The Making of the American Constitution Judy Walton

Transcriber: tom carter
Reviewer: Bedirhan Cinar

It is the spring of 1787.

The Revolutionary War has been over for only six years,

and the young United States is still struggling in its infancy.

Uprisings, boundary disputes and the lack of a common vision all plague the newborn country.

In an effort to steady this precarious ship,

the Confederation Congress calls on states to send delegates to the grand Convention,

to begin on May 14 in Philadelphia.

The delegates must draft revisions to the Articles of Confederation,

which would then be considered by the Congress and approved by the states.

Under the terms of the Articles,

all 13 states had to agree to any changes.

Since the purpose of the Convention is just to make recommendations,

not everyone is excited about attending,

and frankly, some think it’s a waste of time.

As men from different parts of the country began to travel down dusty, rugged roads on the way to Philadelphia,

not all states send delegates.

In fact, Rhode Island never even shows up.

On May 14th, only 8 delegates –

not states, but individual delegates –

are present, so they wait.

Finally, on May 25th, the necessary quorum of seven states is acheived.

In all, 55 delegates arrive in Philadelphia over the course of the Convention.

They are all white males, property owners, and the average age is about 44.

Some are slaveholders, some had signed the Declaration of Independence, [James Madison, Roger Sherman]

and almost all are well-educated. [Benjamin Franklin]

Picture the delegates, James Madison and George Washington among them,

sitting in Independence Hall in hot, humid Philadelphia.

They’re all wearing the dress of the day: frock coats, high collars and thick pants.

They vote to keep their discussions secret to encourage honest debate.

But that means the windows are closed, and there is no air conditioning in 1787, not even an electric fan.

and they’ll sit in that sweltering heat, in those heavy clothes, for three months.

Shockingly, they all keep their vow of secrecy.

That could never happen today, not even for an hour-long meeting.

Someone would share “James Madison thinks he’s so smart.

Keyword: articles are dead” via social media,

and the whole thing would be a disaster.

But in 1787, there are no leaks. Not even a drip that hints at what they are doing.

And what they are doing is nothing short of overthrowing the very government that sent them there.

Within a few days, with only a seven-state quorum, and only six of those states agreeing,

a handful of men change the course of history.

They vote to get rid of the Articles of Confederation,

and write a new, more nationalistic document that becomes our Constitution.

The risk is immense.

Everyone on the outside assumes they were working on recommended revisions to the Articles.

It’s an incredible gamble, and even when the Convention presents the signed Constitution on September 17th,

not all delegates endorse it.

The country will argue and debate for two more years

before the document is adopted by the required nine out of 13 states.

But instead of punishing them for their deception,

today we celebrate the wisdom and vision of those men in Philadelphia.

抄写员:汤姆·卡特
审稿人:Bedirhan Cinar

现在是 1787 年的春天。独立

战争结束仅仅六年

,年轻的美国还在襁褓中挣扎。

起义、边界争端和缺乏共同愿景都困扰着这个新生国家。

为了稳定这艘岌岌可危的船

,联邦代表大会呼吁各州派代表

参加将于 5 月 14 日在费城开始的盛大会议。

代表们必须起草对《邦联条例》的修订

,然后由国会审议并由各州批准。

根据条款的条款,

所有 13 个州都必须同意任何更改。

由于大会的目的只是提出建议,

并不是每个人都对参加感到兴奋

,坦率地说,有些人认为这是浪费时间。

随着来自全国不同地区的男性开始在前往费城的路上走上尘土飞扬、崎岖不平的道路,

并非所有州都派出了代表。

事实上,罗德岛甚至从未出现过。

5 月 14 日,只有 8 名代表——

不是州代表,而是个人代表

——出席,所以他们等待。

最后,在 5 月 25 日,达到了七个州的必要法定人数。

在大会期间,总共有 55 名代表抵达费城。

他们都是白人男性,拥有财产,平均年龄在 44 岁左右。

有些是奴隶主,有些签署了《独立宣言》,[詹姆斯麦迪逊,罗杰谢尔曼]

,几乎所有人都受过良好的教育。 [本杰明·富兰克林]

想象一下代表们,其中包括詹姆斯·麦迪逊和乔治·华盛顿,他们

坐在炎热潮湿的费城独立厅。

他们都穿着当天的礼服:工装大衣、高领和厚裤子。

他们投票决定对他们的讨论保密,以鼓励诚实的辩论。

但这意味着窗户是关着的,1787年没有空调,甚至没有电风扇。

他们会穿着厚重的衣服在酷热的天气里呆上三个月。

令人震惊的是,他们都遵守了保密的誓言。

这在今天是不可能发生的,即使是一个小时的会议也是如此。

有人会通过社交媒体分享“詹姆斯麦迪逊认为他很聪明。

关键词:文章已死”

,整个事情将是一场灾难。

但在 1787 年,没有泄漏。 甚至没有一点暗示他们在做什么。

他们所做的无异于推翻将他们送到那里的政府。

几天之内,只有七个州的法定人数,其中只有六个州同意,

少数人改变了历史进程。

他们投票决定废除《邦联条例》,

并编写一份新的、更具民族主义色彩的文件,成为我们的宪法。

风险是巨大的。

外界的每个人都认为他们正在对文章进行推荐的修订。

这是一场令人难以置信的赌博,即使大会在 9 月 17 日提交签署的宪法,也

并非所有代表都支持它。

在该文件被所需的 13 个州中的 9 个通过之前,该国将再进行两年的辩论和辩论。

但今天我们不是因为他们的欺骗而惩罚他们,

而是庆祝费城这些人的智慧和远见。