was how the Committee of Detail set up the powers.  There were still other things that needed to be covered. Article IV would cover how states interacted with each other.  One was a requirement to give full faith and credit to decisions by other state governments.  This actually came from the Articles of Confederation which required full faith.  

The Constitution also guaranteed that citizens would be entitled to the privileges and immunities of citizens in all of the states. The fourth article also raised the issue of a person charged with a crime in one state and who fled to another. The Committee of Detail inserted this, nothing that such a person would have to be returned to the original state for trial.  The New Jersey plan had included something similar, but it hadn’t really received much of any debate during the convention.

Once inserted however, it touched off a debate that had been avoided through much of the convention: slavery.  In 1787, only a few states had begun the process of ending slavery in their states.  But several states in the south, particularly South Carolina, were nowhere near ready to give up the institution, and wanted to make sure that the Constitution would not interfere with slavery.

Two delegates from South Carolina, Pierce Butler, and Charles Cotesworth Pickney, moved that slaves or indentured servants who fled bondage to another state must also be returned to their masters.

Delegates from free states were not ready to use the Constitution to outlaw slavery altogether.  They knew that would blow up the convention and prevent probably all of the southern states from remaining in the Union.  Even so, James Wilson of Pennsylvania objected to a constitutional provision which meant that the federal government, and possibly other state governments, would have to spend money and resources trying to return slaves.  The government didn’t do that for horses or cows that fled their owners.  Why would it have to do that for slaves?

In the end though, the southern delegates were adamant, near the end of August, Butler moved to insert a clause that anyone held to service or labor in one state, and who escaped, shall be delivered up to the person claiming that service or labor.  The Convention agreed to this clause without a vote.  There is speculation it was part of a larger compromise on other matters added on that same day.

The delegates also included a clause allowing congress the authority to admit new states based on whatever criteria they wanted, but did make clear that new states could not be taken from jurisdictions of existing states unless that state agreed to the matter.  This was pretty uncontroversial, considered first in early June and never got much debate or dissent.  To the extent there was some argument, it was mostly over the claims to western lands that some larger states might assert.  Delegates eventually decided it would be up to others to decide the legitimacy of those claims.

They also added a clause allowing Congress to make laws for US territories that were not part of any other state.  This was already what the Confederation Congress was doing in the Northwest Territory.  They just had to add a proviso that this could not be used to prejudice any claims of territory by the US or its states.

The delegates also debated the insertion of a clause that the federal government would ensure that each state maintained a republican form of government and protected the existing laws of each state.  Gouverneur Morris objected, raising concerns about some of Rhode Island’s laws that seemed to threaten basic property rights.  Should the US government protect such laws?  

In the end, delegates changed the wording to ensure that each state did have a republican form of government, meaning one elected by the people, and not a monarch or oligarchy.  They left out any protection of existing state laws, but did guarantee protection to each state against foreign invasion or domestic violence.  This was probably in direct response to the recent Shays rebellion in Massachusetts, and the inability of the Confederation Congress to do anything to restore order.  Elbridge Gerry asked for a provision that the state government had to give permission for federal intervention.  After some debate, the delegates agreed.

Amendments

The Convention also tackled the subject of amending the Constitution.  The Articles of Confederation had required the unanimous consent of all states to make any such changes.  That had proven impractical..

The Virginia plan had proposed that all amendments be proposed by the national legislature.  As representatives of the people, this made sense to many.  This didn’t get much debate until late August, after most other issues were resolved.  When it did, some delegates argued that it should not be Congress, but rather the states, that would decide when a Constitutional Amendment was necessary.  A resolution by John Rutledge called for the application of two-thirds of the state legislatures to call for a new convention to discuss changes to the Constitution.  That was essentially how this Convention had come to be.

During debate in September the Committee of Style argued about who should be able to propose amendments.  Gerry and Hamilton wanted Congress to have the ability to propose amendments.  After all, they were the ones working under the Constitution and would mostly keenly feel the effects of any flaws.  Others were concerned that if the states were suffering, the federal Congress might not be willing to make the necessary changes.

IN the end, the Convention agreed to include two possible ways to propose Amendments.  One was with a two-thirds vote in both houses of Congress.  The other would be if two-thirds of the states called for a convention to propose amendments.  Once an amendment was proposed, at least two-thirds of the states must consent to it.  Given some concerns about minorities being overruled, this was changed to require approval by three-quarters of the states.

There was still some concern.  Smaller states remained hesitant that Amendments might be used someday to take away equal representation in the Senate.  Eventually, the convention agreed that no state could ever be deprived of equal suffrage in the Senate without its consent

Another issue by the South Carolina delegation was concerned about federal power to prevent the importation of slaves.  They wanted protection against that federal power.  The overwhelming majority of delegates disagreed.  That was an issue that would be left up to Congress.  South Carolina, however, was adamant.  In the end, they agreed that Congress would have no power to block the import of slaves for the next twenty years.

Debts

The Convention also debated the repayment of debts.  The Virginia Plan had included a resolution that the new Congress would take on all the engagements of the Confederation Congress.

There was little debate that the new government should continue to repay the war debts incurred by the Continental Congress.  After all, the need to find a way to repay those debts was one of the reasons many delegates wanted this new government.  

There was, however, some debate over whether the new government should assume all the war debts that the individual states.  In August Rutledge put forward a motion that would allow the government to take on those debts.  A large faction of delegates, however, opposed the measure.  Many states had made great efforts to pay down their debts already.  Gerry made the point that states with relatively small remaining debts did not want to have the burden of paying down debts for states that had not made such an effort yet.  Butler objected to paying the debts at all.  He noted that speculators had purchased most of these notes, and he had not interest in paying off what he called “blood suckers.”  

Although not in the record, Hamilton, a strong supporter of assuming state debts, spoke with Madison about the question outside the convention.  Hamilton later told people that Madison agreed that the government should assume state debts, but had decided to leave that to the new administration to settle, and not put it in the Constitution.  In the end, the Constitution only said that the new government would repay debts from the Confederation Congress, and left silent the matter of state debts.

