fbpx
Wikipedia

Congress of the Confederation

The Congress of the Confederation, or the Confederation Congress, formally referred to as the United States in Congress Assembled, was the governing body of the United States from March 1, 1781, until March 3, 1789, during the Confederation period. A unicameral body with legislative and executive function, it was composed of delegates appointed by the legislatures of the several states. Each state delegation had one vote. The Congress was created by the Articles of Confederation and Perpetual Union upon its ratification in 1781, formally replacing the Second Continental Congress.

United States in Congress Assembled
Type
Type
Term limits
3 years in 6 year period
History
EstablishedMarch 1, 1781
DisbandedMarch 3, 1789
Preceded byContinental Congress
Succeeded byUnited States Congress
Leadership
Secretary
Structure
SeatsVariable, ~50
CommitteesCommittee of the States
CommitteesCommittee of the Whole
Length of term
1 year
SalaryNone
Elections
Last election
1788
Meeting place
Pennsylvania State House
(present-day Independence Hall),
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania (first)
City Hall (present-day Federal Hall)
New York, New York (last)
Constitution
Articles of Confederation
Footnotes
Though there were about 50 members of the Congress at any given time, each state delegation voted en bloc, with each state having a single vote.

The Congress continued to refer itself as the "Continental Congress" throughout its eight-year history, although modern historians separate it from the two earlier congresses, which operated under slightly different rules and procedures until the later part of American Revolutionary War.[1] The membership of the Second Continental Congress automatically carried over to the Congress of the Confederation, and had the same secretary as the Second Continental Congress, Charles Thomson.

The Congress of the Confederation was succeeded by the Congress of the United States as provided for in the new Constitution of the United States, drafted on September 17, 1787, in Philadelphia, ratified by each of the states, and adopted by the Congress in 1788.[2]

History Edit

 
General George Washington Resigning His Commission, an 1824 portrait of George Washington by John Trumbull

On March 1, 1781, the Articles of Confederation and Perpetual Union were signed by delegates of Maryland at a meeting of the Second Continental Congress in Philadelphia, which then declared the Articles ratified. As historian Edmund Burnett wrote, "There was no new organization of any kind, not even the election of a new President." The Congress still called itself the Continental Congress. Nevertheless, despite its being generally the same exact governing body, with some changes in membership over the years as delegates came and went individually according to their own personal reasons and upon instructions of their state governments, some modern historians would later refer to the Continental Congress after the ratification of the Articles as the Congress of the Confederation or the Confederation Congress.

The Congress of the Confederation opened in the last stages of the American Revolution. Combat ended in October 1781, with the surrender of the British after the Siege and Battle of Yorktown. The British, however continued to occupy New York City, while the American delegates in Paris, named by the Congress, negotiated the terms of peace with Great Britain.[3] Based on preliminary articles with the British negotiators made on November 30, 1782, and approved by the "Congress of the Confederation" on April 15, 1783, the Treaty of Paris was further signed on September 3, 1783, and ratified by the Confederation Congress then sitting at the Maryland State House in Annapolis on January 14, 1784. This formally ended the American Revolutionary War between Great Britain and the thirteen former colonies, which on July 4, 1776, had declared independence. In December 1783, General George Washington, commander-in-chief of the Continental Army, journeyed to Annapolis after saying farewell to his officers (at Fraunces Tavern) and men who had just reoccupied New York City after the departing British Army. On December 23, at the Maryland State House, where the Congress met in the Old Senate Chamber, he addressed the civilian leaders and delegates of Congress and returned to them the signed commission they had voted him back in June 1775, at the beginning of the conflict. With that simple gesture of acknowledging the first civilian power over the military, he took his leave and returned by horseback the next day to his home and family at Mount Vernon near the colonial river port city on the Potomac River at Alexandria in Virginia.

