Abstract
Two hundred years ago this spring George Washington wrote to our fellow Mainer, General Henry Knox, that because of the illness of his mother he would not be able to attend the Philadelphia Convention. If her health had not speedily improved, we might have had quite a different kind of Bicentennial, for both Washington and Benjamin Franklin, though largely silent in the debates, were palpable sources of strength. As it is, we have the happy occasion to celebrate what Everett Ladd has called "the expression of a nation-defining consensus on political values," our nationalizing principle, the one supreme bond linking all of us, the idea of the Constitution. Legal scholar Charles Black has called it "the greatest work of political creation since the union . . . of upper and lower Egypt."
First Page
247
Recommended Citation
Frank M. Coffin,
A Genealogy of Founders,
39
Me. L. Rev.
247
(1987).
Available at:
https://digitalcommons.mainelaw.maine.edu/mlr/vol39/iss2/3
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