Elbridge Gerry: Speech on Paying Revolutionary War Debts
(1790)Elbridge Gerry’s views were taken seriously by his contemporaries, and his writings were carefully read by people involved in the politics of the day. Although he seems to have viewed himself primarily as a state politician rather than as a national one, his ideas were influential throughout the United States. His objections were taken into consideration not only in his home state of Massachusetts but throughout America as well, and his contentions were often the subjects of public replies by opponents of his views; thus, he was an important contributor to national debates on significant issues. His concerns about the creation of a bill of rights were echoed by other politicians, and they likely spurred some states to assert that their ratification of the U.S. Constitution was dependent on the First Congress’s taking up the issues of civil rights protection under the new stronger central government. In the House of Representatives, he frequently spoke out about how the...