Congress had little power, and without the external threat of a war against the British, it became quite difficult to get enough delegates to meet to form a quorum. Nonetheless, the Congress still managed to pass important laws, most notably the Northwest Ordinance of 1787.

The country incurred a massive debt as a result of the War of Independence. In 1784, the total Confederation debt was nearly $40 million. Of that sum, $8 million was owed to the French and Dutch. Of the domestic debt, government bonds, known as loan-office certificates, composed $11.5 million, certificates on interest indebtedness $3.1 million, and continental certificates $16.7 million.

The certificates were non-interest bearing notes issued for supplies purchased or impressed, and to pay soldiers and officers. To pay the interest and principal of the debt, Congress had twice proposed an amendment to the Articles granting them the power to lay a 5% duty on imports, but amendments to the Articles required the consent of all thirteen states: the 1781 impost plan had been rejected by Rhode Island and Virginia, while the revised plan, discussed in 1783, was rejected by New York.

Without revenue, except for meager voluntary state requisitions, Congress could not even pay the interest on its outstanding debt. The states, meanwhile, regularly failed or refused to meet the requisitions requested of them by Congress.[4]

To that end, in September 1786, after resolving a series of disputes regarding their common border along the Potomac River, delegates of Maryland and Virginia called for a larger assembly to discuss various situations and governing problems to meet in Annapolis, Maryland, the Maryland state capital. The Annapolis Convention in 1786 which included additional state representatives who joined the sessions, first attempted to look into improving the earlier original Articles of Confederation and Perpetual Union. There were enough problems to bear further discussion and deliberation that the Convention called for a wider meeting to recommend changes and meet the next year in the late Spring of 1787 in Philadelphia.

The Confederation Congress itself endorsed the Call and issued one on its own further inviting the states to send delegates. After meeting in secret all summer in the Old Pennsylvania State House, which by then was renamed Independence Hall, from the famous actions of there eleven years earlier. The Philadelphia Convention, under the presidency of former General George Washington, issued a proposed new Constitution for the United States to replace the 1776–1778 Articles. The Confederation Congress received and submitted the new Constitution document to the states, and the Constitution was later ratified by enough states (nine were required) to become operative in June 1788. On September 13, 1788, the Confederation Congress set the date for choosing the new electors in the Electoral College that was set up for choosing a President as January 7, 1789, the date for the Electors to vote for the President as on February 4, 1789, and the date for the Constitution to become operative as March 4, 1789, when the new Congress of the United States should convene, and that they at a later date set the time and place for the Inauguration of the new first President of the United States.

The Congress of the Confederation continued to conduct business for another month after setting the various dates. On October 10, 1788, Congress formed a quorum for the last time; afterward, although delegates would occasionally appear, there were never enough to officially conduct business. The last meeting of the Continental Congress was held March 2, 1789, two days before the new Constitutional government took over; only one member was present at said meeting, Philip Pell, an ardent Anti-Federalist and opponent of the Constitution, who was accompanied by the Congressional secretary. Pell oversaw the meeting and adjourned the Congress sine die.

Presiding officer Edit

The Continental Congress was presided over by a president (referred to in many official records as President of the United States in Congress Assembled), who was a member of Congress elected by the other delegates to serve as a neutral discussion moderator during meetings. Elected to a non-renewable one-year term, this person also chaired the Committee of the States when Congress was in recess and performed other administrative functions. He was not, however, an executive in the way the later President of the United States is a chief executive since all of the functions he executed were under the direct control of Congress.[5] There were ten presidents of Congress under the Articles. The first, Samuel Huntington, had been serving as president of the Continental Congress since September 28, 1779.

