Articles of Confederation | |
---|---|
Page I of the Articles of Confederation
| |
Created | November 15, 1777 |
Ratified | March 1, 1781 |
Location | National Archives |
Author(s) | Continental Congress |
Signatories | Continental Congress |
Purpose | First constitution for the United States; replaced by the current United States Constitution on March 4, 1789 |
The Articles of Confederation and Perpetual Union was an agreement among the 13 original states of the United States of America that served as its first constitution. It was approved, after much debate (between July 1776 and November 1777), by the Second Continental Congress on November 15, 1777, and sent to the states for ratification. The Articles of Confederation came into force on March 1, 1781, after being ratified by all 13 states. A guiding principle of the Articles was to preserve the independence and sovereignty of the states. The weak central government established by the Articles received only those powers which the former colonies had recognized as belonging to king and parliament.
The document provided clearly written rules for how the states' "league of friendship" would be organized. During the ratification process, the Congress looked to the Articles for guidance as it conducted business, directing the war effort, conducting diplomacy with foreign states, addressing territorial issues and dealing with Native American relations. Little changed politically once the Articles of Confederation went into effect, as ratification did little more than legalize what the Continental Congress had been doing. That body was renamed the Congress of the Confederation; but most Americans continued to call it the Continental Congress, since its organization remained the same.
As the Confederation Congress attempted to govern the continually growing American states, delegates discovered that the limitations placed upon the central government rendered it ineffective at doing so. As the government's weaknesses became apparent, especially after Shays' Rebellion, some prominent political thinkers in the fledgling union began asking for changes to the Articles. Their hope was to create a stronger government. Initially, some states met to deal with their trade and economic problems. However, as more states became interested in meeting to change the Articles, a meeting was set in Philadelphia on May 25, 1787. This became the Constitutional Convention. It was quickly agreed that changes would not work, and instead the entire Articles needed to be replaced. On March 4, 1789, the government under the Articles was replaced with the federal government under the Constitution. The new Constitution provided for a much stronger federal government by establishing a chief executive (the President), courts, and taxing powers.
Background and context
The political push to increase cooperation among the then-loyal colonies began with the Albany Congress in 1754 and Benjamin Franklin's proposed Albany Plan, an inter-colonial collaboration to help solve mutual local problems. Over the next two decades, some of the basic concepts it addressed would strengthen; others would weaken, especially in the degree of loyalty (or lack thereof) owed the Crown. Civil disobedience resulted in coercive and quelling measures, such as the passage of what the colonials referred to as the Intolerable Acts in the British Parliament, and armed skirmishes which resulted in dissidents being proclaimed rebels. These actions eroded the number of Crown Loyalists (Tories) among the colonials and, together with the highly effective propaganda campaign of the Patriot leaders, caused an increasing number of colonists to begin agitating for independence from the mother country. In 1775, with events outpacing communications, the Second Continental Congress began acting as the provisional government.
It was an era of constitution writing—most states were busy at
the task—and leaders felt the new nation must have a written
constitution; a "rulebook" for how the new nation should function.
During the war, Congress exercised an unprecedented level of political,
diplomatic, military and economic authority. It adopted trade
restrictions, established and maintained an army, issued fiat money, created a military code and negotiated with foreign governments.
To transform themselves from outlaws into a legitimate nation, the colonists needed international recognition for their cause and foreign allies to support it. In early 1776, Thomas Paine argued in the closing pages of the first edition of Common Sense that the "custom of nations" demanded a formal declaration of American independence if any European power were to mediate a peace between the Americans and Great Britain. The monarchies of France and Spain, in particular, could not be expected to aid those they considered rebels against another legitimate monarch. Foreign courts needed to have American grievances laid before them persuasively in a "manifesto" which could also reassure them that the Americans would be reliable trading partners. Without such a declaration, Paine concluded, "[t]he custom of all courts is against us, and will be so, until, by an independence, we take rank with other nations."
Beyond improving their existing association, the records of the Second Continental Congress show that the need for a declaration of independence was intimately linked with the demands of international relations. On June 7, 1776, Richard Henry Lee introduced a resolution before the Continental Congress declaring the colonies independent; at the same time, he also urged Congress to resolve "to take the most effectual measures for forming foreign Alliances" and to prepare a plan of confederation for the newly independent states. Congress then created three overlapping committees to draft the Declaration, a model treaty, and the Articles of Confederation. The Declaration announced the states' entry into the international system; the model treaty was designed to establish amity and commerce with other states; and the Articles of Confederation, which established "a firm league" among the thirteen free and independent states, constituted an international agreement to set up central institutions for the conduct of vital domestic and foreign affairs.
