[991] Tyler, i, 142. Grigsby estimates that three fourths of the people of Virginia were opposed to the Constitution. (Grigsby, i, footnote to 160.)

[992] Lee to Madison, Dec. 1787; Writings: Hunt, v, footnote to p. 88.

[993] Madison's father to Madison, Jan. 30, 1788; Writings: Hunt, v, footnote to p. 105.

[994] Madison to Jefferson, Feb. 19, 1788; ib., 103.

[995] Henry to Lamb, June 9, 1788; Henry, ii, 342.

[996] Minton Collins to Stephen Collins, March 16, 1788; Collins MSS., Lib. Cong.

[997] Even Hamilton admitted this. "The framers of it [the Constitution] will have to encounter the disrepute of having brought about a revolution in government, without substituting anything that was worthy of the effort; they pulled down one Utopia, it will be said, to build up another." (Hamilton to Washington, Sept., 1788; Hamilton's Works: Lodge, ix, 444; and also in Jefferson, Writings: Ford, xi, footnote to 330.) Martin Van Buren describes the action of the Federal Convention that framed the Constitution, in "having ... set aside the instructions of Congress by making a new Constitution ... an heroic but lawless act." (Van Buren, 49-50.)

Professor Burgess does not overstate the case when he declares: "Had Julius or Napoleon committed these acts [of the Federal Convention in framing and submitting the Constitution], they would have been pronounced coups d'état." (Burgess, i, 105.)

Also see Beard: Econ. I. C., 217-18.

[998] Ford: P. on C., 14.