Meeting sites Edit

The Second Continental Congress was meeting at the Old Pennsylvania State House (Independence Hall), in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, at the time the Articles of Confederation entered into force on March 1, 1781, but left after an anti-government protest by several hundred soldiers of the Continental Army in June 1783. Congress moved its meeting site successively to Princeton, New Jersey; Annapolis, Maryland; Trenton, New Jersey, and then in January 1785 New York City, which remained the seat of government for several years.[6]

List of sessions Edit

First Congress
March 2, 1781[a]
  November 3, 1781
Pennsylvania State House, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania  
President: Samuel Huntington[b] (until July 10, 1781)
           Thomas McKean (from July 10, 1781)
Second Congress
November 5, 1781 –
  November 2, 1782
Pennsylvania State House, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania  
President: John Hanson
Third Congress
November 4, 1782 –
  November 1, 1783
Pennsylvania State House, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
(until June 21, 1783)
 
Nassau Hall, Princeton, New Jersey
(from June 30, 1783)
 
President: Elias Boudinot
Fourth Congress
November 3, 1783 –
  June 3, 1784
Nassau Hall, Princeton, New Jersey
(until November 4, 1783)
 
Maryland State House, Annapolis, Maryland
(from November 26, 1783)
 
President: Thomas Mifflin
Fifth Congress
November 1, 1784 –
  November 6, 1785
French Arms Tavern, Trenton, New Jersey
(until December 24, 1784)
 
City Hall, New York, New York
(from January 11, 1785)
 
President: Richard Henry Lee (from November 30, 1784)
Sixth Congress
November 7, 1785 –
  November 2, 1786
City Hall, New York, New York  
President: John Hancock (from November 23, 1785, until June 5, 1786)
           Nathaniel Gorham (from June 6, 1786)
Seventh Congress
November 6, 1786 –
  November 4, 1787
City Hall, New York, New York  
President: Arthur St. Clair (from February 2, 1787)
Eighth Congress
November 5, 1787 –
  October 31, 1788
City Hall, New York, New York
(until October 6, 1788)
 
Walter Livingston House, New York, New York
(from October 8, 1788)
 
President: Cyrus Griffin (from January 22, 1788)
Ninth Congress
November 3, 1788[c]
  March 3, 1789[d]
Walter Livingston House, New York, New York
 
President: Cyrus Griffin (de jure, until November 15, 1788)
           vacant (from November 15, 1788)[e]

See also Edit

Notes Edit

  1. ^ Ratification of the Articles of Confederation was concluded on February 2, 1781, and certified as having come into force by the Continental Congress on March 1, 1781, and the United States in Congress Assembled government convened for the first time on March 2, 1781.
  2. ^ President of the Second Continental Congress from September 28, 1779.
  3. ^ Congress did not convene on November 3, 1788, the stated first day of the 1788–89 Congressional Year because of a lack of a quorum (namely, delegates present from seven of the 13 states). Through March 2, 1789, delegates from various states occasionally gathered, but never in sufficient number to constitute a quorum.[7]
  4. ^ On September 13, 1788, the Confederation Congress resolved that March 4, 1789, would be the commencement date of the federal government under the Constitution, effectively dissolving Congress on March 3, 1789.
  5. ^ As Congress could not transact official business due to the lack of a quorum, a president could not be elected for the 1788–89 Congressional Year. As a result, Cyrus Griffin, who had been elected to the office January 22, 1788, remained the de jure president of Congress until he resigned on November 15, 1788.[7]

References Edit

  1. ^ "Journals of the Continental Congress, 1774–1789", Edited by Worthington C. Ford et al. 34 vols. Washington, D.C.: Government Printing Office, 1904–37.
  2. ^ "Confederation Congress". Ohio Historical Society. Retrieved October 23, 2010.
  3. ^ See: Peace of Paris (1783)#Treaty with the United States of America.
  4. ^ Proposed Amendments to the Articles of Confederation December 1, 2010, at the Wayback Machine Journals of the Continental Congress, 1774–1789. Edited by Worthington C. Ford et al. 34 vols. Washington, D.C.: Government Printing Office, 1904–37. 31:494–98
  5. ^ Jensen, Merrill (1959). The Articles of Confederation: An Interpretation of the Social-Constitutional History of the American Revolution, 1774–1781. University of Wisconsin Press. pp. 178–179. ISBN 978-0-299-00204-6.
  6. ^ DiCamillo, Michael (2015). "Articles of Confederation". The Encyclopedia of Greater Philadelphia. Mid-Atlantic Regional Center for the Humanities, Rutgers University–Camden. Retrieved April 19, 2019.
  7. ^ a b Jillson, Calvin C.; Wilson, Rick K. (1994). Congressional Dynamics: Structure, Coordination, and Choice in the First American Congress, 1774–1789. Palo Alto, California: Stanford University Press. p. 88. ISBN 0-8047-2293-5. OCLC 28963682. Retrieved April 20, 2019.

