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+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #51742 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/51742)
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-The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Wyandotte convention; an address, by
-John Alexander Martin
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most
-other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions
-whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms of
-the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at
-www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you'll have
-to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook.
-
-Title: The Wyandotte convention; an address
-
-Author: John Alexander Martin
-
-Release Date: April 12, 2016 [EBook #51742]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: UTF-8
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK WYANDOTTE CONVENTION: AN ADDRESS ***
-
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-Produced by Richard Tonsing and the Online Distributed
-Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This file was
-produced from images generously made available by The
-Internet Archive)
-
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-
-
- THE WYANDOTTE CONVENTION
- AN ADDRESS,
-
-
- Delivered By
-
- JOHN A. MARTIN,
-
- ——at the——
-
- Re-Union of the Members and Officers
-
- ——of the——
-
- WYANDOTTE CONSTITUTIONAL CONVENTION.
-
- HELD AT
-
- WYANDOTTE, KANSAS, JULY 29, 1882.
-
- ATCHISON, KAS:
- HASKELL & SON, PRINTERS.
- —1882.—
-
-
-
-
- THE WYANDOTTE CONVENTION.
-
-
- MR. PRESIDENT:
-
-It is often charged that participants in assemblages of this character
-are apt to exaggerate the importance of the occasion they commemorate,
-and after the manner of one of our poets, sing in chorus: "I celebrate
-myself." Perhaps I can speak of the Wyandotte Convention and its work
-without being accused of this self-gratulation; for I was more of an
-observer of its proceedings than a participant in them. I recorded what
-was done, but I had no part or lot in the doing. If its work had been
-crude or weak, I could not fairly have been held responsible for the
-failure. As it was strong, efficient and enduring, I can felicitate you,
-the survivors of those who wrought this great service for Kansas,
-without a suspicion of self-praise.
-
-
- KANSAS CONSTITUTIONAL CONVENTIONS.
-
-Four Conventions framed Constitutions for this State. The first
-assembled at Topeka, on the 23d of October, 1855, and adjourned on the
-11th of November, after a session of twenty days. It was composed of
-forty-seven members, of whom thirty-one signed the Constitution. On the
-15th of December this instrument was submitted to the people for
-ratification or rejection. Only 1,777 ballots were cast, all but 46
-being favorable. One of its sections, a provision excluding negroes and
-mulattoes from the State, was submitted as an independent proposition,
-and adopted by an affirmative vote of 1,287, to 453 against it.
-
-The second convention was that held at Lecompton, which met on the 7th
-of June, 1857, and after a session of four days, adjourned until the
-19th of October, a final adjournment being reached on the 3d of
-November. It was composed of sixty-four members, forty-five of whom
-signed the organic law it framed, and its session continued twenty days.
-No direct vote on this Constitution was provided for. The Schedule
-ordered two forms of ballot, one, the "Constitution with Slavery," the
-other, "Constitution with no Slavery." It was the old turkey and buzzard
-choice. The Free State men refused to vote at the election, held on the
-21st of December, and only 6,712 ballots were cast, 6,147 being for
-Slavery and 569 against Slavery. The Free State men had, however,
-elected a majority of the Territorial Legislature in October, and at a
-special session of that body, held in December, a law was passed
-providing for a direct vote on the Constitution. This election was held
-on the 14th of January, 1858, resulting: against the Constitution,
-10,266; for, 164—the pro-Slavery men not voting. A third vote on the
-Lecompton instrument was taken August 2d, 1858, Congress having ordered
-its re-submission under the terms of the English bill. Again it was
-rejected, the ballots in its favor being only 1,788, and those against
-it, 11,300.
-
-The Leavenworth Convention met at Minneola, March 23d, 1858, and at once
-adjourned to Leavenworth, where it re-assembled March 25th. It was
-composed of ninety-five members, was in session only eleven days, and
-the Constitution it framed was signed by eighty-three persons. This
-instrument was adopted at an election held May 11th, by a very small
-vote, the pro-Slavery men taking no part in the contest. It was never a
-popular organic law, and many Free State men who supported it did so
-under protest. An earnest effort was made, by the Republicans, to secure
-the admission of Kansas under the Topeka Constitution, and by the
-Democrats, with a few exceptions to bring the Territory in under the
-Lecompton Constitution. But no serious or determined contest was waged,
-in Congress, for admission under the Leavenworth Constitution, and in
-less than eight months the movement in its behalf was formally
-abandoned.
-
-
- THE WYANDOTTE CONVENTION.
-
-Early in February, 1859, the Territorial Legislature passed an act
-submitting to the people the question of calling a Constitutional
-Convention. This vote was taken March 28th, and resulted: For, 5,306;
-against, 1,425. On the 10th of May, 1859, the Republican party of Kansas
-was organized, at Osawatomie, and at the election held on the 7th of
-June, for delegates to the Wyandotte Convention, the Republican and
-Democratic parties confronted each other in Kansas for the first time.
-The Democrats carried the counties of Leavenworth, Doniphan, Jefferson
-and Jackson, and elected one of the two delegates from Johnson. The
-Republicans were successful in all the other Counties voting. The total
-vote polled was 14,000. The Republican membership was thirty five;
-Democratic, seventeen.
-
-The Convention then chosen assembled on the 5th day of July, 1859. In
-its composition it was an unusual, not to say remarkable, Kansas
-assemblage. Apparently the chiefs of the contending parties had grown
-weary of Constitution making, or regarded this fourth endeavor in that
-line as a predestined failure, for they were conspicuous by their
-absence. In the Topeka Convention nearly every prominent man of the Free
-State party had a seat. Gen. Lane was its President, and Charles
-Robinson, Martin F. Conway, Marcus J. Parrott, Wm. Y. Roberts, Geo. W.
-Smith, Philip C. Schuyler, C. K. Holliday, Mark W. Delahay, and many
-other recognized Free State leaders, were members. In the Leavenworth
-Convention there was a similar gathering of widely-known Free State men.
-Conway was its President, and Lane, Roberts, Thos. Ewing, jr., Henry J.
-Adams, H. P. Johnson, S. N. Wood, T. Dwight Thacher, P. B. Plumb, Joel
-K. Goodin, A. Larzalere, W. F. M. Arny, Chas. H. Branscomb, John
-Ritchey, and many other influential Free State chiefs or partizans, were
-among its members.
-
-
- THE MEMBERSHIP.
-
-In the Wyandotte Convention all the noted Free State leaders were
-conspicuously absent. Its roll-call was made up of names generally new
-in Kansas affairs, and largely unknown in either the Free State or
-pro-Slavery councils. Its President, James M. Winchell, his colleague,
-Wm. McCullough, and John Ritchey, of Shawnee, had been members of the
-Leavenworth Convention; Col. Caleb May, of Atchison, and W. R. Griffith,
-of Bourbon, had been members of both the Topeka and the Leavenworth
-Conventions; and Jas. M. Arthur, of Linn, had been a member of the
-Topeka Convention. But their prominence was largely local. On the
-Democratic side, too, appeared men before unnoted in the annals of the
-stirring and tremendous conflict that had for years made the young
-Territory the cynosure of a Continent's interest. None of the prominent
-pro-Slavery men who sat in the Lecompton Convention or the pro-Slavery
-Legislatures—Calhoun, Stringfellow, Henderson, Elmore, Wilson, Carr and
-others—appeared in this body.
-
-Perhaps the absence of these party leaders was a fortunate thing for the
-Convention and the incipient State. For in discriminating intelligence,
-in considerate zeal for the welfare of the people, in catholic grasp of
-principles, and in capacity for defining theories clearly and compactly,
-the members of this body were not wanting. On the other hand, there were
-fewer jealousies and far less wrangling than would have been possible
-had the envious and aspiring party leaders been present. I think it is
-certain that the work was better done, done with more sobriety,
-sincerity, prudence and real ability, than would have resulted had the
-recognized chiefs of the rival parties been on the floor of the
-Convention. The pioneers—the John Baptists—of the Free State cause were
-all at Topeka, and the Constitution they framed is disfigured by some
-blotches and much useless verbiage. The leaders were all at Leavenworth,
-where they schemed for precedence, and spread traps to catch one
-another, and quarreled over non-essentials, and did everything but make
-a popular Constitution. Lecompton was the last expression of a beaten,
-desperate and wrong-headed, but intellectually vigorous faction, and was
-really, barring the mean method of its submission, and its attempt to
-perpetuate Slavery, an admirable organic law.
-
-The younger men of the Territory constituted the Convention at
-Wyandotte. They came upon the field fresh, enthusiastic, and with a
-place in the world of thought and action to conquer. They recognized the
-fact that they must do extremely well to secure popular favor, and they
-set about their task with industry, intelligence and prudence. They were
-not martyrs or reformers, as many of those at Topeka were; nor jealous
-politicians or factionists, as most of those at Leavenworth were. They
-had no old battles to fight over again, no personal feuds to distract
-them, no recollection of former defeats or victories to reverse or
-maintain. They were their own prophets. They had had no experience in
-Constitution making, and hence did not look backward. They were not
-specialists. A few had hobbies, but the vast majority had no bees
-buzzing in their bonnets. A few were dogmatic, but the many were anxious
-to discuss, and willing to be convinced. A few were loquacious, but the
-majority were thinkers and workers. Some were accomplished scholars, but
-the majority were men of ordinary education, whose faculties had been
-sharpened and trained by the hard experience of an active and earnest
-life. Many were vigorous, direct, intelligent speakers; several were
-really eloquent; and a few may justly be ranked with the most versatile
-and brilliant men Kansas has ever numbered among her citizens.
-
-Very few were old men. Only fifteen of the fifty-two members were over
-forty. Over one-third were under thirty, and nearly two-thirds under
-thirty-five. Very few, as I have said, had previously appeared as
-representatives of the people in any Territorial assemblage, and this
-was especially true of the men whose talents, industry and force soon
-approved them leaders. Samuel A. Kingman had been in the Territory only
-about eighteen months, and was unknown, outside of Brown county, until
-he appeared at Wyandotte. Solon O. Thacher was a young lawyer of
-Lawrence, never before prominent in public affairs. John J. Ingalls had
-served, the previous winter, as Engrossing Clerk of the Territorial
-Council. Samuel A. Stinson was a young attorney, recently from Maine.
-William C. McDowell had never been heard of outside of Leavenworth,
-Benjamin F. Simpson was a boyish-looking lawyer from Miami county, and
-John T. Burris had been practicing, for a year or two, before Justices'
-courts in Johnson county. John P. Slough had been a member of the Ohio
-Legislature, but was a new comer in Kansas; and E. G. Ross was the
-publisher of a weekly newspaper at Topeka.
-
-One-half of the members had been in the Territory less than two years.
