Ohio History Journal

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SHALL THE CONSTITUTION BE PRESERVED

SHALL THE CONSTITUTION BE PRESERVED?1

 

By ROBERT D. W. CONNOR

 

When a distinguished Justice of the Supreme Court of the

United States not long ago mournfully lamented that the decision

of the Court in the Gold

Clause Case had destroyed the

Constitution of the United

States, he merely echoed an

opinion that has been ex-

pressed by dissenting jurists

in every generation from the

days of John Marshall to

those   of   Charles  Evans

Hughes. In the earlier period

it was the Jeffersonian "radi-

cals" whose cue it was to

weep bitter tears every time

John Marshall destroyed the

Constitution; in these latter

days it is the Hamiltonian

"reactionaries" who enjoy an

attack of the jitters every time

his latest successor allows it to

escape preservation. In both

cases concern is felt for the

preservation of the Constitu-

tion as a body of political

principles, as the fundamental organic law of the Nation, and

 

1. An address delivered before the Ohio State Archaeological and Historical

Society, at the evening session of the fiftieth anniversary meeting at Columbus, Ohio,

April 23, 1935.

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