The Maryland Constitution of 1776

by H.H. Walker Lewis

The Maryland Constitution of 1776 was one of the least revolutionary documents of that revolutionary period. Its frame of government was designed to perpetuate the existing social order minus Crown and Proprietary. It was also remarkable in another respect- It was drafted with great expedition and apparent unanimity by a committee of seven, all of whom had been trained in the law.

In Maryland, unlike some of the other colonies, the American Revolution was not a class war. Patriotism, or the lack of it, was not a matter of affluence, and the change from Proprietary to State government was effected with little social turmoil. It approached the ideal stated by John Adams in a letter of April 16, 1776, to Mercy Otis Warren:

"The most difficult and dangerous part of the business Americans have to do in this mighty contest is to contrive some method for the Colonies to gilde insensibly from under the old govemment into a peaceable and contented submission to the new ones."[1]

No other colony effected the transition with less turbulence.

Three factors were principally responsible: (1) the' quality of the leadership, fumished mostly by lawyers; (2) the personality of the last Proprietary Govemor, Sir Robert Eden; and (3) the conditions created by the Proprietorship.

[1] Warren-Adams Letters, I, 221, Mass. Hist. Soc.; quoted in The Spirit of Seventy-Six, Edited by Henry Steele Commager and Richard B. Morris (N.Y., 1958), 379.


The Proprietorship

The Proprietary charter granted in 1632 by Charles I to Cecil Calvert insulated Maryland from direct control by the British Government. Provincial officials were appointed, not by the Crown, but by the Proprietor. Also, the charter purported to exempt the colony from British taxes. By the beginning of the Revolution, this insulation had been considerably eroded. Nevertheless, Maryland was a proprietorship at the time of the Revolution. Accordingly, the govemmental grievances that mattered most were directed against the Proprietor rather than against Parliament, creating a materially different situation from other colonies.

On some of the earlier colonial issues, the Proprietary officials sided with the colonists. Indeed, the strongest and most effective American attack against the Stamp Tax was that mounted by the Secretary of the Province, Daniel Dulany the younger. Entitled "Considerations on the Propriety of Imposing Taxes in the British Colonies for the Purpose of Raising a Revenue by Act of Pariiament," [2] it was widely read in England as well as in America, and was the ablest of all such documents. In addition to being a high-ranking Proprietary official, Dulany was the leading lawyer in Maryland, and perhaps in all Amenca.

Constitutions stem from grievances. Bills of rights fumish the clearest example of this, but any new frame of government necessarily reflects the defects of the old. In writing the 1776 Constitution the grievances most important to the draftsmen, and therefore to us, were those against the Proprietorship. In addition, it was these that created the strong opposition party that led Maryland through the transition period.

[2] 7 Md. Hist. Mag. (1912)1-27.

p . 2


The party division in Maryland was between those who owed their livings to the Proprietary and those who did not. The former, though powerful, were a small minority, and their ultimate withdrawal from the political scene caused little disruption. Their opponents, on the other hand, grew steadily in numbers, organization, and leadership. By the time of the final crisis and breakdown, they were in a position to take over the mnning of the Province, and did.

The shift was gradual and without convulsion. For more than a year before the Declaration of Independence two governments functioned side by side, each wary of the other and anxious to avoid open conflict, the one inexorably gaining strength, the other fading.

In the light of other colonial events the local situation was fraught with danger and could have become explosive. That it did not was a triumph of leadership, and major credit must go to lawyers, including individuals trained in the law as well as those in active practice. Forming the nucleus of the "Country Party," so named to distinguish it from the Proprietary or "Court Party" centered in the City of Annapolis, they had been drawn together by common grievances extending back some thirty years.They had gained domination of the lower house, or House of Delegates, in the Provincial Assembly. From this they moved into control of the revolutionary Conventions and then fumished the leadership in the organization of the new State.

Except for the Governor, the dominant leaders of the Court or Proprietary Party were Marylanders. Led by the Dulanys, [3] they held the principal offices in the government and made up the Governor's Council that formed the upper house of the Assembly. They were bound to Maryland by ties of family and self-interest. When the crisis came, two members of the Council, George Plater and Daniel of St.

[3] See Aubrey C. Land, The Dulanys of Maryland (Balto., 1955, 1968).

p. 3


Thomas Jenifer, joined the leadership of the Country Party. Equally important was the tact and pleasing personality of the Governor, Sir Robert Eden, who set the tone of the Proprietary Government during the transition.[4]

Sir Robert owed his post to nepotism. He was the brother-in-law of Frederick, the last of the Lords Baltimore and a dismal remnant of the great line of Calverts. Eden was without prior training in government.He had been an army officer in one of the royal regiments in which commissions were bought rather than earned, and his tastes had run to high living. Nevertheless, he proved the perfect person for the post. Humorous, gracious, and likable, he mixed easily with Marylanders of both parties. He participated with enthusiasm in their hilarious goings on in the Homony Club, [5] a semi-intellectual group that wrote bad poetry, played jokes on each other, and had fun generally.He entertained with ease and without formality.

[4] See Bernard C. Steiner, Life and Administration of Sir Robert Eden (Balto., 1898; JHU Studies, XVI, Nos. 7-8-9).

[5] The Homony Club included eading lights of both the Proprietary and Country Parties, providing a common meeting ground in which friendly discussion and humor could soften the acerbities of political differences. In his Reminiscences of an American Loyalist (Boston, 1925), the Rev. Jonathan Boucher, rector of St. Anne's, who thought Annapolis "the genteelist town in North America" (p. 65), called the Homony Club "the best club in all respects I have ever heard of, as the sole object of it was to promote innocent mirth and ingenious humor" (p. 67). Of Sir Robert Eden he said: "With all his follies and foibles, which were indeed abundant, he had such a warmth and affectionateness of heart that it was impossible not to love him" (p. 67).

p. 4


Perhaps too much so, if we may believe the gossip that Charles Carroll of Carrollton relayed to his cousm, Charles Carroll, Barrister, while the latter was on a trip to England. In a letter of August 9, 1771, he'wrote:

"The Major tells me he has wrote you lately. I suppose he has given you an account of his and DeButts rastling at the Governor's and some other particulars of that drunken frolic. Mrs. Eden was so much alarmed (as it is said) at the disturbance they made in the house that she miscarried."[6]

Eden possessed to a remarkable extent two of the greatest of all public virtues, tolerance and common sense. At the height of the crisis he wrote the- Earl of Dartmouth, British Secretary of 'State for the Colonies:


"It hasever been by endeavor, by the most soothing
measures I could safely use, and yielding to the storm when
I could not resist it, to preserve some hold on the helm of
government, that I might steer; as long as it should be
possible, clear ~of those shoals, which all here must sooner
or later, I fear, get shipwrecked upon."7

For contrast we need only look next door to Lord Dunmore, Royal
Govemor of Virginia. When opposed, he had arbitrarily seized the
colonists' gunpowder, promised freedom to their slaves and indentured
servants, and conducted a campaign of arson and pillage against the
plantations that could be reached by his fleet.








6 32 Md. Hist Mag. (1937) 20(>Ol. The "Major" was Daniel of
St. Thomas Jenifer.


~ Steiner, Eden, 94-95.



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The Country Party

Patriarch and recognized leader of the Country Party at the time
of the Revolution was Matthew Tilghman (1718-1790), whom J.
Thomas Scharf in his History of Maryland characterized as "one of
therichest andworthiest citizens that Talbot County has ever
known."8 Without formal training in the law, he had been a justice
of the Talbot County Court for more than thirty years. He had
served almost as many in the Provincial House of Delegates and was
Speaker in 1773 and 1774, the last two years of its existence. He
presided over five of the seven Conventions that gradually took over
the government of the Province from 1774 to 1777, including the
one that created the Constitution of 1776. In addition, he was a
delegatetothe Continental Congress, and was on most of the
important revolutionary committees in Maryland, including the one
that drafted the new Constitution.

At the time of the Declaration of Independence, Tilghman was
58 and belonged to an earlier generation than most of the other
revolutionary leaders in Maryland. Closest to his age in the group that
drafted the Constitution was his son-in4aw, Charles Carroll, Barrister,
five years his junior. At the core of the revolutionary leadership were
the individuals we will meet as members of this group. Ml of them
were lawyers or trained in the law. Those other than Tilghman, and
their ages at the time of the Declaration of Independence, were:

Charles Carroll, Barrister (1723-1783), 53
Charles Carroll of Carrollton (1737-1832), 38
-Samuel Chase (1741-1811), 35
Robert Goldsborough (1733-1788), 42
Robert T. Hooe (1743-1809), 33
Thomas Johnson (1732-1819), 43

8 J Thomas Scharf, History of Maryland (1879), II, 76.

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William Paca (1740-1799), 35

George Plater (1735-1792), 40


The two Charles Carrolls have often been confused, a mistake
compounded by the fact that each was the son of another Charles
Carroll, and that all four maintained residences in Annapolis. As they
played keyparts in the creation of the Constitution, it seems
desirable to differentiate them at the outset.


Charles Carroll, Barrister,9 received this appellation because he
had beenadinittedtothe English bar in1754 after study at
Cambridge University and the Middle Temple in London. His father,
Dr. Charles Carroll (1691-1755), had at one time been a physician
and for fsfteen years was a leader of the Country Party in the House
of Delegates. Upon his death, the Barrister was elected in his place,
andbecame,likehim,astaunchandableopponent of the
Proprietary, although a friendly one. Both had given up the active"
practice of their professions and had prospered as merchants and
investors. Among their profitable ventures was an interest in the
Baltimore Iron Works, operated in partnership with the other Carrolls
and -the Dulanys.


The two Carroll families were distantly related, but upon coming
to America Dr. Charles had renounced the Catholic faith that they
had shared in Ireland, and had become a Protestant. As a result he
and his son were' not disqualified from holding office and taking an
active part in political life. Among other things, the Barrister presided
over the Maryland Convention of May 8, 1776.


Although trained in the law, the Barrister once seriously ruffled
the feathers of Colonel John Tayloe of Richmond by asking him to


~See W. Stull Holt, "Charles Carroll, Barrister: The Man," in 32
MW Hist. Mag. (1936) 112-26. This and succeeding issues of the
Magazine contain many of his letters, although none about the 1776
Constitution. His Baltimore home, "Mount Clare," is still one of the
show places in the City.