-Six came in 1854, four in 1855, and twelve in 1856, while Mr. Forman, of
-Doniphan, dated his residence from 1843; Mr. Palmer, of Pottawatomie,
-from 1854, and Mr. Houston, of Riley, from 1853. Forty-one were from
-Northern States, seven from the South, and four were of foreign birth,
-England, Scotland, Ireland, and Germany each contributing one. It
-appears singular that only one of the Western States, Indiana, was
-represented in the membership, that State furnishing six delegates.
-Twelve hailed from New England, Ohio contributed twelve, Pennsylvania
-six, and New York four. Only eighteen belonged to the legal
-profession—an unusually small number of lawyers in such a body. Sixteen
-were farmers, eight merchants, three physicians, three manufacturers,
-one a mechanic, one a printer, one a land agent, and one a surveyor. The
-oldest member was Robert Graham, of Atchison, who was 55; the youngest,
-Benj. F. Simpson, of Lykins Co., (now Miami,) who was 23.
-
-
- A WORKING BODY.
-
-It was a working body, from the first hour of its session until the
-last. There is a tradition that the Continental Congress which
-promulgated the Declaration of Independence was materially hastened in
-its deliberations over that immortal document by swarms of flies that
-invaded the hall where it sat, and made the life of its members a
-burden. Perhaps the intense heat of the rough-plastered room where the
-Convention met, or the knowledge that Territorial scrip would be
-received by importunate landlords only at a usurious discount, had
-something to do with urging dispatch in business. But certainly the
-Convention went to work with an energy and industry I have never seen
-paralleled in a Kansas deliberative body since that time. It perfected
-its organization, adopted rules for its government, discussed the best
-mode of procedure in framing a Constitution, and appointed a Committee
-to report upon that subject, during the first day's session; all the
-standing Committees were announced on the third day; and by the close of
-the fifth day it had disposed of two very troublesome contested election
-cases, decided that the Ohio Constitution should be the model for that
-of Kansas, perfected arrangements for reporting and printing its
-debates, and instructed its Committees upon a number of disputed
-questions. The vote on selecting a model for the Constitution was, on
-the second ballot: for the Ohio Constitution, 25 votes; Indiana, 23; and
-Kentucky, 1. So our Kansas Constitution was modeled after that of
-Ohio—something, I think, as the farmer's new house was designed after
-his old one; it was built upon the old site.
-
-
- THE COMMITTEES.
-
-The Chairmanships of the different Committees were assigned as follows:
-Preamble and Bill of Rights—Wm. Hutchinson, of Lawrence. Executive
-Department—John P. Greer, of Shawnee. Legislative Department—Solon O.
-Thacher, of Lawrence. Judicial Department—Samuel A. Kingman, of Brown
-Co. Military—James G. Blunt, of Anderson Co. Electors and Elections—P.
-H. Townsend, of Douglas. Schedule—John T. Burris, of Johnson.
-Apportionment—H. D. Preston, of Shawnee. Corporations and Banking—Robert
-Graham, of Atchison. Education and Public Institutions—W. R. Griffith,
-of Bourbon Co. County and Township Organizations—John Ritchey, of
-Topeka. Ordinance and Public Debt—James Blood, of Lawrence. Finance and
-Taxation—Benj. F. Simpson, of Lykins. Amendments and Miscellaneous—S. D.
-Houston, of Riley Co. Federal Relations—T. S. Wright, of Nemaha Co.
-Phraseology and Arrangements—John J. Ingalls, of Atchison.
-
-I have studied the composition of these Committees with some interest,
-reviewing the work of their members in the Convention, and recalling
-their subsequent careers. And it appears to me that in making them up,
-President Winchell exhibited phenomenally quick and accurate judgment of
-men. He was, indeed, one of the best presiding officers I have ever
-known. His imperturbable coolness, never for an instant ruffled by the
-most sudden and passionate outbreaks of excitement in the Convention;
-his mastery of all the niceties of parliamentary law; his uniform
-courtesy and tact; his promptness and clearness in stating his
-decisions; and above all, the mingled grace and kindness and firmness
-with which he announced to an indignant member an adverse decision, were
-really wonderful. But what shall be said of that still more wonderful
-prescience with which he made up the Committees? What induced this calm,
-grey-eyed, observing little man, whose brass-buttoned blue coat was
-first seen by two-thirds of the Convention on the morning of the 5th of
-July—what impelled him, within twenty-four hours, to select an obscure,
-dull-looking, shock-headed country doctor as Chairman of the Military
-Committee, and thus name in connection with military affairs, for the
-first time, the only Kansas soldier who reached a full Major
-Generalship? How did he happen to pass by half a dozen more widely known
-lawyers, and appoint as Chairman of the Judiciary Committee, a man who,
-during more than fifteen years thereafter, occupied a place on the
-Supreme Bench of the State, for the greater portion of this time as the
-Chief Justice? How came he to recognize so quickly, in the Engrossing
-Clerk of the Territorial Legislature, the ripest scholar and the fittest
-man in the body for the Chairmanship of the Committee to which every
-article of the Constitution was referred for final revision and
-amendment? In the youngest and most boyish-looking member he found the
-man who was to form, for this State, a code of Finance and Taxation
-whose clear directions and wholesome restrictions have guarded Kansas
-against the wasteful extravagance of Legislatures and the curse of a
-burdensome public debt, during all the tempting and perilous affairs of
-its first quarter of a century. And he named, as head of the Committee
-on Education, the first State Superintendent of Public Instruction. All
-of his appointments were made with rare judgment, but those mentioned
-appear notably discerning.
-
-
- PROGRESS OF WORK.
-
-On the sixth day a resolution favoring biennial sessions of the
-Legislature—adopted sixteen years afterward—was submitted and referred.
-The first of a long series of resolutions or proposed sections of the
-Constitution, prohibiting the settlement of negroes or mulattoes within
-the limits of the State, was also introduced. This question, with others
-of a kindred nature, such as propositions to prohibit colored children
-attending the schools, or to exclude them from the University, or to
-forbid the appropriation of any funds for their education, and last, and
-meanest of all, to deny to negroes the shelter of county poor houses
-when poor and helpless, was voted upon again and again, first in one
-form and then in another, and to the enduring honor of the majority,
-always defeated. It seems singular, in this day and generation, that
-such theories found persistent and earnest advocates. But it should be
-remembered that all this happened before the war, when slavery was still
-an "institution" in nearly half the States of the Union. The pro-Slavery
-party was, of course, solidly in favor of excluding free negroes from
-the State, and less than four years prior to the meeting of the
-Convention, the Free State party, in voting on the Topeka Constitution,
-had given a decided majority in favor of such exclusion. It therefore
-required genuine courage and principle to go upon record against each
-and every proposition of this character. For very few members who so
-voted felt absolutely certain of the endorsement of their constituents.
-
-The first Article of the Constitution reported, that on Corporations and
-Banks, was submitted on the sixth day and considered. It was stated, by
-the President, that many other Committees had their reports in the hands
-of the printer, and during the next few days they began to come in very
-rapidly. The Convention, to expedite work, adopted a resolution
-requiring all Committees to report on or before Saturday, the eleventh
-day of the session.
-
-
- THE BOUNDARIES OF THE STATE.
-
-On the seventh day the annexation of that portion of Nebraska lying
-south of the Platte river, was formally considered. The then organized
-Nebraska counties included in that section of our sister State had
-elected delegates to the Convention, who were present earnestly
-advocating annexation. This proposition was discussed during several
-days, and the debates took a wide range. The Nebraska delegates were
-admitted to seats as honorary members, with the privilege of speaking on
-this subject. The final determination, however, was to preserve the
-original Northern line. Two influences induced this decision, one
-political, the other local and material. Many Republicans feared that
-the South Platte Country was, or would be likely to become, Democratic.
-Lawrence and Topeka both aspired to be the State Capital, and their
-influence was against annexation, because they feared it would throw the
-center of population far north of the Kaw.
-
-The Preamble and Bill of Rights was reported on the tenth day, and
-opened the whole question of the State's boundaries. The Committee
-proposed the twenty-third meridian as the western line, and the fortieth
-parallel as the line on the north. This would have excluded about ninety
-miles of territory within the present limits of the State. The
-Committee's recommendation was, however, adopted, and stood as the
-determination of the Convention until the day before the final
-adjournment, when Col. May, of Atchison, secured a reconsideration, and
-on his motion the twenty-fifth parallel was substituted for the
-twenty-third. The northern boundary question was finally settled on the
-fifteenth day, when, by a vote of 19 ayes to 29 nays, the Convention
-refused to memorialize Congress to include the South Platte country
-within the limits of Kansas.
-
-
- FEATURES OF THE CONSTITUTION.
-
-On the seventh day the Legislative and Judicial Committees reported. The
-Legislative article was considered next day. The Committee proposed that
-bills might originate in either House, but Mr. Winchell submitted a
-novel amendment, which required all laws to originate in the House of
-Representatives. This was adopted, notwithstanding the vigorous
-opposition of Mr. Thacher, the Chairman of the Committee, by a vote of
-37 to 13. It survived the admission of the State only three years, being
-amended in 1864.
-
-On the eighth day the Militia article was adopted; on the ninth day the
-Judicial article was perfected, and the article on Education and Public
-Institutions reported and discussed; and on the tenth day the Committees
-on County and Township Organizations, and Schedule, reported. The
-deathless pertinacity of a "claim" is illustrated by a petition
-presented that day, from one Samuel A. Lowe, a clerk of the so-called
-"Bogus Legislature," who wanted pay for certain work he alleged he had
-performed. Only a year ago Mr. Lowe presented the same claim to
-Congress, and it was, I believe allowed by the House. But the Kansas
-Senators made such determined war on it that Mr Lowe can still sing, "a
-claim to keep I have."
-
-I have mentioned the fact that Mr Winchell was the author of the section
-providing that all bills should originate in the House. It should be
-stated that Mr. Ingalls was the author of the provision that "in actions
-for libel, the truth may be given in evidence to the jury, and if it
-shall appear that the alleged libelous matter was published for
-justifiable ends, the accused shall be acquitted." Another original
-provision of the Constitution is the Homestead section. This was first
-proposed by Mr. Foster, of Leavenworth county, on the sixth day of the
-session, and reported by the Committee on Miscellaneous and Amendments,
-on the thirteenth day. No other feature of the Constitution, perhaps,
-elicited more animated and earnest debate. It was discussed for several
-days; amended, referred, and again submitted. As originally reported, it
-provided for the exemption of "a homestead of 160 acres of land, or a
-house and lot not exceeding $2,000 in value, or real, personal and mixed
-property not exceeding $2,000, to any family." This was adopted by a
-vote of 28 ayes to 16 nays. Two days later the vote was reconsidered,
-and President Winchell proposed the wording finally adopted: "A
-homestead of 160 acres of farming land, or of one acre within the limits
-of an incorporated town or city, occupied as a residence by the family
-of the owner, together with all the improvements on the same, shall be
-exempted from forced sale under any process of law, and shall not be
-alienated without the joint consent of husband and wife, where the
-relation exists." Thus perfected, it was adopted by a vote of 33 to 7.
