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The draft constitution was discussed, section by section and clause by clause. Details were attended to, and further compromises were effected. [4] [6] On September 8, 1787, a Committee of Style, with different members, was impaneled to distill a final draft constitution from the twenty-three approved articles. [4]
The main article for this page is Signing of the United States Constitution. Pages in category "Signers of the United States Constitution" The following 40 pages are in this category, out of 40 total.
[44] [45] As a result, signers of three key documents are generally considered to be Founding Fathers of the United States: Declaration of Independence (DI), [21] Articles of Confederation (AC), [23] and U.S. Constitution (USC). [22] The following table provides a list of these signers, some of whom signed more than one document.
Jonathan Dayton (October 16, 1760 – October 9, 1824) was an American Founding Father and politician from New Jersey.At 26, he was the youngest person to sign the Constitution of the United States.
For example, in a recent TED talk, physicist and entrepreneur Riccardo Sabatini demonstrated that a printed version of the entire human genetic code would occupy some 262,000 pages, or 175 large ...
Daniel Carroll Jr. (July 22, 1730 – May 7, 1796) was an American politician and plantation owner from Maryland and one of the Founding Fathers of the United States.He supported the American Revolution, served in the Confederation Congress, was a delegate to the Philadelphia Convention of 1787 which penned the Constitution of the United States, and was a U.S. Representative in the First ...
Nathaniel Gorham (May 27, 1738 – June 11, 1796; sometimes spelled Nathanial) was an American Founding Father, merchant, and politician from Massachusetts.He was a delegate from the Bay Colony to the Continental Congress and for six months served as the presiding officer of that body under the Articles of Confederation.
A publisher had access to it in 1846 for a book on the Constitution. In 1883, historian J. Franklin Jameson found the parchment folded in a small tin box on the floor of a closet at the State, War and Navy Building. In 1894 the State Department sealed the Declaration and Constitution between two glass plates and kept them in a safe. [2]