This is a part of the story of the American Constitution, the U.S. Constitution, that

really has been neglected.

The greatest era of constitution writing in American history, indeed in world history,

is between 1776 and the summer of 1787.

In other words, before the Framers got together in Philadelphia.

And that's because the former colonies, newly founded states in 1776, had to write charters

of government, their own constitutions to figure out how each of these governments would

work.

And so that became the initial laboratory of constitution writing in American government.

Those early state constitutions are the first constitutions that have separation of powers

at the state level between governors, legislatures, and the courts.

That of course is duplicated in the U.S. Constitution.

Those state constitutions innovated the individual rights guarantees that we've come to prize

so much in America, protecting liberty, property, life and so forth.

And the original language for those things is written by the state Framers and written

by some not inconsequential leaders.

John Adams, George Mason, among others.

All of our individual rights guarantees, free speech, free exercise of religion, and so

forth were originally put in the state constitutions.

The federal Framers in the summer of 1787, eventually ratified by the people in 1789,

borrowed from those documents when it came to individual rights protections, and borrowed

still more when they put together the Bill of Rights.

The first eight Bill of Rights are all individual rights guarantees that owe their origin to

the state constitutions and the state Framers.

Even provisions of the Fourteenth Amendment would have drawn on earlier state constitutions.

And in the words of historian Gordon Wood, that was the epic constitution writing period

in American and world history.