Virginia's
Example Inspires the World
by Kevin R. C. Gutzman
by Kevin R. C. Gutzman
DIGG THIS
Today
is the 232nd anniversary of the inauguration of the American
Revolution. It was on May 15, 1776 that Virginia’s ruling revolutionary
May Convention adopted the resolutions that Virginians understood,
according to young James Madison, as launching the ship of independence.
The first
of the Virginians’ resolutions called for the adoption of a declaration
of rights. The committee appointed to draft that declaration, chaired
by George Mason of Gunston Hall, soon reported a document establishing
the Lockean foundation of Virginia’s assertion of home rule. All
men are born free and equal, it said, and when they enter into a
state of society, they cannot be deprived of their basic rights.
The balance
of the Declaration of Rights was devoted to explaining the relationship
between citizens and government and to enshrining some of the basic
rights of Englishmen, such as the right to trial by jury and the
right to have militia, not professional soldiers, be the government’s
first recourse.
The Avalon
Project of Yale University has helpfully posted the final version
of the Declaration of Rights of 1776 online. In doing so, however,
it mistakenly identifies Mason as the Declaration’s draftsman. Although
Mason did the lion’s share of the work, there were two important
areas in which the final text was a product of the entire Convention.
First,
at the beginning, Mason would have had the Declaration state simply
that men are born free and equal and that they cannot be deprived
of certain basic rights. When his committee reported its draft to
the full Convention, however, it met the objection that such a pious
statement either would soon yield social convulsion (in case it
were actually implemented by an abolition of slavery) or, in being
ignored, would teach Virginians not to respect their Declaration
of Rights. That is why the Convention added the caveat that when
they enter into a state of society, men cannot be deprived of
their rights. The slaves were not entering into the Lockean compact
that was creating republican Virginia.
The other change
to Mason’s handiwork came in the final provision. Mason, a self-described
"Man of 1688" (the Glorious Revolution), had said that
Virginians were entitled to the fullest "toleration" in
matters of religion. Madison objected to this language, noting its
implication that the state knew best. His alternative proposal was
that Virginians were to enjoy the "free exercise" of religion.
The house, including Mason, agreed.
Thus began
the American tradition of declarations of rights. The work of George
Mason and his colleagues would serve as a template for other states’
declarations of rights, for the French Declaration of the Rights
of Man and Citizen (Virginian Thomas Jefferson helped his friend
the marquis de la Fayette in the composition, so it is unsurprising
that some of the French provisions were virtual translations of
the Virginian versions), and, through the influence of French law,
of those of former French colonies around the world. Ultimately,
several of the Virginian ideas made their way into the UN version.
This was not
the most important work of the May Convention, however, but only
its prelude. Next came the real work: adopting a permanent republican
constitution. Like the other colonies, Virginia had been arguing
for years that its sole legal link to Great Britain was through
the Crown. Virginia patriots said that their House of Burgesses
should have the primary role in the government and repeatedly ran
off royal governors whose policies or personalities they found unacceptable.
According to them, their colonial constitution was a mirror image
of Britain’s, and so their 1776 constitution established a very
similar government.
The Virginia
Constitution of 1776 was the first written constitution adopted
by the people’s representatives in the history of the world. Beyond
the fact that it was a written constitution, there was, as anyone
who knew Mason might have predicted, basically nothing innovative
about it. The first governor of republican Virginia, Patrick Henry,
took the oath of office on June 29, 1776.
How significant
were these events? Congressman Thomas Jefferson repeatedly wrote
home while it was being drafted to ask to be relieved of his congressional
duties. As he explained it, this was what the war was about; it
would be better to have the poor constitution the British were trying
to force on the colonies without a fight, he said, than to win the
right to force a bad one on themselves.
When the Convention’s
leaders omitted to send someone to take his place, Jefferson sent
a proposed constitution to Williamsburg for the Convention’s consideration.
It arrived too late to have much influence, but the Convention did
use Jefferson’s preamble. Poor Jefferson, for his part, had to content
himself with staying in Philadelphia and drafting the Declaration
of American Independence.
In one of the
classic cases of sour grapes in American history, Jefferson spent
the rest of his life complaining that the Constitution of 1776 was
illegitimate. It had been adopted, he insisted, by a body that had
not been given power to adopt a constitution. Never mind that the
Convention’s leadership, including Henry and Mason, had considered
this argument and rejected it. (If the Convention had the power
to declare independence, they reasoned, it obviously must have power
to replace the king’s government with something else.)
In time,
Virginia would adopt a more Jeffersonian constitution. Whether that
document was superior to its predecessor is debatable. What is not
is that Virginia’s example continues to inspire the world.
May
15, 2008
Kevin
R. C. Gutzman, J.D., Ph.D. [send
him mail], Associate Professor of History at Western Connecticut
State University, is the author of Virginia’s
American Revolution: From Dominion to Republic, 17761840
(newly available in paperback) and The
Politically Incorrect Guide to the Constitution. He
is also the co-author, with Thomas E. Woods, Jr., of Who
Killed the Constitution? The Fate of American Liberty from World
War I to George W. Bush (forthcoming from Crown Forum on
July 8, 2008).
Copyright
© 2008 LewRockwell.com
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