Bibliography Edit

  • Burnett, Edmund C. (1975). The Continental Congress. Greenwood Publishing. ISBN 0-8371-8386-3.
  • Henderson, H. James (1987). Party Politics in the Continental Congress. Boston: Rowman & Littlefield. ISBN 0-8191-6525-5.
  • Jensen, Merrill (1950). New Nation: A History of the United States During the Confederation, 1781–1789. New York: Knopf.
  • McLaughlin, Andrew C. (1935). A Constitutional History of the United States. Appleton-Century-Crofts. ISBN 978-1-931313-31-5.
  • Montross, Lynn (1970). The Reluctant Rebels; the Story of the Continental Congress, 1774–1789. New York: Barnes & Noble. ISBN 0-389-03973-X.
  • Morris, Richard B. (1987). The Forging of the Union, 1781–1789. New York: Harper & Row. ISBN 0-06-091424-6.
  • Morris, Richard B. (1956). "The Confederation Period and the American Historian". William and Mary Quarterly. 13 (2): 139–156. doi:10.2307/1920529. JSTOR 1920529.
  • Rakove, Jack N. (1979). The Beginnings of National Politics: An Interpretive History of the Continental Congress. New York: Knopf. ISBN 0-394-42370-4.

External links Edit

  • Major documents from the Congress, including journals, letters, debates, via Library of Congress
  • Journals of the Continental Congress 1774–1789
Preceded by Legislature of the United States
March 1, 1781 – March 4, 1789
Succeeded by

