The Constitution was ratified by the thirteen states, as follows:—
| 1. | Delaware | Dec. 6, 1787. |
| 2. | Pennsylvania | Dec. 12, 1787. |
| 3. | New Jersey | Dec. 18, 1787. |
| 4. | Georgia | Jan. 2, 1788. |
| 5. | Connecticut | Jan. 9, 1788. |
| 6. | Massachusetts | Feb. 6, 1788. |
| 7. | Maryland | April 28, 1788. |
| 8. | South Carolina | May 23, 1788. |
| 9. | New Hampshire | June 21, 1788. |
| 10. | Virginia | June 25, 1788. |
| 11. | New York | July 26, 1788. |
| 12. | North Carolina | Nov. 21, 1789. |
| 13. | Rhode Island | May 29, 1790. |
PRESIDENTS OF THE CONTINENTAL CONGRESS.
| 1. | Peyton Randolph of Virginia | Sept. 5, 1774. |
| 2. | Henry Middleton of South Carolina | Oct. 22, 1774. |
| Peyton Randolph | May 10, 1775. | |
| 3. | John Hancock of Massachusetts | May 24, 1775. |
| 4. | Henry Laurens of South Carolina | Nov. 1, 1777. |
| 5. | John Jay of New York | Dec. 10, 1778. |
| 6. | Samuel Huntington of Connecticut | Sept. 28, 1779. |
| 7. | Thomas McKean of Delaware | July 10, 1781. |
| 8. | John Hanson of Maryland | Nov. 5, 1781. |
| 9. | Elias Boudinot of New Jersey | Nov. 4, 1782. |
| 10. | Thomas Mifflin of Pennsylvania | Nov. 3, 1783. |
| 11. | Richard Henry Lee of Virginia | Nov. 30, 1784. |
| 12. | Nathaniel Gorham of Massachusetts | June 6, 1786. |
| 13. | Arthur St. Clair of Pennsylvania | Feb. 2, 1787. |
| 14. | Cyrus Griffin of Virginia | Jan. 22, 1788. |
INDEX.
Acadians, [205].
Adams, Herbert B., [192].
Adams, John, arrives in Paris, [22];
his indignation at the pusillanimous instructions from Congress, [36];
condemns the Cincinnati, [116];
tries in vain to negotiate commercial treaty with Great Britain, [139–141];
negotiates a treaty with Holland, [155];
obtains a loan there, [156], [157];
his interview with the envoy from Tripoli, [161];
absent from the United States at the time of the Federal Convention, [223];
elected vice-president of the United States, [348].
Adams, Samuel, his devotion to local self-government, [57], [318];
his committees of correspondence, [92];
opposes Washington's proposal for pensioning officers, [106];
but at length supports the Commutation Act, [114];
condemns the Cincinnati, [116], [118];
approves the conduct of the Massachusetts delegates, [143];
opposes pardoning the ringleaders in the Shays insurrection, [184];
not a delegate to the Federal Convention, [225];
"the man of the town meeting," [318];
in the Massachusetts convention, [324], [326–328];
why not selected for the vice-presidency, [347].
Albany, riot in, [339].
Amendments to Constitution, [302], [330], [338].
Ames, Fisher, [319], [326], [348].
Amis, North Carolinian trader, [210].
Amphiktyonic council, [249].
Annapolis convention, [216].
Antagonisms between large and small states, [244–252];
between east and west, [255];
between north and south, [256–267].
Antifederalist party, [309];
in Pennsylvania, [310];
in Massachusetts, [317], [324];
in South Carolina, [334];
in Virginia, [335–337];
in New York, [340], [341], [346].
Antipathies between states, [62].
Aranda, Count, his prophecy, [19].
Aristides, pseudonym, [312].
Aristocracy, [283].
Aristotle, [225].
Arkwright, Sir Richard, [267].
Armada, the Invincible, [235].
Armstrong, John, [109], [150].
Army, dread of, [105], [321].
Arnold, Benedict, [28], [106], [151].
Asbury, Francis, [85].
Ashburton, Lord, [5].
Ashburton treaty, [26].
Assemblies, [65].
Assunpink Creek, [349].