Ratification

The final article proclaimed that this new Constitution would be established once the conventions of nine states ratified it.  This was actually a pretty drastic step.  Remember that originally, the Convention was supposed to make recommendations to be approved by the Confederation Congress.  Such amendments under the Articles had to be unanimous. 

In this process, the delegates ignored the Confederation Congress entirely, and sent it to the states. It even bypassed state legislatures, calling for state conventions of the people.  They further required the effective support of only nine states, a two-thirds majority before the Constitution went into effect.  That was a lower standard that was even required for amendments to this constitution.

This process made clear that the Convention was not just recommending even radical changes to the Articles.  It was establishing an independent process to replace them without the consent of either the Confederation Congress or state legislatures.

Concluding the Convention

By early September the Convention delegates were exhausted from nearly four months of nonstop negotiating on this new document.  Up until the very end, there were arguments over various clauses.  On Saturday, September 8, the convention appointed a Committee of Style to draft the final version.  William Johnson of Connecticut served as the chair, with Alexander Hamilton, Gouverneur Morris, James Madison, and Rufus King also serving.

Morris did most of the actual drafting. Hw wrote the preamble beginning “We the people…” and made most of the final wording choices.  The Committee brought back a final document the following Wednesday.  Even at that point, after all the debate, the delegates argued for last minute changes.  The last significant one was to reduce the congressional override of a presidential veto from three-quarters to two-thirds.

The committee then printed copies for everyone the following day for a final review.  Many delegates still were not happy.  Elbridge Gerry, Edmund Randolph, and George Mason said they could not sign a document that lacked a bill of rights.  Delegates spent the rest of the week reviewing the final document to make sure that no one had snuck in any changes.

On Saturday, September 15, the convention gave its approval to the final wording.  The convention paid $30 to Jacob Shallus, an assistant clerk for the Pennsylvania State House, to draft and engross the final document.  The document was written out on four pages and was ready for signing on Monday the 17th.  Many delegates were still unhappy.  There was a question as to how many of them would sign the final version.

Benjamin Franklin was asked to give final remarks.  Franklin wrote out a speech, but was to sick to stand and address the delegates.  Instead, he handed his speech to James Wilson who read it for him.  Franklin conceded that the Constitution was not perfect and that he did not get everything he wanted.  But the compromises that they had made were the best they could produce as fallible humans.  

Franklin pointed out that any government would rely on the people who would soon administer the government to ensure it would work.  He hoped it would be well administered for years, and that it would be a long time before the people became so corrupted as to need a despotic government.  Delegates must rely on the people and the officials who would make up this new government to make it work.

Franklin ended by noting that he had raised his complaints about parts of the constitution during debate, but with the work done, he would support the final product and not make public anything that he thought should be different.  He urged the delegates to sign this imperfect document as the best that men could produce.

Gouverneur Morris called on all delegates to sign, simply as witnesses to the unanimous consent of the states present.  In the end, thirty-eight of forty one delegates signed.  Mason, Randolph, and Gerry still refused.  A thirty-ninth signature, that of John Dickinson had to leave the convention due to illness, but authorized fellow delegate George Read to sign on his behalf.

Delegates signed, grouped by states.  Alexander Hamilton wrote the State names at the bottom of the document.  With their work complete, the delegates went home.

Next week, we’ll see what the country thought as the people got their first look at this new document.

- - -

Next Episode 350 Creating a Judiciary, 1787 (coming soon)

Previous Episode 348 Creating Congress, 1787

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Further Reading

Websites

The Virginia Plan: https://www.senate.gov/civics/common/generic/Virginia_Plan_item.htm

The New Jersey Plan: https://avalon.law.yale.edu/18th_century/patexta.asp

The Constitutional Convention of 1787: A Revolution in Government https://constitutioncenter.org/the-constitution/white-papers/the-constitutional-convention-of-1787-a-revolution-in-government

The Constitutional Convention of 1787: A Day by Day Account: https://www.nps.gov/inde/learn/historyculture/stories-constitutionalconvention.htm

Franklin closing speech to the convention: https://archive.csac.history.wisc.edu/assessments_64.pdf

Free eBooks
(from archive.org unless noted)

Secret Proceedings and Debates of the Convention Assembled at Philadelphia, in the Year 1787, Richmond; Wilbur Curtiss, 1839. 

Brant, Irving James Madison: Father of the Constitution, 1787-1800. Bobbs-Merrill Co. 1950 (borrow only). 

Donovan, Frank R. Mr. Madison’s Constitution: The Story Behind the Constitutional Convention, New York: Dodd, Mead & Co. 1965 (borrow only) 

Farrand, Max The Framing of the Constitution of the United States, Yale Univ. Press, 1913. 

Farrand, Max (ed) The Records of the Federal Convention of 1787Vol. 1Vol. 2, and Vol 3, Yale Univ. Press, 1911.  

Ford, Worthington, Chauncey The Federal Constitution in Virginia, 1787-1788. Cambridge: University Press, 1903. 

Jameson, J. Franklin Studies in the History of the Federal Convention of 1787, Washington: Government Printing Office, 1903. 

Madison, James Notes of Debates in the Federal Convention of 1787, Ohio Univ. Press, 1966. 

McMaster, John Bach (ed) Pennsylvania and the Federal Constitution: 1787-1788, Historical Society of Pennsylvania, 1888. 

Meigs, William M. The Growth of the Constitution in the Federal Convention of 1787, Philadelphia: J.B. Lippincott Co. 1900. 

Richardson, Hamilton P. The Journal of the Federal Convention of 1787 Analyzed, San Francisco: Murdock Press, 1899. 

Scott, James B. James Madison's notes of debates in the Federal convention of 1787, New York: Oxford Univ. Press, 1918. 

Books Worth Buying
(links to Amazon.com unless otherwise noted)*

Amar, Akhil Reed America’s Constitution: A Biography, Random House 2005. 