To transform themselves from outlaws into a legitimate nation, the colonists needed international recognition for their cause and foreign allies to support it. In early 1776, Thomas Paine argued in the closing pages of the first edition of Common Sense that the "custom of nations" demanded a formal declaration of American independence if any European power were to mediate a peace between the Americans and Great Britain. The monarchies of France and Spain, in particular, could not be expected to aid those they considered rebels against another legitimate monarch. Foreign courts needed to have American grievances laid before them persuasively in a "manifesto" which could also reassure them that the Americans would be reliable trading partners. Without such a declaration, Paine concluded, "[t]he custom of all courts is against us, and will be so, until, by an independence, we take rank with other nations."
Beyond improving their existing association, the records of the Second Continental Congress show that the need for a declaration of independence was intimately linked with the demands of international relations. On June 7, 1776, Richard Henry Lee introduced a resolution before the Continental Congress declaring the colonies independent; at the same time, he also urged Congress to resolve "to take the most effectual measures for forming foreign Alliances" and to prepare a plan of confederation for the newly independent states. Congress then created three overlapping committees to draft the Declaration, a model treaty, and the Articles of Confederation. The Declaration announced the states' entry into the international system; the model treaty was designed to establish amity and commerce with other states; and the Articles of Confederation, which established "a firm league" among the thirteen free and independent states, constituted an international agreement to set up central institutions for the conduct of vital domestic and foreign affairs.
Drafting
On June 12, 1776, a day after appointing a committee to prepare a draft of the Declaration of Independence,
the Second Continental Congress resolved to appoint a committee of 13
to prepare a draft of a constitution for a union of the states. The
committee met frequently, and chairman John Dickinson presented their results to the Congress on July 12, 1776. Afterward, there were long debates on such issues as state sovereignty, the exact powers to be given to Congress, whether to have a judiciary, western land claims and voting procedures. To further complicate work on the constitution, Congress was forced to leave Philadelphia twice, for Baltimore, Maryland, in the winter of 1776, and later for Lancaster then York, Pennsylvania, in the fall of 1777, to evade advancing British troops. Even so, the committee continued with its work.
The final draft of the Articles of Confederation and Perpetual Union was completed on November 15, 1777.
Consensus was achieved by: including language guaranteeing that each
state retained its sovereignty, leaving the matter of western land
claims in the hands of the individual states, including language stating
that votes in Congress would be en bloc by state, and establishing a unicameral legislature with limited and clearly delineated powers.
Ratification
The Articles of Confederation was submitted to the states for ratification in late November 1777. The first state to ratify was Virginia on December 16, 1777; 12 states had ratified the Articles by February 1779, 14 months into the process. The lone holdout, Maryland, refused to go along until the landed states, especially Virginia, had indicated they were prepared to cede their claims west of the Ohio River to the Union. It would be two years before the Maryland General Assembly
became satisfied that the various states would follow through, and
voted to ratify. During this time, Congress observed the Articles as its
de facto
frame of government. Maryland finally ratified the Articles on February
2, 1781. Congress was informed of Maryland's assent on March 1, and
officially proclaimed the Articles of Confederation to be the law of the
land.
The several states ratified the Articles of Confederation on the following dates:
State | Date | |
---|---|---|
1 | Virginia | December 16, 1777 |
2 | South Carolina | February 5, 1778 |
3 | New York | February 6, 1778 |
4 | Rhode Island | February 9, 1778 |
5 | Connecticut | February 12, 1778 |
6 | Georgia | February 26, 1778 |
7 | New Hampshire | March 4, 1778 |
8 | Pennsylvania | March 5, 1778 |
9 | Massachusetts | March 10, 1778 |
10 | North Carolina | April 5, 1778 |
11 | New Jersey | November 19, 1778 |
12 | Delaware | February 1, 1779 |
13 | Maryland | February 2, 1781 |
Article summaries
The Articles of Confederation contain a preamble, thirteen articles, a conclusion,
and a signatory section. The individual articles set the rules for
current and future operations of the confederation's central
government. Under the Articles, the states retained sovereignty over all
governmental functions not specifically relinquished to the national
Congress, which was empowered to make war and peace, negotiate
diplomatic and commercial agreements with foreign countries, and to
resolve disputes between the states. The document also stipulates that
its provisions "shall be inviolably observed by every state" and that "the Union shall be perpetual".