Augustine, [158].
Backus, Rev. Isaac, [322].
Bagehot, Walter, [291].
Baldwin, Abraham, [251].
Baltimore and Ohio Railroad, [213].
Baptists persecuted in Virginia, [80].
Barbary pirates, [157–161].
Barré, Isaac, [41].
Bedford, Gunning, [249].
Bennington, [321].
Bernard, Sir Francis, [298].
Biennial elections, [327].
Bill of rights demanded, [329].
Blackstone, Sir William, [290], [291], [297].
Bossuet on slavery, [72].
Boston Gazette, quoted, [328].
Boundaries of United States as settled by the treaty, [25].
Bowdoin, James, [143], [180–184], [319], [324].
Boyd, Lieutenant, [122].
Braddock, Edward, [305].
Bradshaw's Railway Guide, [171].
Brearley, David, [229], [246].
Bribery, charges of, [328].
British army departs, [51].
British Constitution compared with American, [290–298].
Buff and blue colours, [2].
Burgesses, House of, in Virginia, [65].
Burke, Ædanus, [116].
Burke, Edmund, his sympathy with the Americans, [2];
could not see the need for parliamentary reform, [6];
his invective against Shelburne, [17];
on the slave-trade, [72].
Butler, Pierce, [258].
Cabinet, the president's, [299].
Cabinet government, growth of, in England, [296].
Camden, Lord, [5].
Canada, Franklin suggests that it should be ceded to the United States, [9], [14].
Carleton, Sir Guy, [50], [131].
Carlisle, Pa., disturbances at, [315].
Carpet-bag governments, [270].
Carr, Dabney, [92].
Carrington, Edward, [204], [307].
Carroll, Daniel, [228].
Carrying trade, [163], [263].
Cartwright, Edmund, [267].
Catalonian rebels indemnified, [29].
Catholics in the United States, [87].
Cato, pseudonym, [312].
Cavendish, Lord John, [5], [16].
Censors, council of, in Pennsylvania, [150].
Centinel, pseudonym, [313].
Cervantes, Miguel de, [159].
Charles II., [29].
Chase, Samuel, [322].
Chatham, Lord, [188].
Cherry Valley, [122].
Chesapeake and Ohio Canal, [213].
Chittenden, Thomas, [121].
Cincinnati, order of the, [114–118].
Cincinnati, the city, original name of, [197].
Cincinnatus, pseudonym, [312].
Clan system, [62].
Clergymen in the Massachusetts convention, [319];
their liberal spirit, [322].
Cleveland, Grover, his tariff message, [294].
Clinton, George, favours persecution of Tories, [123];
an enemy to closer union of the states, [145];
defeats impost amendment, [220];
opposes the Constitution, [340];
entertains President Washington at dinner, [350].
Clinton, Sir Henry, [322].
Clymer, George, [311].
Coalition ministry, [38–46].
Cœur-de-Lion and Saladin, [161].
Coinage, [165].
Coke, Thomas, [86].
Columbia College, [125].
Commerce, control of, given to Congress, [263].
Common law in the United States, [69].
Commons, House of, in England, [68], [290–298];
in North Carolina, [65].
Compromises of the Federal Constitution, [250–267].
Confederation, articles of, [92–98].
Congress, Continental, its instructions to the commissioners at Paris, [35];
its weakness, [56], [98], [102–113], [234];
its anomalous character, [92];
its presidents, [96];
driven from Philadelphia by drunken soldiers, [112];
flees to Princeton, [113];
unable to enforce the provisions of the treaty, [119–131], [154];
unable to regulate commerce, [140–144];
afraid to interfere openly in the Shays rebellion, [185];
passes ordinance for government of northwestern territory, [203–206];
refuses to recommend a convention for reforming the government, [218];
reconsiders its refusal, [221];
in some respects a diplomatic rather than a legislative body, [237];
its migrations, [271], [306];
debates on the Constitution, [307];
submits it to the states, [308];
comes to an end, [345].
Congress, Federal, powers granted to, [270];
choice of president by, [282–284];
counting electoral votes in, [284], [285], [289].