Beeman, Richard R. Plain, Honest Men: The Making of the American Constitution, Random House, 2009. 

Bowen, Catherine Drinker Miracle at Philadelphia: The Story of the Constitutional Convention, Little, Brown & Co. 1966 (borrow at archive.org).

Collier, Christopher Decision in Philadelphia: The Constitutional Convention of 1787, Random House, 1986 (borrow at archive.org).

Morris, Richard B. Witnesses at the Creation: Hamilton, Madison, Jay and the Constitution, Holt, Rinehart & Winston, 1985. 

Rossiter, Clinton 1787: The Grand Convention, Macmillan Co. 1966 (borrow on archive.org).

Smith, Page The Constitution: A Documentary and Narrative History, Morrow Quill, 1978. 

Stewart, David O. The Summer of 1787: The Men Who Invented the Constitution, Simon & Schuster, 2007. 

* As an Amazon Associate I earn from qualifying purchases.

 

Sunday, April 13, 2025

ARP349 Creating the Presidency, 1787

Over the last couple of weeks we’ve discussed how the Constitutional convention wanted the new US Congress to operate.  The Congress was by far the most important and powerful branch of government.  It was the only branch that existed above the state level under the Articles of Confederation.

The delegates, however, also recognized the need for an executive branch.  They had trouble trying to oversee the execution of their own laws under the Articles.  By the end of the war, the Confederation Congress was appointing secretaries to manage important components of the government.  Most delegates recognized the need to create a better structure to execute and enforce the laws.  All the states had some form of executive, which was the model that also existed in Britain.

Of course, in Britain, the executive branch was headed by the king.  No one at the convention, with the possible exception of Hamilton, wanted a king to rule over the United States.  So there was great debate on what an executive Branch would look like.  

Chief Executive or Executive Committee:

One question which the delegates debated was whether there should be a single chief executive or an executive committee.  Madison’s Virginia Plan had called for the creation of a single chief executive who would be appointed by Congress for a fixed term and that the executive could not serve a second term.  Paterson’s New Jersey Plan called for a group of executives to be chosen with similar restrictions.

James Wilson and Gouverneur Morris were most prominent in arguing for a unitary executive.  Having a committee subjected the executive to internal divisions which would create problems similar to a divided congress.  Former Governor John Rutledge also spoke in favor of a single chief executive.  

Proponents noted that every state had a single governor.  A single chief executive would have more accountability to Congress, would be more capable of secrecy, dispatch and decisive action, and would simply be most efficient.

There were those who had concerns about granting so much power to a single person.  So much of the convention’s debate centered around checks and balances that would prevent any single faction from gaining an upper hand.  Turning over so much power to a single person could thwart those protections and give an ambitious man a path toward becoming a tyrant.

While all states did have a governor, many of the executive functions were done by a governor’s council.  In the colonial era, while there were governors, many of them were absent or inactive, allowing local councils to perform many of the executive functions.  

Virginia Governor Edmund Randolph strongly opposed a unitary executive.  For him it came to close to monarchy.  George Mason similarly opposed it, calling the proposed presidency an elective monarchy.

For opponents, a plural executive created more checks and balances.  Randolph even suggested a three member executive council, with each member being drawn from different parts of the country in order to ensure no region of the country could dominate.

Despite these objections, the convention voted seven states to three in favor of a unitary executive.  New Jersey did not vote on the matter, which was decided even before its delegates proposed the New Jersey Plan.  Despite a minority’s efforts to reopen debate later, the majority considered the issue settled.  When, on July 17, a proposal was put forward to formalize the clause establishing a “National Executive” consisting “of a single person,” it was agreed to unanimously.

Opponents, however, conceding that point, argued that there should also be an executive council to constrain the president.  Some argued this council should have the power to vote on vetoes of congressional legislation.  The idea of creating a council was more divided.  On the same day in July when the convention voted in favor of a unitary executive.  It voted only 4-3 against creating an executive council.  Connecticut, Maryland, and Virginia supported the creation of a council.  Massachusetts, Delaware, North Carolina, and South Carolina voted it down.  Pennsylvania and Georgia had split delegations and could not vote.  New Jersey was absent.  The New York delegation had already gone home.

Selection of the Executive

The delegates also had to contend with how the executive would be selected.  Both the Virginia and the New Jersey plans suggested that the Congress select the executive.  This was how many states did it.  The state legislature would choose the governor after a legislative election.  This helped to ensure that the executive would be someone who would faithfully execute the laws as passed by the legislature.

Even in states that independently elected a governor, they usually had a governor’s council chosen by the legislature to ensure the executive would act in compliance with the legislature’s wishes.  The people at this time were especially dubious of an independent executive for fear that this person could easily turn into a monarch and a tyrant.  

Many delegates, however, favored an executive elected by the people.  James Wilson and James Madison both spoke passionately on the issue.  Many of the proponents were the same as those who had supported proportional representation in congress.  This new national government was supposed to be a government of the people, not of the states.  The direct election of the executive would be part of that.

Proponents of an elected executive noted that direct elections of governors in Massachusetts and Pennsylvania had led to capable and well respected leaders who had tended to respect the will of the people.  As long as there were other limitations on the executive, that would prevent any tendency toward tyranny.

These same proponents also noted that this was to be a government of checks and balances.  If the executive was truly to be a check on the legislature, then the executive could not be completely dependent on the legislature.

One of the biggest arguments against the direct election of an executive was that it was impractical.  There would be almost no leaders who were known nationwide.  Different states or regions would support local leaders, but none who could truly have the confidence of the entire nation.

One factor that sat in favor of an elected leader was sitting right there in the convention.  Pretty much everyone at the convention assumed that George Washington would become the first executive.  That fact had also probably influenced the decision to have a unitary executive.  It also encouraged the idea of a directly elected executive.  Washington was one of very few men who were known nationally and could be a favorite by voters everywhere.  But what happened after Washington?  He had gained notoriety through his war leadership.  How would future executives come to be known by the people in all regions?