Summary of the purpose and content of each of the 13 articles:
- Establishes the name of the confederation with these words: "The stile of this confederacy shall be 'The United States of America.'"
- Asserts the sovereignty of each state, except for the specific powers delegated to the confederation government: "Each state retains its sovereignty, freedom, and independence, and every power, jurisdiction, and right, which is not by this Confederation expressly delegated."
- Declares the purpose of the confederation: "The said States hereby severally enter into a firm league of friendship with each other, for their common defense, the security of their liberties, and their mutual and general welfare, binding themselves to assist each other, against all force offered to, or attacks made upon them, or any of them, on account of religion, sovereignty, trade, or any other pretense whatever."
- Elaborates upon the intent "to secure and perpetuate mutual friendship and intercourse among the people of the different States in this union," and to establish equal treatment and freedom of movement for the free inhabitants of each state to pass unhindered between the states, excluding "paupers, vagabonds, and fugitives from justice." All these people are entitled to equal rights established by the state into which they travel. If a crime is committed in one state and the perpetrator flees to another state, he will be extradited to and tried in the state in which the crime was committed.
- Allocates one vote in the Congress of the Confederation (the "United States in Congress Assembled") to each state, which is entitled to a delegation of between two and seven members. Members of Congress are to be appointed by state legislatures. No congressman may serve more than three out of any six years.
- Only the central government may declare war, or conduct foreign political or commercial relations. No state or official may accept foreign gifts or titles, and granting any title of nobility is forbidden to all. No states may form any sub-national groups. No state may tax or interfere with treaty stipulations already proposed. No state may wage war without permission of Congress, unless invaded or under imminent attack on the frontier; no state may maintain a peacetime standing army or navy, unless infested by pirates, but every State is required to keep ready, a well-trained, disciplined, and equipped militia.
- Whenever an army is raised for common defense, the state legislatures shall assign military ranks of colonel and below.
- Expenditures by the United States of America will be paid with funds raised by state legislatures, and apportioned to the states in proportion to the real property values of each.
- Powers and functions of the United States in Congress Assembled.
- Grants to the United States in Congress assembled the sole and exclusive right and power to determine peace and war; to exchange ambassadors; to enter into treaties and alliances, with some provisos; to establish rules for deciding all cases of captures or prizes on land or water; to grant letters of marque and reprisal (documents authorizing privateers) in times of peace; to appoint courts for the trial of pirates and crimes committed on the high seas; to establish courts for appeals in all cases of captures, but no member of Congress may be appointed a judge; to set weights and measures (including coins), and for Congress to serve as a final court for disputes between states.
- The court will be composed of jointly appointed commissioners or Congress shall appoint them. Each commissioner is bound by oath to be impartial. The court's decision is final.
- Congress shall regulate the post offices; appoint officers in the military; and regulate the armed forces.
- The United States in Congress assembled may appoint a president who shall not serve longer than one year per three-year term of the Congress.
- Congress may request requisitions (demands for payments or supplies) from the states in proportion with their population, or take credit.
- Congress may not declare war, enter into treaties and alliances, appropriate money, or appoint a commander in chief without nine states assented. Congress shall keep a journal of proceedings and adjourn for periods not to exceed six months.
- When Congress is in recess, any of the powers of Congress may be executed by "The committee of the states, or any nine of them", except for those powers of Congress which require nine states in Congress to execute.
- If Canada [referring to the British Province of Quebec] accedes to this confederation, it will be admitted. No other colony could be admitted without the consent of nine states.
- Affirms that the Confederation will honor all bills of credit incurred, monies borrowed, and debts contracted by Congress before the existence of the Articles.
- Declares that the Articles shall be perpetual, and may be altered only with the approval of Congress and the ratification of all the state legislatures.
Congress under the Articles
The army
Under the Articles, Congress had the authority to regulate and fund the Continental Army,
but it lacked the power to compel the States to comply with requests
for either troops or funding. This left the military vulnerable to
inadequate funding, supplies, and even food.