Connecticut, government of, [65];
quarrels with New York and Pennsylvania, [146–151];
keeps almost entirely clear of paper money, [172];
western claims of, [189], [194];
ratifies the Constitution, [316].
Connecticut compromise, the, [250–255].
Conservative character of the American Revolution, [64].
Constitution, emblematic federal ship, [339], [344].
Convention, the Federal, [154], [222–305].
Conway, Gen. Henry, [5].
Cooper, Dr. Myles, [126].
Cornwallis, Lord, [22], [51], [349].
Council, privy, [299].
Cowardice of American politicians, [231].
Crawford, William, [51].
Curtis, B.R., [276].
Cutler, Manasseh, [203].
Dane, Nathan, [204], [217], [307].
Dayton, Jonathan, [225], [229].
Debt, imprisonment for, [173].
Debts to British creditors, [27], [131].
Delaware, government of, [65];
ratifies the Constitution, [314].
Democratic-Republican party, [309].
Dickinson, John, [93], [112], [228], [242], [243], [281], [283], [299], [312].
Dissolution of Parliament, [298].
Dollar, the Spanish, [165].
Dunmore, Lord, [298].
Election by lot, [281];
first presidential, [346–348].
Electoral college in Maryland, [66];
device adopted for choosing the president, [281–287];
its practical working, [288].
Elliot, Sir Gilbert, [3].
Ellsworth, Oliver, [228], [249], [250], [267], [269], [274], [276], [280], [300].
Embargo acts, [142].
Eminent domain, [194].
Episcopal church, [77–85].
Erie Canal, [212], [228].
Executive, federal, [241], [277];
length of term, [279];
how elected, [279–285];
corresponds to sovereign, not to prime minister, [290], [299].
Exports not to be taxed, [264], [270].
"Federal," the word preferred to "national," [254].
Federal city under federal jurisdiction, [271], [320].
"Federal Farmer" (letters by R.H. Lee), [314].
Federal Street in Boston, [331].
"Federalist," the, [235], [341–343].
Federalist party, [238], [309].
Field, S.J., [275].
Fisheries, question of, [20], [26], [37], [139], [163].
Fitzherbert, Alleyne, [22], [45].
Florida surrendered by Great Britain to Spain, [37];
disputes about boundary of, [208].
Folkland, [187], [207].
Fox, C.J., his sympathy with the Americans, [2];
quarrels with Shelburne, [6], [14];
resigns, [15];
waywardness of his early career, [16];
coalition with North, [38–42];
mistake in opposing a dissolution, [48].
France, treaty of 1783 with Great Britain, [37].
Franklin, Benjamin, negotiates with Oswald, [9];
overruled by Jay and Adams, [23];
his arguments against compensating the loyalists, [30];
ridicules the Cincinnati, [116];
returns from France, [138];
in the Federal Convention, [225], [250], [277], [299], [303], [305];
lays the Constitution before the Pennsylvania legislature, [306];
called a dotard by the Antifederalists, [313].
Franklin, state of, [200], [209].
Frederick the Great, on republics, [58].
Free trade, [4], [134–139].
French army embarks at Boston, [51].
Froissart, [153].
Frontier posts to be surrendered by Great Britain, [51];
why not surrendered, [152].
Fugitive slaves, [206], [267], [333].
Fur trade, [132], [164].
Gadsden, C., [122], [334].
Gallatin, A., [125], [134].
Galloway, Joseph, [248].
Gardoqui, Diego, [209].
Gates, Horatio, [108–111], [180].
George III. threatens to abdicate, [3];
his disgust at the coalition, [44];
rebuked by House of Commons, [46];
his personal government overthrown, [48];
hopes the Americans will repent of their folly, [58], [141];
resists the movement for abolishing slave-trade, [72];
his personal government, [297].
Georgia takes the lead in making the judiciary elective, [69];
abandons that evil practice, [69];
issues paper money, [169];
ratifies the Constitution, [316].
Germaine, Lord George, [39].
Gerry, Elbridge, [118], [229], [243], [251], [252], [256], [269], [279], [282], [298], [303], [304], [328], [347].
Gibbon, Edward, [38], [39].
Gibraltar, [17], [36].