-
-I thought at the time, however, and a review of the proceedings and
-debates has confirmed my impression that favorable action on this
-provision was due to the earnest and eloquent advocacy of Judge Kingman,
-who was its most zealous, logical and courageous supporter. The
-homestead clause of the Kansas Constitution has been severely
-criticised, but I believe the people of the State generally regard it as
-a most beneficent provision of their organic law. For nearly a quarter
-of a century it has been maintained, and it still stands, as Judge
-Kingman said it would, guarding "the home, the hearthstone, the fireside
-around which a man may gather his family with the certainty of assurance
-that neither the hand of the law, nor any, nor all of the uncertainties
-of life, can eject them from the possession of it."
-
-The Finance and Taxation and the Executive articles were adopted on the
-fourteenth day, and the Miscellaneous article considered. This
-originally provided for the election of a Public Printer, but that
-section was stricken out, after a vigorous protest by Messrs. Ross and
-Ingalls. Nine years later their idea was endorsed, by the adoption of an
-amendment creating the office of State Printer.
-
-On the seventeenth day the temporary Capital was located at Topeka, the
-second ballot resulting: for Topeka, 29; for Lawrence, 14; for Atchison,
-6.
-
-
- THE FIRST "PROHIBITION AMENDMENT."
-
-On the same day a proposition was made, by Mr. Preston, of Shawnee Co.,
-to amend the Miscellaneous article by adding the following section:
-
-"Sec. —. The Legislature shall have power to regulate or prohibit the
-sale of alcoholic liquors, except for mechanical and medicinal
-purposes."
-
-A motion made to lay this amendment on the table, was defeated, by a
-vote of 18 ayes to 31 nays. But the anxiety of the members to exclude
-from the Constitution any provision that might render its adoption
-doubtful, or prevent the admission of the State, finally prevailed, and
-after a full interchange of views, Mr. Preston withdrew his amendment.
-There is, it is said, nothing new under the sun. Those who imagine that
-the prohibition amendment adopted in 1880 was a new departure in
-Constitution making, have never examined the records of the Wyandotte
-Convention.
-
-
- THE LAST OF SLAVERY IN KANSAS.
-
-On the nineteenth day occurred the last struggle over the Slavery
-question in Kansas. Sec. 6 of the Bill of Rights, prohibiting Slavery or
-involuntary servitude, came up for adoption, and it was moved to add a
-proviso suspending the operation of this section for the period of
-twelve months after the admission of the State. This proviso received
-eleven votes, and twenty-eight were recorded against it. A most exciting
-discussion occurred, on the same day, over the apportionment article,
-which the Democrats denounced as a "gerrymander."
-
-
- THE LAST DAYS.
-
-The work of the Convention was practically completed on the twenty-first
-day. The various articles had each been considered and adopted, first in
-Committee of the whole, then in Convention, then referred to the
-Committee on Phraseology and Arrangement, and, after report of that
-Committee, again considered by sections and adopted. But so anxious were
-the members that every word used should be the right word, expressing
-the idea intended most clearly and directly, that when the reading of
-the completed Constitution was finished, on the morning of the 21st day,
-it was decided to refer it to a special committee, consisting of Messrs.
-Ingalls, Winchell, Ross and Slough, for further revision and
-verification. This Committee reported the same afternoon, and again the
-Constitution was read by sections, for final revision, with the same
-painstaking carefulness and attention to the minutest details. All that
-afternoon, and all the next day, with brief interruptions for action on
-other closing work, this revision went on, and it was five o'clock in
-the afternoon of the 29th before the last section was perfected. Then
-occurred one of the most dramatic scenes of the Convention. Mr.
-Hutchinson submitted a resolution declaring that "we do now adopt and
-proceed to sign the Constitution."
-
-
- A SPIRITED DEBATE.
-
-At once Mr. Slough addressed the Chair, and after warmly eulogizing the
-general features of the Constitution, pronouncing it "a model
-instrument," he formally announced that political objections impelled
-himself and his Democratic associates to decline attaching their
-signatures to it. These objections he stated at length. They were,
-briefly: the curtailment of the boundaries of the State; the large
-Legislative body provided for; the exclusion of Indians made citizens of
-the United States, from the privilege of voting; the registry of voters
-at the election on the Constitution; the refusal to exclude free negroes
-from the State; and the apportionment.
-
-This action of the Democratic members had been foreshadowed for several
-days, but it was, nevertheless, something of a surprise. The Republicans
-understood that several of the Democrats had earnestly opposed such a
-course, and hoped that some of them would be governed by their own
-convictions, rather than by the mandate of their caucus. For a few
-moments after Mr. Slough concluded, the Convention sat, hushed and
-expectant. But no other Democratic member rose. It was evident that the
-caucus ruled. Then Judge Thacher, the President _pro tem._, addressed
-the Chair, and in a speech of remarkable vigor and eloquence, accepted
-the gauge of battle thrown down. "Upon this Constitution," he declared,
-"we will meet our opponents in the popular arena. It is a better, a
-nobler issue than even the old Free State issue. They have thrown down
-the gauntlet; we joyfully take it up." He then proceeded to defend, with
-great earnestness and power, the features of the Constitution objected
-to by Mr. Slough. "The members of the Convention," he asserted, "have
-perfected a work that will be enduring." The Constitution, he affirmed,
-would "commend itself to the true and good everywhere, because through
-every line and syllable there glows the generous sunshine of liberty."
-It was and should be, he declared:
-
- "Like some tall cliff, that lifts its awful form,
- Swells from the vale, and midway leaves the storm;
- Though round its breast the rolling clouds shall spread,
- Eternal sunshine settles on its head."
-
-Read in the light of subsequent history, these declarations appear
-almost prophetic.
-
-
- SIGNING THE CONSTITUTION.
-
-The twilight shadows were gathering about Wyandotte when this debate
-closed, and the Convention proceeded to vote on Mr. Hutchinson's
-resolution, which was adopted by 34 ayes to 13 nays—one Republican and
-four Democrats being absent. The roll was then called, and the
-Constitution was signed by all the Republican members except one, Mr.
-Wright, of Nemaha, who was absent, sick. The work of the Convention was
-completed, and after voting thanks to its officers, it adjourned without
-date.
-
-
- TWO MISTAKES.
-
-Each party, I think, was guilty of one blunder it afterwards seriously
-regretted—the Republicans in refusing to include the South Platte
-country within the boundaries of Kansas; the Democrats in refusing to
-sign the Constitution they had labored diligently to perfect. I speak of
-what I consider the great mistake of the Republicans with all the more
-frankness because I was, at the time, in hearty sympathy with their
-action; but I feel confident that no Republican member is living to-day
-who does not deplore that decision. And I am equally confident that
-within a brief time after the Convention adjourned, there were few
-Democratic members who did not seriously regret their refusal to sign
-the Constitution.
-
-
- "ADDED TO THE STARS."
-
-On the 4th of October, 1859, the Constitution was submitted to the
-people for ratification or rejection, and, for the first time in the
-history of Kansas, all parties cast a full, free and unintimidated vote.
-The Republicans favored, and the Democrats generally opposed its
-adoption. Nearly 16,000 ballots were polled, of which 10,421 were for,
-and 5,530 against the Constitution. The Homestead clause, submitted as
-an independent proposition, was ratified by a vote of 8,788 for, to
-4,772 against it. Every county in the territory except two, Johnson and
-Morris, gave a majority for the Constitution.
-
-Two months later, December 6th, State and County officers and members of
-the Legislature were elected, and the people of Kansas, having exhausted
-their authority in State building, patiently awaited the action of
-Congress. On the 11th of April, 1860, the House of Representatives
-voted, 134 to 73, to admit Kansas as a State, under the Wyandotte
-Constitution. Twice, during the next eight months, the Senate defeated
-motions to consider the Kansas bill, but on the 21st of January, 1861,
-several Southern Senators having seceded, Mr. Seward "took a pinch of
-snuff" and called it up again. It passed by a vote of 36 to 16, and on
-the 29th of the same month President Buchanan approved it. Thus young
-Kansas, through many difficulties and turmoils, was "added to the
-Stars."
-
-
- AN ENDURING CONSTITUTION.
-
-During nearly twenty-two of the most eventful and exciting years of
-American history, the Constitution thus framed and ratified has defined
-the powers and regulated the duties of the government of Kansas. Three
-Legislatures have voted down propositions to call a new Constitutional
-Convention. Twelve or fifteen amendments have been submitted, but only
-eight have been approved by the people. Finally, in 1880, the
-Legislature voted to submit a proposal for a new Convention, and at the
-regular election held in November of that year, this ballot was taken.
-The result was an endorsement of the old Wyandotte Constitution by a
-majority far more emphatic and overwhelming than that by which it was
-originally adopted, the vote standing 22,870 for, and 146,279 against
-the proposed Convention, or nearly seven to one.
-
-It is doubtful whether the organic law of any other State in the Union
-has more successfully survived the mutations of time and inconstant
-public sentiment, and the no less fluctuating necessities of a swiftly
-developing Commonwealth. Of its seventeen articles, only four, and of
-its one hundred and seventy-eight sections, only eight, have ever been
-amended. And of the eight amendments adopted, only five have revoked or
-modified the principles or policy originally formulated, the others
-being changes demanded by the growth of the State, or by the events of
-the civil war. The first amendment, ratified in 1861, provides that no
-banking institution shall issue circulating notes of a less denomination
-than $1—the original limitation being $5. In 1864 the provision
-requiring all bills to originate in the House of Representatives, was
-repealed; and a section intended to prevent U. S. soldiers from voting,
-but which was so worded that it deprived our volunteers of that right,
-was also repealed. In 1867 an amendment was adopted disfranchising all
-persons who aided the "Lost Cause," or who were dishonorably discharged
-from the army of the United States, or who had defrauded the United
-States or any State during the war. In 1868 the State Printer amendment
-was ratified. In 1873 the number of Senators and Representatives,
-originally limited to 33 and 100, respectively, was increased to 40 and
-125. In 1875 three propositions, each having in view biennial instead of
-annual sessions of the Legislature, were adopted. And in 1880 the
-Prohibition amendment was ratified. These are all the changes that have
-been made in our organic law during nearly a quarter of a century.
-
-
- PARTING AT WYANDOTTE.
-
-It would violate the proprieties of such an occasion to comment on the
-personal feuds or partisan broils which once or twice marred the general
-harmony and orderly progress of the proceedings. These were very few,
-indeed, and none of them, I think, outlasted the Convention. The members
-parted, when the final adjournment came, with mutual respect and good
-will, and the friendships formed during the session have been unusually
-warm and enduring.
-
-
- SUBSEQUENT HISTORY.
