History of the Origin, Formation, and Adoption of the Constitution of the United States, Vol. 1 / With Notices of Its Principle Framers

Multiple-page footnotes, repositioned to the end of the text, have resulted in numbered pages with no contents (visible in html version only).
Remaining transcriber's notes are at the end of the text.
IN TWO VOLUMES. VOLUME I.
NEW YORK: HARPER AND BROTHERS, Franklin Square. 1854.
Entered according to Act of Congress, in the year 1854, by GEORGE T. CURTIS, in the Clerk's Office of the District Court of the District of Massachusetts
TO GEORGE TICKNOR, Esq., THE HISTORIAN OF SPANISH LITERATURE, BY WHOSE ACCURATE SCHOLARSHIP AND CAREFUL CRITICISM THESE PAGES HAVE LARGELY PROFITED, I DEDICATE THIS WORK, IN AFFECTIONATE ACKNOWLEDGMENT OF TIES, WHICH HAVE BEEN TO ME CONSTANT SOURCES OF HAPPINESS THROUGH MY WHOLE LIFE.

A special history of the origin and establishment of the Constitution of the United States has not yet found a place in our national literature.
Many years ago, I formed the design of writing such a work, for the purpose of exhibiting the deep causes which at once rendered the Convention of 1787 inevitable, and controlled or directed its course and decisions; the mode in which its great work was accomplished; and the foundations on which our national liberty and prosperity were then deliberately settled by the statesmen to whom the American Revolution gave birth, and on which they have rested ever since.
In the prosecution of this purpose I had, until death terminated his earthly interests, the encouragement and countenance of that illustrious person, whose relation to the Constitution of the United States, during the last forty years, has been not inferior in importance to that of any of its founders during the preceding period.
Mr. Webster had for a long time the intention of writing a work which should display the remarkable state of affairs under whose influence the Constitution was first brought into practical application; and this design he relinquished only when all the remaining plans of his life were surrendered with the solemn and religious resignation that marked its close. It was known to him that I had begun to labor upon another branch of the same subject. In the spring of 1852 I wrote to him to explain the plan of my work, and to ask him for a copy of some remarks made by his father in the Convention of New Hampshire when the Constitution was ratified by that State. I received from him the following answer.

George Ticknor Curtis
О книге

Язык

Английский

Год издания

2012-08-03

Темы

Constitutional history -- United States

Reload 🗙