During the first week of debate at the Convention, Wilson brought up the idea of dividing the country into electoral districts.  The people would vote for an elector. Then electors from all over the country would meet to select the executive.  This would keep the process separate from congress, and would prevent the executive from being so dependent on Congress.  At the time, the delegates were not happy with the idea, and voted it down, with only Pennsylvania and Maryland supporting the proposal.  The majority supported having the legislature choose the executive.

The delegates tabled the matter for about six weeks until July 17, the same day the convention agreed to a  unitary executive.  By that time the delegates had also agreed on a proportional house and a senate chosen by the states.

Once again, the debate seemed to come down to not wanting the executive to be chosen by the legislature, by also not thinking the people could coalesce around a single choice.  Congress also decided to remove the restriction that prevented the executive from being reelected.  If Congress chose the executive, then the executive would simply act to please Congress, and then Congress would re-elect him, thus effectively creating what could be a lifetime tenure.  Some delegates were ok with that, and even suggested making it a lifetime tenure, with congress having the ability to remove him for malfeasance.

Madison opposed the idea of having an executive that was completely dependent on congress to remain in office.  It went against his principles of check and balances.  The executive simply became subservient to congress.  Mason also opposed the idea, thinking that an executive who essentially had office for a lifetime would become a king and eventually evolve into a hereditary monarchy.

Some delegates suggested a third option.  Elbridge Gerry of Massachusetts and Roger Sherman of Connecticut argued that the executive should be chosen by state legislatures or state governors.   That way, the executive would serve as a check on the abuse of power by Congress over the states.

Debate in late July turned back to the idea of having people select electors who would choose the executive.  Even at that point, there was no good consensus on how to do it.  By late August the Convention established a committee of detail to try to create a coherent system based on the many votes that had already been taken.  The committee’s report on August 24 proposed an election by the congress, but still left the details vague.

In early September, another committee took a stab at the issue, this time essentially punting on the selection entirely.  The committee proposed that each state select electors based on whatever the criteria that state wanted.  If they wanted the people to vote for electors, fine.  If they wanted the governor to appoint electors, that was fine too.  Each state would get electors equal to the state’s representation in Congress.  That meant that smaller states got more votes per capita since each state got two electoral votes for their Senators, but larger states would still have a greater say based on the number of Representatives that they had.

The electors would then meet at the nation’s capital and vote on the executive.  If no candidate received a majority of votes, the Senate would choose from the top five candidates in the electoral college.

This was a win for the small states since delegates believed that in most cases there would be no national consensus for the chief executive.  By letting the Senate make the selection, small states would have a much greater say over the office.

Those who wanted the people to elect the executive opposed this idea.  First, there was no guarantee that people would have a say in choosing electors since that was left up to each state. Secondly, the Senate was made up of people appointed by state government’s, meaning voters would be even more distant from influencing who would serve as chief executive.  Further the Senate was made up of only 26 people.  In a heavily divided race, an executive could win office with less than 10 votes of unelected politicians.  At the very least, the election should be in the House, which was directly elected by the people.  

Of course, the smaller states did not like that idea.  Election by the House meant that larger states would have a much greater say in choosing the executive.  Eventually, the two sides reached a compromise, proposed by Roger Sherman of Connecticut.  When the Electoral College failed to give a majority to a single candidate,  the House would vote for the executive instead of the Senate, but each state delegation in the House would only get one vote.  So smaller states would still have a much greater say in the selection.

Term Length and Term Limits

Because the Chief executive was an entirely new position, there were all sorts of debates on how long a term in office should be.  In the first week of deliberations, the convention agreed that the executive, selected by Congress, would serve a seven year term and would not be eligible for reelection.

The delegates, however, returned to this question several times.  Proponents of a longer term for the executive wanted a stronger executive that was not dependent on the legislature or anyone else to make decisions on behalf of the country.  Even seven years might not be long enough. Gouverneur Morris suggested that if an executive only had a few years in office, he might be more prone to go to war to win glory during his short time in office.  Others made suggestions for a longer term including 15 years.  A few, like Hamilton, supported an executive appointed for life.  This would allow him to look toward the long term needs of the nation without having to worry about disapproval or what he would do after leaving office.

Others, however, wanted to keep the executive on a short leash.  Some proposed short terms of two or three years, allowing the executive to serve multiple terms.  This would ensure that he would remain obedient to the wishes of Congress, or the people, at least if he wanted to keep his job.

In the end, the convention went back to the delegates original agreement.  In late July, they voted that the president would serve a single seven year term and could not be reelected.  This passed by a vote of six to three.

In August, the Committee of Detail, who was the first to decide that the executive should be called the “president” included the Convention’s decision that the president should serve a single seven year term.  Up until this time, the convention simply referred to him as the executive.   Then in August, the Committee on Unfinished Parts, which was supposed to fill in items where there was no consensus, changed the term to four years, and removed the bar against reelection.

It’s not clear who made this change, but several committee members did not like the seven year term.

Similarly, the Committee of Detail came up with the requirements that the President be at least 35 years old, a natural born citizen, and be a resident of the US for at least 21 years.  There seems to have been almost no debate at the convention on any of those qualifications.  The Convention agreed to all those requirements unanimously.  However about a week later, another committee reduced the residency requirement from 21 to 14 years, and no one complained about that either.  No one seemed to think these requirements were particularly controversial, and since it was near the end of the Convention, I suspect most delegates were getting tired of arguing about most matters.

Executive Powers

The Delegates also determined that the president should be the commander-in-chief of the army, navy, and state militia.  While Congress had the exclusive power to declare war, the president would be in command of the military.  During the Revolutionary war, there was no civilian commander in chief. George Washington, as head of the army, was given that role.  Since most delegates took for granted that George Washington would be the nation’s first president, it probably seemed natural to give him command of the military.