congress, confederation, confused, with, confederate, states, congress, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, unsourced, material, challenged, removed, find, sourc. Not to be confused with Confederate States Congress This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Congress of the Confederation news newspapers books scholar JSTOR May 2021 Learn how and when to remove this template message The Congress of the Confederation or the Confederation Congress formally referred to as the United States in Congress Assembled was the governing body of the United States from March 1 1781 until March 3 1789 during the Confederation period A unicameral body with legislative and executive function it was composed of delegates appointed by the legislatures of the several states Each state delegation had one vote The Congress was created by the Articles of Confederation and Perpetual Union upon its ratification in 1781 formally replacing the Second Continental Congress United States in Congress AssembledGreat Seal of the United States 1782 TypeTypeUnicameralTerm limits3 years in 6 year periodHistoryEstablishedMarch 1 1781DisbandedMarch 3 1789Preceded byContinental CongressSucceeded byUnited States CongressLeadershipPresident of CongressSamuel Huntington first Cyrus Griffin last SecretaryCharles ThomsonStructureSeatsVariable 50CommitteesCommittee of the StatesCommitteesCommittee of the WholeLength of term1 yearSalaryNoneElectionsLast election1788Meeting placePennsylvania State House present day Independence Hall Philadelphia Pennsylvania first City Hall present day Federal Hall New York New York last ConstitutionArticles of ConfederationFootnotesThough there were about 50 members of the Congress at any given time each state delegation voted en bloc with each state having a single vote The Congress continued to refer itself as the Continental Congress throughout its eight year history although modern historians separate it from the two earlier congresses which operated under slightly different rules and procedures until the later part of American Revolutionary War 1 The membership of the Second Continental Congress automatically carried over to the Congress of the Confederation and had the same secretary as the Second Continental Congress Charles Thomson The Congress of the Confederation was succeeded by the Congress of the United States as provided for in the new Constitution of the United States drafted on September 17 1787 in Philadelphia ratified by each of the states and adopted by the Congress in 1788 2 Contents 1 History 2 Presiding officer 3 Meeting sites 4 List of sessions 5 See also 6 Notes 7 References 8 Bibliography 9 External linksHistory EditFurther information Confederation Period nbsp General George Washington Resigning His Commission an 1824 portrait of George Washington by John TrumbullOn March 1 1781 the Articles of Confederation and Perpetual Union were signed by delegates of Maryland at a meeting of the Second Continental Congress in Philadelphia which then declared the Articles ratified As historian Edmund Burnett wrote There was no new organization of any kind not even the election of a new President The Congress still called itself the Continental Congress Nevertheless despite its being generally the same exact governing body with some changes in membership over the years as delegates came and went individually according to their own personal reasons and upon instructions of their state governments some modern historians would later refer to the Continental Congress after the ratification of the Articles as the Congress of the Confederation or the Confederation Congress The Congress of the Confederation opened in the last stages of the American Revolution Combat ended in October 1781 with the surrender of the British after the Siege and Battle of Yorktown The British however continued to occupy New York City while the American delegates in Paris named by the Congress negotiated the terms of peace with Great Britain 3 Based on preliminary articles with the British negotiators made on November 30 1782 and approved by the Congress of the Confederation on April 15 1783 the Treaty of Paris was further signed on September 3 1783 and ratified by the Confederation Congress then sitting at the Maryland State House in Annapolis on January 14 1784 This formally ended the American Revolutionary War between Great Britain and the thirteen former colonies which on July 4 1776 had declared independence In December 1783 General George Washington commander in chief of the Continental Army journeyed to Annapolis after saying farewell to his officers at Fraunces Tavern and men who had just reoccupied New York City after the departing British Army On December 23 at the Maryland State House where the Congress met in the Old Senate Chamber he addressed the civilian leaders and delegates of Congress and returned to them the signed commission they had voted him back in June 1775 at the beginning of the conflict With that simple gesture of acknowledging the first civilian power over the military he took his leave and returned by horseback the next day to his home and family at Mount Vernon near the colonial river port city on the Potomac River at Alexandria in Virginia Congress had little power and without the external threat of a war against the British it became quite difficult to get enough