-
-It seems fitting that, in concluding this sketch of the Convention and
-its labors, I should briefly narrate the subsequent history of its
-members. It was a small company, that which parted here twenty-three
-years ago to-day, and it was made up, as I have said, largely of young
-and vigorous men. But when this reunion was first suggested, and I came
-to look over the familiar names I had so often called during the long,
-hot days of that far away July, it was painful to note the havoc death
-had made. It impressed me something as did a roll-call I once witnessed,
-in the red glare of bivouac fires after one of the great battles of the
-war, when surviving comrades answered "killed," or "wounded," to
-one-half the names of a regiment. Ten of the fifty-two members composing
-the Convention I have not heard of for many years. Of the remaining
-forty-two, twenty rest quietly in
-
- —"The reconciling grave,
- Where all alike lie down in peace together."
-
-The largest delegation was that from Leavenworth county, and only one of
-the ten gentlemen comprising it, R. C. Foster, certainly survives. Rare
-Sam Stinson, whose genial wit and brilliant accomplishments won all
-hearts, was elected Attorney General in 1861, by a unanimous vote, and
-died in his old Maine home, in February, 1866. William C. McDowell was
-chosen Judge of the First Judicial District at the first election under
-the Constitution; served four years; and was killed by a fall from an
-omnibus in St. Louis, July 16, 1866. John P. Slough removed to Colorado,
-was Colonel of a regiment raised in that State, and later a Brigadier
-General; was appointed, after the war, Chief Justice of New Mexico, and
-was killed at Santa Fe. Samuel Hipple removed to Atchison county; served
-as a Quartermaster during the war; was elected State Senator in 1867;
-and died in January, 1876. William Perry removed to Colorado, where he
-died. P. S. Parks returned to Indiana, and engaged in journalism and the
-law until his death, three years ago. Fred. Brown died in St. Joseph,
-Mo., and John Wright at his home in Leavenworth county. Robert Graham,
-of Atchison county, the oldest member, died in 1868. Three of the five
-members from Doniphan county, Robert J. Porter, Benjamin Wrigley and
-John Stairwalt, are dead. The members from Linn, James M. Arthur and
-Josiah Lamb, are both dead, as are also N. C. Blood, of Douglas, and T.
-S. Wright, of Nemaha. W. R. Griffith, of Bourbon, was elected the first
-State Superintendent of Public Instruction, and died, February 12th,
-1862, before the completion of his term. James G. Blunt, of Anderson,
-who became a Major General during the war, and won renown as a brave and
-skillful soldier, died, in Washington, a year or more ago. James Hanway,
-of Franklin, after a long life of usefulness, died at his old home, only
-a brief while ago. President James M. Winchell returned to New York
-shortly after the outbreak of the rebellion, and resumed his connection
-with the _Times_, first as war correspondent and afterwards as an
-editorial writer. Until his death, a few years since, he was employed
-upon that great journal.
-
-
- SURVIVING MEMBERS.
-
-Of the surviving members, many have attained the highest distinctions of
-the State, and all, I believe are useful and honored citizens. At the
-first election under the Constitution, Samuel A. Kingman was chosen as
-Associate Justice of the Supreme Court; in 1866 he was elected Chief
-Justice, and re-elected in 1872. Benj. F. Simpson was elected the first
-Attorney General of the State, but resigned the position to enter the
-army, in which he served throughout the war. He has since been Speaker
-of the House of Representatives, several times a State Senator, and is
-now serving his second term as U. S. Marshal. Solon O. Thacher was
-chosen District Judge at the first election under the Constitution, has
-since occupied many positions of honor and responsibility, and is a
-member of the present State Senate. J. C. Burnett, S. D. Houston and S.
-E. Hoffman were members of the first State Senate, and Geo. H. Lillie
-was a member of the first House of Representatives. E. G. Ross was
-appointed United States Senator in 1866, and elected in 1867, serving
-until 1871. John J. Ingalls was chosen as State Senator in 1861; was
-elected United States Senator in 1873, and re-elected in 1879, and is
-still occupying that distinguished place. John T. Burris was Lieut. Col.
-of the 10th Kansas, and subsequently District Judge. Wm. P. Dutton,
-James Blood, L. R. Palmer, John P. Greer and John Ritchey have filled
-many positions of local trust and prominence, with credit and
-usefulness. R. C. Foster and John W. Forman are residing in Texas;
-William Hutchinson lives in Washington; and C. B. McClellan, E. Moore
-and E. M. Hubbard are still prominent and honored citizens of the
-counties they represented. My old friend, Col. Caleb May, sole surviving
-member of the three Free State Constitutional Conventions, lives in
-Montgomery Co. If Dean Swift was right in saying that "whoever could
-make two ears of corn, or two blades of grass, to grow on a spot of
-ground where one grew before, would deserve better of mankind, and do
-more essential service to his country, than the whole race of
-politicians," what honor is due this sturdy Kansas farmer, who, during a
-residence of twenty-eight years in the State, has never—not even in the
-disastrous seasons of 1860 and 1874—failed to raise a good crop. Even
-the heroic service he rendered the cause of Freedom during the darkest
-days of the struggle in Kansas, was less valuable to the State than this
-practical and triumphant vindication of its soil and climate.
-
-
- "LOST TO SIGHT."
-
-Stalwart, quiet Wm. McCullough I have not heard of for many years. John
-A. Middleton, of Marshall Co., was a soldier in the 7th Kansas, removed
-to Montana in 1864, and I have learned nothing of him since. H. D.
-Preston, of Shawnee; R. L. Williams, P. H. Townsend and Ed. Stokes, of
-Douglas; Allen Crocker, of Woodson; A. D. McCune, of Leavenworth; J. H.
-Signor, of Allen, and J. T. Barton, of Johnson, have all disappeared and
-left no sign. I know not whether they are living or dead.
-
-
- THE OFFICERS.
-
-Of the officers of the Convention, queer old George Warren,
-Sergeant-at-arms of nearly all the early Kansas Legislatures and
-Conventions, died many years ago. Ed. S. Nash, the Journal Clerk, was
-Adjutant of the 1st Kansas, and died, some years since, in Chicago.
-Robt. St. Clair Graham, one of the Enrolling Clerks, was elected Judge
-of the Second Judicial District in 1866, and died in 1880. Richard J.
-Hinton, also an Enrolling Clerk, is the editor of the Washington (D. C.)
-_Gazette_, and a widely known journalist. Werter R. Davis, the Chaplain,
-was a member of the first State Legislature; was Chaplain of the 12th
-and Colonel of the 16th Kansas regiments during the war; and is one of
-the most prominent clergymen of his denomination in the State. S. D.
-McDonald, printer to the Convention, is still engaged in journalism. J.
-M. Funk, the door-keeper, and J. L. Blanchard, the Assistant Secretary,
-I have not heard from or of for many years.
-
-
- CONCLUSION.
-
-I wish I could sketch more in detail the work and history of the members
-of the Convention. But this paper is, I know, already too long. I have
-tried to tell how our Constitution was made. I could not narrate, within
-reasonable limits,
-
- "What workman wrought its ribs of steel,
- Who made each mast, and sail, and rope,
- What anvils rang, what hammers beat,
- In what a forge and what a heat
- Were shaped the anchors of its hope."
-
-It is enough to say that the work has proved strong and enduring.
-Through the groping inexperience of our State's childhood and the still
-more perilous ambitions of its youth, through the storm of civil war and
-the calm of prosperous peace, the Wyandotte Convention has justified the
-confident hopes of its early friends. The most marvelous changes have
-been wrought in this country since it was framed. The huge brick
-building in which the Convention held its sessions, long ago crumbled
-and fell. The distracted, dependent and turbulent Territory has grown to
-be a peaceful, powerful and prosperous State. Its hundred thousand
-people have multiplied to a million. Upon its vast and solitary
-prairies, where then bloomed a wild and unprofitable vegetation,
-"wherewith the mower filleth not his hand, nor he that bindeth sheaves
-his bosom," miles of green meadows now glisten with morning dew, and
-thousands of golden wheat fields shimmer in the noonday sun, and
-millions of acres of tasseling corn, rustling in the sweet twilight air,
-tell of harvests so bountiful that they would feed a continent. Every
-quiet valley and prairie swell is dotted with pleasant homes, where
-happy children laugh and play and men and women go their busy ways in
-prosperous content. Eager learners throng eight thousand school houses.
-Church bells ring in nearly every county from the Missouri to the
-Colorado line. More than four thousand miles of railway bind town and
-country, factory and farm and store, into one community. And over all
-the institutions and activities of this great, intelligent and orderly
-Commonwealth, broods the genius and spirit of the Wyandotte Convention.
-Under its ample authority and direction, just and generous laws have
-maintained the rights of citizenship, given protection to labor and
-property, stimulated enterprise, multiplied industries, opened to every
-child and youth the door of school and college, encouraged morality,
-fostered temperance, protected the weak, restrained the strong, and
-sternly punished outbreaking crime. And still the sunshine of popular
-confidence and favor falls upon the Constitution. It has outlived half
-of its framers, and when, a quarter of a century hence, the last
-surviving member of the Convention awaits the inevitable hour, the
-Wyandotte Constitution may yet be the chart and compass ordering and
-guiding the destinies of a State whose imperial manhood is foreshadowed
-by its stalwart and stately youth.
-
-[Illustration]
-
-
-
-
- TRANSCRIBER'S NOTES
-
-
- 1. Changed 1855 to 1854 on p. 4.
- 2. Silently corrected simple spelling, grammar, and typographical
- errors.
- 3. Retained anachronistic and non-standard spellings as printed.
- 4. Enclosed italics font in _underscores_.
-
-
-
-
-
-End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of The Wyandotte convention; an address, by
-John Alexander Martin
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-The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Wyandotte convention; an address, by
-John Alexander Martin
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-Title: The Wyandotte convention; an address
-
-Author: John Alexander Martin
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-
-<div class='tnotes covernote'>
-
-<p class='c000'> <strong>Transcriber's Note:</strong></p>
-
-<p class='c000'> The cover image was created by the transcriber and is placed in the public domain.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div>
- <h1 class='c001'>THE WYANDOTTE CONVENTION<br />AN ADDRESS,</h1>
-</div>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c1'>
-<div class='nf-center c002'>
- <div>Delivered By</div>
- <div class='c003'><span class='xlarge'>JOHN A. MARTIN,</span></div>
- <div class='c003'>——at the——</div>
- <div class='c003'><span class='large'>Re-Union of the Members and Officers</span></div>
- <div class='c003'>——of the——</div>
- <div class='c003'><span class='large'>WYANDOTTE CONSTITUTIONAL CONVENTION.</span></div>
- <div class='c003'>HELD AT</div>
- <div class='c003'><span class='large'>WYANDOTTE, KANSAS, JULY 29, 1882.</span></div>
- <div class='c003'>ATCHISON, KAS:</div>
- <div>HASKELL &amp; SON, PRINTERS.</div>
- <div>—1882.—</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_1'>1</span>
- <h2 class='c004'>THE WYANDOTTE CONVENTION.</h2>
-</div>
-
-<div class='lg-container-l c002'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><span class='sc'>Mr. President</span>:</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c000'>It is often charged that participants in assemblages of this character
-are apt to exaggerate the importance of the occasion they commemorate,
-and after the manner of one of our poets, sing in chorus: "I celebrate
-myself." Perhaps I can speak of the Wyandotte Convention and its
-work without being accused of this self-gratulation; for I was more of an
-observer of its proceedings than a participant in them. I recorded what
-was done, but I had no part or lot in the doing. If its work had been
-crude or weak, I could not fairly have been held responsible for the failure.
