The Fundamental
Orders
In
the late nineteenth century the historical popularizer and Connecticut
native son John Fiske wrote that the Fundamental Orders were "the
First written constitution known to history, that created a government
and it [sic] marked the beginnings of American democracy.... The
government of the United States today is in lineal descent more
nearly related to that of Connecticut than to that of any of the
other thirteen colonies." Perhaps Fiske's most concise statement
of the case was that delivered to the Ruth Wylly's chapter of
the D.A.R. in Hartford. It was published in a little thirty-one-page
pamphlet in 1901 as Connecticut’s Part the Federal Constitution.
Fiske's contention that the U.S. Constitution was modeled on a
Connecticut confederation with a bicameral legislature which manifested
the federal principle is pure nonsense. Nevertheless Fiske articulated
a belief which became so pervasive that it finally found expression
on the rear end of every car registered in Connecticut.
Some
jurists joined Fiske's supporters, and their spokesman, Alexander
Johnston, a professor of jurisprudence at Princeton, wrote one
of the most widely read statements of the thesis in the post-Fiske
era. "In the development of new towns, Connecticut had always
been careful to maintain the substantial equality of each town
in at Least one branch of her government" he wrote, incorrectly.
Under an archaic nineteenth-century formula, many towns were limited
to one deputy, while most had two. Nevertheless, the ill-informed
Johnston contended that in the context of the Federal Constitutional
Convention of 1787, Connecticut's "combination of commonwealth
and town rights had worked so simply and naturally that her delegates
were quite prepared to suggest a similar combination of national
and state rights as the foundation of the new government ... This
is the crowning glory of the system which Hooker inaugurated in
the wilderness and of the commonwealth of Connecticut" (Connecticut.
Boston: Houghton, Mifflin and Co., 1887; 2nd rev. ed., 1903, p.
321.) To characterize Thomas Hooker in 1639 as the father of the
Connecticut Compromise of 1787 stretches credibility more than
a bit; but, then, Johnston was not a historian.
Charles
M. Andrews, a far better scholar than Fiske and a much better
historian than Johnston, disputed the contention as early as 1889
in The River Towns of Connecticut: A Study of Wethersfield,
Hartford, and Windsor (Baltimore: John Hopkins University
Press, 1889) and continued to attempt to dispel the myth to his
dying day. His most concise statement is found in a piece published
the year after his death "On Some Aspects of Connecticut
History," New England Quarterly 17(March, 1944)1:3-24,
originally a talk given at Woodstock "The Fundamental Order,"
he said "are a constitution or civil compact in the sense
that any body of law that defines a government has a constitutional
character. But they are not a constitution analogous to our Federal
Constitution or state constitution of today, nor have they ever
been taken as a model for any of the constitutions of modern times."
(p. 11) Andrews' The Colonial Period vol. II, remains the
best source for the Fundamental Orders, the Warwick Patent and
the Charter of 1662.
See
also Andrews'
Connecticut's Place in Colonial History.
New Haven: Yale University Press, 1923. A talk that also concisely
states his views.
The Beginnings of Connecticut, 1632-1662.
New Haven Yale University Press, 1934. Tercentenary pamphlet XXXII
(1934); chapters from vol. II of The Colonial Period.
Christopher
Collier tries to explain matters in : The Fundamental Orders and
American Constitutionalism," Connecticut Law Review
21 (Summer 1989) 4: 863-70; and "Why Connecticut Is the
Constitution State," Connecticut Bar Journal. 61
(August 1981) 4:210-14.
An
adequate short discussion of the documents is Mary Jeanne Anderson
Jones' Congregational Commonwealth: Connecticut, 1636-1662
(Middletown: Wesleyan University Press, 1968). She adds little
to Andrews, but puts it all together in a handy format and in
an appendix includes the relevant documents: the Warwick Patent,
the Massachusetts Bay Commission, and the Fundamental Orders.
She also includes a nice bibliography of her topic. Jones has
been faulted, however, for her lack of familiarity with Puritanism,
so that the Congregational part of her story is badly flawed.
(Timothy Breen's review in the New England Quarterly 421969:474)
For older comment by sound but probably incorrect students, see
Bacon,
Leonard. A Discourse on the Early Constitutional History of
Connecticut. Hartford: Case, Tiffany and Burnham, 1843. This
was a talk presented before the CHS. Bacon was the first to suggest
that the Fundamental Orders were the foundation of American federalism.
Baldwin,
Simeon E. "The Three Constitutions of Connecticut."
Papers of the NHCHS 5(1884):179-246. The Fundamental Orders,
The Charter of 1662, and the Constitution of 1818. Baldwin also
insists that the Orders were a constitution.
The
Tercentenary Commission published as pamphlet XX (1934) Albert
Carlos Bates' "transliteration" of the Fundamental Orders,
with a short introduction by George M. Dutcher. The pamphlet includes
a photographic reproduction of the original document, which is
kept at the State Library.
For
Thomas Hooker's significant part in the development of the Fundamental
Orders and that of Roger Ludlow, see entries in the "Biographies"
section. But don't miss, also, the piece by Ferry Miller, for
a generation the dean of historians of Puritanism, "Thomas
Hooker and the Democracy of Early Connecticut," in New
England Quarterly 4(October, 1931)4:663-712. Miller, without
disparaging the significance of Hooker's work, sees Connecticut's
government as a logical development from the Massachusetts experience;
the Orders were a natural evolution, not a radical innovation.
See
also Bronson, Henry "Chapters on the Early Government of
Connecticut with Critical and Explanatory Remarks on the Constitution
of 1639," Papers of the NHCHS 3(1882):291-404. This
work is interesting and sound but superseded by Andrews and Jones.
Hart,
Samuel. "The Fundamental Orders and the Charter." Papers
of the NHCHS 8(1914):298-54. A short survey, no longer useful.
Humphrey,
E. F. “Connecticut's First Constitution." Connecticut
Bar Journal 13(January, 1939).
McCook,
Philip. "The Fundamental Orders." Connecticut Bar
Journal 13 January, 1939)1:52-65. Issues another tercentenary
rebuttal to Andrews.
Santos,
Hubert J. "The Birth of a Liberal State: Connecticut's Fundamental
Orders." Connecticut Law Review 1(December, 1968)2:386-400
Does not enter the fray but concludes about another aspect that
the Orders were an effort to decentralize political control and,
though essentially conservative, were more liberal than any other
government then existing in the Western world (p. 400)
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