President of the Continental Congress

Continental Congress
First Continental Congress
Second Continental Congress
Confederation Congress
Members

The President of the Continental Congress (Inclusive of the First, Second and Confederation Congresses.) was the presiding officer of the Continental Congress, the convention of delegates that emerged as the first national government of the United States during the American Revolution. The president was a member of Congress elected by the other delegates to serve as an impartial moderator during meetings of Congress.

George Washington referred to the office as "the most important seat in the United States".[1]

The first President of Congress was Peyton Randolph, who was elected on September 5, 1774. The last president, Cyrus Griffin, resigned in November 1788. Because of the limited role of the office, the Presidents of Congress are among the lesser known leaders of the American Revolution. The best-known President of Congress is John Hancock, remembered for his large, bold signature on the Declaration of Independence, which was adopted and signed during his presidency.

Contents

Title

The presiding officer of the Continental Congress was usually styled "President of the Congress" or "President of Congress".[2] After the Articles of Confederation were adopted on March 1, 1781, the Continental Congress, previously officially known as simply "The Congress", became officially known as "The United States in Congress Assembled."[3] Thereafter, the president was referred to as the "President of the United States in Congress Assembled", although "President of (the) Congress" was used in some official documents.[2]

Honor

Based on the type of men who held the position of President of Congress, the title carried great weight:

“Among the fourteen men who held the chair of Congress, were some of the first characters in America, and of the seven who occupied it during the period, 1774-81, five must be regarded as belonging to a small group of the foremost leaders of the day. These were Peyton Randolph, John Hancock, Henry Laurens, John Jay, and Thomas Mckean. Henry Middleton and Samuel Huntington, the other two, were less prominent, but were possessed of substantial reputations.”[4]

The citizenry likewise viewed the office with considerable honor:

“’Your name [President Randolph], till late, known comparatively to but few out of your own Provence, now holds rank with other Chieftans in the American cause, and is of course, in the mouth of every…man, woman, and child, throughout the extended Continent of English America.’”[5]

Role

The President of Congress was, by design, a position with little authority.[6] The Continental Congress, fearful of concentrating political power in an individual, gave their presiding officer even less responsibility than the speakers in the lower houses of the colonial assemblies.[7] Unlike some colonial speakers, the President of Congress could not, for example, set the legislative agenda or make committee appointments.[8] The president could not meet privately with foreign leaders; such meetings were held with committees or the entire Congress.[9]

Historian Richard B. Morris noted:

"The president was not only a presiding officer. As a delegate, he had power to vote and to serve on committees...He was in effect the administrative head of state...As Congress's social functionary, the president was its undisputed first member...the ceremonial head of state, and, indeed, foreshadowed the high tone set by President Washington under the federal Constitution."

"Lacking specific authorization or clear guidelines, the presidents of Congress could with some discretion influence events, formulate the agenda of Congress, and prod Congress to move in directions they considered proper. Much depended on the incumbents themselves and their readiness to exploit the peculiar opportunities their office provided."[10]

The presidency was less powerful than it was ceremonial.[11][12][13] The primary role of the office was to preside over meetings of Congress, which entailed serving as an impartial moderator during debates.[14] When Congress would resolve itself into a Committee of the Whole to discuss important matters, the president would relinquish his chair to the chairman of the Committee of the Whole.[15] The president was also responsible for dealing with a large amount of official correspondence,[16] but he could not answer any letter without being instructed to do so by Congress.[17] Presidents also signed, but did not write, Congress's official documents.[18] These limitations could be frustrating, because a delegate essentially declined in influence when he was elected president.[19] Henry Laurens, for example, resigned his presidency so that he could play a more active role in Congress.[20]

Term of office

Before the Articles of Confederation were ratified on March 1, 1781, Presidents of Congress served terms of no specific duration; their tenure ended when they resigned or, lacking an official resignation, when Congress selected a successor. When John Hancock was elected to preside over the Second Continental Congress in May 1775, his position was somewhat ambiguous, because it was not clear if President Peyton Randolph had permanently resigned or was on a leave of absence.[21] The situation became uncomfortable when Randolph returned to Congress in September 1775. Some delegates thought Hancock should have stepped down, but he did not; the matter was resolved only by Randolph's sudden death in October.[22] Ambiguity also clouded the end of Hancock's term: he left in October 1777 for what he believed was an extended leave of absence, only to find upon his return that Congress had elected Henry Laurens to replace him.[23]

The only reference to the President of Congress in the Articles of Confederation is a brief mention of the term of office:

The United States in Congress assembled shall have authority ... to appoint one of their members to preside, provided that no person be allowed to serve in the office of president more than one year in any term of three years....