delegates to meet to form a quorum Nonetheless the Congress still managed to pass important laws most notably the Northwest Ordinance of 1787 The country incurred a massive debt as a result of the War of Independence In 1784 the total Confederation debt was nearly 40 million Of that sum 8 million was owed to the French and Dutch Of the domestic debt government bonds known as loan office certificates composed 11 5 million certificates on interest indebtedness 3 1 million and continental certificates 16 7 million The certificates were non interest bearing notes issued for supplies purchased or impressed and to pay soldiers and officers To pay the interest and principal of the debt Congress had twice proposed an amendment to the Articles granting them the power to lay a 5 duty on imports but amendments to the Articles required the consent of all thirteen states the 1781 impost plan had been rejected by Rhode Island and Virginia while the revised plan discussed in 1783 was rejected by New York Without revenue except for meager voluntary state requisitions Congress could not even pay the interest on its outstanding debt The states meanwhile regularly failed or refused to meet the requisitions requested of them by Congress 4 To that end in September 1786 after resolving a series of disputes regarding their common border along the Potomac River delegates of Maryland and Virginia called for a larger assembly to discuss various situations and governing problems to meet in Annapolis Maryland the Maryland state capital The Annapolis Convention in 1786 which included additional state representatives who joined the sessions first attempted to look into improving the earlier original Articles of Confederation and Perpetual Union There were enough problems to bear further discussion and deliberation that the Convention called for a wider meeting to recommend changes and meet the next year in the late Spring of 1787 in Philadelphia The Confederation Congress itself endorsed the Call and issued one on its own further inviting the states to send delegates After meeting in secret all summer in the Old Pennsylvania State House which by then was renamed Independence Hall from the famous actions of there eleven years earlier The Philadelphia Convention under the presidency of former General George Washington issued a proposed new Constitution for the United States to replace the 1776 1778 Articles The Confederation Congress received and submitted the new Constitution document to the states and the Constitution was later ratified by enough states nine were required to become operative in June 1788 On September 13 1788 the Confederation Congress set the date for choosing the new electors in the Electoral College that was set up for choosing a President as January 7 1789 the date for the Electors to vote for the President as on February 4 1789 and the date for the Constitution to become operative as March 4 1789 when the new Congress of the United States should convene and that they at a later date set the time and place for the Inauguration of the new first President of the United States The Congress of the Confederation continued to conduct business for another month after setting the various dates On October 10 1788 Congress formed a quorum for the last time afterward although delegates would occasionally appear there were never enough to officially conduct business The last meeting of the Continental Congress was held March 2 1789 two days before the new Constitutional government took over only one member was present at said meeting Philip Pell an ardent Anti Federalist and opponent of the Constitution who was accompanied by the Congressional secretary Pell oversaw the meeting and adjourned the Congress sine die Presiding officer EditThe Continental Congress was presided over by a president referred to in many official records as President of the United States in Congress Assembled who was a member of Congress elected by the other delegates to serve as a neutral discussion moderator during meetings Elected to a non renewable one year term this person also chaired the Committee of the States when Congress was in recess and performed other administrative functions He was not however an executive in the way the later President of the United States is a chief executive since all of the functions he executed were under the direct control of Congress 5 There were ten presidents of Congress under the Articles The first Samuel Huntington had been serving as president of the Continental Congress since September 28 1779 Meeting sites EditThe Second Continental Congress was meeting at the Old Pennsylvania State House Independence Hall in Philadelphia Pennsylvania at the time the Articles of Confederation entered into force on March 1 1781 but left after an anti government protest by several hundred soldiers of the Continental Army in June 1783 Congress moved its meeting site successively to Princeton New Jersey Annapolis Maryland Trenton New Jersey and then in January 1785 New York City which remained the seat of government for several years 6 List of sessions EditFirst CongressMarch 2 1781 a November 3 1781 Pennsylvania State House Philadelphia Pennsylvania nbsp President Samuel Huntington b until July 10 1781 Thomas McKean from July 10 1781 Second CongressNovember 5 1781 November 2 1782 Pennsylvania State House Philadelphia Pennsylvania