Further, although the Articles enabled the states to present a unified
front when dealing with the European powers, as a tool to build a
centralized war-making government, they were largely a failure;
Historian Bruce Chadwick wrote:
George Washington had been one of the very first proponents of a strong federal government. The army had nearly disbanded on several occasions during the winters of the war because of the weaknesses of the Continental Congress. ... The delegates could not draft soldiers and had to send requests for regular troops and militia to the states. Congress had the right to order the production and purchase of provisions for the soldiers, but could not force anyone to supply them, and the army nearly starved in several winters of war.
The Continental Congress, before the Articles were approved, had
promised soldiers a pension of half pay for life. However Congress had
no power to compel the states to fund this obligation, and as the war
wound down after the victory at Yorktown the sense of urgency to support
the military was no longer a factor. No progress was made in Congress
during the winter of 1783–84. General Henry Knox, who would later become the first Secretary of War
under the Constitution, blamed the weaknesses of the Articles for the
inability of the government to fund the army. The army had long been
supportive of a strong union. Knox wrote:
The army generally have always reprobated the idea of being thirteen armies. Their ardent desires have been to be one continental body looking up to one sovereign. ... It is a favorite toast in the army, "A hoop to the barrel" or "Cement to the Union".
As Congress failed to act on the petitions, Knox wrote to Gouverneur
Morris, four years before the Philadelphia Convention was convened, "As
the present Constitution is so defective, why do not you great men call
the people together and tell them so; that is, to have a convention of
the States to form a better Constitution."
Once the war had been won, the Continental Army was largely disbanded. A very small national force was maintained to man the frontier forts and to protect against Native American
attacks. Meanwhile, each of the states had an army (or militia), and 11
of them had navies. The wartime promises of bounties and land grants to
be paid for service were not being met. In 1783, George Washington defused the Newburgh conspiracy, but riots by unpaid Pennsylvania veterans forced Congress to leave Philadelphia temporarily.
The Congress from time to time during the Revolutionary War
requisitioned troops from the states. Any contributions were voluntary,
and in the debates of 1788, the Federalists (who supported the proposed
new Constitution) claimed that state politicians acted unilaterally, and
contributed when the Continental army protected their state's
interests. The Anti-Federalists claimed that state politicians
understood their duty to the Union and contributed to advance its needs.
Dougherty (2009) concludes that generally the States' behavior
validated the Federalist analysis. This helps explain why the Articles
of Confederation needed reforms.
Foreign policy
The 1783 Treaty of Paris,
which ended hostilities with Great Britain, languished in Congress for
several months because too few delegates were present at any one time to
constitute a quorum
so that it could be ratified. Afterward, the problem only got worse as
Congress had no power to enforce attendance. Rarely did more than half
of the roughly sixty delegates attend a session of Congress at the time,
causing difficulties in raising a quorum.
The resulting paralysis embarrassed and frustrated many American
nationalists, including George Washington. Many of the most prominent
national leaders, such as Washington, John Adams, John Hancock, and Benjamin Franklin,
retired from public life, served as foreign delegates, or held office
in state governments; and for the general public, local government and
self-rule seemed quite satisfactory. This served to exacerbate
Congress's impotence.
Inherent weaknesses in the confederation's frame of government
also frustrated the ability of the government to conduct foreign policy.
In 1786, Thomas Jefferson, concerned over the failure of Congress to fund an American naval force to confront the Barbary pirates, wrote in a diplomatic correspondence to James Monroe
that, "It will be said there is no money in the treasury. There never
will be money in the treasury till the Confederacy shows its teeth."
Furthermore, the 1786 Jay–Gardoqui Treaty with Spain
also showed weakness in foreign policy. In this treaty, which was never
ratified, the United States was to give up rights to use the Mississippi River for 25 years, which would have economically strangled the settlers west of the Appalachian Mountains. Finally, due to the Confederation's military weakness, it could not compel the British army
to leave frontier forts which were on American soil — forts which, in
1783, the British promised to leave, but which they delayed leaving
pending U.S. implementation of other provisions such as ending action
against Loyalists
and allowing them to seek compensation. This incomplete British
implementation of the Treaty of Paris would later be resolved by the
implementation of Jay's Treaty in 1795 after the federal Constitution came into force.
Taxation and commerce
Under the Articles of Confederation, the central government's power
was kept quite limited. The Confederation Congress could make decisions
but lacked enforcement powers. Implementation of most decisions,
including modifications to the Articles, required unanimous approval of
all thirteen state legislatures.
