In September 1787 the Constitutional Convention in Philadelphia
proposed a new Federal Constitution to replace the beleaguered
Articles of Confederation. Each state then had to call a convention
of its own to vote on ratification. Pennsylvania, like many states,
was deeply divided over the new constitution. For six months
Federalists and Antifederalists fought a bitter and, on occasion,
violent political battle, with the Federalists ultimately
prevailing.
In this detailed study of Pennsylvania, the first in fifty
years, Owen S. Ireland argues that the overwhelming majority of
voters in Pennsylvania favored ratification. While many modern
views of the ratification conflict in America explain the
Federalist success as a victory of the "patrician" minority over
the "plebeian" majority, Ireland finds that political divisions
were based less on class, sectional, and occupational differences
than on partisan attachments rooted in religious and ethnic
conflicts. The state Constitutionalist party, dominated by
Presbyterians, opposed ratification, while the Anglican-led
Republicans supported it. Voters from Scots-Irish and German
Reformed backgrounds joined the Antifederalists, and those from
virtually every other ethnic and religious group supported the
Federalists.
Ireland has long concentrated his scholarly work on assembling
and analyzing quantitative data on politics and politicians in late
eighteenth-century Pennsylvania. Here he uses the results of this
research as the foundation on which to build a narrative of one of
the most dramatic and significant events of the Revolutionary
era.
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