From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
1788 compromise in American politics
The
New York Circular Letter
was a solution reached in a controversy between
Federalists
and
Anti-Federalists
over ratification of the
United States Constitution
. The compromise built on earlier deals like the
Massachusetts Compromise
to call for the use of the Convention provision written into the newly ratified Constitution in order to get the amendments demanded by New York and other states.
Melancton Smith
lead the Anti-Federalists at the New York Ratifying Convention in
Poughkeepsie
.
John Jay
and
Alexander Hamilton
were among the leaders of the Federalists. A majority of the Convention were Anti-Federalists. But after
New Hampshire
and
Virginia
ratified the Constitution, many felt it was no longer practical to insist on amendments before ratifying. With 10 other States having ratified, the Constitution was clearly going into effect, the debate was whether or not New York would be a part of it.
Smith proposed that the States call for a Convention under Article V as a condition of New York's ratification, but Jay and Hamilton altered the proposal to ratification unconditionally, but with the understanding that the Article V Convention procedure would be used. The delegates assigned both Smith and Jay to the committee to draft the letter, though ultimately the draft adopted by the New York Convention was written by John Jay with help from Hamilton and
John Lansing Jr.
The Convention adopted the letter unanimously. Governor of New York and Chair of the Convention
George Clinton
sent the letter to all of the States and championed the proposal in the New York State Legislature to call for the Convention. Virginia and New York were the only two states to call for the Convention. The response in other states varied from outright rejection to consideration only after giving Congress a chance to propose the amendments first.
James Madison
opposed the idea of early amendments, advocating a few years of seeing how the Constitution would run first. However, he believed that if amendments were to be proposed early, especially if some of them went to the heart of the function of Congress before Congress had a chance to demonstrate how well it would work, it would be better if they were proposed by Congress. Madison, a member of the first
United States House of Representatives
, proposed the
Bill of Rights
partially in response to the Convention effort.
References
[
edit
]
- John P. Kaminski, Gaspare J. Saladino, Richard Leffler, Charles H. Schoenleber, Margaret A. Hogan, and Jonathan M. Reid.
"N.Y. Calls For a Second Constitutional Convention"
(PDF)
.
The Documentary History of the Ratification of the Constitution, Volume XXIII: New York, No. 5
. Wisconsin Historical Society Press. Archived from
the original
on 2019-08-06.
{{
cite web
}}
: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (
link
)
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Articles
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Amendments
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Formation
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Clauses
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Interpretation
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Signatories
| Convention President
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New Hampshire
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Massachusetts
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Connecticut
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New York
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New Jersey
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Pennsylvania
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Delaware
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Maryland
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Virginia
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North Carolina
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South Carolina
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Georgia
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Convention Secretary
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Related
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Display
and legacy
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