6/Introduction
executive, with Governor Spiro T. Agnew characterizing the existing constitution as
"outdated and restrictive.'"
Significant differences of opinion among delegates to the Constitutional Con-
vention nonetheless prevailed on many issues, and extended discussion ensued on
numerous provisions before consensus was reached. Protracted debate and repeated
attempts to amend certain proposed sections of the new constitution finally
prompted one delegate to observe that he had discovered how to detect when a con-
sensus of the delegates had been reached. It occurred, he said, "when the delegates
begin to beat their heads on the desk, and to scream 'question, question.' "6 The
lengths to which the convention would go in discussing various aspects of the new
constitution is exemplified by the judicial article, which on initial review alone re-
quired five continuous days of debate and elicited sixty-one different amendments.
Despite the overly sanguine hopes of some in the early days of the convention, it
soon became clear that the work of drafting a new constitution would require more
than the allotted ninety days. The convention overwhelmingly approved an exten-
sion to 120 days, the maximum allowed by the enabling legislation.
Day after day the delegates toiled, eventually extending the work week of the
convention to six days, with committee meetings adding to the burden. The conven-
tion continued meeting, with an increased sense of urgency, as Christmas ap-
proached with much yet to be done. At a critical juncture when the draft constitu-
tion was nearing completion, numerous delegates were felled by an outbreak of in-
fluenza of epidemic proportions. Even the weather failed to cooperate, with heavy
snowfalls on several days late in the session stranding delegates and making preser-
vation of the crucial quorum precarious. Despite the difficulties, the delegates com-
pleted their work on 8 January, leaving just enough time for their proposed constitu-
tion to be printed on special paper for the official engrossment ceremony. The sign-
ing occurred in the House of Delegates chamber on 10 January 1967, with each dele-
gate in turn signing three copies of the document that they hoped would set a new
course for the State of Maryland.7
The purpose of this volume is first, to provide index access to the full Debates
of the Constitutional Convention of 1967-1968, and second, to present a finding aid
to the voluminous ancillary published and unpublished materials that constitute the
archives of the Constitutional Convention Commission and the Constitutional Con-
vention. Given the rejection of the proposed Constitution of 1968 by the voters—it
was defeated at the special ratification election on 14 May 1968 by a vote of 367,101
to 284,033—one could fairly ask why an index to the Debates and a finding aid to
the records of the Constitutional Convention Commission and Convention are
needed at all.
An index to the Debates is required, above all, because what occurred on the
floor during the 118 days the convention was in session represented the culmination,
5 Report of the Constitutional Convention Commission, p. ix.
6 Del. Harry E. Taylor, Jr., in Debates of the Constitutional Convention of 1967-1968 (Annapolis: Hall
of Records Commission, 1982), p. 957.
7 For a synopsis of the daily activities of the Constitutional Convention, see Journal of the Constitutional
Convention of Maryland of 1967-1968 (Annapolis: Constitutional Convention of Maryland, 1968).
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