Congress was denied any powers of taxation:
it could only request money from the states. The states often failed to
meet these requests in full, leaving both Congress and the Continental
Army chronically short of money. As more money was printed by Congress,
the continental dollars depreciated. In 1779, George Washington wrote to
John Jay,
who was serving as the president of the Continental Congress, "that a
wagon load of money will scarcely purchase a wagon load of provisions."
Mr. Jay and the Congress responded in May by requesting $45 million
from the States. In an appeal to the States to comply, Jay wrote that
the taxes were "the price of liberty, the peace, and the safety of
yourselves and posterity."
He argued that Americans should avoid having it said "that America had
no sooner become independent than she became insolvent" or that "her
infant glories and growing fame were obscured and tarnished by broken
contracts and violated faith." The States did not respond with any of the money requested from them.
Congress had also been denied the power to regulate either foreign trade or interstate commerce
and, as a result, all of the States maintained control over their own
trade policies. The states and the Confederation Congress both incurred
large debts during the Revolutionary War, and how to repay those debts
became a major issue of debate following the War. Some States paid off
their war debts and others did not. Federal assumption of the states'
war debts became a major issue in the deliberations of the
Constitutional Convention.
Accomplishments
Nevertheless, the Confederation Congress did take two actions with long-lasting impact. The Land Ordinance of 1785 and Northwest Ordinance created territorial government, set up protocols for the admission of new states and the division of land into useful units, and set aside land in each township for public use.
This system represented a sharp break from imperial colonization, as in
Europe, and it established the precedent by which the national (later,
federal) government would be sovereign and expand westward—as opposed to
the existing states doing so under their sovereignty.
The Land Ordinance of 1785
established both the general practices of land surveying in the west
and northwest and the land ownership provisions used throughout the
later westward expansion beyond the Mississippi River. Frontier lands were surveyed into the now-familiar squares of land called the township (36 square miles), the section (one square mile), and the quarter section (160 acres). This system was carried forward to most of the States west of the Mississippi (excluding areas of Texas and California that had already been surveyed and divided up by the Spanish Empire). Then, when the Homestead Act was enacted in 1867, the quarter section became the basic unit of land that was granted to new settler-farmers.
The Northwest Ordinance of 1787 noted the agreement of the original states to give up northwestern land claims, organized the Northwest Territory
and laid the groundwork for the eventual creation of new states. While
it didn't happen under the articles, the land north of the Ohio River and west of the (present) western border of Pennsylvania ceded by Massachusetts, Connecticut, New York, Pennsylvania, and Virginia, eventually became the states of: Ohio, Indiana, Illinois, Michigan, and Wisconsin, and the part of Minnesota
east of the Mississippi River. The Northwest Ordinance of 1787 also
made great advances in the abolition of slavery. New states admitted to
the union in this territory would never be slave states.
No new states were admitted to the Union under the Articles of
Confederation. The Articles provided for a blanket acceptance of the Province of Quebec
(referred to as "Canada" in the Articles) into the United States if it
chose to do so. It did not, and the subsequent Constitution carried no
such special provision of admission. Additionally, ordinances to admit Frankland (later modified to Franklin), Kentucky, and Vermont to the Union were considered, but none were approved.
Presidents of Congress
Under the Articles of Confederation, the presiding officer of Congress—referred to in many official records as President of the United States in Congress Assembled—chaired the Committee of the States
when Congress was in recess, and performed other administrative
functions. He was not, however, an executive in the way the later President of the United States is a chief executive, since all of the functions he executed were under the direct control of Congress.
There were 10 presidents of Congress under the Articles. The first, Samuel Huntington, had been serving as president of the Continental Congress since September 28, 1779.
President | Term |
---|---|
Samuel Huntington | March 1, 1781 – July 10, 1781 |
Thomas McKean | July 10, 1781 – November 5, 1781 |
John Hanson | November 5, 1781 – November 4, 1782 |
Elias Boudinot | November 4, 1782 – November 3, 1783 |
Thomas Mifflin | November 3, 1783 – June 3, 1784 |
Richard Henry Lee | November 30, 1784 – November 4, 1785 |
John Hancock | November 23, 1785 – June 5, 1786 |
Nathaniel Gorham | June 6, 1786 – November 3, 1786 |
Arthur St. Clair | February 2, 1787 – November 4, 1787 |
Cyrus Griffin | January 22, 1788 – November 15, 1788 |
The U.S. under the Articles
The peace treaty left the United States independent and at peace but
with an unsettled governmental structure. The Articles envisioned a
permanent confederation but granted to the Congress—the only federal
institution—little power to finance itself or to ensure that its
resolutions were enforced. There was no president, no executive
agencies, no judiciary, and no tax base. The absence of a tax base meant
that there was no way to pay off state and national debts from the war
years except by requesting money from the states, which seldom arrived.