Much more debate was given to the idea of whether there should be any approval for a standing army.  After all, standing armies in time of peace had been considered part of the British tyranny that justified independence.  One delegate joked that a standing army was like an erection “an excellent assurance of domestic tranquility, but a dangerous temptation to foreign adventure.”

Elbridge Gerry proposed that any standing army be limited to two or three thousand troops.  Luther Martin and Roger Sherman expressed some agreement.  Although not noted in the minutes, stories afterward claimed that Washington commented in a loud whisper that perhaps the constitutions should also limit an invading army’s forces to the same number.  This obvious joke pointed out the obvious problem with placing an artificial limit on the size of the army.  Other delegates noted that the US should not be hamstrung during a time of build up to war and that a standing army also had the benefit of deterring an attack. In the end, the convention was silent on the matter, neither requiring nor prohibiting an army of any size.

The delegates also gave the president the power to appoint judges, ambassadors and other officers in the government.  Unless Congress gave power to appoint some offices on his own, the president would have to get the advice and consent of the Senate on all appointments.

There were debates over giving the president exclusive power on appointments.  There were also proposals to include the house in approvals.  Concerns over factionalism in the House caused that idea to fade quickly.  Most delegates wanted congress to have some say in appointments.  The Senate was seen as the more deliberative body, similar to the governor’s council in many states.  Those state councils often had power of approval, while the general assemblies did not.  Since that seemed to work at the state level that seemed workable  At one point, Madison suggested that appointment only require support  of one-third of the senate.  The idea was that the President should get his appointments unless there was an overwhelming majority against.  Others argued that the Senate should make appointments and the President would be given the power to veto appointments.  In the end, the presidential appointment with majority Senate approval won the day.

For treaties, the convention opted to keep the House out of the process entirely.  The need for confidentiality and careful deliberation for diplomatic matters meant most delegates thought the house was ill-suited.  The delegates did require a two-thirds vote in the Senate to approve all treaties.  The Articles of Confederation had required a super-majority for treaties.  Also, the recent fights over the treaty that John Jay had negotiated with Spain convinced many southern states that they needed to make sure there was a larger consensus, and that they did not get out-voted by the more numerous northern states.

Other than foreign policy matters, the convention defined very little for the president,other than to take care that the laws be faithfully executed and the commissioning of government officers.  It also stated that the president should provide information to Congress on the state of the union and make recommendations to them.

Finally, congress retained the power over the president by giving the House the power of impeachment and the Senate the power of removal by a two-thirds vote.  Originally, the Convention said the president could be removed for maladministration or neglect of duty.  Some members argued that there should be stronger reasons for removal, eventually settling on the language of high crimes and misdemeanors.

Next week, we turn to the creation of the courts, and other matters that the convention decided before finally wrapping up its business.

- - -

Next Episode 350 Creating a Judiciary, 1787 (coming soon)

Previous Episode 348 Creating Congress, 1787

 Contact me via email at mtroy.history@gmail.com

 Follow the podcast on X (formerly Twitter) @AmRevPodcast

 Join the Facebook group, American Revolution Podcast 

 Join American Revolution Podcast on Quora 
 
Discuss the AmRev Podcast on Reddit

American Revolution Podcast Merch!

T-shirts, hoodies, mugs, pillows, totes, notebooks, wall art, and more.  Get your favorite American Revolution logo today.  Help support this podcast.  https://merch.amrevpodcast.com


American Revolution Podcast is distributed 100% free of charge. If you can chip in to help defray my costs, I'd appreciate whatever you can give.  Make a one time donation through my PayPal account. You may also donate via Venmo (@Michael-Troy-20).


Click here to see my Patreon Page
You can support the American Revolution Podcast as a Patreon subscriber.  This is an option making monthly pledges.  Patreon support will give you access to Podcast extras and help make the podcast a sustainable project.

An alternative to Patreon is SubscribeStar.  For anyone who has problems with Patreon, you can get the same benefits by subscribing at SubscribeStar.

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Visit the American Revolution Podcast Bookshop.  Support local bookstores and this podcast!





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Further Reading

Websites

Secret Proceedings and Debates of the Convention Assembled at Philadelphia, in the Year 1787, Richmond; Wilbur Curtiss, 1839. 

Brant, Irving James Madison: Father of the Constitution, 1787-1800. Bobbs-Merrill Co. 1950 (borrow only). 

Donovan, Frank R. Mr. Madison’s Constitution: The Story Behind the Constitutional Convention, New York: Dodd, Mead & Co. 1965 (borrow only) 

Farrand, Max The Framing of the Constitution of the United States, Yale Univ. Press, 1913. 

Farrand, Max (ed) The Records of the Federal Convention of 1787Vol. 1Vol. 2, and Vol 3, Yale Univ. Press, 1911.  

Ford, Worthington, Chauncey The Federal Constitution in Virginia, 1787-1788. Cambridge: University Press, 1903. 

Jameson, J. Franklin Studies in the History of the Federal Convention of 1787, Washington: Government Printing Office, 1903. 

Madison, James Notes of Debates in the Federal Convention of 1787, Ohio Univ. Press, 1966. 

McMaster, John Bach (ed) Pennsylvania and the Federal Constitution: 1787-1788, Historical Society of Pennsylvania, 1888. 

Meigs, William M. The Growth of the Constitution in the Federal Convention of 1787, Philadelphia: J.B. Lippincott Co. 1900. 

Richardson, Hamilton P. The Journal of the Federal Convention of 1787 Analyzed, San Francisco: Murdock Press, 1899. 

Scott, James B. James Madison's notes of debates in the Federal convention of 1787, New York: Oxford Univ. Press, 1918. 

Books Worth Buying
(links to Amazon.com unless otherwise noted)*

Amar, Akhil Reed America’s Constitution: A Biography, Random House 2005. 

Beeman, Richard R. Plain, Honest Men: The Making of the American Constitution, Random House, 2009. 

Bowen, Catherine Drinker Miracle at Philadelphia: The Story of the Constitutional Convention, Little, Brown & Co. 1966 (borrow at archive.org).