Previously a president could serve indefinitely—Hancock presided for more than two years—but now presidents would serve a one-year term. When the Articles went into effect, however, Congress did not hold an election for a new president.[24] Instead, Samuel Huntington continued to serve as President of Congress until he asked to be relieved due to ill health in July 1781.[24] Samuel Johnston was selected as Huntington's replacement, but he declined the office, and so Thomas McKean was elected as the next presiding officer.[24] President McKean resigned on October 23, 1781, after hearing news of the British surrender at Yorktown, but Congress asked him to remain in office until November, when a new session of Congress was scheduled to begin.[25] (The Articles of Confederation called for Congress to meet "on the first Monday in November, in every year....") On November 5, 1781, John Hanson of Maryland became the first President of Congress to be elected to an annual term as specified under the Articles of Confederation.[12][25]

Decline

Congress, and its presidency, declined in importance with the end of the American Revolutionary War. Increasingly, delegates elected to the Congress declined to serve, the leading men in each state preferred to serve in state government, and the Congress had difficulty establishing a quorum.[26] President Hanson wanted to resign, but his departure would have left Congress without a quorum to select a successor, and so he stayed on.[12] President Thomas Mifflin found it difficult to convince the states to send enough delegates to Congress to ratify the 1783 Treaty of Paris.[27] For six weeks in 1784, President Richard Henry Lee did not come to Congress, but instead instructed secretary Charles Thomson to forward any papers that needed his signature.[28] John Hancock was elected to a second term in 1785, even though he was not then in Congress; he never took his seat, citing poor health, though he may have been uninterested in the position.[29] When Nathaniel Gorham resigned in November 1786, it was months before enough members were present in Congress to elect a new president.[29] The ratification of the new United States Constitution in June 1788 reduced the Confederation Congress to the status of a caretaker government. Cyrus Griffin, the final President of Congress, resigned in November 1788 after only two delegates showed up for the new session of Congress.[29]

Relationship to the US Presidency

The office of President of Congress foreshadowed[30] the current office of President of the United States and was similar in terms of its name, social, and diplomatic precedence, but different in terms of its executive powers. Historian Edmund Burnett wrote:

[T]he President of the United States is scarcely in any sense the successor of the presidents of the old Congress. The presidents of Congress were almost solely presiding officers, possessing scarcely a shred of executive or administrative functions; whereas the President of the United States is almost solely an executive officer, with no presiding duties at all. Barring a likeness in social and diplomatic precedence, the two offices are identical only in the possession of the same title.[31]

Because John Hanson was the first president elected under the terms of the Articles of Confederation, his grandson promoted him as the "first President of the United States" and waged a successful campaign to have Hanson's statue placed in Statuary Hall in the U.S. Capitol, even though Hanson was not really one of Maryland's foremost leaders of the Revolutionary era.[12]

List of presidents

"Hardly youthful revolutionaries, their average age at the time of election to the presidency was forty-seven."[32]

# Name State/colony Age Term start Term end Months Previous Experience
1 Peyton Randolph Virginia 53 September 5, 1774[a] October 22, 1774 2 Speaker, Va. House of Burgesses
2 Henry Middleton South Carolina 57 October 22, 1774 October 26, 1774[b] <1 Speaker, S.C. Commons House of Assembly
3 Peyton Randolph Virginia 54 May 10, 1775[c] May 24, 1775 <1 Speaker, Va. House of Burgesses
4 John Hancock Massachusetts 38 May 24, 1775 October 29, 1777 29 President, Mass. Provincial Congress
5 Henry Laurens South Carolina 53 November 1, 1777[d] December 9, 1778 13 President, S.C. Provincial Congress, Vice President, S.C.
6 John Jay New York 32 December 10, 1778 September 28, 1779 10 Chief Justice, N.Y. Supreme Court
7 Samuel Huntington Connecticut 48 September 28, 1779 July 10, 1781[e] 21 Associate Judge, Conn. Superior Court
8 Thomas McKean Delaware 47 July 10, 1781 November 5, 1781 4 Chief Justice, Pa. Supreme Court
9 John Hanson Maryland 66 November 5, 1781[f] November 4, 1782 12 Member, Md. Senate
10 Elias Boudinot New Jersey 42 November 4, 1782 November 3, 1783 12 Commissary of Prisoners, Continental Army
11 Thomas Mifflin Pennsylvania 39 November 3, 1783[g] June 3, 1784 7 Quartermaster General, Continental Army Member, Board of War
12 Richard Henry Lee Virginia 52 November 30, 1784 November 4, 1785 11 Member, Va. House of Burgesses
13 John Hancock[h] Massachusetts 48 November 23, 1785 June 5, 1786 6 Governor, Mass.
14 Nathaniel Gorham Massachusetts 48 June 6, 1786 November 3, 1786 5 Member, Board of War
15 Arthur St. Clair Pennsylvania 52 February 2, 1787 November 4, 1787 10 Major General, Continental Army
16 Cyrus Griffin Virginia 39 January 22, 1788 November 15, 1788[i] 10 Judge, Va. Court of Appeals