-As it was strong, efficient and enduring, I can felicitate you, the
-survivors of those who wrought this great service for Kansas, without a
-suspicion of self-praise.</p>
-
-<h3 class='c005'>KANSAS CONSTITUTIONAL CONVENTIONS.</h3>
-
-<p class='c006'>Four Conventions framed Constitutions for this State. The first assembled
-at Topeka, on the 23d of October, 1855, and adjourned on the
-11th of November, after a session of twenty days. It was composed of
-forty-seven members, of whom thirty-one signed the Constitution. On
-the 15th of December this instrument was submitted to the people for
-ratification or rejection. Only 1,777 ballots were cast, all but 46 being
-favorable. One of its sections, a provision excluding negroes and mulattoes
-from the State, was submitted as an independent proposition, and
-adopted by an affirmative vote of 1,287, to 453 against it.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The second convention was that held at Lecompton, which met on
-the 7th of June, 1857, and after a session of four days, adjourned until the
-19th of October, a final adjournment being reached on the 3d of November.
-It was composed of sixty-four members, forty-five of whom signed
-the organic law it framed, and its session continued twenty days. No
-direct vote on this Constitution was provided for. The Schedule ordered
-two forms of ballot, one, the "Constitution with Slavery," the
-other, "Constitution with no Slavery." It was the old turkey and buzzard
-choice. The Free State men refused to vote at the election, held on the
-21st of December, and only 6,712 ballots were cast, 6,147 being for Slavery
-and 569 against Slavery. The Free State men had, however, elected
-a majority of the Territorial Legislature in October, and at a special session
-of that body, held in December, a law was passed providing for a direct
-vote on the Constitution. This election was held on the 14th of
-January, 1858, resulting: against the Constitution, 10,266; for, 164—the
-pro-Slavery men not voting. A third vote on the Lecompton instrument
-was taken August 2d, 1858, Congress having ordered its re-submission
-under the terms of the English bill. Again it was rejected, the ballots in
-its favor being only 1,788, and those against it, 11,300.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'><span class='pageno' id='Page_2'>2</span>The Leavenworth Convention met at Minneola, March 23d, 1858,
-and at once adjourned to Leavenworth, where it re-assembled March 25th.
-It was composed of ninety-five members, was in session only eleven days,
-and the Constitution it framed was signed by eighty-three persons. This
-instrument was adopted at an election held May 11th, by a very small
-vote, the pro-Slavery men taking no part in the contest. It was
-never a popular organic law, and many Free State men who supported it
-did so under protest. An earnest effort was made, by the Republicans,
-to secure the admission of Kansas under the Topeka Constitution, and by
-the Democrats, with a few exceptions to bring the Territory in under the
-Lecompton Constitution. But no serious or determined contest was
-waged, in Congress, for admission under the Leavenworth Constitution,
-and in less than eight months the movement in its behalf was formally
-abandoned.</p>
-
-<h3 class='c005'>THE WYANDOTTE CONVENTION.</h3>
-
-<p class='c006'>Early in February, 1859, the Territorial Legislature passed an act
-submitting to the people the question of calling a Constitutional Convention.
-This vote was taken March 28th, and resulted: For, 5,306; against,
-1,425. On the 10th of May, 1859, the Republican party of Kansas was
-organized, at Osawatomie, and at the election held on the 7th of June, for
-delegates to the Wyandotte Convention, the Republican and Democratic
-parties confronted each other in Kansas for the first time. The Democrats
-carried the counties of Leavenworth, Doniphan, Jefferson and Jackson,
-and elected one of the two delegates from Johnson. The Republicans
-were successful in all the other Counties voting. The total vote
-polled was 14,000. The Republican membership was thirty five; Democratic,
-seventeen.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The Convention then chosen assembled on the 5th day of July, 1859.
-In its composition it was an unusual, not to say remarkable, Kansas assemblage.
-Apparently the chiefs of the contending parties had grown
-weary of Constitution making, or regarded this fourth endeavor in that
-line as a predestined failure, for they were conspicuous by their absence.
-In the Topeka Convention nearly every prominent man of the Free State
-party had a seat. Gen. Lane was its President, and Charles Robinson,
-Martin F. Conway, Marcus J. Parrott, Wm. Y. Roberts, Geo. W. Smith,
-Philip C. Schuyler, C. K. Holliday, Mark W. Delahay, and many other
-recognized Free State leaders, were members. In the Leavenworth Convention
-there was a similar gathering of widely-known Free State men.
-Conway was its President, and Lane, Roberts, Thos. Ewing, jr., Henry J.
-Adams, H. P. Johnson, S. N. Wood, T. Dwight Thacher, P. B. Plumb,
-Joel K. Goodin, A. Larzalere, W. F. M. Arny, Chas. H. Branscomb,
-John Ritchey, and many other influential Free State chiefs or partizans,
-were among its members.</p>
-
-<h3 class='c005'>THE MEMBERSHIP.</h3>
-
-<p class='c006'>In the Wyandotte Convention all the noted Free State leaders were
-conspicuously absent. Its roll-call was made up of names generally new
-in Kansas affairs, and largely unknown in either the Free State or pro-Slavery
-councils. Its President, James M. Winchell, his colleague, Wm.
-McCullough, and John Ritchey, of Shawnee, had been members of the
-Leavenworth Convention; Col. Caleb May, of Atchison, and W. R. Griffith,
-of Bourbon, had been members of both the Topeka and the Leavenworth
-Conventions; and Jas. M. Arthur, of Linn, had been a member of
-the Topeka Convention. But their prominence was largely local. On
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_3'>3</span>the Democratic side, too, appeared men before unnoted in the annals of
-the stirring and tremendous conflict that had for years made the young
-Territory the cynosure of a Continent's interest. None of the prominent
-pro-Slavery men who sat in the Lecompton Convention or the pro-Slavery
-Legislatures—Calhoun, Stringfellow, Henderson, Elmore, Wilson,
-Carr and others—appeared in this body.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Perhaps the absence of these party leaders was a fortunate thing for
-the Convention and the incipient State. For in discriminating intelligence,
-in considerate zeal for the welfare of the people, in catholic grasp
-of principles, and in capacity for defining theories clearly and compactly,
-the members of this body were not wanting. On the other hand, there
-were fewer jealousies and far less wrangling than would have been possible
-had the envious and aspiring party leaders been present. I think it is
-certain that the work was better done, done with more sobriety, sincerity,
-prudence and real ability, than would have resulted had the recognized
-chiefs of the rival parties been on the floor of the Convention. The pioneers—the
-John Baptists—of the Free State cause were all at Topeka,
-and the Constitution they framed is disfigured by some blotches and much
-useless verbiage. The leaders were all at Leavenworth, where they
-schemed for precedence, and spread traps to catch one another, and quarreled
-over non-essentials, and did everything but make a popular Constitution.
-Lecompton was the last expression of a beaten, desperate and
-wrong-headed, but intellectually vigorous faction, and was really, barring
-the mean method of its submission, and its attempt to perpetuate Slavery,
-an admirable organic law.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The younger men of the Territory constituted the Convention at
-Wyandotte. They came upon the field fresh, enthusiastic, and with a
-place in the world of thought and action to conquer. They recognized
-the fact that they must do extremely well to secure popular favor, and
-they set about their task with industry, intelligence and prudence. They
-were not martyrs or reformers, as many of those at Topeka were; nor
-jealous politicians or factionists, as most of those at Leavenworth were.
-They had no old battles to fight over again, no personal feuds to distract
-them, no recollection of former defeats or victories to reverse or maintain.
-They were their own prophets. They had had no experience in Constitution
-making, and hence did not look backward. They were not specialists.
-A few had hobbies, but the vast majority had no bees buzzing in
-their bonnets. A few were dogmatic, but the many were anxious to discuss,
-and willing to be convinced. A few were loquacious, but the majority
-were thinkers and workers. Some were accomplished scholars, but
-the majority were men of ordinary education, whose faculties had been
-sharpened and trained by the hard experience of an active and earnest
-life. Many were vigorous, direct, intelligent speakers; several were
-really eloquent; and a few may justly be ranked with the most versatile
-and brilliant men Kansas has ever numbered among her citizens.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Very few were old men. Only fifteen of the fifty-two members were
-over forty. Over one-third were under thirty, and nearly two-thirds
-under thirty-five. Very few, as I have said, had previously appeared as
-representatives of the people in any Territorial assemblage, and this was
-especially true of the men whose talents, industry and force soon approved
-them leaders. Samuel A. Kingman had been in the Territory only
-about eighteen months, and was unknown, outside of Brown county, until
-he appeared at Wyandotte. Solon O. Thacher was a young lawyer of
-Lawrence, never before prominent in public affairs. John J. Ingalls
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_4'>4</span>had served, the previous winter, as Engrossing Clerk of the Territorial
-Council. Samuel A. Stinson was a young attorney, recently from Maine.
-William C. McDowell had never been heard of outside of Leavenworth,
-Benjamin F. Simpson was a boyish-looking lawyer from Miami county,
-and John T. Burris had been practicing, for a year or two, before Justices'
-courts in Johnson county. John P. Slough had been a member of
-the Ohio Legislature, but was a new comer in Kansas; and E. G. Ross
-was the publisher of a weekly newspaper at Topeka.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>One-half of the members had been in the Territory less than two
-years. Six came in <a id='Africa'></a>1854, four in 1855, and twelve in 1856, while Mr.
-Forman, of Doniphan, dated his residence from 1843; Mr. Palmer, of
-Pottawatomie, from 1854, and Mr. Houston, of Riley, from 1853. Forty-one
-were from Northern States, seven from the South, and four were of
-foreign birth, England, Scotland, Ireland, and Germany each contributing
-one. It appears singular that only one of the Western States, Indiana,
-was represented in the membership, that State furnishing six delegates.
-Twelve hailed from New England, Ohio contributed twelve,
-Pennsylvania six, and New York four. Only eighteen belonged to the
-legal profession—an unusually small number of lawyers in such a body.