Collier, Christopher Decision in Philadelphia: The Constitutional Convention of 1787, Random House, 1986 (borrow at archive.org).

Morris, Richard B. Witnesses at the Creation: Hamilton, Madison, Jay and the Constitution, Holt, Rinehart & Winston, 1985. 

Rossiter, Clinton 1787: The Grand Convention, Macmillan Co. 1966 (borrow on archive.org).

Smith, Page The Constitution: A Documentary and Narrative History, Morrow Quill, 1978. 

Stewart, David O. The Summer of 1787: The Men Who Invented the Constitution, Simon & Schuster, 2007. 

* As an Amazon Associate I earn from qualifying purchases.

Sunday, April 6, 2025

ARP348 Creating Congress, 1787


Last week we covered the most controversial issue of the Constitutional Convention in Philadelphia in 1787.  That was whether states should be represented in Congress by population or with equal representation for each state.  The convention ended up splitting the difference, giving population representation in the House and equal representation in the Senate.

One or Two Houses

To reach that final agreement, however, the delegates had to agree to having two houses in the first place.  While this issue was not nearly as heated as the controversial as the proportionality question, it did go through some back and forth.

The initial Virginia Plan, written by James Madison, had recommended two houses, what we call a bicameral legislature.  Madison considered this to be an important check on a potentially runaway majority.  Although the Confederation had operated with a single house, Madison saw that as a problem.  Eleven of the thirteen states had bicameral legislatures.  Only Pennsylvania and Georgia had a single house.  Of course, Britain, the model for so many things, had two houses: a House of Commons and a House of Lords.

For most supporters of two houses, the idea of an upper house kept the more intemperate voices of the people in the lower house from going too far.  Short term popular majorities, often led by a charismatic figure, might gain a majority at times.  There was a need to keep them in check.

Supporters of a single house essentially agreed with the purpose of the upper house, but said that it was a bug rather than a feature.  Having one house of the legislature made up of elites who could thwart the will of the majority went against everything that a democratic republic meant.  Rule by the people meant that the people should be able to implement the laws that they wanted without a tiny minority of rich old guys standing in their way.

Because the delegates voted general support for the Virginia plan to become the basis of their consideration and because the Virginia plan called for two houses, that became the basis for most discussions.  The equal states delegates were also the delegates who had originally wanted a single body legislature.  After the majority of the convention voted for proportional representation in both houses, the equal state folks also got behind the idea of a two house legislature so that at least one of them would offer equal representation.  So, by a month or so into the convention, pretty much everyone was on board with a proposal that included two houses. There remained debates over how those two houses would be populated but the decision to have to houses had pretty much reached a consensus by that point.

Terms of Office

A big issue was how long a term of office should be. Many delegates wanted a term of one year.  In fact, Massachusetts had instructed its delegates to demand a single year term and also to allow states to recall members during the year if they wanted.  For many, these regular elections - which were the norm in most state legislatures at the time, were a way of ensuring that representatives always reflected the will of the people.  Too much time between elections meant more time to get swayed by others in Congress, rather than listening to constituents.

Under the Articles of Confederation, appointments to the Continental Congress were annual, and subject to recall.  Of course, there was no requirement that they be elected. In most cases, the governor or state legislature appointed delegates to the Confederation Congress.

The Virginia plan as introduced literally left this blank.  The plan read “the members of the first branch of the National Legislature ought to be elected by the people of the several States every __  for the term of __.”

Others thought that one year terms were a mistake. Daniel of St. Thomas Jenifer of Maryland proposed three year terms, arguing that annual elections made people indifferent to them and that it made it more difficult to find candidates willing to run with such frequency.  

Madison and Hamilton also supported three year terms.  They, and others, argued that congressmen needed time to understand how the government worked, and that a constant churn would prevent that.  There was also the time it took to travel to the nation’s capital.  Having to return home all the time for elections would prove difficult. In the end, the Convention compromised on two year terms for the House.

In the Senate, there was a whole range of proposed term lengths, proposals included, three, four, five, seven, nine years, and even lifetime appointments.  These were supposed to be wise statesmen who were somewhat detached from the people and who could serve as a check on the House when it went too far.  Much of the debate compared Senate terms to those in the British Parliament, which were seven years.  Madison wanted nine year terms so that they would line up with the three year terms that he wanted in the House. Having terms that didn’t line up meant that elections could not be held together in the same year.  When the House terms were reduced from three years to two, Madison also accepted the idea that Senate terms should be six years, so that a Senator would still stand for election in one out of three elections.

Senators would be selected by state governments rather than elected directly.  The Virginia Plan had recommended that Senators be chosen by members of the house.  Pretty early on though, the overwhelming majority of delegates wanted state governments to choose their Senators.  The Senate would serve as a protection of state sovereignty within the federal government. There wasn’t really any support for direct election of Senators.  

Term limits

The Convention debated whether either house should have term limits or be subject to recall.  Under the Articles of Confederation, appointed delegates could be recalled at any time during their one year terms.  Further, no one under the Articles of Confederation could serve more than three terms in a row in Congress.

Debate over the power to recall members of the House or Senate never got much traction.  Although a vocal minority liked the idea, the notion of recalling representatives mid-session and having to hold new elections to replace them, was considered unworkable.  Beyond that many delegates wanted representatives to have a greater ability to act independent of popular opinion back home.  Voters at home were not privy to all the debates and reasons for decisions that representatives would have. As a result, representatives had to be free to use their own best judgment on matters.

There was probably a better case for recalling Senators.  After all, they had six year terms if they proved unpopular, and since the state legislature appointed them, it would be easy to appoint a replacement.  But the nationalists wanted the Senate to be a body of wise and deliberative men who were aloof from factional majorities that might form in the House.  These wiser independent leaders should not be looking at popular disapproval for their actions.  That was why some delegates wanted to give them lifetime tenure.  In the end, they would have to face reappointment every six years, but could not be recalled short of that.