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forward a claim to some honest attorney, "if any such there be." The
Colonel expressed such indignation at this slur on his fellow Virginia
lawyers that the Barrister tried to placate him by writing: "When I
hinted at the honesty of Attorneys, I assure you I did not intend to
apply it to those of Virginia only but to our whole fraternity."10 We
doubt that the Colonel was mollified.

Charles Carroll of Carrollton1 1 used the name of his estate in
Frederick County to differentiate himself from other Carrolls. He even
signed himself this way in letters to his father, who for a like reason
was sometimes known as "of Doughoregan," the family estate outside
of what is now Ellicott City. Like the Barrister, Charles of Carrollton
had studied abroad and had attended the Middle Temple, but he had
not been adrnitted to the bar. As a Catholic he was disqualified from
voting, holding office, or practicing law in Maryland prior to the
Revolution, and he did not practice thereafter.

The other members of the Committee that drafted the 1776
Constitution were also lawyers or trained in the law. Like most
members of the bar of that day, they engaged in farming and other
income-producing activities. This was fortunate, as during much of the
Revolution the courts were closed and the pickings from practice
were slim. They were an able and distinguished group. Three were
signersoftheDeclarationof Independence(Charles Carrollof
Carrollton,Samuel Chase, and William Paca); three later became
governors of Maryland (Johnson, Paca, and Plater); and two became
justices of the U.S. Supreme Court (Johnson and Chase).
10 31 Md. Hist. Mag. (1936) 317.
~~ A considerable amount has been written about Charles of
Carrollton,especially in the present bicentennial year. The most
complete biography is still Kate Mason Rowland's two volumes, The
Life of Charles Carroll of Carrollton, 1737-1832 (N.Y., 1908). The
-periodwith which we are chiefly concerned is particularly well
covered in the illuminating and readable biographical sketches by Sally
Mason, Ronald Hoffman and Edward C. Papenfuse in - the Balto.
Museum of Art Exhibition Catalogue on C C of C, His Family, and
His MW (Balto., 1975).

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Proprietary Grievan&es12

The grievances against the Proprietorship not only explain some
of the provisions of the 1776 Constitution but, what is even more
important, help us to understand the influences that united the
Country Party, and the Province behind its leadership. Without such
unity and leadership, it is idle to think that the 1776 Constitution
couldhavebeenadopted with so littleturmoilandonsuch
conservative terms. At the time with which we are concerned, the
major grievances fell into two categories: (1) the exorbitance of the
fees charged by Proprietary officials for governmental services; and (2)
the poll taxes collected from all inhabitants, regardless of religious
belief, for the support of the clergy of the Church of England.










1 2 For background material, see especially: Charles Aibro Barker,
The Background of the Revolution in Maryland (New Haven, 1940),
and Philip Axtell Crowl, Maryland During and After the Revolution
(Balto., 1943; JHU Studies, LM, No. 1), which picks up more or less
where Barker leaves off. Both are top-flight and readable. Other useful
references include: John V. L. McMahon, An Historical View of the
Government of Maryland (Balto., 1831); Elihu S. Riley, A History of
the General Assembly of Maryland 1635-1904 (Balto., 1905); Elisha
P. Douglass, Rebels and Democrats (Chapel Hill, 1955), the Maryland
portion of which draws heavily on Crowl; and Richard Walsh, "The
Era of Revolution," Chapt. II in Maryland, A History 1632-1974
(Balto., 1974).


 9

Proprietary Fees

Proprietary officials were paid by fees on the transactions of
theiroffices,includingreal estateactivities,tobaccoinspection,
controlof shipping, executionof documents,thecollectionof
Proprietary dues and rentals, etc. With the growth of the colony the
volume of transactions multiplied, and fees that originally may have
been reasonable came to yield an excessive renumeration. The offices
became plums that the Proprietor could hand out to his favorites or
use to purchase the loyalty of local leaders, such as the Dulanys.

The situation was aggravated by the deterioration of the later
Lords Baltimore. They were absentee landlords primarily interested in
squeezing the greatest possible profit from the Province. Guality hit
bottom with Frederick, the Sixth Lord, who ruled the Province
during the critical period from 1751 to 1771 and upon his death
transferred the succession to his illegitimate son, Henry Harford.
Underthemthefmancial burden grew beyondreason,making
Maryland one of the most heavily taxed of all the colonies.

The Houseof Delegates, elected by local freemen, asserted
legislative power over all fees and taxes. This was disputed by the
Proprietor. In any event, affnmative action by the House could be
negated at any one of three levels: by the Council, which was
appointed by the Proprietor and acted as the upper house in the
Assembly; by the Governor individually; and by the Proprietor. Once
a tax law or fee schedule got on the books, there was nothing the
House could do about it over the objection of the others unless and
until it expired, if it ever did.

Despite its subordinate role, the House of Delegates possessed
considerable bargaining power. Laws could not be enacted without its



 10

participation~andwhentheProprietoror the Council wanted
5~mething the House could demand concessions. In 1747, when a
tobacco inspection law was found essential in order to place Maryland
in a ~~mpeiltive position with Virginia, the House forced a reduction
of official fees and poll taxes as the price of ~ooperalion. In 1770
this law expired and the House sought to exact a fursher reduction.
This time the Govern0r refused. Instead, he sent the House members
home, as was his right, and then reinstated the existing fee schedule
by proclamation.


At stake was the cherished principle that British citizens could
notbetaxedwithouttheirconsentor thatof their elected
~presentatives. It was this issue that triggered the fusal great crisis in
ProprietarY affairs just prior to the Revolution.































 11
 The~PoII Tax


The 1702 law establishing the Church of England in Maryland
divided the Province into parishes and entitled the rector of each to
forty pounds of tobacco annually from every resident. This was
pay able as a poll tax and was collected by the sheriff under the
penalties of the law, including imprisonment for non-payment. At
the time of the Revolution there were forty-four parishes and the
more populous yielded a princely sum.

The tax was not limited to members of the Church of England.
It extended to Puritans, Catholics, Quakers, Mennonites, and others;
even to atheists, if there were any such. To be forced to support
religiousbeliefsand practices that they detested was gall and
wormwood.

Nor were the recipientsof thislargessealways beyond
reproach. In 1714 Govemor Hart wrote the Bishop of London, who
had jurisdiction over the Church in America, that while there were
some worthy persons among the clergy of Maryland, "I am sorry t9
represent to your Lordship that there are some whose education and
morals are a scandal to their profession."1 ~ Scharf in his History of
Maryland refers to them by such unflattering terms as drunkards and
bigamists, and states that in 1734

"There were 36 parishes in the Province and the livings
would average 200 pounds sterling per annum, the most
valuable Church holdings upon the Continent and filled with
the greatest proportion of profligate incumbents."' 4

13 Quoted in Scharf, Maryland, II, 31.

14 Scharf, Maryland, II, 31.


 12

Time did not improve the situation. In 1753 the Rev. Thomas
Cradock, rector of St. Thomas parish in Baltimore County, and one
-of the "worthy" ones, in urging clerical discipline, called two of his
fellow clerics "monsters of wickedness," adding that one had fallen
into a fire while drunk and bumed to death, and another had almost
certainly been guilty, though unpunished, of murdering his wife.1 ~


Top performer, however, was the Rev. Bennet Allen, who had
been of comfort to the Sixth Lord Baltimore during the latter's trial
for rape. Allen arrived in Maryland in 1776 with instructions to the
Govemor to give him the best church living available. When assigned
St. James' Parish, near Annapolis, yielding 300 pounds steriing a year
he expressed dismay. He told Samuel Chew, head of the vestry (also,
father-in-law of William Paca) that it would scarcely keep him in
liquor, and added: "You have a wife, but it will cost me something
considerable to enjoy the pleasures you are possessed oft"1 6


At the time, the richest parish in the Province was All Saints,
which comprised most of Frederick County. The westward flow of
population had swollen its poll tax to the incredible sum of 1,000
pounds steriing a year. It had also made subdivision essential from the
standpoinf of clerical management, and plans had been made to split
it.This was awaiting only the decease of the then venerable rector,
theRev. Thomas Bacon,17who picked this critical moment to
become fatally ill. Allen, hearing of this, demanded and received the
assignment of the parish while Bacon was still alive and, over the
objections of the vestry took possession of the church on the day of




1 S Barker, Background of Revolution, 276.


16 Barker, 283, note 62.


17 The Rev. Thomas Bacon is best known to lawyers as one of
the ear!y compilers of the laws of the Province.




 13

the funeral. The following Sunday, brandishing a pistol from the
pulpit, he swore to shoot anyone who tried to remove him. His
militant evangelism was a sufficient deterrent. No one tried. He then
betook himself to Philadelphia to enjoy the amenities of city life
while a hired curate took over his parochial duties. 1 6


























18 For more on the Rev. Bennett Allen, see Josephine Fisher in
38 Md: Hist. Mag. (1943) 299-322, 39 Md: Hist. Mag. (1944) 49-72.
Among others with whom Allen feuded were the Dulanys, and many
years later he killed Lloyd Dulany in a duel in Hyde Park, London.
See Land, Duianys, 328-29.


 14

The 1770 Impasse
The effect of the eariier legislative compromise, in 1747, had
been to incorporate the official fee schedule and the poll tax into the
Tobacco Inspection Law. The expiration of this in 1770, and the
ensuing impasse, created a curious situation. The official fees were left
without statutory sanction, whereas the poll tax reverted from the
compromise rate of 30 pounds of tobacco per annum to the original
rate of 40 pounds. Faced with this and the Governor's proclamation
continuing the official fee schedule, there was little the House could
do but seethe. Instead, the controversy moved to the public press.


