FACTS ON THE
U. S. BILL OF RIGHTS
G'day folks,
Welcome to some facts on the US bill of Rights. The first 10 amendments to the U.S. Constitution, known
collectively as the Bill of Rights, became law on December 15, 1791. Celebrate
its birthday with eight facts about its roots, ratification and legacy.
1.Why was the Bill of Rights tacked onto the Constitution
just three years after its ratification in June 1788? Essentially,
anti-Federalist delegates objected to the proposed draft, arguing that it
provided a framework for a new centralized government but failed to safeguard
individual liberties and states’ rights. They finally agreed to ratify the
Constitution on the condition that Congress amend the document to include these
protections.
2.While drafting the Bill of Rights, James Madison drew
heavily on the Virginia Declaration of Rights, written by George Mason and
ratified shortly before the Constitution of Virginia in June 1776. Considered
the first constitutional protection of individual rights, it also provided a
blueprint for the U.S. Declaration of Independence and France’s Declaration of
the Rights of Man and of the Citizen.
3.Since America’s founding fathers had just spent years
fighting for independence from Britain, it might seem ironic that an English
law—the Bill of Rights of 1689—served as another inspiration for the U.S. Bill
of Rights. The two documents share a number of guarantees, including the right
to petition and protection again “cruel and unusual punishments.”
4.James Madison was an unlikely author of the proposed
amendments that eventually became the Bill of Rights. He initially argued that
the Constitution itself sufficiently restricted the federal government and that
Americans inherently enjoyed natural rights even in the absence of laws
ensuring them. Madison’s mentor Thomas Jefferson, who was then serving as
ambassador to France, helped convince him of their necessity in 1789.
5.Despite its seemingly inclusive wording, the Bill of
Rights did not apply to all Americans—and it wouldn’t for more than 130 years.
At the time of its ratification, the “people” referenced in the amendments were
understood to be land-owning white men only. Blacks only received equal
protection under the law in 1868, and even then it was purely on paper. Women
couldn’t vote in all states before 1920, and Native Americans did not achieve
full citizenship until 1924.
6.The original Bill of Rights included 12 amendments, but
only 10 became law in 1791. One of the omitted articles, which deals with the
size of electoral districts, has yet to be ratified. The other, which prohibits
pay raises for Congress members until the next election takes place, was
ratified in 1992 as the 27th Amendment.
7.George Washington commissioned 14 handwritten copies of
the Bill of Rights—one for each of the original 13 colonies and one for
Congress. Twelve of the originals survive to this day. North Carolina’s copy
disappeared during the Civil War when a Union soldier took it home as a
souvenir; it resurfaced in 2003 thanks to the efforts of an undercover FBI
agent.
8.One hundred fifty years after the Bill of Rights became
law, President Franklin D. Roosevelt called on the American people to observe
December 15 as Bill of Rights Day. Just days after he made his speech, the
Japanese attacked Pearl Harbor and celebrations were cancelled. Though
relatively obscure, it remains a federal holiday.
I'm ...
No comments:
Post a Comment