For similar reasons, the Convention did not allow states to saddle representatives with instructions.  Many state governments had gotten used to the idea of instructing their delegates on how to vote.  Supporters of the new federal system believed that representatives should be able to use their own judgment, and not be hamstrung by rules imposed by people back home who were not part of the national debates.  Most of the people serving in this convention had served as delegates under the articles of Confederation and had experienced frustration of such instructions.

The delegates also rejected the idea of term limits. The Virginia plan had initially anticipated some term limits on members of congress.  Madison also proposed at one point that members of congress be ineligible for any other federal office for at least one year after leaving office.  He saw this as a way to prevent members from creating government jobs for themselves.

In the end though, the delegates rejected all of this.  The states voted unanimously against term limits. From their perspective, the term limit rules in the Articles of Confederation had proven to be a disaster.  Those limits essentially sidelined some of the best delegates from further service, while putting up the B team to continue to represent their state.  Members could continue to run for office as long as the people continued to reelect them.

Citizenship, Residency, and Age

The Convention also considered other restrictions on members of Congress, beyond being able to win an election.  A big one was whether immigrants could serve in Congress.  This raised some debate.  Hamilton, in particular, strongly opposed a proposal to restrict members of Congress to native born Americans.  Some have argued that he did this out of self-interest, since he had been born in the West Indies.  Hamilton, however, probably would have been eligible since he was a citizen when the US was created.  Hamilton was more concerned that highly qualified people from Europe might immigrate and would be able to add greatly to the nation through government service.  They should not be prevented from running.  That should be left up to the voters.

Supporters of requiring elected officials be native born or longtime citizens argued that outsiders could come into the government and change it based on their attachments to their home countries and also with foreign ideas that were incompatible with the American form of government.  There were considerable debates on how long to require an immigrant to be a citizen before they could run for office.

In the end, the delegates agreed that all members of the House and Senate should be citizens.  They initially placed a restriction that members must be a citizen for at least three years before holding office.  In the final version they changed this to seven years.  For the Senate, they settled on nine years.

There was also a question of residency.  Could an outsider, say a member of another state or district move into an area immediately run for office? Some delegates thought there should be some period of years before someone could run for office, so that they truly represented those who elected them.  In the end, the Convention required that an elected official reside in the state that they want to represent. There was no waiting requirement.  If the official became an inhabitant of the state just before the election, that was good enough.

Delegates also considered age restrictions.  There were some, like Wilson who argued for no restrictions on age.  If a candidate gained the confidence of the voters, even at a very young age, youth should not bar him from serving.  Initially, the delegates set the age at 21.  That was the traditional age of adulthood, when a man could make contracts and do other things under the law.  

George Mason, however, argued it should be set higher limits.  Mason argued a man should not move from being considered a child one day to be able to represent people in government the next.  Mason, who was aged 62 at the time, also noted that he looked back on his foolish mistakes of youth in his early twenties, and believed that everyone would become wiser with age. He moved that the minimum age be set at 25.  In the end a majority of states agreed seven states to three, to set the minimum age for the House at 25.

Delegates also argued over a higher age for Senators.  The Senate was to be a place for more mature, stable, and experienced men.  Despite the fact that several delegates at the convention that was making these rules were still in their twenties, the delegates voted to set a minimum age of 30 for Senators.

Leadership

There seems to have been little debate over how each house would choose its leaders.  Neither the Virginia Plan, nor the New Jersey Plan even addressed the issue.  There was a general consensus that the House of Representatives would choose its own leader, called a Speaker.  This was based on the British Speaker of the House of Commons.  The House also received the power to create other officers as it deemed necessary.  The details of all this was left up to the House itself.

There was not much thought at all given to the leader of the Senate.  It was typical that in most state upper houses or in the House of Lords in Britain, that there was no leader.  These bodies were small enough and collegial enough that they didn’t necessarily need a leader.

It wasn’t until near the end of the Convention when the Committee on Unfinished Parts proposed that the Vice President preside over the Senate.  The main reason for doing this was to give the Vice President something to do.  There were some objections.  Elbridge Gerry of Massachusetts argued that this would be akin to placing the President in charge of the legislature and that it would destroy the independence of the legislature.  Similarly, George Mason of Virginia argued that it was mixing the legislative and executive branches, which should be kept separate.

Others, however, pointed out that if the Senate chose one of its own to lead, that one state would be denied one of its two votes in the Senate, except in cases of a tie.  The convention voted to let the Vice President sit as the ex officio President of the Senate, although the final wording just said he would sit as the President of the Senate.

Rules and Punishment

The Convention also established that each house would have the power to set rules for itself and to punish its own members.  They did not want outsiders to be able to intervene in the operations of the House and Senate.  Both the House and Senate were given the power to expel their own members, again without any outside involvement.  Madison recommended requiring a two-thirds vote for expulsion in order to prevent extremely factionalized majorities from removing minority members they did not like.  The majority agreed with Madison.

I think it is important to note however, that other branches of government had no power to remove members of Congress.  Contrast this with the fact that Congress gave itself the power to remove any member of the executive or judicial branches through impeachment.  Congress was meant to be the branch of government with the most control over all three branches of goverment.

Powers of Congress

While the Convention allowed states to set elections, it also gave Congress the power to overrule state election dates and mandate its own date for federal elections.  It gave each house the authority to judge the results of the elections of its members, again, without any interference from the other branches.

Further, members, with some exceptions, would not be subject to arrest while Congress was in session, or while traveling to or from sessions of Congress.  Members also could not be questioned anywhere else for speech and debate made in Congress.  Delegates were well aware that by creating other branches of government, those branches might try to interfere with Congress, or attack individual members.  Congress tried to put limits on that possibility.

Another rule was that all bills for raising revenue had to originate in the House, not the Senate.  You may ask, what does it matter since both houses would have to approve it anyway?  Part of the argument was that the House was closest to the people and representative of the people.  That whole taxation without representation thing meant that the house that represented the people should control proposals to raise taxes.  

