|
Home |
Acknowledgements |
Bibliography |
Unit Resources |
Credits
Introduction
page 1
2 3 4
5 6 of
intro
By July of 1788, eleven of the 13 states that comprised the infant
"united States" of America had ratified the countrys
recently written second plan of government. Despite the fact that
North Carolina and Rhode Island were still holding out, Article
VII of the Constitution required only 9 states approval before it
went into effect. Eager to launch the new ship of state, the first
federal elections began in September and did not end until December
of 1790 when the last of the 13 states to ratify Rhode Island
- sent its lone representative to Federal Hall in New York. By the
time Benjamin Bourn arrived, Congress had already completed the
first of its three sessions. Yet, he was still in time to participate
in the greater part of the federal legislatures most critical
work.
Although the proceedings of the First Federal Congress (FFC) were
scheduled to begin in New York on March 4, 1789, the ongoing ratification
debates and difficulties of travel to the "present" capital
prevented a quorum from being reached for five weeks. When the first
Congress adjourned in March of 1791, the sixty-five representatives
and 26 senators found themselves in a new, temporary capital
Philadelphia. The change in location symbolized the new direction
in which the FFC had steered the nation.
The first Postmaster of the United States, Samuel Osgood, once
suggested that the work of the FFC compared to that of "a second
convention." In the final analysis, his analogy is probably
not exaggerated. The FFC gave practical meaning to the brilliantly
conceived but frequently ambiguous phrases of the United States
Constitution and passed legislation that allowed the "federal
ship Union" to remain afloat in the stormy waters of the late
18th Century. Indeed, future Supreme Court Justice James Iredells
prediction that "[T]he first session of Congress will probably
be the most important of any for many years" now seems remarkably
accurate. (Bickford & Bowling, 5).
page 1
2 3 4
5 6 of
intro
For more information, contact Fran
O'Malley by e-mail
or phone (302-831-4271 or 302-831-8443).
|