Table data compiled from the Biographical Directory of the United States Congress, 1774-1989. [33] There are some date discrepancies based on differing interpretations of when a president's term effectively ended.[34][35]

Table notes
a Start of the First Continental Congress
b Middleton only served as president for the last few days of the First Continental Congress (Jillson and Wilson, Congressional Dynamics, 51, 77), though his entry in the Dictionary of American Biography says that his term lasted until May 10, 1775, counting the months that Congress was not in sesssion as part of his term.
c Start of the Second Continental Congress
d Secretary Charles Thomson fulfilled presidential duties from October 29, 1777, to November 1, 1777.
e Articles of Confederation were ratified during term
f First president elected under the Articles of Confederation
g Daniel Carroll acted as chairman from November 3, 1783, to December 13, 1783.
h Hancock did not report to Congress for his second term, so David Ramsay (November 23, 1785 – May 12, 1786) and Nathaniel Gorham (May 15, 1786 – June 5, 1786) acted as chairmen.
i After Griffin's resignation, the presidency was vacant.

References

  1. ^ Jared Sparks, The writings of George Washington, vol. VIII, 1835, p. 214
  2. ^ a b "United States of America: Congress: 1776-1789". Archontology.org. Archived from the original on 2008-02-04. http://web.archive.org/web/20080204002255/http://www.archontology.org/nations/us/us1/01_congress.php. Retrieved 2008-05-19. 
  3. ^ Burnett, Continental Congress, 502–03.
  4. ^ (Jennings Bryans Sanders, The Presidency of the Continental Congress 1774-89, Chicago, 1930, p. 53)
  5. ^ [Force, Am. Archives, 4th ser., I, 939. ]
  6. ^ Jillson and Wilson, Congressional Dynamics, 71.
  7. ^ Jillson and Wilson, Congressional Dynamics, 71–73.
  8. ^ Jillson and Wilson, Congressional Dynamics, 75, 89.
  9. ^ Jillson and Wilson, Congressional Dynamics, 77–78.
  10. ^ Richard B. Morris, The Forging of the Union, 1781-1789, Harper & Row, 1987, p. 100
  11. ^ Jillson and Wilson, Congressional Dynamics, 77.
  12. ^ a b c d Gregory A. Stiverson, "Hanson, John, Jr.", American National Biography Online, February 2000.
  13. ^ H. James Henderson. "Boudinot, Elias", American National Biography Online, February 2000.
  14. ^ Jillson and Wilson, Congressional Dynamics, 76, 82.
  15. ^ Jillson and Wilson, Congressional Dynamics, 81.
  16. ^ Jillson and Wilson, Congressional Dynamics, 76.
  17. ^ Jillson and Wilson, Congressional Dynamics, 80.
  18. ^ Jillson and Wilson, Congressional Dynamics, 78.
  19. ^ Jillson and Wilson, Congressional Dynamics, 89.
  20. ^ Jillson and Wilson, Congressional Dynamics, 82.
  21. ^ Fowler, Baron of Beacon Hill, 191.
  22. ^ Fowler, Baron of Beacon Hill, 199.
  23. ^ Fowler, Baron of Beacon Hill, 230–31.
  24. ^ a b c Burnett, Continental Congress, 503.
  25. ^ a b Burnett, Continental Congress, 524.
  26. ^ Jillson and Wilson, Congressional Dynamics, 85–88.
  27. ^ John K. Alexander, "Mifflin, Thomas", American National Biography Online, February 2000.
  28. ^ Jillson and Wilson, Congressional Dynamics, 87.
  29. ^ a b c Jillson and Wilson, Congressional Dynamics, 88.
  30. ^ Richard B. Morris, The Forging of the Union, 1781-1789, Harper & Row, 1987, p. 100.
  31. ^ Burnett, Continental Congress, 34.
  32. ^ Richard B. Morris, The Forging of the Union, 1781-1789, Harper & Row, 1987, p. 101.
  33. ^ Biographical Directory of the United States Congress, 1774-1989, Bicentennial ed., Washington, D.C.: Government Printing Office, 1989, as cited by Calvin C. Jillson and Rick K. Wilson in Congressional dynamics: structure, coordination, and choice in the first American Congress, 1774-1789, Standford University Press, 1994, p. 77.
  34. ^ Jillson and Wilson, Congressional Dynamics, 77, the Biographical Directory of the United States Congress
  35. ^ Schultz, Oleg (2008-12-15). "Presidents of the Continental Congress". Archontology.org. Archived from the original on 2009-02-23. http://web.archive.org/web/20090223234100/http://www.archontology.org/nations/us/us1/01_congress.php. Retrieved 2011-09-12. 
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