Gladstone, W.E., [223], [292], [294].
Gorham, Nathaniel, [252], [253], [319].
Governors, colonial, unpopularity of, [67].
Gower, Lord, [44].
Grafton, Duke of, [5].
Grantham, Lord, [17].
Granville, Lord, [293].
Grasse, Count, defeated by Rodney, [12], [13].
Grayson, William, [162], [205], [337].
Green Dragon tavern, [327].
Greene, Nathanael, [94], [102], [108], [116], [122], [225].
Grenville, Thomas, [11].
Guadaloupe, [36].
Guilford, Earl of, [44].
Half-pay controversy, [106].
Hamilton, Alexander, his early life, [124–126];
attacks the Trespass Act, [128];
calls for a federal convention, [217];
advocates the impost amendment, [220];
in the Federal Convention, [225], [226], [243], [244], [246], [249], [254], [279], [303], [304];
on inconvertible paper, [274];
on the electoral college, [287];
called a boy by the Antifederalists, [313];
authorship of the "Federalist," [341–343];
supports the Constitution in the New York convention, [343], [344];
his financial measures, [349].
Hancock, John, [104], [184], [318], [319], [330].
Hannibal, [158].
Hargreaves, James, [267].
Harrington, James, [64].
Harrison, Benjamin, [337].
Hartington, Lord, [293].
Hartley, David, [45].
Hawks, F.L., [82].
Heath, Gen. William, [319].
Henry, Patrick, [80], [225], [331], [335], [336], [347].
Hint Club, [169].
Impost amendment, [218–240].
India bill, [46].
Insurrections, suppression of, [269].
Intercitizenship, [94].
Iroquois league, [190].
Irreconcilables in the Federal Convention, [225], [242], [244], [246], [254].
Isolation of states a century ago, [62].
Jay, John, thwarts Vergennes, [21], [35];
tries to establish free trade between United States and Great Britain, [26];
condemns persecution of Tories, [122];
on compensation for slaves, [132];
consents to the closing of the Mississippi River for twenty-five years, [210];
why not sent as delegate to Federal Convention, [225];
supports the Constitution in New York convention, [340];
contributes articles to the "Federalist," [341];
receives nine electoral votes for the vice-presidency, [348].
Jefferson, Thomas, opposed to slavery, [72];
favours religious freedom, [81];
minister to France, [138], [155];
assists Gouverneur Morris in arranging our decimal currency, [166];
his plan for the government of the northwestern territory, [196];
wishes to prohibit slavery in the national domain, [198], [205];
his purchase of Louisiana, [207];
absent from United States at the time of the Federal Convention, [225];
his faith in the people, [226], [337];
his opinion of the Constitution, [309];
approves the action of the Massachusetts convention, [331].
Johnson, W.S., [229].
Johnston, Alexander, [223].
Jones, Paul, [339].
Jonesborough, convention at, [200].
Judiciary, elective, [69];
federal, [242], [300], [301].
Juilliard vs. Greenman, [275].
Kentucky, [18], [189], [199], [202], [209], [210].
Keppel, Lord, [5], [16], [45].
King, Rufus, [217], [221], [228], [246], [249], [250], [256], [261], [276], [279], [282], [324], [326].
King's Mountain, [28], [200], [321].
Kings, election of, in Poland, [279].
Know Ye men and Know Ye measures, [177], [243].
Knox, Henry, [114].
Lafayette, [50], [54].
Langdon, John, [229], [269], [274], [276], [283], [346].
Lansing, John, [225], [242], [244], [246], [254], [340], [341].
Laurens, Henry, [2], [22].
Lecky, W., [103].
Ledyard, Isaac, [128].
Lee, Henry, [307], [337].
Lee, Richard Henry, [57], [143], [204], [205], [225], [307], [313], [318], [328], [336], [337], [347].
"Letters from a Federal Farmer," by R.H. Lee, [314].
Lexington, [50], [321].
Lincoln, Abraham, [72], [198], [207].
Lincoln, Benjamin, [181–183], [319], [332].
Livingston, Robert, [36], [340], [350].
Livingston, William, [171], [229].
Locke, John, [64], [225].