nbsp President John HansonThird CongressNovember 4 1782 November 1 1783 Pennsylvania State House Philadelphia Pennsylvania until June 21 1783 nbsp Nassau Hall Princeton New Jersey from June 30 1783 nbsp President Elias BoudinotFourth CongressNovember 3 1783 June 3 1784 Nassau Hall Princeton New Jersey until November 4 1783 nbsp Maryland State House Annapolis Maryland from November 26 1783 nbsp President Thomas MifflinFifth CongressNovember 1 1784 November 6 1785 French Arms Tavern Trenton New Jersey until December 24 1784 nbsp City Hall New York New York from January 11 1785 nbsp President Richard Henry Lee from November 30 1784 Sixth CongressNovember 7 1785 November 2 1786 City Hall New York New York nbsp President John Hancock from November 23 1785 until June 5 1786 Nathaniel Gorham from June 6 1786 Seventh CongressNovember 6 1786 November 4 1787 City Hall New York New York nbsp President Arthur St Clair from February 2 1787 Eighth CongressNovember 5 1787 October 31 1788 City Hall New York New York until October 6 1788 nbsp Walter Livingston House New York New York from October 8 1788 nbsp President Cyrus Griffin from January 22 1788 Ninth CongressNovember 3 1788 c March 3 1789 d Walter Livingston House New York New York nbsp President Cyrus Griffin de jure until November 15 1788 vacant from November 15 1788 e See also EditCommittee of the States Founding Fathers of the United States History of the United States 1776 1789 List of delegates to the Continental CongressNotes Edit Ratification of the Articles of Confederation was concluded on February 2 1781 and certified as having come into force by the Continental Congress on March 1 1781 and the United States in Congress Assembled government convened for the first time on March 2 1781 President of the Second Continental Congress from September 28 1779 Congress did not convene on November 3 1788 the stated first day of the 1788 89 Congressional Year because of a lack of a quorum namely delegates present from seven of the 13 states Through March 2 1789 delegates from various states occasionally gathered but never in sufficient number to constitute a quorum 7 On September 13 1788 the Confederation Congress resolved that March 4 1789 would be the commencement date of the federal government under the Constitution effectively dissolving Congress on March 3 1789 As Congress could not transact official business due to the lack of a quorum a president could not be elected for the 1788 89 Congressional Year As a result Cyrus Griffin who had been elected to the office January 22 1788 remained the de jure president of Congress until he resigned on November 15 1788 7 References Edit Journals of the Continental Congress 1774 1789 Edited by Worthington C Ford et al 34 vols Washington D C Government Printing Office 1904 37 Confederation Congress Ohio Historical Society Retrieved October 23 2010 See Peace of Paris 1783 Treaty with the United States of America Proposed Amendments to the Articles of Confederation Archived December 1 2010 at the Wayback Machine Journals of the Continental Congress 1774 1789 Edited by Worthington C Ford et al 34 vols Washington D C Government Printing Office 1904 37 31 494 98 Jensen Merrill 1959 The Articles of Confederation An Interpretation of the Social Constitutional History of the American Revolution 1774 1781 University of Wisconsin Press pp 178 179 ISBN 978 0 299 00204 6 DiCamillo Michael 2015 Articles of Confederation The Encyclopedia of Greater Philadelphia Mid Atlantic Regional Center for the Humanities Rutgers University Camden Retrieved April 19 2019 a b Jillson Calvin C Wilson Rick K 1994 Congressional Dynamics Structure Coordination and Choice in the First American Congress 1774 1789 Palo Alto California Stanford University Press p 88 ISBN 0 8047 2293 5 OCLC 28963682 Retrieved April 20 2019 Bibliography EditBurnett Edmund C 1975 The Continental Congress Greenwood Publishing ISBN 0 8371 8386 3 Henderson H James 1987 Party Politics in the Continental Congress Boston Rowman amp Littlefield ISBN 0 8191 6525 5 Jensen Merrill 1950 New Nation A History of the United States During the Confederation 1781 1789 New York Knopf McLaughlin Andrew C 1935 A Constitutional History of the United States Appleton Century Crofts ISBN 978 1 931313 31 5 Montross Lynn 1970 The Reluctant Rebels the Story of the Continental Congress 1774 1789 New York Barnes amp Noble ISBN 0 389 03973 X Morris Richard B 1987 The Forging of the Union 1781 1789 New York Harper amp Row ISBN 0 06 091424 6 Morris Richard B 1956 The Confederation Period and the American Historian William and Mary Quarterly 13 2 139 156 doi 10 2307 1920529 JSTOR 1920529 Rakove Jack N 1979 The Beginnings of National Politics An Interpretive History of the Continental Congress New York Knopf ISBN 0 394 42370 4 External links Edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Continental Congress Major documents from the Congress including journals letters debates via Library of Congress Journals of the Continental Congress 1774 1789Preceded bySecond Continental Congress Legislature of the United StatesMarch 1 1781 March 4 1789 Succeeded byFirst United States Congress Portals nbsp United States nbsp Politics nbsp History nbsp Law Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Congress of the Confederation amp oldid 1178389275, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.