Ordinary Americans and the Constitution
by Gary B. Nash
Professor Emeritus of History, UCLA
The Constitution is so honored today, at home and abroad, that it may
seem irreverent to suggest that for a great many ordinary Americans, it
was not what they wished as a capstone of their revolutionary experience.
This is not to say that they opposed the Constitution from beginning to
end. Far from it. Rather, they were alarmed at important omissions in
the Constitution, particularly a Bill of Rights. Many believed that the
Constitution was the work of men of wealth and prestige who meant to submerge
the most democratic features of the American Revolution. This is why historians
are generally agreed that if the Constitution had been put before the
electorate for an up and down vote–a plebescite, in effect–it
would not have been ratified. Considering that the suffrage was limited
to about half of the adult white men (others were not qualified for lack
of property), this would have been a thumping rejection of what was seen
by ordinary people as a conservative, elitist-tinged document.
With this in mind, let’s consider how three large groups–African
Americans, artisans, and small farmers–viewed the Constitution,
and examine why these groups had deep reservations about its ability to
steer the nation forward without compromising the founding principles
of the American Revolution.
African Americans
Not until 1845, after Madison’s long-hidden notes on the debates
of the Constitutional Convention were published, would William Lloyd Garrison,
a fervent abolitionist, call the Constitution a “covenant with death”
and “an agreement with hell” because of the several proslavery
clauses embodied in the document and how the delegates to the convention
put them there. Enslaved African Americans–about one-sixth of the
nation’s population in 1790--knew that well enough, for the Constitution
that began with the lofty words “To create a more perfect union”
did nothing to release them and their children from slavery.
This was obvious as well to free African Americans, though their fragile
position in the northern and Chesapeake states made it difficult for them
to criticize the Constitution once it was ratified. And it was well-known
that among the Antifederalists opposing ratification of the Constitution,
some were disturbed at the proslavery character of the document. One such
person was Luther Martin, attorney general of Maryland, who railed against
delaying the end of the slave trade for twenty years and lamented that
the Constitution did not include a clause “to authorize the general
government from time to time, to make such regulations as should be thought
most advantageous for the gradual abolition of slavery, and the emancipation
of the slaves.” In protesting the fugitive slave clause (Article
IV, Section 2) shortly after ratification, black Americans again signified
their understanding that northern delegates to the Constitutional Convention
had bowed to southern slave owners.
It would take a half-century before Frederick Douglass expressed what
many of his black predecessors latently believed about the Constitution,
and this feeling grew as the number of slaves increased rapidly in the
first half of the nineteenth century. “The Constitution of the United
States–What is it?” asked Douglass. “Who made it? For
whom and for what was it made?” His answer was disquieting for whites
but empowering for blacks: “Liberty and Slavery–opposite as
Heaven and Hell–are both in the Constitution; and the oath to support
the latter is an oath to perform that which God has made impossible. .
. If we adopt the preamble, with Liberty and Justice, we must repudiate
the enacting clauses, with Kidnapping and Slave holding.”
Artisans
Representing perhaps one-tenth of the population, craftsmen ranged across
a great many trades, and they were far from unified in their political
views. Nonetheless, most supported the Constitution. They knew that the
Articles of Confederation left the Continental Congress with no taxing
power, with no “energy,” with no authority to raise an army
to suppress insurrections, either by black slaves or white farmers’
desperate at post-1783 demands for taxes and debt payments that they could
not meet in the midst of a postwar depression. Also, they favored a shift
of power from state legislatures to a federal government because it promised
federal protection for the American-made goods that they produced in competition
with British artisans. Tariff protection, mandated by a stronger central
government, fit their needs for the public to “buy American.”
Yet a great many artisans had concerns about the Constitution. Particularly,
they feared that it would usher in an era where the democratic promise
of the Revolution–both in economic and political terms–would
wither away.
The artisans’ economic concerns centered on equal access to capital,
land, and education and the chance to achieve what they called a “decent
competency.” Believing in the virtuousness of productive labor and
the indispensability of laboring people to the community, many artisans
deplored what they saw as a growing tendency of the rich to feed off the
poor, while casting aspersions on “the sheeplike masses” and
“the vulgar herd.” If the Constitution facilitated the rise
of a super-wealthy commercial elite, the day was not far off before the
small producers’ dream of social justice and a rough economic equality
would be shattered. George Bryan, writing as “Centinel,” put
it plainly. He opposed the Constitution because it played into the hands
of the “aristocratic juntos of the well-born few, who had been zealously
endeavoring since the establishment of their [colonial] constitutions,
to humble that offensive upstart–equal liberty.”