Long Lane becomes Federal Street, [331].
Long Parliament, [92], [235].
Lords, House of, [66], [68];
contrasted with Senate, [295].
Lowndes, Rawlins, [332–334].
Loyalists, compensation of, [28–33];
persecution of, [120–130];
did not form, in any proper sense of the word, an opposition party, [308].
Luzerne, Chevalier de, [35], [54].
Lykian League, [249].
Macdougall, Alexander, [107].
McDuffle, George, [60].
McKean, Thomas, [316].
McMaster, J.B., [151].
Madison, James, and the Religious Freedom Act, [81];
on right of coercion, [100];
advocates five per cent. impost, [104];
on the ordinance of 1787, [206];
moves that a convention be held to secure a uniform commercial policy, [214];
succeeds in getting delegates appointed, [220];
his character and appearance, [226], [227];
his journal of the proceedings, [229];
chief author of the Virginia plan, [233], [267];
one of the first to arrive at the fundamental conception of our partly federal and partly national government, [239];
approves at first of giving Congress the power to annul state laws, [241];
opposes the New Jersey plan, [246];
declares that the real antagonism is between slave states and free states, [249], [256];
author of the three fifths compromise, [260], [261];
condemns paper money, [275];
disapproves of election of the executive by the legislature, [279];
approves of a privy council, [299];
supports the Constitution in Congress, [307];
called a boy by the Antifederalists, [313];
supports the Constitution in the Virginia convention, [337];
part author of the "Federalist," [341], [342];
denies that there can be a constitutional right of secession, [344].
Maine as part of Massachusetts, [317].
Manchester, Duke of, [45].
Marbois, François de Barbé, [22], [35].
Marion, Francis, [122].
Marshall, John, [82], [276], [301], [337].
Martin, Luther, [229], [242–244], [246], [249], [250], [254], [275], [322].
Maryland, government of, [65];
insists upon cession of northwestern lands, [93], [192], [195];
paper money in, [170];
message to Virginia, [215];
ratifies the Constitution, [332].
Mason, George, [229], [243], [252], [264], [265], [275], [276], [277], [279], [281], [282], [283], [299], [303], [304], [335], [337].
Massachusetts, government of, [67];
abolishes slavery, [75];
religious bigotry, [76];
on the five per cent. duty, [104];
tries to propose a convention for increasing the powers of Congress, [142];
lays claim to a small part of Vermont, [152];
paper money in, [172–179];
western claims of, [189];
changes her attitude, [221];
local self-government in, [317];
debates on the Constitution, [320–330];
ratifies it, suggesting amendments, [331].
Massachusetts Chronicle, quoted, [120].
Massacre, Boston, [321].
Mayhew, Jonathan, [92].
Meade, William, [79], [83].
Mentor and Phocion, [128].
Mercer, J.F., [274].
Methodists, [85].
Middletown convention, [113].
Mifflin, Thomas, [52].
Minisink, [122].
Mirabeau, Count de, [116].
Mississippi River, attempt to close it, [209–211], [335];
valley of the, [18], [188].
Monroe, James, [216].
Montesquieu, C., [225], [291].
Moonshiners, [334].
Morris, Gouverneur, [108], [166], [228], [242], [251], [261], [264], [269], [273], [276], [279], [282], [303].
Morris, Robert, [108], [167], [228], [312].
Moultrie, William, [143], [334].
Muley Abdallah, [158].
Mutiny act, [321].
Names of persons and places, fashions in, [197].
Nantucket, [163].
Nason, Samuel, [321].
Naval eminence of New England, [20], [139].
Navigation acts, [138–143], [164].
Negroes carried away by British fleet, [131].
Nelson, Samuel, [276].
New Connecticut, [152].
New Hampshire lays claim to Vermont, [151–153];
riots in, [183];
hesitates to ratify the Constitution, [331];
ratifies it, [338].
New Jersey quarrels with New York, [146];
paper money in, [171];
opposes the attempt to close the Mississippi, [211];
instructs her delegates to the Annapolis convention, [217];
her plan for amending the articles of confederation, [245];
ratifies the Constitution, [315].
New Roof, [338].
