A Federalist cartoon show Rhode Island, the last of the thirteen pillars of the new union, teetering on the edge of a fall.
Always contrarian Rhode Island stamped its tiny foot and threatened to hold
its breath until it turned blue.
No, they would absolutely not ratify the tyrannical document known as the Constitution of the United States.
Sure, the moneyed
interests in big states were for it—Virginia, New York, Pennsylvania.
And not-quite-so-big Massachusetts and Connecticut had voted for ratification—but that was all the more reason to be suspicious. The big bullies were likely to swamp
the sovereignty of the pipsqueak. And Massachusetts had been literally threatening
the existence of the former Colony
since Baptist Roger Williams and
his followers escaped the clutches of Puritans and set up a refuge of religious toleration.
Connecticut on the other side was now even more firmly in the hands of
the highly orthodox Black Legion
of Congregational ministers deeply
suspicious of loose religious practices next door which included a
thriving Jewish congregation, Quakers, and even—horror of
horrors—Catholics.
Rhode Island, heavily dependent economically on its ports and merchants, had been such a hot bed of opposition to
heavy handed British taxation and trade restriction policies that a mob of locals had done the faux Indians at the Boston Tea Party one better and
burned the grounded revenue schooner
Gaspee to the water line back in 1772. And it became the first colony, a mouse roaring at a lion, to sever its ties to the motherland, declaring its independence
on May 4, 1776, two months before the Continental
Congress got around to it. Its
delegates at the Congress, Stephen
Hopkins and William Ellery
naturally cast Rhode Island’s single vote for Independence.
During the war the British easily occupied Newport, which became a major Royal Navy Base. Yet the tiny colony still
managed to provide one of the most important and reliable Regiments of the Line for George
Washington’s often beleaguered Continental Army. When the French entered the war as allies,
American troops under General John
Sullivan, including the all Black
1st Rhode Island Regiment of state
militia in their smart and distinctive all white uniforms, in
somewhat uneasy cooperation with French forces
under Admiral the Comte d’Estaing dislodged
the British.
Ruined Newport became the principal base of operations for
the French and General Washington took up residence there planning to go
on the offensive when their combined forces could be brought to
bear in unison. It was from there
that the General launched his long march to Yorktown to trap Lord
Cornwallis’s army on a peninsula bottled
up by the French fleet. You
probably recall how that worked out.
But having played a critical role in the Revolution, Rhode Island’s post war economy was more devastated
than most of the other colonies. Its
merchant traders had trouble re-establishing old trade routes
as the British cut off lucrative
trade with the sugar and spice islands of the Caribbean. Instead they used their
ships to turn increasingly to the Slave
Trade and within a few years Rhode Island dominated between 60 to as much
as 90% of that trade, tying its economy to the slave holding South.
When the Articles of
Confederation failed to provide enough centralized
government to retire war debt
and facilitate trade, Rhode Island
suspicious of the undertaking, never even sent delegates to what became the Constitutional Convention.
In the years following the adoption of the Constitution by
the convention in 1787 there was a vigorous national debate aimed at
encouraging the former colonies to ratify the Constitution and officially join
the new Federal Union. The eloquent and elegant arguments of James Madison, Alexander Hamilton,
and John Jay were countered by dire
warnings of tyranny and the re-imposition of monarchy by wily political leaders like Edmund Randolph, George Mason, and New York Governor George Clinton who
styled themselves Anti-Federalists. Rhode Island was firmly in the
Anti-Federalist camp.
To
assuage those fears, ten new Amendments to
the Constitution, collectively known as the Bill of Rights were added to the original document. Rhode Island, however, was still suspicious.
Rhode
Island voters—property owning white men—rejected
ratification in a popular referendum on
March 27, 1778 by the lopsided margin of 237 to 2,708 after neighboring
Massachusetts and Connecticut had affirmed it.
One
by one all of the other 12 former colonies fell into line isolating and surrounding
the littlest state, which seemed determined to hold on to its own independence.
It
is said that no state was forced to ratify the Constitution, but that
might be a stretch in the case of Rhode Island. With her ports becoming havens for smugglers, gunboats began cruising menacingly offshore. Annual muster
days of Massachusetts militia were marked by drills that hinted that
a march against its neighbor might be in the offing.
George
Washington had already been elected first President
of the United States under the Constitution and had taken the oath of office in New York City where Congress was also meeting. A new national government had become a
reality.
On
May 29, 1790 after the Constitution was again defeated at a special convention in March and a bruising
debate in the legislature members
finally ratified the Constitution by the narrowest of margins—34 for to 32
against.
Rhode
Island became the last of the Original
13 to join the union.
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