The fwst blast was aimed at the poll tax. On September 28,
1770, someone who signed himself "Church of England Planter"
issued a printed handbill attacking the constitutionality of the "Vestry
Act" establishing the Church in Maryland. The clergy had been riding
him "like an ass," he said, and he proposed not only to reduce the
poll tax to 10 pounds but also to empower vestries to discipline, and
if need be discharge, their rectors. The obvious design was to start a
ruckus,and the clergy responded with zest. Scharf's History of
Maryland calls it "the most exciting newspaper war that was ever
known in the Province."19


It is within the realm of possibility that the "Church of England
Planter" was one of the Country Party lawyers. In any event the legal
issue was soon joined. Samuel Chase and William Paca wrote letters to
theMarylandGazettequestioningthevalidityoftheChurch
Establishment,20andthenjoinedtogetherinalongrunning


19 Scharf, Maryland, II, 122.

20 Maryiand Gazette (Annapolis), Aug. 6 and Sept. 10, 1772.





 15

newspaper debate21 with the Rev. Jonathan Boucher, rector of St.
Anne's in Annapolis and one of the most able of the churchmen.
What particularly incensed the man of the cloth was that Chase and
Paca were members of his vestry. He regarded them as ecclesiastical
traitors and his letters grew wordier and wordier. Finally, Chase and
Paca prefaced one of their thrusts with the following:

"Is not the care of souls a load sufficient?
Are not your holy stipends paid for that?
Were you not bred apart from woridly noise,
To study souls, their cures, and their diseases?
The province of the soul is large enough-
To fill up every cranny of your time
And leave you much to answer, if one wretch
Be damned by your neglect."22

It was a high-toned controversy, but as might be expected, the
lawyers ran out of words long before the man of God.

Later, in1774, a test case was taken to court by Joseph
Harrison, a delegate from Charles County.23 Upon his refusal to pay
the poll tax he was arrested and threatened with imprisonment by
Richard Lee, Sheriff of the County, whom he then sued for sixty
pounds damages. The jury brought in a verdict for the amount asked.
Chase, Paca, and Johnson represented Harrison, and the Sheriff was
represented by Thomas Stone, later to be a signer of the Declaration
of Independence. It is not often that a single case has boasted
counsel who later were to provide three Signers, two govemors, and
two Supreme Court Justices.


21 Maryland Gazette, Dec. 31, 1772; Jan. 14, Feb. 3, 25, Mar.
4, 11, 18, 25, Apr. 1, 8, 15, 29, 1773.

22 Maryland Gazette, Mar. 18, 1773.

23 Maryland Gazette, Mar. 4, 1773; see also account in Scharf,
Maryland, II, 172 note 1.

 16

Chase and Paca were close in age and had become friends while
 studying law in Annapolis. In his1831 Historical View of the
 Government of Maryland, John V. L. McMahon tells us that


"Concurring in their general views of the public rights and
policy, the foundation was there laid of an intimacy and a
personal attachment... which endured throughout life. Mr.
Paca, more bland and conciliatory in his demeanor, was
found side by side with Mr. Chase in the transactions of
thisperiod,as - thefriendofprivatelifeandthe
fellow4aborer in public duties."24


 -Johnson and Paca had both studied in the Annapolis office of
 Stephen Bordley, the leading Maryland lawyer of his day, and Paca
 --had later continued his studies at the Inner Temple in London.


Chase was the "enfant terrible" of the group. The fact that his
 --father was rector of St. Paul's in Baltimore and would be damaged,
 did not deter him from attacking the poll tax. Like Paca, he was a
 signer of the Declaration of Independence, and an early biographer of
 -~that group described him as "a bom leader of insurrection." The
 Mayor and Aldermen of Annapolis phrased it somewhat differently.
 They denounced Chase as a "busy, restless incendiary, a ringleader of

- - mobs, a foul-mouthed and inflaming son of discdrd." He retumed
 the compliment by calling them "despicable Pimps and Tools of
 Power, emerged from Obscurity and basking in proprietarySun-
 shine."2 ~







24 McMahon, 393-94.


2 5 Neil Strawser, "Samuel Chase and the Annapolis Paper War,"

- - 57 Md. Hist. Mag. (1962) 177, at 191. See also, Francis F. Beime,
 "Sam Chase, 'Disturber' ", 57 Md. Hist Mag. (1962) 78-89.



 17

The Carroll-Dulany Debate

The battle in the press over the Governor's fee proclamation
gained even greater notoriety than the poll tax outburst. It also
brought to the fore, out of political obscurity, one of the Country
Party's most effective leaders, Charles Carroll of Carrollton. Wealthy,
well educated, incisive and charming, his adherence to the Catholic
faith had excluded him from the practice of law and from politics.
But he could write, and he did so now, at white heat. His
opportunitycamewhenDanielDulanysonghttooverpower
opposition to the fee proclamation with a cleveily concocted dialogue
between a "First Citizen" and a "Second Citizen." In vaudeville
parlance, the First Citizen was a "straight man." He raised a series of
objections to the validity of the fee proclamation, which the &econd
Citizen then proceeded to demolish with crushing thoroughness.

It was an able and powerful performance, and for a time after
its publication in the Maryland Gazette of January 7, 1773, it seemed
to have foreclosed further debate. Then on February 4 a sequel
appeared in which the First Citizen retumed to the fray, this time
with blood in his eye. It was Charles Carroll of Carrolton, who had
cunningly stepped into the shoes that Dulany had so obligingly left
vacant. He argued with such verve and skill that Dulany felt
compelled to reply, this time as "Antilon."

Thusbeganoneofthetrulygreatdebatesoncolonial
constitutional principles. It extended through eight issues of the
Gazette during the winter and spring of 1773, making each a






 18

sell~ut.26The thrusts and rejoinders are too wordy and full of
learned allusions for modem taste, but at the time they aroused
enormous public interest. "In the result," says McMahon

"Mr.Carroll certainlyobtained a decided victory. The
electionsheld in May 1773 . . .resulted in the complete
triumph of the anti-proclamation party."27


Even more important from our standpoint, the debate catapulted
Carroll into a position of popular leadership.


There had been bad blood between the Carrolls and the Dulanys,
leading at one time to the threat of a duel between Charies of
Carrollton and Lloyd Dulany, Daniel's younger brother.28 It must
have given vast satisfaction to Charies to take on the great Daniel,
champion of the Proprietary Party and acknowledged leader of the
bar.


Dulany was not alone in backing the Governor. Anonymous
letters stigmatized Carroll in unflattering terms such as "Jesuitical
hairsplitter." The controversy also brought a letter in support of the
proclamation from John Hammond, respected Annapolis lawyer and
former member of the House of Delegates. This backfired. Hammond
was answered by a devastating attack in the Gazette from Chase,
Paca, and Johnson.Many have consideredtheir joint letter of
September 3, 1773, to be the strongest statement written on the
subject.


26 Maryland Gazette, Jan. 7, Feb. 4, 18, Mar. 11, Apr. 8, May
6, June 3' July 1. There have been several publications of the
combined letters, the most recent being pntitled Maryland and the
Empire, 1 773. The Antilon-First Citizen Letters, Peter S. Onuf, Editor
(Balto., 1974).

27 McMahon, 392.

28 See 10 Md: HisL Mag. (1917) 276-80.



 19

It remained for the Revolution to end the fee controversy by
eliminating the Proprietary authority to collect. But the clerical issue
was compromised at the 1773 General Assembly. In exchange for House
passage of the Tobacco Inspection Law, the Governor and Council
agreed to a continuation of the poll tax at its reduced rate, plus a
provision giving taxpayers the option to pay four shillings' in current
moneyinsteadof thirtypoundsof tobacco.It is difficult to
determine the precise monetary effect, but the clergy complained that
they had been thrown to the wolves.





























 20

Colonial EVents
In part because of its preoccupation with Proprietary grievances,
 Maryland had remained outside the main stream of colonial protest
 against Crown and Pariiament. The Townshend Acts, although bitteriy
 resented elsewhere, had little local impact. But the eariier Stamp Tax
 and the continuation of the tax on tea aroused strong emotions. News of
 the Boston Tea Party inspired an Annapolis mob to burn the locally
 owned ship Peggy Stewart for the sin of carrying such a cargo.29 But
 it was not until the British closed the port of Boston that outside
 events took center stage. In the words of Johns Hopkins historian,
 Prnfessor Barker,- when the Boston Port Act was printed in the

- - MarylandGazetteonMay26,1774,"theneWs - galvanized
 --Maryland."30


If Parliamentary anger could lead to such brutal punitive action,
 then all the colonies were in jeopardy. It unified the spirit of
 resistance, and when a call went out for a Continental Congress,
 Maryland was quick to respond. To elect delegates, the Country Party
 organized a Provincial Convention. It was virtually an extension of the
 House of Delegates and met June 22, 1774, with Speaker Matthew
 Tilghman in the chair. To represent Maryland in Congress it elected
 -him,Thomas Johnson,Robert Goldsborough, William Paca, and
 Samuel Chase.


The Convention was wholly outside the Proprietary framework
 and derived its authority directly from the people. One Convention


29 As to the Peggy Stewart affair, see 5 Md. Hist. Mag. (1910)
 23545; William Eddis, Letters from America, Aubrey C. Land, Ed.
 (Cambridge,Mass.,1969), 91-97; Ronald - Hoffman, ASpritof
 Dissension (Balto., 1973)133-36.

30 Barker, 369.


 21
then led to another until there was a total of seven. Accretmg power
as they proceeded, they created and financed a militia and assembled
military supplies; they set up machinery to enforce non-importation
agreements; and in addition they elected a Council of Safety to
exercise executive authority. Bit by bit, governmental authority was
drained away from the Proprietary and into the hands of the Country
Party.31

The process was gradual, and the leaders continued to pay
deference to the Governor as the titular head of the Province. He
remained in Annapolis until the eve of independence. He had the
good sense not to resist forcibly what he could not successfully
oppose.Mutualrestraintand  courtesy  kept the peace, and the
transition was not merely bloodless, it was amicable.

The  Virginia experience was very different. There, Govemor
Lunmore was conducting a naval war of his own against his former
subjects,  attacking plantations along  the  Bay  and rivers, burning
houses, slaughtering live stock, and carrying off slaves. The Virginians
fought back, and in the spring of 1776 intercepted a letter being
relayed to Governor Eden from Lord George Germain in England.
This  thanked  Eden  for information he had sent to the British
Govermnent, and indicated that he was expected to assist in projected
operations against the colonies. Upon reading this, General Charies
Lee, who had taken command in Virginia, issued orders for Eden's
arrest. So did the Continental Congress.