-Sixteen were farmers, eight merchants, three physicians, three manufacturers,
-one a mechanic, one a printer, one a land agent, and one a surveyor.
-The oldest member was Robert Graham, of Atchison, who was
-55; the youngest, Benj. F. Simpson, of Lykins Co., (now Miami,) who
-was 23.</p>
-
-<h3 class='c005'>A WORKING BODY.</h3>
-
-<p class='c006'>It was a working body, from the first hour of its session until the last.
-There is a tradition that the Continental Congress which promulgated the
-Declaration of Independence was materially hastened in its deliberations
-over that immortal document by swarms of flies that invaded the hall
-where it sat, and made the life of its members a burden. Perhaps the
-intense heat of the rough-plastered room where the Convention met, or
-the knowledge that Territorial scrip would be received by importunate
-landlords only at a usurious discount, had something to do with urging
-dispatch in business. But certainly the Convention went to work with
-an energy and industry I have never seen paralleled in a Kansas deliberative
-body since that time. It perfected its organization, adopted rules
-for its government, discussed the best mode of procedure in framing a
-Constitution, and appointed a Committee to report upon that subject,
-during the first day's session; all the standing Committees were announced
-on the third day; and by the close of the fifth day it had disposed
-of two very troublesome contested election cases, decided that the
-Ohio Constitution should be the model for that of Kansas, perfected arrangements
-for reporting and printing its debates, and instructed its
-Committees upon a number of disputed questions. The vote on selecting
-a model for the Constitution was, on the second ballot: for the Ohio Constitution,
-25 votes; Indiana, 23; and Kentucky, 1. So our Kansas Constitution
-was modeled after that of Ohio—something, I think, as the
-farmer's new house was designed after his old one; it was built upon the
-old site.</p>
-
-<h3 class='c005'>THE COMMITTEES.</h3>
-
-<p class='c006'>The Chairmanships of the different Committees were assigned as
-follows: Preamble and Bill of Rights—Wm. Hutchinson, of Lawrence.
-Executive Department—John P. Greer, of Shawnee. Legislative Department—Solon
-O. Thacher, of Lawrence. Judicial Department—Samuel
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_5'>5</span>A. Kingman, of Brown Co. Military—James G. Blunt, of Anderson
-Co. Electors and Elections—P. H. Townsend, of Douglas.
-Schedule—John T. Burris, of Johnson. Apportionment—H. D. Preston,
-of Shawnee. Corporations and Banking—Robert Graham, of
-Atchison. Education and Public Institutions—W. R. Griffith, of Bourbon
-Co. County and Township Organizations—John Ritchey, of Topeka.
-Ordinance and Public Debt—James Blood, of Lawrence.
-Finance and Taxation—Benj. F. Simpson, of Lykins. Amendments and
-Miscellaneous—S. D. Houston, of Riley Co. Federal Relations—T. S.
-Wright, of Nemaha Co. Phraseology and Arrangements—John J. Ingalls,
-of Atchison.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>I have studied the composition of these Committees with some interest,
-reviewing the work of their members in the Convention, and recalling
-their subsequent careers. And it appears to me that in making
-them up, President Winchell exhibited phenomenally quick and accurate
-judgment of men. He was, indeed, one of the best presiding officers I
-have ever known. His imperturbable coolness, never for an instant
-ruffled by the most sudden and passionate outbreaks of excitement in the
-Convention; his mastery of all the niceties of parliamentary law; his
-uniform courtesy and tact; his promptness and clearness in stating
-his decisions; and above all, the mingled grace and kindness and firmness
-with which he announced to an indignant member an adverse decision,
-were really wonderful. But what shall be said of that still more
-wonderful prescience with which he made up the Committees? What
-induced this calm, grey-eyed, observing little man, whose brass-buttoned
-blue coat was first seen by two-thirds of the Convention on the morning
-of the 5th of July—what impelled him, within twenty-four hours, to
-select an obscure, dull-looking, shock-headed country doctor as Chairman
-of the Military Committee, and thus name in connection with military
-affairs, for the first time, the only Kansas soldier who reached a full
-Major Generalship? How did he happen to pass by half a dozen more
-widely known lawyers, and appoint as Chairman of the Judiciary Committee,
-a man who, during more than fifteen years thereafter, occupied a
-place on the Supreme Bench of the State, for the greater portion of this
-time as the Chief Justice? How came he to recognize so quickly, in
-the Engrossing Clerk of the Territorial Legislature, the ripest scholar
-and the fittest man in the body for the Chairmanship of the Committee
-to which every article of the Constitution was referred for final revision
-and amendment? In the youngest and most boyish-looking member he
-found the man who was to form, for this State, a code of Finance and
-Taxation whose clear directions and wholesome restrictions have guarded
-Kansas against the wasteful extravagance of Legislatures and the curse
-of a burdensome public debt, during all the tempting and perilous affairs
-of its first quarter of a century. And he named, as head of the Committee
-on Education, the first State Superintendent of Public Instruction.
-All of his appointments were made with rare judgment, but those
-mentioned appear notably discerning.</p>
-
-<h3 class='c005'>PROGRESS OF WORK.</h3>
-
-<p class='c006'>On the sixth day a resolution favoring biennial sessions of the Legislature—adopted
-sixteen years afterward—was submitted and referred. The
-first of a long series of resolutions or proposed sections of the Constitution,
-prohibiting the settlement of negroes or mulattoes within the limits of the
-State, was also introduced. This question, with others of a kindred nature,
-such as propositions to prohibit colored children attending the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_6'>6</span>schools, or to exclude them from the University, or to forbid the
-appropriation of any funds for their education, and last, and meanest
-of all, to deny to negroes the shelter of county poor houses when poor and
-helpless, was voted upon again and again, first in one form and then in
-another, and to the enduring honor of the majority, always defeated. It
-seems singular, in this day and generation, that such theories found persistent
-and earnest advocates. But it should be remembered that all this
-happened before the war, when slavery was still an "institution" in nearly
-half the States of the Union. The pro-Slavery party was, of course,
-solidly in favor of excluding free negroes from the State, and less than
-four years prior to the meeting of the Convention, the Free State party,
-in voting on the Topeka Constitution, had given a decided majority in
-favor of such exclusion. It therefore required genuine courage and principle
-to go upon record against each and every proposition of this character.
-For very few members who so voted felt absolutely certain of the
-endorsement of their constituents.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The first Article of the Constitution reported, that on Corporations
-and Banks, was submitted on the sixth day and considered. It was
-stated, by the President, that many other Committees had their reports
-in the hands of the printer, and during the next few days they began to
-come in very rapidly. The Convention, to expedite work, adopted a resolution
-requiring all Committees to report on or before Saturday, the
-eleventh day of the session.</p>
-
-<h3 class='c005'>THE BOUNDARIES OF THE STATE.</h3>
-
-<p class='c006'>On the seventh day the annexation of that portion of Nebraska lying
-south of the Platte river, was formally considered. The then organized
-Nebraska counties included in that section of our sister State had
-elected delegates to the Convention, who were present earnestly advocating
-annexation. This proposition was discussed during several days, and
-the debates took a wide range. The Nebraska delegates were admitted
-to seats as honorary members, with the privilege of speaking on this subject.
-The final determination, however, was to preserve the original
-Northern line. Two influences induced this decision, one political, the
-other local and material. Many Republicans feared that the South
-Platte Country was, or would be likely to become, Democratic. Lawrence
-and Topeka both aspired to be the State Capital, and their influence
-was against annexation, because they feared it would throw the center
-of population far north of the Kaw.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The Preamble and Bill of Rights was reported on the tenth day,
-and opened the whole question of the State's boundaries. The Committee
-proposed the twenty-third meridian as the western line, and the fortieth
-parallel as the line on the north. This would have excluded about
-ninety miles of territory within the present limits of the State. The
-Committee's recommendation was, however, adopted, and stood as the
-determination of the Convention until the day before the final adjournment,
-when Col. May, of Atchison, secured a reconsideration, and on his
-motion the twenty-fifth parallel was substituted for the twenty-third. The
-northern boundary question was finally settled on the fifteenth day, when,
-by a vote of 19 ayes to 29 nays, the Convention refused to memorialize
-Congress to include the South Platte country within the limits of Kansas.</p>
-
-<h3 class='c005'>FEATURES OF THE CONSTITUTION.</h3>
-
-<p class='c006'>On the seventh day the Legislative and Judicial Committees reported.
-The Legislative article was considered next day. The Committee proposed
-that bills might originate in either House, but Mr. Winchell submitted
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_7'>7</span>a novel amendment, which required all laws to originate in the
-House of Representatives. This was adopted, notwithstanding the vigorous
-opposition of Mr. Thacher, the Chairman of the Committee, by a vote
-of 37 to 13. It survived the admission of the State only three years,
-being amended in 1864.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>On the eighth day the Militia article was adopted; on the ninth day
-the Judicial article was perfected, and the article on Education and Public
-Institutions reported and discussed; and on the tenth day the Committees
-on County and Township Organizations, and Schedule, reported.
-The deathless pertinacity of a "claim" is illustrated by a petition presented
-that day, from one Samuel A. Lowe, a clerk of the so-called "Bogus
-Legislature," who wanted pay for certain work he alleged he had performed.
-Only a year ago Mr. Lowe presented the same claim to Congress,
-and it was, I believe allowed by the House. But the Kansas Senators
-made such determined war on it that Mr Lowe can still sing, "a
-claim to keep I have."</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>I have mentioned the fact that Mr Winchell was the author of the
-section providing that all bills should originate in the House. It should
-be stated that Mr. Ingalls was the author of the provision that "in actions
-for libel, the truth may be given in evidence to the jury, and if it
-shall appear that the alleged libelous matter was published for justifiable
-ends, the accused shall be acquitted." Another original provision of the
-Constitution is the Homestead section. This was first proposed by Mr.
-Foster, of Leavenworth county, on the sixth day of the session, and reported
-by the Committee on Miscellaneous and Amendments, on the
-thirteenth day. No other feature of the Constitution, perhaps, elicited
-more animated and earnest debate. It was discussed for several days;
-amended, referred, and again submitted. As originally reported, it provided
-for the exemption of "a homestead of 160 acres of land, or a house
-and lot not exceeding $2,000 in value, or real, personal and mixed property
-not exceeding $2,000, to any family." This was adopted by a vote
-of 28 ayes to 16 nays. Two days later the vote was reconsidered, and
-President Winchell proposed the wording finally adopted: "A homestead
-of 160 acres of farming land, or of one acre within the limits of an
-incorporated town or city, occupied as a residence by the family of the
-owner, together with all the improvements on the same, shall be exempted
-from forced sale under any process of law, and shall not be alienated
-without the joint consent of husband and wife, where the relation exists."