Liberty also meant political rights. The artisans had found their voice
during the revolution, throwing off deference to wealthy leaders, and
coming to play important positions on seaport committees charged with
enforcing boycotts against British products. They had insisted that they
were a part of the body politic–to be enfranchised, allowed to run
for office, and given respect for their service to the community. At the
time of Constitution-making, they were beginning to form mechanic organizations,
which would soon become nodes of political consciousness. All of this
seemed at risk as the ratification debates engaged the public.
In some towns, especially in the interior, artisans and small shopkeepers
fiercely opposed ratification of the Constitution. In Carlisle, Pennsylvania,
for example, reported William Petrikin, an ordinary man, “almost
every day some new society [was] being formed” to block “this
detestable federal conspiracy.” A volunteer militia company which
he led even pledged “to oppose the establishment of the new Constitution
at the risque of our life and fortunes.” Crowd action occurred only
rarely during the ratification process, but sentiments ran strong against
what thousands of ordinary citizens saw as a retreat from the liberties
they had gained during the revolution.
By the late eighteenth century, most artisans had drifted away from the
Federalist Party into the Jefferson-led Democratic-Republican Party because
some of the features of the Constitution that worried them at the time
of its creation came to the fore under the first several Congresses and
the presidencies of Washington and Adams. As one New York City sailmaker
declaimed at a Fourth of July celebration in 1797, “Wherever the
wealthy by the influence of riches are enabled to direct the choice of
public officers, there the downfall of liberty cannot be very remote.”
Proud to live “by the sweat of their brows,” the artisans
passed down their fears of concentrated economic and political power–the
enemy of a society of equal opportunity and social justice—to industrial
laborers who by the 1820s were confronting capital in its expansive, freewheeling
form.
Small Farmers
When Amos Singletary, the rough-hewn farmer from Worcester County, Massachusetts
rose before the state’s elected convention gathered in 1788 to decide
on whether to ratify the Constitution, he spoke without benefit of any
schooling. But standing behind the plow, he had developed a wealth of
feelings and political instincts. Singletary may have appreciated that
a written constitution was in itself a landmark event in the Western world,
and he may have celebrated the fact that conventions of delegates elected
by their constituents were charged with deciding on the wisdom of the
document. These, after all, were breathtaking innovations in putting the
power in the people--or, as was the case in Massachusetts, to give a say
in political matters to about half the white adult males who qualified
through property ownership.
But gnawing at Singletary’s innards was something born of his lifelong
experience with the men of wealth in western Massachusetts. He, like most
debt-ridden farmers tilling marginal lands in New England, had just left
behind a wrenching, blood-filled civil insurrection born out of desperation.
“These lawyers, and men of learning, and moneyed men, that talk
so finely, and gloss over matters so smoothly, to make us poor illiterate
people swallow down the pill,” he sputtered, “expect to get
into congress themselves; they expect to be managers of the Constitution
and get all the power and all the money into their own hands, and then
they will swallow up all of us little folks, like the great Leviathan.
Mr. President; yes just as the whale swallowed up Jonah. This is what
I am afraid of.”
Singletary did not speak for all farmers and probably not for most of
the commercially successful men of the plow. But he spoke for the hardscrabble
families who eked out a living far from commercial markets. Such men toiled
on the frontiers of the new nation, especially in the Appalachian hill
country from Maine to Georgia. As small agricultural producers, they feared
and hated what they regarded as moneyed, parasitical men who did not live
by their own labor but handled money, speculated in land, bore hard on
debtors to whom they made loans, and paid low taxes in relation to their
wealth.
Many ordinary farmers did support the Constitution because they accepted
the Federalists’ arguments that the nation was languishing under
a government with insufficient power to levy taxes for national defense,
conduct a muscular foreign policy, and devise national solutions to other
national problems. The promise of the addition of a Bill of Rights, the
lack of which was a bone in the throat of a majority of people, set at
ease many who feared the aristocratic tendencies of the Constitution and
the transfer of power from state legislatures to a federal Congress. But
decade after decade, usually in times of economic stress, agrarian radicals
would step forward in every part of the expanding nation to seek redress
for grievances that were rooted, in their view, from a narrow, aggrandizing
minority of wealthy Americans who benefited the most from the Constitution.
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