New York passes navigation and tariff acts directed against neighbouring states, [146];
lays claim to Vermont, [151–153];
paper money in, [170];
western claims of, [190], [193];
defeats the impost amendment, [218–220];
debates on the Constitution, [340–344];
ratifies it, [344];
asks for a second convention, [344];
fails to choose electors, [346].
New York Central Railroad, [212].
Newburgh address, [108–112], [118].
Nicola, Louis, his letter to Washington, [107], [118].
Non-importation agreement, [142].
North, Frederick, Lord, fall of his ministry, [1];
coalition with Fox, [38–42];
his blindness, [41];
his proposals after Saratoga, [91];
his subservience to the king, [297].
North Carolina issues paper money, [169];
cedes her western lands to the United States, [199];
repeals the act of cession, [201];
delays her ratification of the Constitution, [345].
Ohio, [203–206].
Old Sarum, [249].
Old South Church, [321].
Onslow, George, [2].
Ordinance of 1787, [199], [203–206].
Oregon, [60].
Oswald, Richard, [9–14], [22–26], [32], [45].
Paine, Thomas, [50], [55], [191].
Paper currency, [163–179], [205], [218], [273–276].
Parker, Theodore, [264].
Parsons, Samuel Holden, [203].
Parsons, Theophilus, [319], [324].
Parties, formation of, [308].
Paterson, William, [229], [245–248], [255], [258], [274].
Patterson, militia officer in Wyoming, [149].
Payson, Rev. Philip, [322].
Pendleton, Edmund, [336].
Pennsylvania, government of, [65];
first tariff act, [142];
quarrels with Connecticut, [148–150];
paper money in, [170];
opposes the closing of the Mississippi, [211];
contest over the Constitution, [309–314];
ratifies it, [315].
Petersham, scene of Shays's defeat, [182], [319].
Philadelphia, Congress driven from, [112];
Federal Convention meets at, [222];
unparliamentary proceedings in legislature, [311];
celebrates ratification by ten states, [339].
Phocion and Mentor, [128].
Pinckney, Charles, [228], [243], [261], [265], [266], [269], [276], [277], [334].
Pinckney, Cotesworth, [228], [243], [258], [261], [263], [265], [266], [276], [333], [334].
Pitt, Thomas, [44].
Pitt, William, chancellor of exchequer, [16];
denounces the coalition, [39];
defends the treaty, [43];
refuses to form a ministry, [44];
character, [47];
prime minister, [47];
wins a great political victory, [48];
favours free trade with the United States, [136].
Polish kings, election of, [279].
Population as an index of wealth, [257].
Portland, Duke of, [16], [45].
Potomac, navigation of, [213–216].
Poughkeepsie, convention at, [340–344].
Powers granted to federal government, [268].
Presbyterians, [81], [86].
Presidents of Continental Congress, [96].
Prevost's march against Charleston, [27].
Prime minister contrasted with president, [292–294].
Primogeniture, abolition of, [71].
Proprietary governments, [65], [71].
Providence, R.I., barbecue and mob at, [339].
Public lands, [188].
Putnam, Israel, [151].
Putnam, Rufus, [203].
Quebec act, [18].
Quesnay, François, [141].
Quorum, how to make a, [311].
Railroads, political influence of, [60].
Randolph, Edmund, [229], [233], [235], [239], [242], [246], [265], [269], [275], [276], [277], [282], [300], [303], [335], [337].
Rayneval, Gérard de, [21].
Read, George, [242], [274].
Reform, parliamentary, [6].
Religious freedom, progress in, [76–87].
Religious tests opposed by Massachusetts clergymen, [322].
Representation of slaves, [258–262].
Representatives, House of, [236], [252].
Republican party, [238].
Republics, old notion that they must be small in area, [59].
Reserve, Connecticut's western, [194].
Revenue bills, [270].
Revere, Paul, [327].
Revolution, American, its conservative character, [64];
the French, [64], [118].
Rhode Island, government of, [65];
extends franchise to Catholics, [77];
on the five per cent. duty, [104];
paper money in, [172–177];
opposes the closing of the Mississippi, [211];
does not send delegates to Philadelphia, [222];
delays her ratification of the Constitution, [345].