-Thus perfected, it was adopted by a vote of 33 to 7.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>I thought at the time, however, and a review of the proceedings and
-debates has confirmed my impression that favorable action on this provision
-was due to the earnest and eloquent advocacy of Judge Kingman,
-who was its most zealous, logical and courageous supporter. The homestead
-clause of the Kansas Constitution has been severely criticised, but
-I believe the people of the State generally regard it as a most beneficent
-provision of their organic law. For nearly a quarter of a century it has
-been maintained, and it still stands, as Judge Kingman said it would,
-guarding "the home, the hearthstone, the fireside around which a man
-may gather his family with the certainty of assurance that neither the
-hand of the law, nor any, nor all of the uncertainties of life, can eject
-them from the possession of it."</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The Finance and Taxation and the Executive articles were adopted
-on the fourteenth day, and the Miscellaneous article considered. This
-originally provided for the election of a Public Printer, but that section
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_8'>8</span>was stricken out, after a vigorous protest by Messrs. Ross and Ingalls.
-Nine years later their idea was endorsed, by the adoption of an amendment
-creating the office of State Printer.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>On the seventeenth day the temporary Capital was located at Topeka,
-the second ballot resulting: for Topeka, 29; for Lawrence, 14; for
-Atchison, 6.</p>
-
-<h3 class='c005'>THE FIRST "PROHIBITION AMENDMENT."</h3>
-
-<p class='c006'>On the same day a proposition was made, by Mr. Preston, of Shawnee
-Co., to amend the Miscellaneous article by adding the following section:</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>"Sec. —. The Legislature shall have power to regulate or prohibit
-the sale of alcoholic liquors, except for mechanical and medicinal
-purposes."</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>A motion made to lay this amendment on the table, was defeated, by
-a vote of 18 ayes to 31 nays. But the anxiety of the members to exclude
-from the Constitution any provision that might render its adoption doubtful,
-or prevent the admission of the State, finally prevailed, and after a
-full interchange of views, Mr. Preston withdrew his amendment. There
-is, it is said, nothing new under the sun. Those who imagine that the
-prohibition amendment adopted in 1880 was a new departure in Constitution
-making, have never examined the records of the Wyandotte Convention.</p>
-
-<h3 class='c005'>THE LAST OF SLAVERY IN KANSAS.</h3>
-
-<p class='c006'>On the nineteenth day occurred the last struggle over the Slavery
-question in Kansas. Sec. 6 of the Bill of Rights, prohibiting Slavery or
-involuntary servitude, came up for adoption, and it was moved to add a
-proviso suspending the operation of this section for the period of twelve
-months after the admission of the State. This proviso received eleven
-votes, and twenty-eight were recorded against it. A most exciting discussion
-occurred, on the same day, over the apportionment article, which
-the Democrats denounced as a "gerrymander."</p>
-
-<h3 class='c005'>THE LAST DAYS.</h3>
-
-<p class='c006'>The work of the Convention was practically completed on the
-twenty-first day. The various articles had each been considered and
-adopted, first in Committee of the whole, then in Convention, then referred
-to the Committee on Phraseology and Arrangement, and, after report
-of that Committee, again considered by sections and adopted. But
-so anxious were the members that every word used should be the right
-word, expressing the idea intended most clearly and directly, that when
-the reading of the completed Constitution was finished, on the morning
-of the 21st day, it was decided to refer it to a special committee, consisting
-of Messrs. Ingalls, Winchell, Ross and Slough, for further revision
-and verification. This Committee reported the same afternoon, and
-again the Constitution was read by sections, for final revision, with the
-same painstaking carefulness and attention to the minutest details. All
-that afternoon, and all the next day, with brief interruptions for action
-on other closing work, this revision went on, and it was five o'clock in the
-afternoon of the 29th before the last section was perfected. Then occurred
-one of the most dramatic scenes of the Convention. Mr. Hutchinson
-submitted a resolution declaring that "we do now adopt and proceed
-to sign the Constitution."</p>
-
-<h3 class='c005'>A SPIRITED DEBATE.</h3>
-
-<p class='c006'>At once Mr. Slough addressed the Chair, and after warmly eulogizing
-the general features of the Constitution, pronouncing it "a model
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_9'>9</span>instrument," he formally announced that political objections impelled
-himself and his Democratic associates to decline attaching their signatures
-to it. These objections he stated at length. They were, briefly: the
-curtailment of the boundaries of the State; the large Legislative body
-provided for; the exclusion of Indians made citizens of the United States,
-from the privilege of voting; the registry of voters at the election on the
-Constitution; the refusal to exclude free negroes from the State; and the
-apportionment.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>This action of the Democratic members had been foreshadowed for
-several days, but it was, nevertheless, something of a surprise. The Republicans
-understood that several of the Democrats had earnestly opposed
-such a course, and hoped that some of them would be governed
-by their own convictions, rather than by the mandate of their caucus. For
-a few moments after Mr. Slough concluded, the Convention sat, hushed and
-expectant. But no other Democratic member rose. It was evident that
-the caucus ruled. Then Judge Thacher, the President <em><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">pro tem.</span></em>, addressed
-the Chair, and in a speech of remarkable vigor and eloquence,
-accepted the gauge of battle thrown down. "Upon this Constitution,"
-he declared, "we will meet our opponents in the popular arena. It is a
-better, a nobler issue than even the old Free State issue. They have
-thrown down the gauntlet; we joyfully take it up." He then proceeded
-to defend, with great earnestness and power, the features of the Constitution
-objected to by Mr. Slough. "The members of the Convention," he
-asserted, "have perfected a work that will be enduring." The Constitution,
-he affirmed, would "commend itself to the true and good
-everywhere, because through every line and syllable there glows the generous
-sunshine of liberty." It was and should be, he declared:</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>"Like some tall cliff, that lifts its awful form,</div>
- <div class='line'>Swells from the vale, and midway leaves the storm;</div>
- <div class='line'>Though round its breast the rolling clouds shall spread,</div>
- <div class='line'>Eternal sunshine settles on its head."</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c000'>Read in the light of subsequent history, these declarations appear
-almost prophetic.</p>
-
-<h3 class='c005'>SIGNING THE CONSTITUTION.</h3>
-
-<p class='c006'>The twilight shadows were gathering about Wyandotte when this
-debate closed, and the Convention proceeded to vote on Mr. Hutchinson's
-resolution, which was adopted by 34 ayes to 13 nays—one Republican
-and four Democrats being absent. The roll was then called, and the
-Constitution was signed by all the Republican members except one, Mr.
-Wright, of Nemaha, who was absent, sick. The work of the Convention
-was completed, and after voting thanks to its officers, it adjourned without
-date.</p>
-
-<h3 class='c005'>TWO MISTAKES.</h3>
-
-<p class='c006'>Each party, I think, was guilty of one blunder it afterwards seriously
-regretted—the Republicans in refusing to include the South Platte
-country within the boundaries of Kansas; the Democrats in refusing to
-sign the Constitution they had labored diligently to perfect. I speak of
-what I consider the great mistake of the Republicans with all the more
-frankness because I was, at the time, in hearty sympathy with their action;
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_10'>10</span>but I feel confident that no Republican member is living to-day
-who does not deplore that decision. And I am equally confident that
-within a brief time after the Convention adjourned, there were few Democratic
-members who did not seriously regret their refusal to sign the
-Constitution.</p>
-
-<h3 class='c005'>"ADDED TO THE STARS."</h3>
-
-<p class='c006'>On the 4th of October, 1859, the Constitution was submitted to the
-people for ratification or rejection, and, for the first time in the history
-of Kansas, all parties cast a full, free and unintimidated vote. The Republicans
-favored, and the Democrats generally opposed its adoption.
-Nearly 16,000 ballots were polled, of which 10,421 were for, and 5,530
-against the Constitution. The Homestead clause, submitted as an independent
-proposition, was ratified by a vote of 8,788 for, to 4,772 against
-it. Every county in the territory except two, Johnson and Morris, gave
-a majority for the Constitution.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Two months later, December 6th, State and County officers and
-members of the Legislature were elected, and the people of Kansas, having
-exhausted their authority in State building, patiently awaited the
-action of Congress. On the 11th of April, 1860, the House of Representatives
-voted, 134 to 73, to admit Kansas as a State, under the Wyandotte
-Constitution. Twice, during the next eight months, the Senate defeated
-motions to consider the Kansas bill, but on the 21st of January,
-1861, several Southern Senators having seceded, Mr. Seward "took a
-pinch of snuff" and called it up again. It passed by a vote of 36 to 16,
-and on the 29th of the same month President Buchanan approved it.
-Thus young Kansas, through many difficulties and turmoils, was "added
-to the Stars."</p>
-
-<h3 class='c005'>AN ENDURING CONSTITUTION.</h3>
-
-<p class='c006'>During nearly twenty-two of the most eventful and exciting years
-of American history, the Constitution thus framed and ratified has defined
-the powers and regulated the duties of the government of Kansas. Three
-Legislatures have voted down propositions to call a new Constitutional
-Convention. Twelve or fifteen amendments have been submitted, but
-only eight have been approved by the people. Finally, in 1880, the
-Legislature voted to submit a proposal for a new Convention, and at the
-regular election held in November of that year, this ballot was taken.
-The result was an endorsement of the old Wyandotte Constitution by a
-majority far more emphatic and overwhelming than that by which it was
-originally adopted, the vote standing 22,870 for, and 146,279 against the
-proposed Convention, or nearly seven to one.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>It is doubtful whether the organic law of any other State in the
-Union has more successfully survived the mutations of time and inconstant
-public sentiment, and the no less fluctuating necessities of a swiftly
-developing Commonwealth. Of its seventeen articles, only four, and of
-its one hundred and seventy-eight sections, only eight, have ever been
-amended. And of the eight amendments adopted, only five have revoked
-or modified the principles or policy originally formulated, the others being
-changes demanded by the growth of the State, or by the events of the
-civil war. The first amendment, ratified in 1861, provides that no banking
-institution shall issue circulating notes of a less denomination than
-$1—the original limitation being $5. In 1864 the provision requiring
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_11'>11</span>all bills to originate in the House of Representatives, was repealed; and
-a section intended to prevent U. S. soldiers from voting, but which was
-so worded that it deprived our volunteers of that right, was also repealed.
-In 1867 an amendment was adopted disfranchising all persons who aided
-the "Lost Cause," or who were dishonorably discharged from the army
-of the United States, or who had defrauded the United States or any
-State during the war. In 1868 the State Printer amendment was ratified.
-In 1873 the number of Senators and Representatives, originally
-limited to 33 and 100, respectively, was increased to 40 and 125. In
-1875 three propositions, each having in view biennial instead of annual
-sessions of the Legislature, were adopted. And in 1880 the Prohibition
-amendment was ratified. These are all the changes that have been made
-in our organic law during nearly a quarter of a century.</p>
-
-<h3 class='c005'>PARTING AT WYANDOTTE.</h3>
-
-<p class='c006'>It would violate the proprieties of such an occasion to comment on
-the personal feuds or partisan broils which once or twice marred the
-general harmony and orderly progress of the proceedings. These were
-very few, indeed, and none of them, I think, outlasted the Convention.