When the Convention was debating the interests of large vs. small states, some of the large states argued that it was unfair that smaller states, contributing far less in taxes, should have equal power in originating money bills.  In response, this rule about the house originating all bills raising revenue, was given to the large state faction.  Of course, though, it was meaningless since the Senate could amend any such bill to say whatever it wanted, then send it back to the House.

Both houses would have to pass all laws, although the power to make treaties and appoint members of the other branches was limited to the Senate.  We'll get into that more next week when we discuss the executive branch.

The Convention also listed the specific powers which the Congress, would have.  Number one was borrowing money, which had been much of the purpose of the Continental Congress.  The second thing listed was regulating commerce, both at home and abroad.  Recall that this was the primary goal at the Annapolis convention and played such a large role in creating the demand for this convention.  It also gave Congress the power to establish uniform rules of naturalization, so that states did not create their own.  

There were a great many financial powers for congress.  Establishing bankruptcy rules, coining money, punishment of counterfeiting were all given to Congress, probably with an eye toward preventing financial abuses like Rhode Island had committed in recent years.  It explicitly took away the power of states to make their own money or create a new legal tender.

Congress had the power to declare war, raise armies and navies, deal with crimes on the high seas.  It shared with states the power to arm and regulate militia.  It denied states the power to enter into foreign treaties, grant letters of marque, etc.  They could not maintain standing armies or ships of war.  The new Federal government would have exclusive power related to war and foreign policy.   

Finally, the Convention granted Congress exclusive power of a district which would become the seat of government.  After their experience in Philadelphia where local officials had refused to protect Congress from angry Continental soldiers, the delegates wanted to be sure that Congress could regulate its own local government.  The Constitution did not specify where this district would be, but did call on states to cede the land to make it into an independent jurisdiction controlled by Congress.

Next week, we will turn our attention to what the Convention thought an executive branch should look like.

- - -

Next Episode 349 Creating a President, 1787 

Previous Episode 347 The Convention's Biggest Fight

 Contact me via email at mtroy.history@gmail.com

 Follow the podcast on X (formerly Twitter) @AmRevPodcast

 Join the Facebook group, American Revolution Podcast 

 Join American Revolution Podcast on Quora 
 
Discuss the AmRev Podcast on Reddit

American Revolution Podcast Merch!

T-shirts, hoodies, mugs, pillows, totes, notebooks, wall art, and more.  Get your favorite American Revolution logo today.  Help support this podcast.  https://merch.amrevpodcast.com


American Revolution Podcast is distributed 100% free of charge. If you can chip in to help defray my costs, I'd appreciate whatever you can give.  Make a one time donation through my PayPal account. You may also donate via Venmo (@Michael-Troy-20).


Click here to see my Patreon Page
You can support the American Revolution Podcast as a Patreon subscriber.  This is an option making monthly pledges.  Patreon support will give you access to Podcast extras and help make the podcast a sustainable project.

An alternative to Patreon is SubscribeStar.  For anyone who has problems with Patreon, you can get the same benefits by subscribing at SubscribeStar.

Help Support this podcast on "BuyMeACoffee.com"


Visit the American Revolution Podcast Bookshop.  Support local bookstores and this podcast!





Signup for the AmRev Podcast Mail List

* indicates required

Further Reading

Websites

Secret Proceedings and Debates of the Convention Assembled at Philadelphia, in the Year 1787, Richmond; Wilbur Curtiss, 1839. 

Brant, Irving James Madison: Father of the Constitution, 1787-1800. Bobbs-Merrill Co. 1950 (borrow only). 

Donovan, Frank R. Mr. Madison’s Constitution: The Story Behind the Constitutional Convention, New York: Dodd, Mead & Co. 1965 (borrow only) 

Farrand, Max The Framing of the Constitution of the United States, Yale Univ. Press, 1913. 

Farrand, Max (ed) The Records of the Federal Convention of 1787Vol. 1Vol. 2, and Vol 3, Yale Univ. Press, 1911.  

Ford, Worthington, Chauncey The Federal Constitution in Virginia, 1787-1788. Cambridge: University Press, 1903. 

Jameson, J. Franklin Studies in the History of the Federal Convention of 1787, Washington: Government Printing Office, 1903. 

Madison, James Notes of Debates in the Federal Convention of 1787, Ohio Univ. Press, 1966. 

McMaster, John Bach (ed) Pennsylvania and the Federal Constitution: 1787-1788, Historical Society of Pennsylvania, 1888. 

Meigs, William M. The Growth of the Constitution in the Federal Convention of 1787, Philadelphia: J.B. Lippincott Co. 1900. 

Richardson, Hamilton P. The Journal of the Federal Convention of 1787 Analyzed, San Francisco: Murdock Press, 1899. 

Scott, James B. James Madison's notes of debates in the Federal convention of 1787, New York: Oxford Univ. Press, 1918. 

Books Worth Buying
(links to Amazon.com unless otherwise noted)*

Amar, Akhil Reed America’s Constitution: A Biography, Random House 2005. 

Beeman, Richard R. Plain, Honest Men: The Making of the American Constitution, Random House, 2009. 

Bowen, Catherine Drinker Miracle at Philadelphia: The Story of the Constitutional Convention, Little, Brown & Co. 1966 (borrow at archive.org).

Collier, Christopher Decision in Philadelphia: The Constitutional Convention of 1787, Random House, 1986 (borrow at archive.org).

Morris, Richard B. Witnesses at the Creation: Hamilton, Madison, Jay and the Constitution, Holt, Rinehart & Winston, 1985. 

Rossiter, Clinton 1787: The Grand Convention, Macmillan Co. 1966 (borrow on archive.org).

Smith, Page The Constitution: A Documentary and Narrative History, Morrow Quill, 1978. 

Stewart, David O. The Summer of 1787: The Men Who Invented the Constitution, Simon & Schuster, 2007. 

* As an Amazon Associate I earn from qualifying purchases.