No Convention was meeting at the time, and these orders were
routed to the Council of Safety. Instead of complying, a committee
headed by Charles Carroll, Barrister, interviewed the Govemor. Eden
assured them that the information he had furnished to the British was


31 John Archer Silver, The Provisionni Government of Maryland
1774-1777 (Balto.,~l895; JHU Studies, MI).



 22

not hostile, and the Comrnittee's reaction was one of friendship for
the Governor and of resentment at being ordered to imprison him. A
letter written by William Eddis, alde to Sir. Robert, describes the
outcome:


"The council of safety acted on this critical occasion with
the  utmost  moderation  and  delicacy.  They  avoided
proceeding  with  that  precipitate  vigor  so  strenuously
enjoined, and only requlred him to give his parole that he
would not take any measures for leaving the' continent till
after the meeting of the next convention."32


The Convention reassembled May 8, 1776, with Charies Carroll,
Barrister presiding in place of Tilghman, who was attending Congress.
On May 25 it delegated a committee to inform Sir. Robert that in
the interest of all concerned his departure was absolutely necessary.
Until he left on June 23  aboard the British frigate Fowey, he
remained at liberty, and he was given a friendly send-off.























~ ? Eddis, Letters, 147




 23

 Independence



Until this time most of the Maryland leaders had opposed a
complete break with the mother country. The prevailing hope was for
reconciliation, and as late as May 21, 1776, the Convention voted
unanimously  to  instruct its  delegates  in  Congress to  oppose  a
declaration of independence. Then, swiftly, the tide tumed. On June
28, again by unanimous vote, the Convention authorized its delegates
"to concur with the other united colonies, or a majority of them, in
declaring the united colonies free and independent states."

Some have given credit for this about-face to Samuel Chase and
Charles Carroll of Carrollton, the most zealous of the Maryland
leaders for independence. They had been sent to Quebec on an
unsuccessful mission to persuade the Canadians to make common
cause with the other colonies. When they got back to Philadelphia on
June 11, the drive for independence was reaching its clirnax, and they
returned to Maryland to compaign for it. Undoubtedly they played a
part in the result, but there were also other factors.

William Eddis attributed the sudden shift in Maryland opinion to
a different cause. Governor Eden had boarded the Fowey on June 23,
leaving his baggage and provisions ashore to be picked up the next
day. During the night a deserting militiaman and some escaping
servants sought refuge on the Fowey. When this fact became known
their return was demanded but was denied by Captain Montague of
the Fowey. Rightly or wrongly, this was attributed to Governor Eden.
It was so strongly reminiscent of the hated Lord Dunmore who, upon
leaving Williamsburg (also aboard the Fowey) had promised freedom
to all slaves and indentured servants who would turn against their
masters,  that Annapolitans gathered in rage. They prevented the




 24

loading of Governor Eden's personal belongings, and he was forced to
leave without them. Eddis, who was still in Annapolis, wrote:


"This incident, inconsiderable as it may appear, will operate
strongly against those who have hitherto restrained the
impetuosity of the popular zeal. The delegates in Congress
for  this province have been instructed to oppose the
declaration of independence; but it now appears almost a
general opinion that Maryland will coincide in every measure
which the uniting colonies may think essential for the
interest and happiness of the general communty."33


In addition to these factors, Maryland was one of the last
hMd~uts against the independence fever that had been sweeping the
country. Its delegates in Congress had been under attack for their
seeming intransigence, and there was serious concern that the Province
would be left alone in its stand. Its delegates in Congress now favored
united action, including Thomas Johnson and others who previously
had  opposed  a  declaration  of independence. They returned to
Maryland to urge it, and their combined voices carried the Convention
to unanimity.34















~~ Eddis, Letters, 164.


~~ For an excellent, detailed description of the events leading up
to  independence,  see  Herbert  E.  KIingelhofer,  "The  Cautious
Revolution:  Maryland  and  the Movement Toward Independence;
1774-1776," 60 Md. Hisfl Mag. (1965) 261-313.



 25

  The Call for a ConstitutiOnal ConVention

As a corollary to independence came the need for a permanent
form of government. On July 3, 1776, the Convention

 "Resolved, that a new Convention be elected for the
express purpose of forming a new government, by the
authority of the people only, and enacting and ordaining all
things for the preservation, safety, and general weal of this
colony."

It called local elections for Thursday, August 1 and appointed
judges  of election  throughout  the  Province.  For  this purpose,
Frederick County was split into three districts, soon to become
Frederick, Montgomery, and Washington Counties. Each county, and
each district of Frederick, was to elect four delegates. In addition,
and for the first time, Annapolis and Baltimore Town were each
accorded two delegates of their own, separate from their counties,
bringing the total number of delegates to 76.

The property qualifications that had been in force under the
Proprietary were expressly made applicable (except in Annapolis, for
which there were special rules). These limited voting to male freemen
over twenty~ne who owned fifty acres of land or had visible
property of the value of forty pounds steriing. It has been claimed
that these restrictions disqualified half the otherwise potential voters.
In the existing revolutionary frame of mind they caused a political
uproar, especially among the militia. They felt that if they were to be
asked to figf\t they should be allowed to vote, and they were now
greatly enlarged and well organized.





 26

When the Constitutional Convention met at Annapolis on August
14, 1776, Samuel Chase, Chairman of the Coinmittee on Elections,
reported that  four of the subdivisions had rebelled against the
property qualifications. An unruly crowd led by militiamen had
blocked the Kent County election altogether. In the face of like
demonstrations in Prince George's, Queen Anne's, and the lower
district of Frederick, all taxable individuals bearing arms had been
pernutted to vote. In a crucial decision the Convention stood fIrm,
and by vote of 49 to 10 ordered a new election in each such area.35


As it turned out, all but one of the twelve unseated delegates
were returned on the second round. But the revolt was symptomatic.
The voting issue split the State along economic lines and created a
power base for dissent. If the long struggle with the Proprietary had
not given the conservative leadership of the Country Parry such
strength  and cohesion, it is most unlikely  that it could have
maintained its ascendancey. And if it had not, the results of the
Convention would surely have been very different.


Next to Tilghman, the most respected of the Country Party
leaders was Thomas Johnson, later to be the first Governor of the
State. Charles Carroll of Carrollton, and no doubt others as well,
thought  his  participation  in  the  Convention  indispensable.  But
organized  opposition in Anne Arundel County had blocked his
election. Instead, he was serving as a senior officer with the militia at
its "Flying Camp "36 in Frederick County.

~~ The  ten  dissenters  included  Deye,  Fitzhugh,  Hammond,
Ridgely, and Williams, who throughout the Convention were the
leaders, and the hard core, of the opposition to the drafting
Conunittee's program. For descriptions of their activities see Hoffman,
A Spfrit of Dissension, as indexed under individual names and under
"Hall-Hammond Faction."

36 The term "Hyingcamp" was applied to the militia assembled
in camp for active duty, presumably to denote their purported ability
to march on short notice, whenever and wherever called.



 27

His  loss  was  soon  rectified.  On  the  second  day  of the
Convention, Gustavus Scott of Somerset County (who had studied law
at the Middle Temple) put through a motion to disqualify from
membership  in  the  Convention  anyone  thereafter  accepting  a
commission in the "flying Camp." Next, the Convention elected
William Richardson as Colonel of the Eastern Shore battalion on duty
there. As he was a delegate from Dorchester County, his prompt
acceptance created a vacancy and the Convention ordered a special
election on the 26th. Unsurprisingly, it chose Johnson. To qualify
hir~  there,  Richardson  transferred  some  of his  own land into
Johnson's name, and they exchanged places.37
























37 See Edward S. Delaplaine, Life of Thomas Johnson (N.Y.,
1927), 184.

 28

The opposition
Johnson's defeat in Anne Arundel County, which he had
previously represented, came as a shock and was the first public
evidence of the strength of the developing opposition. Its leader there
was Rezin Hammond, aged thirty of Annapolis, who was also a
Lieutenant Colonel in the milltia. On June 26 he and his older
brother, Matthias, arranged a meeting of militia representatives at
which resolves were adopted in favor of immediate independence and
for the preparation of a new form of government to be laid before
the people of the County. They presented such a form at an
adjourned meeting the very next day, in such detail as to make it
obvious that it was part of a pre-arranged plan. It was published in
the Maryland Gazette of July 18, 1776, two weeks before the
election.

On August 1 Hammond was elected and Johnson was defeated.
Thereafter, a set of "Instructions" embodying many of the provisions
in the previously proposed form of government was circulated in the
County and, with the help of the militia, was sigued by 885 freemen.
Mthough the Instructions were addressed to the four elected delegates
by name, including Hammond, they were in reality from him to the
other three: Charles Carroll, Bamister, Samuel Chase, and Brice T. B.
Worthington.

As printed in the Maryland Gazette of August 22, 1776, the
Instructions included the following demands, among others: that there
be no property qualifications on voting' by citizens; that justices of
the peace, sheriffs, county clerks, and surveyors be elected by the
people; that the militia elect their own officers; that all elections be






 29

viva voce (and not by ballot); that poll taxes be abolished and all
money be raised by property taxes; and that tax assessors be elected
annually by the people.38

The document was skillfully worded, and larded with proposals
on which there could be little or no disagreement; for example, the
preservation of the sacred rights of jury trial and habeas corpus. But
to the conservative-minded it smacked of "levellers," a term that then
had  about  as  happy  a  connotation  to  property  owners  as
"communist" now does to bank presidents.

On August 27, Barrister Carroll, Chase, and Worthington resigned
from the Convention in protest. They conceded that they could not
flaunt the wishes of 885 constituents, but they declined to follow
instructions  which  they  considered  "incompatible  with  good
government and the public  peace and happiness." An election was
ordered to fill the three vacancies, at which Chase and Worthington
were returned. Charles Carroll, Barrister, was not. His successor was
John Hall (1729-1797), who as a lawyer4eader of the Country Party
had attended prior Conventions and had presided over one of them
that Tilghrnan did not attend. Samuel Chase had studied law in his
office.39 The Barrister was a serious loss,40.

38 The "Militia Resolves" and the "Instructions" are quoted in
full in David Curtis Skaggs, Roots of Maryland Democracy, 17534776
(Westport, Conn., 1973), 223-28. Professor Skaggs has also gone to
great pains to assemble personal data relating to the Delegates to the
Constitutional Convention.