Although historians generally agree that the Articles were too weak to
hold the fast-growing nation together, they do give credit to the
settlement of the western issue, as the states voluntarily turned over
their lands to national control.
By 1783, with the end of the British blockade, the new nation was
regaining its prosperity. However, trade opportunities were restricted
by the mercantilism of the British and French empires. The ports of the
British West Indies were closed to all staple products which were not
carried in British ships. France and Spain established similar policies.
Simultaneously, new manufacturers faced sharp competition from British
products which were suddenly available again. Political unrest in
several states and efforts by debtors to use popular government to erase
their debts increased the anxiety of the political and economic elites
which had led the Revolution. The apparent inability of the Congress to
redeem the public obligations (debts) incurred during the war, or to
become a forum for productive cooperation among the states to encourage
commerce and economic development, only aggravated a gloomy situation.
In 1786–87, Shays' Rebellion,
an uprising of dissidents in western Massachusetts against the state
court system, threatened the stability of state government.
The Continental Congress printed paper money which was so
depreciated that it ceased to pass as currency, spawning the expression
"not worth a continental". Congress could not levy taxes and could only
make requisitions upon the States. Less than a million and a half
dollars came into the treasury between 1781 and 1784, although the
governors had been asked for two million in 1783 alone.
When John Adams
went to London in 1785 as the first representative of the United
States, he found it impossible to secure a treaty for unrestricted
commerce. Demands were made for favors and there was no assurance that
individual states would agree to a treaty. Adams stated it was necessary
for the States to confer the power of passing navigation laws to
Congress, or that the States themselves pass retaliatory acts against
Great Britain. Congress had already requested and failed to get power
over navigation laws. Meanwhile, each State acted individually against
Great Britain to little effect. When other New England states closed
their ports to British shipping, Connecticut hastened to profit by
opening its ports.
By 1787 Congress was unable to protect manufacturing and
shipping. State legislatures were unable or unwilling to resist attacks
upon private contracts and public credit. Land speculators expected no
rise in values when the government could not defend its borders nor
protect its frontier population.
The idea of a convention to revise the Articles of Confederation grew in favor. Alexander Hamilton
realized while serving as Washington's top aide that a strong central
government was necessary to avoid foreign intervention and allay the
frustrations due to an ineffectual Congress. Hamilton led a group of
like-minded nationalists, won Washington's endorsement, and convened the
Annapolis Convention in 1786 to petition Congress to call a constitutional convention to meet in Philadelphia to remedy the long-term crisis.
Signatures
The Second Continental Congress approved the Articles for
distribution to the states on November 15, 1777. A copy was made for
each state and one was kept by the Congress.
On November 28, the copies sent to the states for ratification were
unsigned, and the cover letter, dated November 17, had only the
signatures of Henry Laurens and Charles Thomson, who were the President and Secretary to the Congress.
The Articles, however, were unsigned, and the date was blank.
Congress began the signing process by examining their copy of the
Articles on June 27, 1778. They ordered a final copy prepared (the one
in the National Archives), and that delegates should inform the
secretary of their authority for ratification.
On July 9, 1778, the prepared copy was ready. They dated it and
began to sign. They also requested each of the remaining states to
notify its delegation when ratification was completed. On that date,
delegates present from New Hampshire, Massachusetts, Rhode Island, Connecticut, New York, Pennsylvania, Virginia and South Carolina signed the Articles to indicate that their states had ratified. New Jersey, Delaware and Maryland could not, since their states had not ratified. North Carolina and Georgia also were unable to sign that day, since their delegations were absent.
After the first signing, some delegates signed at the next
meeting they attended. For example, John Wentworth of New Hampshire
added his name on August 8. John Penn was the first of North Carolina's
delegates to arrive (on July 10), and the delegation signed the Articles
on July 21, 1778.
The other states had to wait until they ratified the Articles and
notified their Congressional delegation. Georgia signed on July 24, New
Jersey on November 26, and Delaware on February 12, 1779. Maryland refused to ratify the Articles until every state had ceded its western land claims. Chevalier de La Luzerne, French Minister
to the United States, felt that the Articles would help strengthen the
American government. In 1780 when Maryland requested France provide
naval forces in the Chesapeake Bay for protection from the British (who were conducting raids in the lower part of the bay), he indicated that French Admiral Destouches
would do what he could but La Luzerne also “sharply pressed” Maryland
to ratify the Articles, thus suggesting the two issues were related.
