A Voice of Dissent: George Mason
text and picture courtesy of the National
Archives
As the delegates gathered at the Pennsylvania State House in May 1787 to
"revise" the Articles of
Confederation, Virginia delegate George
Mason wrote, "The Eyes of the United States are turned upon this
Assembly and their Expectations raised to a very anxious Degree." Mason
had earlier written the Virginia
Declaration of Rights that strongly influenced Thomas
Jefferson in writing the first part of the Declaration
of Independence. He left the convention bitterly disappointed, however, and
became one of the Constitution's most vocal
opponents. "It has no declaration of rights," he was to state.
Ultimately, George Mason's views prevailed. When James
Madison drafted the amendments to the Constitution that were to become the Bill
of Rights, he drew heavily upon the ideas put forth in the Virginia
Declaration of Rights.
The article "A
More Perfect Union" provides an in-depth look at the Constitutional
Convention, the ratification process, and the adoption of the Bill of Rights.