-The members parted, when the final adjournment came, with mutual respect
-and good will, and the friendships formed during the session have
-been unusually warm and enduring.</p>
-
-<h3 class='c005'>SUBSEQUENT HISTORY.</h3>
-
-<p class='c006'>It seems fitting that, in concluding this sketch of the Convention
-and its labors, I should briefly narrate the subsequent history of its members.
-It was a small company, that which parted here twenty-three years
-ago to-day, and it was made up, as I have said, largely of young and vigorous
-men. But when this reunion was first suggested, and I came to look over
-the familiar names I had so often called during the long, hot days of that
-far away July, it was painful to note the havoc death had made. It impressed
-me something as did a roll-call I once witnessed, in the red glare
-of bivouac fires after one of the great battles of the war, when surviving
-comrades answered "killed," or "wounded," to one-half the names of a
-regiment. Ten of the fifty-two members composing the Convention I
-have not heard of for many years. Of the remaining forty-two, twenty
-rest quietly in</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line in18'>—"The reconciling grave,</div>
- <div class='line'>Where all alike lie down in peace together."</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c000'>The largest delegation was that from Leavenworth county, and only
-one of the ten gentlemen comprising it, R. C. Foster, certainly survives.
-Rare Sam Stinson, whose genial wit and brilliant accomplishments won
-all hearts, was elected Attorney General in 1861, by a unanimous vote,
-and died in his old Maine home, in February, 1866. William C. McDowell
-was chosen Judge of the First Judicial District at the first election
-under the Constitution; served four years; and was killed by a fall
-from an omnibus in St. Louis, July 16, 1866. John P. Slough removed
-to Colorado, was Colonel of a regiment raised in that State, and later a
-Brigadier General; was appointed, after the war, Chief Justice of New
-Mexico, and was killed at Santa Fe. Samuel Hipple removed to Atchison
-county; served as a Quartermaster during the war; was elected State
-Senator in 1867; and died in January, 1876. William Perry removed
-to Colorado, where he died. P. S. Parks returned to Indiana, and engaged
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_12'>12</span>in journalism and the law until his death, three years ago. Fred.
-Brown died in St. Joseph, Mo., and John Wright at his home in Leavenworth
-county. Robert Graham, of Atchison county, the oldest member,
-died in 1868. Three of the five members from Doniphan county, Robert
-J. Porter, Benjamin Wrigley and John Stairwalt, are dead. The members
-from Linn, James M. Arthur and Josiah Lamb, are both dead, as
-are also N. C. Blood, of Douglas, and T. S. Wright, of Nemaha. W. R.
-Griffith, of Bourbon, was elected the first State Superintendent of Public
-Instruction, and died, February 12th, 1862, before the completion of his
-term. James G. Blunt, of Anderson, who became a Major General during
-the war, and won renown as a brave and skillful soldier, died, in
-Washington, a year or more ago. James Hanway, of Franklin, after a
-long life of usefulness, died at his old home, only a brief while ago.
-President James M. Winchell returned to New York shortly after the
-outbreak of the rebellion, and resumed his connection with the <cite>Times</cite>,
-first as war correspondent and afterwards as an editorial writer. Until
-his death, a few years since, he was employed upon that great journal.</p>
-
-<h3 class='c005'>SURVIVING MEMBERS.</h3>
-
-<p class='c006'>Of the surviving members, many have attained the highest distinctions
-of the State, and all, I believe are useful and honored citizens. At
-the first election under the Constitution, Samuel A. Kingman was chosen
-as Associate Justice of the Supreme Court; in 1866 he was elected
-Chief Justice, and re-elected in 1872. Benj. F. Simpson was elected the
-first Attorney General of the State, but resigned the position to enter the
-army, in which he served throughout the war. He has since been
-Speaker of the House of Representatives, several times a State Senator,
-and is now serving his second term as U. S. Marshal. Solon O. Thacher
-was chosen District Judge at the first election under the Constitution,
-has since occupied many positions of honor and responsibility, and is a
-member of the present State Senate. J. C. Burnett, S. D. Houston and
-S. E. Hoffman were members of the first State Senate, and Geo. H.
-Lillie was a member of the first House of Representatives. E. G. Ross
-was appointed United States Senator in 1866, and elected in 1867, serving
-until 1871. John J. Ingalls was chosen as State Senator in 1861; was
-elected United States Senator in 1873, and re-elected in 1879, and is
-still occupying that distinguished place. John T. Burris was Lieut.
-Col. of the 10th Kansas, and subsequently District Judge. Wm. P.
-Dutton, James Blood, L. R. Palmer, John P. Greer and John Ritchey
-have filled many positions of local trust and prominence, with credit and
-usefulness. R. C. Foster and John W. Forman are residing in Texas;
-William Hutchinson lives in Washington; and C. B. McClellan, E.
-Moore and E. M. Hubbard are still prominent and honored citizens of
-the counties they represented. My old friend, Col. Caleb May, sole surviving
-member of the three Free State Constitutional Conventions, lives
-in Montgomery Co. If Dean Swift was right in saying that "whoever
-could make two ears of corn, or two blades of grass, to grow on a spot
-of ground where one grew before, would deserve better of mankind, and
-do more essential service to his country, than the whole race of politicians,"
-what honor is due this sturdy Kansas farmer, who, during a
-residence of twenty-eight years in the State, has never—not even in the
-disastrous seasons of 1860 and 1874—failed to raise a good crop. Even
-the heroic service he rendered the cause of Freedom during the darkest
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_13'>13</span>days of the struggle in Kansas, was less valuable to the State than this
-practical and triumphant vindication of its soil and climate.</p>
-
-<h3 class='c005'>"LOST TO SIGHT."</h3>
-
-<p class='c006'>Stalwart, quiet Wm. McCullough I have not heard of for many
-years. John A. Middleton, of Marshall Co., was a soldier in the 7th
-Kansas, removed to Montana in 1864, and I have learned nothing of him
-since. H. D. Preston, of Shawnee; R. L. Williams, P. H. Townsend
-and Ed. Stokes, of Douglas; Allen Crocker, of Woodson; A. D.
-McCune, of Leavenworth; J. H. Signor, of Allen, and J. T. Barton,
-of Johnson, have all disappeared and left no sign. I know not
-whether they are living or dead.</p>
-
-<h3 class='c005'>THE OFFICERS.</h3>
-
-<p class='c006'>Of the officers of the Convention, queer old George Warren,
-Sergeant-at-arms of nearly all the early Kansas Legislatures and Conventions,
-died many years ago. Ed. S. Nash, the Journal Clerk, was
-Adjutant of the 1st Kansas, and died, some years since, in Chicago. Robt.
-St. Clair Graham, one of the Enrolling Clerks, was elected Judge of the
-Second Judicial District in 1866, and died in 1880. Richard J. Hinton,
-also an Enrolling Clerk, is the editor of the Washington (D. C.) <cite>Gazette</cite>,
-and a widely known journalist. Werter R. Davis, the Chaplain, was a
-member of the first State Legislature; was Chaplain of the 12th and
-Colonel of the 16th Kansas regiments during the war; and is one of the
-most prominent clergymen of his denomination in the State. S. D. McDonald,
-printer to the Convention, is still engaged in journalism. J. M.
-Funk, the door-keeper, and J. L. Blanchard, the Assistant Secretary, I
-have not heard from or of for many years.</p>
-
-<h3 class='c005'>CONCLUSION.</h3>
-
-<p class='c006'>I wish I could sketch more in detail the work and history of the
-members of the Convention. But this paper is, I know, already too long.
-I have tried to tell how our Constitution was made. I could not narrate,
-within reasonable limits,</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>"What workman wrought its ribs of steel,</div>
- <div class='line in2'>Who made each mast, and sail, and rope,</div>
- <div class='line'>What anvils rang, what hammers beat,</div>
- <div class='line'>In what a forge and what a heat</div>
- <div class='line in2'>Were shaped the anchors of its hope."</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c000'>It is enough to say that the work has proved strong and enduring.
-Through the groping inexperience of our State's childhood and the still
-more perilous ambitions of its youth, through the storm of civil war and
-the calm of prosperous peace, the Wyandotte Convention has justified
-the confident hopes of its early friends. The most marvelous changes
-have been wrought in this country since it was framed. The huge brick
-building in which the Convention held its sessions, long ago crumbled
-and fell. The distracted, dependent and turbulent Territory has grown
-to be a peaceful, powerful and prosperous State. Its hundred thousand
-people have multiplied to a million. Upon its vast and solitary prairies,
-where then bloomed a wild and unprofitable vegetation, "wherewith the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_14'>14</span>mower filleth not his hand, nor he that bindeth sheaves his bosom," miles
-of green meadows now glisten with morning dew, and thousands of golden
-wheat fields shimmer in the noonday sun, and millions of acres of tasseling
-corn, rustling in the sweet twilight air, tell of harvests so bountiful
-that they would feed a continent. Every quiet valley and prairie swell is
-dotted with pleasant homes, where happy children laugh and play and
-men and women go their busy ways in prosperous content. Eager learners
-throng eight thousand school houses. Church bells ring in nearly
-every county from the Missouri to the Colorado line. More than four
-thousand miles of railway bind town and country, factory and farm and
-store, into one community. And over all the institutions and activities of
-this great, intelligent and orderly Commonwealth, broods the genius and
-spirit of the Wyandotte Convention. Under its ample authority and
-direction, just and generous laws have maintained the rights of citizenship,
-given protection to labor and property, stimulated enterprise, multiplied
-industries, opened to every child and youth the door of school and
-college, encouraged morality, fostered temperance, protected the weak,
-restrained the strong, and sternly punished outbreaking crime. And still
-the sunshine of popular confidence and favor falls upon the Constitution.
-It has outlived half of its framers, and when, a quarter of a century
-hence, the last surviving member of the Convention awaits the inevitable
-hour, the Wyandotte Constitution may yet be the chart and compass ordering
-and guiding the destinies of a State whose imperial manhood is
-foreshadowed by its stalwart and stately youth.</p>
-
-<div class='figcenter id001'>
-<img src='images/i_016.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-</div>
-
-<div class='tnotes'>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <h2 class='c004'>TRANSCRIBER'S NOTES</h2>
-</div>
- <ol class='ol_1 c002'>
- <li>Changed 1855 to 1854 on p. <a href='#Africa'>4</a>.
-
- </li>
- <li>Silently corrected simple spelling, grammar, and typographical errors.
-
- </li>
- <li>Retained anachronistic and non-standard spellings as printed.
-
- </li>
- </ol>
-
-</div>
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-<pre>
-
-
-
-
-
-End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of The Wyandotte convention; an address, by
-John Alexander Martin
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