~~ 57 Mc!:  Hist.  Mag.  (1962)  187;  John  Sanderson,  Ed.,
Biography of the Signers to the Declaration of Independence (Phila.,
1820-27), IX, 232. Hoffman, A Spirit of Dissension, portrays Hall as
a leader of the radical group, but he did not vote with them at the
Convention.

40 Skaggs, Roots of Mc!: Democracy, 183 note 22, says that the
Barrister  was  subsequently elected  to  replace Thomas  Ringgold,
deceased', but did not return to the Convention before adjournment.


 30








As early as August 17, three days after the Convention met,
Charles Carroll of Carroilton referred to the opposition in a letter to
his father:


"Col. Fitzhugh is most outrageous and acts a very weak and
I  think a very wicked part. He is united with Rezin
Hammond, Cockey Deye and such men, and seems desirous
of  impeding  business  and  throwing  everything  into
confusion."


Carroll (here and hereafter "of Carroliton" unless otherwise noted)
followed this on August 20 with a copy of the Anne Arundel
Instructions, which he termed "the machinations of evil and designing
men."41 He attributed their acts to a desire for personal power. Their
demagoguery so alarmed him that he said:


"Should their schemes take place . . . anarchy will follow as
a certain consequence .. . and this Province in a short time
will be involved in all the horrors of an ungovernable and
revengeful democracy and will be dyed with the blood of
its best citizens."4 2


Overwrought as this may sound, it should be remembered, that
mob action was not new to Annapolis. There had been riots in 1765
over the Stamp Tax, and in October 1774 the discovery of tea
aboard  the  ship Peggy Stewart had brought a repetition. The
Committee of Observation had ordered the tea burned, but the mob
had demanded destruction of the ship as well. One of its leaders is
reported to have told the owner, Anthony Stewart, to "burn or
hang." Accepting the hint, he put a torch to his own ship. In the
forefront of the mob were Rezin Hammond and Charles Ridgely,
members of the Convention and leaders pf the present opposition.43


41 Md. Hist. Soc. MS 206, IV, No. 360.


42 Md. Hist. Soc. MS 206, IV, No. 361.


~~ S Md. Hisfl Mag. (1910) 238A3.


 31

Nevertheless, any view of Hammond, Fitzhugh and Deye as
"levellers" fades upon acquaintance. Hammond's family was one of
the wealthiest in Anne Arundel County. His brother Matthias built
the  Hammond-Harwood house, one of the architectural gems of
Annapolis, and Rezin built a beautiful home, "Burleigh Manor," in
what is now Howard County. At one time he owned more slaves than
anyone in Anne Arundel County except the Carrolls. When he died in
1809 he left a Will freeing all of them.

Rezin's father, Philip, was noted for his rough tongue and made
bitter enemies.  Nor, if we can  trust the historian Newton D.
Mereness, author of Maryland as a Proprietary Province (1901), was
he a totally exemplary character in other respects. He had been a
member of the Provincial House of Delegates for some twenty years
and was its Speaker when he died in 1760, but his actions led
Mereness to comment:

"From 1739 to 1760 the leaders of the opposition, such as
Phil Hammond, were patriots of an inferior type. They were
unreasoning radicals, determined to oppose the government
in every possible way, even to the sacrifice of the real
welfare  of  the  country,  and  to  delude  their ignorant
constituents in order to retain power."44

Some of these qualities seem to have rubbed off on Rezin.45 Either
because of the enmities created by his father, or his own irascibility,

~~ Newton  D.  Mereness, Maryland as a Proprietary Province
(N.Y., 1901), 216. As to Rezin Hammond, see 51 Mc!: Hist. Mag:
(1956) 212-18.

~~ Charles Carroll of Carroll ton's father had this to say about
the Hammonds in a Nov. 26, 1773, letter to his son: "Dear Charley,
The Hammonds... are all noted for not observing their word. Had I
gone to Rezin Hammond I must have entered 'into a long disagreeable
controversy with a noisy obstinate fool not to be convinced tho quite
in the ......." 15 Md. Hist. Mag. (1920) 288; see also adverse
comments on Rezin Hammond in Skaggs, Roots of Md. Democracy,
12O~2l.

 32

he had not been accepted into the inner councils of the Country
Party. He was five years junior to Chase and Paca, the youngest of
the lawyer4eaders, but this would not of itself have been sufficient to
exclude one of his wealth and ability. It seems probable that he
developed a chip-on-the~houlder attitude and a compulsive desire for
power.


Colonel  William  Fitzhugh,  twenty~ome  years  older  than
Hammond, also exhibited a thirst for political power. He had briefly
been a member of the Council of Governor Eden, whom he had
entertained lavishly at "Rousby Hall," his Calvert County estate on
the Patuxent River. His hospitality was featured in the letters home

of William Eddis.46 Fitzhugh, a Virginian, had acquired the estate by 4
marrying the widow of the last of the Rousbys after a courtship that

is described by Charles F. Stein in his History of Calvert County.47


It seems that the Colonel had repeatedly proposed marriage but
without success. As he was returning to his boat after the fourth
rejection,  a nurse appeared carrying the widow's baby girl. The
Colonel snatched the babe from the nurse's arms. Dashing aboard his
boat, he called to the mother that he would drown the baby unless
she would marry him at once. Swooning, she did. Stein assures us
that "a happy marriage ensued," and says that the baby grew up to
become the wife of George Plater, a member of the Committee that
drafted the Constitution and, later, governor of the State. Assuming
that Carroll had heard the story, it is not surprising that he may have
had reservations about the Colonel as a fellow constitutionallst.





46 Eddis, Letters,xv-xvii, 18-19, 86.


~~ Charies Francis Stein, History of Calvert County, Maryland
(BaltQ., 1960), 11617.




 33

Thomas Cockey Deye was a substantial landowner in Baltimore
County and had served in the Provincial House of Delegates off and
on since 1757. At the time of the Constitutional Convention he was
closely associated with Charles Ridgely, also of Baltimore County, and
they exerted strong political influence over the other delegates of that
and Harford County. But they had not received posts of leadership
and probably felt slighted.

Carroll obviously felt that Hammond, Fitzhugh, and Deye were
playing up popular causes in order to build a political following. In
addition, all three exhibited resentment at the dominance of the
lawyer4eaders and were in the forefront of moves to regulate the
legal profession. Their main delegate strength was from Baltimore,
Calvert, and Harford Counties and the lower district of Frederick.
























 34
 The setting

Mthough the primary purpose of the Convention was to form a
new  government,  the  Convention  itself was  the  only  existing
government  of Maryland.  As  a consequence, it was constantly
subjected to other urgencies. In addition, it was not only plagued by
absences but met under the shadow of imminent military disaster.

On August 17, the third day of the Convention and the one on
which the drafting committee was elected, Carroll wrote to his father
at Doughoregan Manor:

"By the latest advices from New York, Howe is preparing
for an attack either on N.Y., Long Island, or the Jersey
Shore."48

On the 26th, the day before the draft of Declaration of Rights was
submitted to the Convention, the British landed in force on Long
Islarid, and in the ensuing attack the Maryland troops bore the bmnt
of the action. James McSherry's History of Maryland calls the losses
"murderous," adding that "neariy half the force was annihilated. The
loss in killed and wounded was 256 officers and men."49







48 Md. Hist. Soc. MS 206, IV, No. 360.

  49 James McSherry, History of Maryland (Balto., 1849), 202.




 35

On October 4 Carroll wrote:


 "Our affairs are in a very critical situation. whether we
shall go into the consideraflon of our bill of rights and
form of government I know not, to judge the temper of the
house. I think we shall, tho I think the matter had better
be postponed till there is a greater certainty than we have
at present of possessing a country and people to govem. In
my  opinion  (entre nous) our affairs are desperate and
nothing but peace with Great Britain on tolerably reasonable
terms can save us from destruction."50


And on October 10, the day the Convention started its detailed
consideration of the Declaration of Rights, he said:


"I think our wants so great and our means of supplying
them so inadequate, that even without a battle and defeat
our army must wander away."51


It  would  take something of an  optimist  to  consider such an
atmosphere conducive to calm deliberation.


















~~ Md. Hist. Soc. MS 206, IV, No. 366a.


~~ Md. Hist. Soc. MS 206, IV, No. 366b.



 36

The ConVention

The Convention  assembled  August  14,  1776, and promptly
elected Matthew Tilghman as president and Gabriel Duvall52 as Clerk.
Then,  after  other  organizational  details,  they  turned  to  the
Constitution. On the late morning of Saturday, August 17, samuel
Chase moved:

"That a committee be appointed to prepare a declaration
and charter of rights and a plan of government agreeable to
such rights as will best maintain peace and order, and most
~ffectually secure happiness and liberty to the people of this
State."

Before  acting on this the Convention recessed for imd<1ay
dinner, and perhaps also to line up votes. Then, in the post-prandial
comfort induced by Maryland cookery they balloted for a committee
of seven and chose: Matthew Tilghman, Charles Carroll, Barrister,
William Paca, Charles Carroll of Carrollton, George Plater, Samuel
Chase, and Robert ~oldsbowugh. presumably the order in which they
were listed reflected the number of their votes.

It seems obvious that the ~embership of the Committee must
have been worked out in advance. Otherwise, it is difficult to believe
that they could have started their work so quickly and ~~~ompllshed
-it with such dispatch. Within ten days53 they submitted a draft of

52 Gabriel Duvall (1752-1844) was later a Justice of the U.S
Supreme Court.

53 It is stated in 66 Mi  Hist. Mag.  (1971) 424 that the
Committee performed this feat in eight days, but this resnlted from
using Aug. 19 as the beginning date, whereas the Committee was in
fact elected on Aug. 17.

 37

the  Declaration  of  Rights,  and  two - weeks  later  a  Form  of
Government.  Both were presented to the Convention by George
Plater, suggesting that he may have acted as a subcommittee on style
to do the fimal polishing.


