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About The united American : a magazine of good citizenchip. (Portland, Or.) 1923-1927 | View Entire Issue (April 1, 1925)
APRIL 1925 THE UNITED AMERICAN BECOMING AN AMERICAN (Continued from Page Eight) sary to cause a rebellion. This, too, became a principle in the new government. Hence, when, they wrote their Constitution, they were very careful to enact laws to promote rather than hamper their trade with the world markets. As a consequence of these wise and liberal provisions, America has become one of the great com mercial powers of the world. (5) A fifth grievance was the denying of jury trial to colonists charged with certain offenses against the law. One of the rights first fought for by the people of England was the right of trial by a jury of his peers, or equals, of anyone charged with crime. This right was granted hundreds of years before and in England it had long been enjoyed. Hence when the government of England arbitrarily ruled that certain offenses against the English laws should be tried before judges sent from England, without juries, there arose a very strong resentment. It is probable that exact justice was usually rendered. The colonists did not expressly charge that they had failed to receive fair treatment. It was, on the contrary, a matter of principle. Hence when they later wrote their own Constitution, they established trial by jury as one of the fundamental rights of every American citizen. (6) A sixth of the leading charges against the English government was the impressment, or forcing, of our sailors into the English navy. The mother country claimed that a man who was once an Englishman was always an Englishman. Several of the European countries make the same claim today. If Greece, for example, were engaged in a war and a naturalized American citizen, bom in Greece, were to go back to his old home on a visit, he might find himself forced into the military service of his country. The colonists denied the justice of such act and ex pressed strongly their resentment in the Declaration. Different from the grievances before mentioned, this matter was not settled by the Revolution. It took a second war with England, the War of 1812, to settle the dispute, and even then it was not mentioned in the treaty closing the war. England, however, had come to realize the force of the feeling against such arbitrary enforcement of military duty and since that time has never impressed into her military service the English- born, naturalized citizens of any country. American citizens should know and understand these grievances because out of the statement of them in the Declaration and) out of the differences over them grew certain of th# outstanding fundamental principles of American constitutional law. ♦ ♦ ♦ A paragraph should be given also to the Articles of Confederation. In 1774 a congress of delegates from all of the colonies except Georgia met in Philadelphia. These delegates met merely for conference and little was done other than to prepare a Declaration of Rights. A second Continental Congress, however, met in 1776 and remained in session because of the necessity of Page Thirteen conducting a war, for several years. It was this congress which prepared and adopted the famous Declaration of Independence. It very soon came to understand fully that it had little power to conduct a war or govern the colonies. Hence, a committee was early appointed to draw up a plan of government. This plan became the agreement called the Articles of Confederation. It was adopted in the year 1777 and under it the colonies were governed until the adoption of the Constitution in 1789. The Articles were not satisfactory because only one of the three functions of government, the legislative, was provided for. Laws could be made but they could not be enforced and in case there was difference of opinion as to the making of a certain law there was no higher court to interpret the meaning. Despite these weaknesses, the colonies got along pretty well un der these Articles so long as the war was in progress. When this unifying influence was gone, however, con fusion and dissatisfaction resulted. The chief weak nesses of the Articles were, — that they gave Congress iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiHiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiuiiiiNiiiiiiiiiiniiiniimiiiiiiiiiv^ Car Shippers—Cargo Shippers Inman-Poulsen Lumber Company Portland, Oregon, U. S. A. LUMBER MANUFACTURERS Annual Output 200,000,000 Feet Prouty Lumber & Box Co Manufacturers Lumber and Box Shooks Water and Rail Transportation Warrenton, Oregon Place Your Orders With The United American Advertisers—and Tell Them Why