On February 2, 1781, the much-awaited decision was taken by the Maryland General Assembly in Annapolis. As the last piece of business during the afternoon Session, "among engrossed Bills" was "signed and sealed by Governor Thomas Sim Lee
in the Senate Chamber, in the presence of the members of both Houses...
an Act to empower the delegates of this state in Congress to subscribe
and ratify the articles of confederation" and perpetual union among the
states. The Senate then adjourned "to the first Monday in August next."
The decision of Maryland to ratify the Articles was reported to the
Continental Congress on February 12. The confirmation signing of the
Articles by the two Maryland delegates took place in Philadelphia at
noon time on March 1, 1781, and was celebrated in the afternoon. With
these events, the Articles were entered into force and the United States
of America came into being as a sovereign federal state.
Congress had debated the Articles for over a year and a half, and
the ratification process had taken nearly three and a half years. Many
participants in the original debates were no longer delegates, and some
of the signers had only recently arrived. The Articles of Confederation
and Perpetual Union were signed by a group of men who were never present
in the Congress at the same time.
Signers
The signers and the states they represented were:
|
|
|
|
|
Roger Sherman (Connecticut) was the only person to sign all four great state papers of the United States: the Continental Association, the United States Declaration of Independence, the Articles of Confederation and the United States Constitution.
Robert Morris (Pennsylvania) signed three of the great state
papers of the United States: the United States Declaration of
Independence, the Articles of Confederation and the United States
Constitution.
John Dickinson (Delaware), Daniel Carroll (Maryland) and
Gouverneur Morris (New York), along with Sherman and Robert Morris, were
the only five people to sign both the Articles of Confederation and the
United States Constitution (Gouverneur Morris represented Pennsylvania
when signing the Constitution).
Gallery
Original parchment pages of the Articles of Confederation, National Archives and Records Administration.
Revision and replacement
On January 21, 1786, the Virginia Legislature, following James Madison's
recommendation, invited all the states to send delegates to Annapolis,
Maryland to discuss ways to reduce interstate conflict. At what came to
be known as the Annapolis Convention, the few state delegates in attendance endorsed a motion that called for all states to meet in Philadelphia
in May 1787 to discuss ways to improve the Articles of Confederation in
a "Grand Convention." Although the states' representatives to the Constitutional Convention
in Philadelphia were only authorized to amend the Articles, the
representatives held secret, closed-door sessions and wrote a new
constitution. The new Constitution gave much more power to the central
government, but characterization of the result is disputed. The general
goal of the authors was to get close to a republic as defined by the philosophers of the Age of Enlightenment,
while trying to address the many difficulties of the interstate
relationships. Historian Forrest McDonald, using the ideas of James
Madison from Federalist 39, describes the change this way:
The constitutional reallocation of powers created a new form of government, unprecedented under the sun. Every previous national authority either had been centralized or else had been a confederation of sovereign states. The new American system was neither one nor the other; it was a mixture of both.
In May 1786, Charles Pinckney of South Carolina proposed that Congress revise the Articles of Confederation. Recommended changes included granting Congress
power over foreign and domestic commerce, and providing means for
Congress to collect money from state treasuries. Unanimous approval was
necessary to make the alterations, however, and Congress failed to reach
a consensus. The weakness of the Articles in establishing an effective
unifying government was underscored by the threat of internal conflict
both within and between the states, especially after Shays' Rebellion threatened to topple the state government of Massachusetts.
Historian Ralph Ketcham comments on the opinions of Patrick Henry, George Mason, and other Anti-Federalists who were not so eager to give up the local autonomy won by the revolution:
Antifederalists feared what Patrick Henry termed the "consolidated government" proposed by the new Constitution. They saw in Federalist hopes for commercial growth and international prestige only the lust of ambitious men for a "splendid empire" that, in the time-honored way of empires, would oppress the people with taxes, conscription, and military campaigns. Uncertain that any government over so vast a domain as the United States could be controlled by the people, Antifederalists saw in the enlarged powers of the general government only the familiar threats to the rights and liberties of the people.