The initial draft of the Declaration of Rights has been attributed
to Charles Carroll, Barrister.54 If so, it is interesting to note that at
the Middle Temple in London he was a friend of Thompson Mason,
son of George Mason, author of the Virginia Bill of Rights.55 For the
reasons already noted, the Barrister resigned from the Convention on
August 27, the day the draft was submitted, as did Samuel Chase,
another Committee member. The Committee vacancies were filled
August 30 by Robert Townshend Hooe of Charles County, and
Thomas Johnson who had that same day made his appearance as a
Delegate from Caroline County.


Little is known of the early life of Hooe, the youngest member
of the Committee. He probably had legal training, as he had eariier
served on an adiniralty committee composed exclusively of lawyers.
His interests later drew him to Alexandria, Virginia, where he owned
privateers  during  the  Revolution  and later gained  wealth as a
merchant and landowner. He was Mayor of Alexandria from 1780 to
1782, and Sheriff of Fairfax County in 1790. In 1801 he was one of
those whom President John Adams appointed Justice of the Peace for
the District of Columbia during his last night in office, too late for
the  commissions to be  delivered.  when President Jefferson and
Secretary of State Madison withheld his commission, he joined as
plaintiff with William Marbury to force its delivery, giving rise to the
famous case of Marbury 1'. Madison.



54 George A. Hanson, Old Kent: The Eastern Shore of Maryland
(Balto., 1876), 146; Rowland, Charles Carroll of Carrollton, II, 190.

~~ 31 Md. Hist. Mag. (1936) 316.



 38

Throughout  the  Convention,  the  Committee's  strength  was
 reduced by absence. All its members except Hooe and Plater were
 delegates to the Continental Congress (later, Plater also was). Voting
 there was by State, and only three delegates were required to attend
 at one time, but the added responsibilities and the movement back
 and forth were disruptive of organlzed effort. Nor was this the only
 cause of absence. Hooe participated in only three of the many votes
 in which "yeas" and "nays" were recorded while the Declaration of
 Rights  and  Form  of Government  were  being debated on the
 Convention floor.

Goldsborough's record was even worse. He was not present for a
 singie one.56 Absenteeism was endemic to the Eastern Shore, where
 the Committee coffid otherwise have counted on strong support.
 Transportation and weather presented special problems, as did the
 continuing threat of hostile naval action against tidewater plantations.
 In addition, then as now, Eastern Shoremen considered a day on the
 wrqng side of the Bay to be a day of paradise lost.

Early in September, before the drafts could be taken up for
 consideration, Congress called all its delegates to Philadelphia to meet


56 Goldsborough attended the beginuing of the Convention but
 was not recorded in any of the votes involving the Declaration of
 Rights or Form of Government. Searching for possible explanations,
 one Fmds that while studying law at the Middle Temple in London he
 married an Engiish girl and was "never in favor of separation from
 Engiand." 10 Md. Hist. Mag. (1915) 10. There is also the following
 reference to him at the preceding Maryland Convention in a letter
 from Benjamin Runisey to B. E. Hall dated May 20, 1776: "We have
 had a small Fracas here 6 days ago. Mr. R. Goldsborough called Col.
 Lloyd a Fool for asserting in Philadelphia that the Instructions given
 by the last Convention were not agreeable to the people here. And to
 his Face he pulled Mr. Goldsborough by the Nose today..." Ouoted
 in 60 Mi Hist. Mag (1965) 302. It is understandable that this might
 iihave dampened his enthusiasm.

II

-\\39
emergencies created by the railitary reverses on Long Island and by
the proposed  Staten Island peace conference. On September 13
Carroll wrote:

"Johnson set off yesterday for PhIa. Chase and Paca went
off  this  morning,  Deputies  to  Congress...  They  are
expected back again in a fortnight or three weeks. The
consideration of the bill of rights and plan of government is
postponed to their return."57

On September 17 the Convention adjourned for two weeks, and
voted:

"That the said bill of rights and form of government be
immediately printed for the consideration of the people at
large, and that twelve copies thereof be sent without delay
to each county in this state."

The vote on this was 30 to 16 with Carroll and Plater in the
negative.  They  plainly  feared  that  this  action  would  generate
opposition and delay, whether or not so designed. The only other
Committee member present was Tilghman who, as President, did not
vote.















57Md. Hist. Soc. MS 206, IV, No. 365.


 40

ConVentibn Tactics
The voting on this and other preliminary questions gives a clue
to the basic strategy of the opposing groups. The Committee and its
supporters obviously were determined to push the drafts through the
Convention as quickly and with as little change as possible. The
opposition, on the other hand, played for a maximum of delay and
discussion.


The Convention did not reassemble until October 2, The next
day Upton Sheredine of the middle district of Frederick County
proposed that it resolve itself into a committee of the whole to
consider the Declaration of Pights and Form of Government. This
was a customary procedure. The same individuals attended in either
event, but the committee device allowed greater flexibility than was
possible under the parliamentary rules of the Convention. Even more
important, no record was kept of committee proceedings, other than
the final report of the action taken, a feature that facilitated  the
bargaining and compromise so essential to legislative action of this
type.  Nevertheless,  Carroll,  Chase,  Paca,  and  Plater,  the  only
Committee members recorded, opposed the move. They were defeated
by the close vote of 27 to 26.


Other business deferred action on the Constitution until October
10, when John Mackall, a lawyer of Calvert County and close
political associate of Fitzhugh, presented the following motion:


"As the people have a right and ought to know the conduct
and behavior of their representatives, Resolved, That on all
questions  to  be  determined  in  this Convention by a
committee of the whole house, the yeas and nays shall be
taken when called for by any member of the house and
seconded, any custom or usage of parliament, assemblies, or
former conventions to the contrary notwithstanding."


 41

The Convention defeated the motion 59 to 7, Carroll, Chase, Hooe,
Paca, and Plater voting against it. That evening Carroll wrote his
father:

"We this day began on the bill of rights and have just got
as far as the 4th art. without any amendments but what are
for the better. I believe there is a party in the house
determined  to  obstruct  if  possible  our  forming  any
government but such as one as will plunge us into worse
difficulties than those from which we are endeavouring to
extricate ourselves; however, in my opinion there is a
considerable majority of the house well disposed"5 8

The committee of the whole then chewed on the Declaration of
Rights for parts of sixteen days. It was customary for a different
individual to preside in committee so that he could present its report
to the President of the Convention, and also to permit the President
to participate in the discussion and voting. Most of these sessions
were chaired by Turbutt Wright (1741-1783) of Oueen Anne's
County. He had been a member of the Provincial House of Delegates
and was later to be a Justice of the County; alsq, a member at one
and the same time of both the new House of Delegates and of
Congress.

On October 30 the committee of the whole reported out a
revised Declaration of Rights. Fitzhugh moved that it be reprinted
and distributed before being acted upon by the Convention. This was
voted down 36 to 23. The amended document was of course set out
in full in the minutes.

The Convention spent most of the next four days debating the
Declaration of Rights article by article, with results that will be more
fully described later. By now the pressure to get done and home kept
the Convention in session into the evenings, seven days a week. Final
passage came on Sunday, November 3, without a record vote being
called for.

58Md. Hist. Soc. MS 206, IV, No. 366b.


 42

The  Convention  immediately  resolved  itself  again  into  aF
committee of the whole and spent the rest of the day consldering the
draft of Form of Government. The Lord must have approved of this
use of the Sabbath, for in that one busy stretch the committee got
thorugh the whole of it and reported out a revised document.


The next day the Convention debated the revised Form of
Government,  article  by  article.  Although  there  were  various
amendments, and some close votes, the proceedings went much more
quickly than on the Declaration of Rights. The fusal vote was taken
on Friday, November 8, and the amended Form of Government was
approved without a record vote. The new Constitution was now
complete and became the fundamental law of the State. It was not
submitted to a vote of the people.59


On Monday, November  11,  the  Convention  adjourned  and,
breathing a monumental sigh of relief, left the interim government of
the State to the Council of Safety.





59 For an interesting analysis of the Constitution see John C.
Rainbolt,  "A Note  on  the Maryland Declaration of Rights and
Constitution of 1776," 66 Md. Hist. Mag. (1971) 42G~3S. Professor
Rainbolt attempts to analyze the voting patterns of the Delegates on
the basis of geography, economic status, democratic leanings, land
ownership, slave-holdings, etc. It is the view of the present writer that
this and similar analyses are wide of the mark, and that personalities
and leadership qualities played a greater part in the results than
sociological factors.











 43

The Docuitients
Both the Declaration of Rights and the Form of Government
went through four stages: (1) drafting by the Committee of Seven;
(2) consideration for more than two weeks by the Delegates and
constituents; (3) revision in the committee of the whole; and (4)
amendment into final form on the floor of the Convention. At no
-stage do we have a record of the discussion or of the reasoning for
the action taken. But we can infer a great deal from the background
and from a comparison of the drafts and revisions.

The initial drafts have become rare items, available only at
specialized libraries, such as the Hall of Records in Annapolis and the
Maryland and Pennsylvania Historical Societies. The committee of the
whole versions, as well as the fmal documents, are included in the
printed proceedings  of the August  14,  1776, Convention. These
proceedings  were published  separately,  and  are also included in
combined printings of all seven of the Conventions that effected the
transition from Proprietorship to State.

There is another possible clue to enlightenment as to the process
of revision. It is reasonable to assume that the issues producing close
votes on the floor of the Convention had been bones of contention
in the committee of the whole, and were brought up again by the
losers in the hope that changes in attendance or of minds would
swing the balance.

In analyzing the documents, it should facilitate understanding to
consider them by issues, and to limit ourselves to those of major
significance.  Inevitably,  this  will  result  in  omissions,  but  the
alternative  is  to  expand  this  already  lengthy  paper  into  an
encyclopedia.


 44

The Declaration of Rights
In drafting the Maryland Declaration of Rights, the Committee
drew on experience stemming all the way back to Magna Carta. In
addition they obviously considered the comparable documents recently
.1adopted in Virginia and Pennsylvania. The Maryland Declaration was,
however, the most elaborate to date and furnished the model for
many that were to follow, including some of the provisions of the
Federal  Constitution.  Delaware adopted its Declaration of Rights
before Maryland, and the two were so similar that it has sometimes
been supposed that ours was copied from theirs. The situation was
actually the reverse. Although theirs was adopted first, Maryland's was
drafted first, and George Read, Chairman of the Delaware drafting
committee, said that he used the Maryland and Pennsylvania drafts as
models.60


Professor Bernard Schwartz in his comprehensive treatise on Bills
of.Rights  comments  that  Maryland  was  the  first  to  make

constitutional use of the term "ex post facto laws." He also says:

"The most significant innovation made by the Maryland

Declaration  of Rights was the inclusion of an express- -
provision against  bills of attainder (Art.  16). This was
apparently the first such constitutional prohibition and was
the forerunner of the Bill of Attainder Clauses of Art. I,
secs. 9 and 10 of the federal constitution. The Maryland
provision was most liberal for its time."6 1


The attainder portion of Art.  16  was included in the original
Committee draft.