Richmond, Duke of, [2], [16].
Rittenhouse, David, [111].
Rockingham, Marquis of, [4];
instability of his ministry, [5];
its excellent work, [7];
his death, [15].
Rodney's victory over Grasse, [12], [13].
Roman republic not like the United States, [59].
Rousseau, J.J., [64], [117].
Rutgers, Elizabeth, [127].
Rutledge, John, [228], [243], [261], [265], [278], [279], [281], [300], [334].
St. Clair, Arthur, [197], [206].
Saladin and Cœur-de-Lion, [161].
Sandy Hook light-house, [147].
Sargent, Winthrop, [203].
Schuyler, Philip, [126], [146], [151], [193].
Scott, Sir Walter, [153].
Scottish representation in Parliament, [249].
Seabury, Samuel, [84].
Secession, threats of, [211], [218];
no constitutional right of, [344].
Secrecy of the debates in Federal Convention, [230].
Sedgwick, Theodore, [122], [319].
Self-government, [57], [63], [88].
Senate, federal, made independent of lower house, [253];
contrasted with House of Lords, [295].
Senates, origin of, [66].
Seven Years' War, [13],
[188].
Sevier, John, [200].
Shattuck, Job, [180].
Shays rebellion, [180–182], [218], [243], [316], [319], [325].
Sheffield, Lord, protectionist, [137];
on the Barbary pirates, [160].
Shelburne, William, Earl of, his character, [4];
his memorandum on proposed cession of Canada, [11];
prime minister, [16];
approached by Rayneval and Vaughan, [22];
misjudged by Fox, [40];
defends the treaty, [43];
resigns, [44];
his conduct justified by his enemies, [45];
understood the principles of free trade, [4], [134].
Shepard, William, [180], [181].
Sherman, Roger, [229], [243], [250], [255], [267], [274], [276], [279], [283], [299], [313];
his suggestion as to relations of the executive to the legislature, [278], [280], [298].
Shillings, [165].
Ship-building in New England, [137–139].
Shute, Rev. Daniel, [322].
Sidney, Algernon, [64].
Singletary, Amos, [322], [324], [325].
Six Nations, [190], [203].
Slave-trade, foreign, permitted for twenty years, [264], [323], [333].
Slavery in the several states, [72–75], [266];
prohibited in northwestern territory, [205];
discussions about it in Federal Convention, [257–267];
condemned by George Mason, [264].
Slaves, representation of, [258–262];
numbers of, in the several states, [266].
Small states converted to federalism by the Connecticut compromise, [255], [315].
Smith, Adam, [125], [134], [135].
Smith, Capt. John, [191].
Smith, Jonathan, [324–326].
Smith, Melanchthon, [340], [343], [344].
Smugglers, [135].
South Carolina, Episcopal church in, [78], [82];
revokes five per cent. impost, [108];
issues paper money, [169];
absolute need of conciliating her, [259], [260];
makes bargain with New England states, [262–267];
debates on the Constitution, [332–334];
ratifies it, [334].
Sovereignty never belonged to separate states, [90].
Spain, treaty of 1783 with Great Britain, [36];
attempts to close Mississippi River, [208–211], [218], [335].
Spanish dollar, why it superseded English pound as unit of value in America, [166].
Spermaceti oil, [139], [163].
Springfield arsenal, [181], [185].
States, powers denied to, [272].
Stormont, Lord, [45].
Story, Joseph, [276].
Strachey, Sir Henry, [22].
Strong, Caleb, [228], [252], [279], [324], [327].
Succession disputed, [289].
Suffrage, limitations upon, [70].
Sugar trade, [138].
Temple, Lord, [44], [46].
Tennessee, [18], [189], [199].
Thayendanegea, [50].
Thomas, Isaiah, [165].
Thompson, Gen., in Massachusetts convention, [324].
Thurlow, Lord, [5].
Thurston, member of Virginia legislature, [144].
Tithing-men in New England, [76].
Tobacco as currency in Virginia, [165].
Tories, American; see Loyalists.
Tories, British, [42].
Townshend, Thomas, [17].
