American Revolution
Creating New State Governments
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f all the achievements of
the Revolutionary era, among the most influential and long-lasting was the
invention of the modern idea of a written constitution. This is a document that
enumerates and limits the powers of government and safeguards the rights of the
people.
Americans were the first
modern people to regard a constitution as
something separate from and
superior to statute law. As such, a constitution Fort Crown Point
could not be drafted by a
legislature. It had to be produced by the people
themselves. A constitution had to be drafted at a
special convention, then ratified by popular vote. The Massachusetts constitution, written by John Adams in 1780, is the
oldest written constitution in continuous existence.
As early as the 1780s,
judges on the state level began to rule that certain legislative acts were
unconstitutional, because they violated provisions of the state constitution.
Massachusetts courts ruled that slavery was illegal in the state because it
violated its constitution.
The new state constitutions
were intended to embody republican principle. The new state constitutions
increased the size of state legislatures (to make them more representative). In
many states, representatives were elected annually. Based on their experience
with royal governors, the new constitutions strengthened the powers of the
legislatures and weakened the powers of governors. Pennsylvania eliminated a
governor altogether, and instead set up an executive committee.
The new constitutions also
sought to eliminate other vestiges of a monarchical society. Taxation was made
more progressive and official monopolies were prohibited. The new constitutions
also reformed inheritance laws. They
outlawed primogeniture—where a father left his property to their eldest son—and
entail—in which property was left to a specific line of descendants.
A guarantee of religious
freedom was viewed as an essential element of republican liberty. Every state
constitution written between 1776 and 1800 included protections for religious
freedom.