60 Bernard Schwartz, The Bill of Rights: A Documentary History
(N.Y~, 1921), I, 276.

--6)  Ibid., I, 279.


 45

From the standpoint of modern interest, the issues of major
significance in the adoption of the Maryland Declaration of Rights
include:

Slavery. The Committee draft provided:

 "41. That no person hereafter imported into this state
from Africa, or any part of the British dominions, ought to
be held in slavery under any pretence whatever, and that no
negro or mulatto slave ought to be brought into this state
for sale from any part of the world."

The committee of the whole deleted this in its entirety. In its day it
was  a  very  liberal  proposal;  more so, for example,  than  the
comparable provision later included in the U.S. Constitution. It is of
interest to note that it was written into the draft with apparent
unanimity  by  a  committee of seven consisting entirely of slave
owners. The Anne Arundel Instructions contained nothing comparable.

Tax es.62 Judging from the language of the prohibition of taxes
without legislative authority (DIR 12), the Proprietary fee controversy
was the immediate motivating factor rather than the more general
colonial complaint against Parliamentary taxation. The only material
change from the Committee draft was the committee of the whole's
F -  insertion of the word ''rated.''

The prohibition  of poll  taxes (DIR  13)  also derives from
Proprietary  experience.  It clearly  was a reaction  to  the highly
unpopular use of poll taxes to support the Church of Engiand and its
clergy. Poll taxes in other colonies did not inspire the hatred that
they did in Maryland.



62 For a more detailed discussion of the tax articles of the
Declaration of Rights, see Lewis, 13 MJ Law Review (1953) 83-112.


 46

Although the provision has little practical significance, it is F
interesting to note that the word "paupers" in DIR ~3 had started in
the draft as the phrase "pauper estates not exceeding thirty pounds
currency," which was a more understandable and generous term. The
substitution was made in the committee of the whole.


The requirement that "every other person in the State ought to
contribute  his  proportion  of public  taxes  for  the support of
government according to his actual worth in real or personal property
within the State" originated in the Committee draft.63 It will be
recalled that the Anne Arundel Instructions went further and would
have outlawed all taxes other than property taxes. It probably was
for this reason that the committee of the whole tacked a further
clause on DIR 13 expressly authorizing other types of taxes. The
wording of this was not happy, and has been a source of confusion,
but it at least settled the point that property was not to be the
exclusive source of taxes. Necessarily, this addition met opposition
from those who were using the Instructions as a blueprint, and in the
floor debate Fitzhugh moved that the clause be stricken. He lost 11

to 41, with the Committee members present voting against him.F


Separation of powers. One of the Proprietary grievances was that
the Governor and his Council exercised legislative, executive, and
judicial powers, as in effect did the Proprietor, and as did Parliament.

This was recognized as a potential source of oppression, and violated F
the political theories that Montesquieu and others had brought into
vogue. Most of the bills of rights, including George Mason's famous
Virginia model, contained provisions requinng a separation, and the
Committee draft provided:

 -"That the legislative, judicial, and executive powers of

government ought to be forever separate, distinct from, and

independent of each other."  4

63 This clearly reflected the tax concepts expressed in Adam
Smith's Wealth of Nations, the pertinent portion of which had been
published that same year.


 47

This language was substantially adopted as DIR 6, but not until after
some tinkering in the committee of the whole, which reversed the
order of "judicial" and "executive" and deleted the requirement that
the powers be "independent." Probably there was also some more
serious  discussion,  as there were interesting points involved, and
during the flcor debate on October 31 Chase proposed the followingF
provision as a substitute:

 "That the legislative, executive, and judicial powers of
government, or any two of them, ought not to be vested in
the same man or group of men."

This was  defeated  without a record vote.  Thereupon, the  five
Committee  members  present  (not  including  Tilghman  who,  as
President, was not recorded) voted against the adoption of the entire
provision, notwithstanding that they had originated it. They were
defeated 30 to 29. Obviously, the point was considered crucial. why?

The principal reason probably lay in the clarity of Chase's
language and the comforting obscurity of the provision as drafted and
adopted. For example, how would it affect justices of the peace?
Some of the delegates held this then prestigious position and realized
that under Chase's language its retention would exclude them from
legislative or executive participation in the new government, whereas
they might qualify under the original provision. It is of interest to
note that during the debate on the Form of Government, Chase
sponsored a specific provision permitting a justice of the peace to be
a senator, a delegate, or a member of the Council. It passed 36 to
18. Also of interest is the fact that the 1851 Constitution enlarged
DIR 6 to include language similar to that proposed by Chase.

Another question may have been in the minds of the more
thoughtful  delegates.  The  Form  of Government  that had  been
proposed and was later to be adopted provided for the election of
the Governor and his Council by the Legislature. Would this of itself
violate the broad DIR 6 requirement of separation of powers? Some


 48

have considered that it did, and Chase's language may have been
designed  to remedy  this.  The point  was more theoretical than
practical, but the Committee members may have wished to avoid the
potential conflict. If so, it is not impossible that the opposition
leaders may have preferred to leave the language as it was in order to
embarass the Committee and perhaps to gain an advantage when the
Form of Government came up for consideration.


Removal  of  judges.  The  Constitution  provided  for  the
appointment  of judges  by  the  Governor,  to  serve  during good
behavior. The Committee draft of DIR 30 made them removable for

misbehavior "on conviction in a court of law, on conviction by4-
impeachinent, or by vote of the legislature."64 The Committee later
had second thoughts about giving the legislature broad power to
remove judges, and on November  1  Paca offered an amendment
providing that the chancellor and judges


"shall be removed for misbehavior on conviction in a court
of law, and may be removed by the governor upon the
address of the general assembly." (Emphasis added)


All through the Convention anything involving laywers or judges drew
fire. Ewing, of Cecil, immediately moved to change the "may" to
"shall."65 The defeat of this, 22 to 36, encouraged the Committee to
tighten up the provision still further by requinng the concurrence of
twoAhirds of each house in such cases. This was passed 31 to 27.
The amended article was then approved without a further record vote.


Legal fees.  Two  efforts  were made  on  the  floor of the
Convention to limit lawyers' fees by law. On November 2, Elisha


64 It seems curious that the provision for removal of judges
should have been included in the Declaration of Rights, rather than in
the- Form of Government as it is in the present- Constitution.

65 Ewing's position was later vindicated. The present (1867)
Constitution uses the word "shall."


 49

II-  -




- -  Williams, of the lower district of Frederick, sought to insert an article
in the Declaration of Rights stating that the charging of exorbitant
fees for legal seivices was "injurious and oppressive to the good
people of the State and ought to be prevented." It was defeated 7 to
46. Its supporters included Fitzhugh, John Mackall, Deye, and
Ridgely.

Later, on November 7, Fitzhugh moved the adoption of a
comparable provision in the Form of Government and picked up nine

--iadditional votes, including Hammond. It was defeated 16 to 39. The
-fact that it was pressed by the opposition leaders, and that at least
one of the delegates voting for it was a lawyer, makes one suspect
that  the  motive  was  to  capitalize  on  resentment  agamst  the
dominance of the lawyer leaders in the Convention.

Religion. The Committee draft specified:

"That the rights of conscience are sacred, and all persons
professing the Christian religion ought for ever to enjoy
equal rights and privileges in the state."

This effectively rooted out the discriminations which had prevented
Catholics from having their own churches and from participating in
public life. Its beneficence was, however, limited to Christians. Jews
and other nonThristians were still consigned to the outer darkness.

The committee of the whole altered the wording and added a
prohibition against forced contribution to any particular ministry.
Then, in the debate on the floor on November 2, Gustavus Scott
proposed the following qualification:

"yet the legislature may, in their discretion, lay a general
and equal tax for the support of the Christian religion,
leaving to each individual the power of appointing the
payment over of the money collected from him to the
support of any particular place of worship or minister, or
for the benefit of the poor of his own denomination, or the
poor in general of any particular county."

 50
The amendment was adopted 41 to 20. The Committee members
present voted in the affirmative.66

Oath or affirmation. In those days formal oaths were taken far
more seriously than today, and the new Constitution was loaded with
them; for example, to act impartially, to do one's duty, etc. It would
be  nice  if human frailities  could  be  so  easily  overcome.  The
requirement of oaths necessarily discriminated against individuals who
had religious scruples against taking them, as did Cuakers, Dunkers,
and Mennonites  This had been a grievance under the Proprietary,
but it was not so easy to cure as might appear. There had been such
a long judicial tradition requiring oaths to support the testimony of
witnesses, especially in criminal cases, that it had acquired the status
of due process of law. It was questionable whether a defendant could
be convicted on unswom testimony.

The Committee draft contained two brief provisions permitting
affirmations by office holders and in civil cases. In some respects
these two provisions seem to duplicate each other, and in others to
be inconsistent; for example, one required a declaration of belief in
the Cliristian religion, the other did not. It seems likely that the
Committee could not come to a consensus and thought it best to
propose both versions and let the Convention take its pick.




66 The provision did not work out in practice. The results are
described as follows in Allan Nevins, The American States During and
After the Revolution, 1775-1789 (N.Y., 1924), 431: "But one serious
effort was made to give effect to Qis power. After the peace,
petitions began to come from certain vestries lamenting a decline in
piety  and  morals; and the legislature early in  1785 laid a bill
providing for a general church tax before the people. A huge uproar
arose against the measure.. . That fall it was decisively beaten."




