Part of a series of articles titled The Constitutional Convention: A Day by Day Account for July 1 to 15, 1787.
Previous: July 14, 1787: Revisiting the Compromise
Article
"P.S. Have you thinned the Carrots which were too thick?"
--The end of a long letter from Washington (VA) to his nephew, advising him on how to take care of his plantation in his absence.
The Convention Today
The Convention was in recess this Sunday.
The preceding week fatigued many of the delegates. They’d decided only a few minor issues and were still clashing over representation in the Senate with little indication that the large and small states could reconcile their differences.
Some details relating to representation in Congress were established. It was agreed that the members of the first branch would be determined by a census every ten years, that direct taxation would be tied to the number of congressmen, that the census would count three-fifths of "other persons" (enslaved Americans), and that property would not be counted in apportioning representation. Yet the matter of representation in the second branch seemed to have no viable resolution. Advocates from the large states—Madison (VA), Gouverneur Morris (PA), and others—argued logically and with conviction that representation in the second branch should be determined by population. On the other side, delegates from the smaller states remained intransigent in their position that all states should have equal representation in the Senate. No amount of logic or rhetoric could dissuade them from their position, and if the large state delegates persisted in demanding proportional representation, some small states were prepared to leave the convention.
Despite the temper and tension, there was opportunity for compromise. The report of the grand committee recommended a plan with proportional representation in the House and equal in the Senate. A crucial number of delegates now understood that reconciliation would be essential for the convention to continue.
Part of a series of articles titled The Constitutional Convention: A Day by Day Account for July 1 to 15, 1787.
Previous: July 14, 1787: Revisiting the Compromise
Last updated: September 1, 2023