Historians have given many reasons for the perceived need to replace
the articles in 1787. Jillson and Wilson (1994) point to the financial
weakness as well as the norms, rules and institutional structures of the
Congress, and the propensity to divide along sectional lines.
Rakove (1988) identifies several factors that explain the
collapse of the Confederation. The lack of compulsory direct taxation
power was objectionable to those wanting a strong centralized state or
expecting to benefit from such power. It could not collect customs after
the war because tariffs were vetoed by Rhode Island.
Rakove concludes that their failure to implement national measures
"stemmed not from a heady sense of independence but rather from the
enormous difficulties that all the states encountered in collecting
taxes, mustering men, and gathering supplies from a war-weary populace."
The second group of factors Rakove identified derived from the
substantive nature of the problems the Continental Congress confronted
after 1783, especially the inability to create a strong foreign policy.
Finally, the Confederation's lack of coercive power reduced the
likelihood for profit to be made by political means, thus potential
rulers were uninspired to seek power.
When the war ended in 1783, certain special interests had
incentives to create a new "merchant state," much like the British state
people had rebelled against. In particular, holders of war scrip and
land speculators wanted a central government to pay off scrip at face
value and to legalize western land holdings with disputed claims. Also,
manufacturers wanted a high tariff as a barrier to foreign goods, but
competition among states made this impossible without a central
government.
Legitimacy of closing down
Political scientist David C. Hendrickson writes that two prominent political leaders in the Confederation, John Jay of New York and Thomas Burke
of North Carolina believed that "the authority of the congress rested
on the prior acts of the several states, to which the states gave their
voluntary consent, and until those obligations were fulfilled, neither
nullification of the authority of congress, exercising its due powers,
nor secession from the compact itself was consistent with the terms of
their original pledges."
According to Article XIII of the Confederation, any alteration had to be approved unanimously:
[T]he Articles of this Confederation shall be inviolably observed by every State, and the Union shall be perpetual; nor shall any alteration at any time hereafter be made in any of them; unless such alteration be agreed to in a Congress of the United States, and be afterwards confirmed by the legislatures of every State.
On the other hand, Article VII of the proposed Constitution stated
that it would become effective after ratification by a mere nine states,
without unanimity:
The Ratification of the Conventions of nine States, shall be sufficient for the Establishment of this Constitution between the States so ratifying the Same.
The apparent tension between these two provisions was addressed at
the time, and remains a topic of scholarly discussion. In 1788, James Madison remarked (in Federalist No. 40)
that the issue had become moot: "As this objection...has been in a
manner waived by those who have criticised the powers of the convention,
I dismiss it without further observation." Nevertheless, it is an
interesting historical and legal question whether opponents of the
Constitution could have plausibly attacked the Constitution on that
ground. At the time, there were state legislators who argued that the
Constitution was not an alteration of the Articles of Confederation, but
rather would be a complete replacement so the unanimity rule did not
apply. Moreover, the Confederation had proven woefully inadequate and therefore was supposedly no longer binding.
Modern scholars such as Francisco Forrest Martin agree that the
Articles of Confederation had lost its binding force because many states
had violated it, and thus "other states-parties did not have to comply
with the Articles' unanimous consent rule". In contrast, law professor Akhil Amar
suggests that there may not have really been any conflict between the
Articles of Confederation and the Constitution on this point; Article VI
of the Confederation specifically allowed side deals among states, and
the Constitution could be viewed as a side deal until all states
ratified it.
Final months
On July 3, 1788, the Congress received New Hampshire's
all-important ninth ratification of the proposed Constitution, thus,
according to its terms, establishing it as the new framework of
governance for the ratifying states. The following day delegates
considered a bill to admit Kentucky into the Union as a sovereign state.
The discussion ended with Congress making the determination that, in
light of this development, it would be "unadvisable" to admit Kentucky
into the Union, as it could do so "under the Articles of Confederation"
only, but not "under the Constitution".
By the end of July 1788, 11 of the 13 states had ratified the new
Constitution. Congress continued to convene under the Articles with a
quorum until October.
On Saturday, September 13, 1788, the Confederation Congress voted the
resolve to implement the new Constitution, and on Monday, September 15
published an announcement that the new Constitution had been ratified by
the necessary nine states, set the first Wednesday in February 1789 for
the presidential electors to meet and select a new president, and set
the first Wednesday of March 1789 as the day the new government would
take over and the government under the Articles of Confederation would
come to an end. On that same September 13, it determined that New York would remain the national capital.