 51

It,- ___







The Convention was not satisfied with either. On November 2,
Earle, of Kent, proposed a new one, sketcluly worded but permitting
affirmations in all civil and criminal cases. The latter was a touchy
point, and his motion was voted down without a record vote.
Johnson then came up with a more carefully worded version. This
sanctioned affirmations based on religious belief with two provisos: it
did not apply to prosecutions in capital cases, and in other criminal
prosecutions it was limited to Quakers, Dunkers, and Mennonites.
Chase  immediately  moved  to  strike  out  the  special  provision
permitting members of these sects to testity in criminal cases on
affirmation. Ills amendment was voted down 17 to 37, and Johnson's
language was then adopted without a record vote.


Eastern Shore secession. The last item in the debate on the
Declaration of Rights was the following motion by Turbutt Wright:


"That if the eastern or western shore shall hereafter judge it
for their interest or happiness to separate from the other,
their right to do so is hereby acknowledged."


Ewing, of Cecil, countered with an amendment requiring approval by
a majority of the qualified voters in every county. The amendment
was adopted, and then the whole thing was voted down 17 to 30.





















 52

-The Form of'GoVernriient


The  structure  of  government  proposed  by  the  Committee
 consisted of a bicameral legislature, a Governor, and a Governor's
 Council of five.67 Like the Convention itself, the House of Delegates
 was to be composed of four elected delegates from each county, plus
  -~  two from Annapolis and two from Baltimore Town. A fifteen man
 Senate (nine from the western and six from the eastern shore) was to
 be chosen by electors who would be popularly elected, two from
 each county and one each from Annapolis and Baltimore Town.

The Governor was to be chosen by joint ballot of the House and
 Senate, as were the five Councillors. The Governor was not to have

 67 After publication  of theCommittee's  draft  of  Form  of
 Government, a long poem appeared in the Maryland Gazette of
 October 24,  1776, calling it, among other things, a triple-headed
 monstrosity, the heads being the Legislature, the Governor,- and the
 Council. Entitled "The Song of the Man in the Moon," it read in
 part:

 "As I lookt thro' my shining sphere
 And to the middle state drew near,
 (That state the last that gave consent
 To break the yoke of Parliament)
 I saw in labour to bring forth
 A government of fame and worth:

 "But when 'twas born, the granny said,
 The monster had a triple head.

  ***

 It much resembles the old mother
 Begat by Mammon on that harlot,
 Who cloathes her heads in silk and scarlet."


 53

any veto or other power over legislation. Ills function was to execute
the laws, and to make appointments with the advice and consent of
the Council. The judicial system was to consist of a Chancellor, Court
of Appeals, General Gourt, and County Courts, all appointed by the
Governor to serve during good behavior.


No substantial change was made in this structure, either in the
committee of the whole or on the floor  of the Convention. A
number of subsidiary issues arose, however, including the following:


Property qualifications: (a) For voters: The Committee draft
proposed the same qualifications that had been in effect under the
Proprietary and that had been used in electing delegates to the
Convention. The committee of the whole reduced the requirement
from forty pounds sterling to thirty pounds current money. This was
a substantial change, as local currency was considerably debased and
became more so.


Three efforts were made on the floor of the Convention to
effect further reductions but all were unsflccessful. First, Bayly moved
to strike all qualifications. This was defeated without a record vote.
Then a motion by Turbutt Wright to reduce the requirement from
thirty pounds to five was voted down 20 to 34. Finally, a motion by
Bayly to make all taxpayers eligible was defeated 24 to 29.


  (b)For  others:  In  addition,  property  qualifications  were
established for the following, the amounts being left blank in the
Committee draft and completed in the course of passage:


Delegates500 pounds
Electors500
Senators  1,000
Governor  5,000
Councillors1,000
Sheriffs  1,000




 54










A)ks

  FThe only one producing a record vote was that for Sheriff, which was

approved 29 to 28, with the Committee members present supporting
it.

Terms of office. The Committee draft provided for the election
of Delegates  every  three years and Senators every seven. The
committee of the whole shortened these to one and five years
respectively. In the floor debate, Chase sought to reinstate the three
year term for Delegates and was defeated without a record vote. He
then tried for two years and was voted down 23 to 27.

Appointment versus election. This issue opened another chasm
between the opposing groups. The Anne Arundel Instructions had
-demanded The Cection of aD offnv$ millilifif zz9ifld off1:'ea ind
tax  assessors.  The  Committee,  on  the  other  hand,  favored
appointment by the Governor, and was sustained as to all but
Sheriffs.

The Committee draft had provided for the annual appointment
of Sheriffs, with a three year disqualification period after three years
-of service. The Committee of the whole changed this to popular
election by ballot, with a four year disqualification period. In the
floor debate, Turbutt Wright moved that Sheriffs be elected every
third year, instead of aunually, and this was passed without a record
vote. Chase then sought to restore appointment by the Governor,
instead of election, and was voted down 9 to 45.

Viva voce voting. Today, viva voce voting, in which an individual
is required to state his vote publicly, is regarded as undemocratic.68
This is a curious twist from the situation in 1776. The Anne Arundel



68 Aside from violating an individual's privacy, via voce voting
mad& it easy for purchasers and pressure groups to be sure the voter
was doing what he promised.


 55
 Instructions, which  were nothing if not democratically oriented,
 demanded viva voce voting in all elections. The Committee draft went
 along with respect to the election of Delegates and of the electors
 who were to choose the Senators, but not in other situations. For,
 example, the Governor and members of his Council were to be
 elected by joint ballot of the two houses, which permitted voting to
 be secret.

On November 4, Earie proposed that voting for Delegates be by
 ballot. It was defeated without a record vote. On November 3, the
 converse situation arose with respect to Sheriffs, who at this stage of
 the proceedings  were to be elected by ballot. Bayly sought to
 substitute "viva voce" for "ballot" and was also brushed off without
 a record vote.

Baltimore representation. Baltimore Town, as it was then known,
 was represented in  the Convention by Jeremiah Townley Chase
 (1748-1828), cousin of Samuel and future Chief Judge of the Court
 of Appeals. He continued to represent Baltimore in the new House of
_Delegates until he moved to Annapolis in 1779. There he acquired
 the Hammond-Harwood House, in a wing of which Roger Brooke
 Taney studied law under his tutellage. Anticipating the future growth
 of Baltimore, Jeremiah Townley Chase proposed an amendment to the
 Form  of  Government  to  increase  or  decrease  its  legislative
 representation so as to keep it roughly in line with the population of
 the counties. It was a smart idea, but he was mousetrapped. The
 ~~~~~~~~~~ voted 37 to  14 to retain his provision for possible
 decreases in representation but to strike out that for increases. For
 more than 130 years Baltimore was to remain under-represented.









 56

Notwithstanding the war conditions under which the Convention
met, a spirit of tolerance prevailed among the majority. One example
was the defeat of a motion by David Smith, of Cecil, to restrict the
office of Governor to natives of the United States. The vote was 23
to 29, with the five Committee members present recorded in the
negative. The other was the defeat of a proposal by Samuel Chase to
disqualify from public office anyone who had not prior to July 4,
1776, subscribed to the colonial association to support united action
against Great Britain. The vote on this was 20 to 27. The four
Committee members voting split, Chase and Hooe being recorded in
the affumative, Johnson and Plater in the negative.69





69 The spirit of tolerance was not long lived. The strains of the
Revolution increased the pressures for punitive action against loyalists,
confiscation of property, further debasement of the currency, etc.,
and  widened  the  chasm  between conservatives and radicals. See
Nevins, Amer. States, 1 7754 789, 308-23.


























 57

  Conclusion


Charles Carroll of Carrollton was not one to hide his sentiments,
at least not from his father. On the whole, the Constitution had not
turned out as badly as he had feared, and he wrote:

"If we cannot get a government as perfect as we could
wish, time perhaps may disclose its defects and point out
the proper remedies if men will be honest and apply them
when they become convinced that they are wanting."70

Most Delegates probably would have said "Amen." In point of- fact,
-however, the Constitution won critical acclaim as one of the best
products of its period.

The feature causing most comment was the composition of the
upper house, or Senate, and its selection by electors rather than by
the direct vote of the people. In a latter letter, CarroU wrote that
this had been his brainchild,71 and we have no reason to doubt his


7~ Letter of Oct. 20, 1776, Md. Hist. Soc. MS 206, IV, No.
368b. Only two days eariier he had written: "We began yesterday on
our Plan of Government, and from the alterations that were made in
it yesterday and this morning, I am satisfied we shall have a very bad
government in this State." Ibid., No. 368a. But when Carroll wrote
this he had additional cause for depression. He had just heard that his
father was suffering from a serious leg ailment. He wrote: "I am
much concerned to hear that you are indisposed ... I suppose it is
the same kind of humour you was troubled with a year or two ago.
The same remedies I hope will have the same effect. I send you up
some rattle snakes which Mrs. Thos. Picton has sent for you ...
Whether because of or in spite of the remedy prescribed, Carroll's
father survived to age 80, and then was killed by a - fall.
71 Letter of Dec. 29, 1817, to Virgil Maxcy, quoted in Rowland,
Life of CC. of C., I, l9(Y9l.

 58

accuracy. Ultimately, it was deemed to have outlived its usefulness,
and was abandoned, but in its day it was singled out for praise by no
less an authority than James Madison. In No. 63 of the Federalist
Papers he pointed to it as the model for the United States Senate
and said:


"The Maryland Constitution is daily deriving, from the
salutary operation of this part of it, a reputation in which
it will probably not be rivalled by that of any State in the
Union."72


The lawyer leaders who fashioned the 1776 Constitution set a
high standard. It was in connection with their labors that John V. L.
McMahon had these words for the legal profession in his His to rical
View of the Government of Maryland (Baltimore, 1831):


"Pointed at as a privileged order...  and as the hired
advocates of right and wrong...  this profession is the
natural ally of liberty. Its pursuits habituate the mind to
respect  the  authority  of  the  law,  in  opposition  to
prerogative... They inspire independence... These remarks
-  are prompted by a sense of justice to a body of men, so
distinguished at every period of our colonial history for
their fIrm and feariess support of the constitutional liberties
of the people."73




72 Charles A. Beard, The Enduring Feralist (N.Y., 1948), 27O~7l.

For many years No. 63 was attributed to Mexander Hamilton, but
present scholars seem agreed that it was written by Madison.


~~ McMahon, 383-86.










 59

_1976 H. H. Walker Lewis