Trade, barbarous superstitions about, [134].
Travelling, difficulties of, a century ago, [61].
Treaty of 1783, difficulties in the way of, [8];
strange character of, [24];
provisions of, [25–33];
a great diplomatic victory for the Americans, [34], [189];
secret article relating to Florida boundary, [33], [208];
adopted, [45];
news arrives in America, [50];
Congress unable to carry out its provisions, [119–132], [154].
Trespass Act in New York. [123–128].
Trevett vs. Weeden, [176].
Tucker, Josiah, [58], [141].
Tyler, John, the elder, [214], [337].
Union, sentiment of, [55].
Unitarianism, [86].
University men in Federal Convention, [224].
Vaughan, Benjamin, [22], [35].
Vergennes, Count de, [12];
wishes to satisfy Spain at the expense of the United States, [18–21];
thwarted by Jay, [22];
accuses the Americans of bad faith, [33];
tired of sending loans, [104].
Vermont, troubles in, [151–153];
riots in connection with the Shays rebellion, [183].
Vice-presidency, [282].
Victoria, Queen, [293].
Vincennes, riot in, [210].
Violence of political invective, [39].
Virginia, church and state in, [78–85];
on five per cent. impost, [104];
paper money in, [170];
takes possession of northwestern territory, [188–191];
cedes it to the United States, [194];
plan for new federal government, [233–242];
its reception by the convention, [242];
compromise as to representation of slaves, [259–262];
resents the compromise between South Carolina and the New England states, [265];
debates on the Constitution, [335–337];
ratifies it, [337].
"Visionary young men," i.e., Hamilton, Madison, Gouverneur Morris, etc., [318].
Waddington, Joshua, [127].
Walpole, Horace, [16].
Walpole, Sir Robert, [296].
War, the Civil, [55], [256], [262];
contrast with Revolutionary, [101–103];
cost of Revolutionary, [166].
Washington, George, marches from Yorktown to the Hudson River, [51];
disbands the army, [51];
resigns his command, [52];
goes home to Mount Vernon, [53];
his "legacy" to the American people, [54];
on the right of coercion, [100];
urges half-pay for retired officers, [106];
supposed scheme for making him king, [107];
his masterly speech at Newburgh, [110];
president of the Cincinnati, [115];
on the weakness of the confederation, [162];
wishes to hang speculators in bread-stuffs, [164];
disapproves of Connecticut's reservation of a tract of western land, [193];
approves of Ohio Company, [203];
his views on the need for canals between east and west, [212];
important meeting held at his house, [214];
is chosen delegate to the Federal Convention, [221];
president of the convention, [229];
his solemn warning, [231], [303];
his suggestion as to the basis of representation, [252];
asks if he shall put the question on the motion of Wilson and Pinckney, [277];
disapproves of electing executive by the legislature, [279];
sends draft of the Constitution to Congress, [307];
called a fool by the Antifederalists, [313];
approves of amendments, but opposes a second convention, [329];
unanimously chosen president of the United States, [346];
his journey to New York, [349];
his inauguration, [350].
Washington, William, [334].
Watson, Bishop of Llandaff, [83].
Watt, James, [60], [267].
Wayne, Anthony, [50].
Wealth as a basis of representation, [257].
Webster, Daniel, [56], [206], [276].
Webster, Pelatiah, [101], [222].
Weems, Mason, [83].
Wesley, John, [85].
West, Rev. Samuel, [322].
West India trade, [138], [164].
Whigs, British, sympathize with revolutionary party in America, [2].
Whiskey as currency in North Carolina, [165].
White, Abraham, [324].
Whitefield, George, [85].
Whitehill, Robert, [313].
Whitney, Eli, [267].
William the Silent, [55].
Wilson, James, [228], [243], [246], [248], [251], [261], [274], [277], [279], [281], [282], [299], [300], [312], [313], [316].
Witenagemot, [66].
Worcester Spy, [165].
Wraxall's Memoirs, [2].
Wyoming, troubles in, [148–150].
Wythe, George, [228].
Yates, Robert, [225], [242], [244], [246], [254], [340], [341].
Yazoo boundary, [33], [208].