<h2><SPAN href="#Contents">CHAPTER IV</SPAN></h2>
<h3>THE NORTHWEST ORDINANCE</h3>
<p><span class="smcap">The</span> population of the United States was like
a body of water that was being steadily enlarged by internal springs and
external tributaries. It was augmented both from within and from without,
from natural increase and from immigration. It had spread over the whole
coast from Maine to Georgia and slowly back into the interior, at first
along the lines of river communication and then gradually filling up the
spaces between until the larger part of the available land east of the
Alleghany Mountains was settled. There the stream was checked as if
dammed by the mountain barrier, but the population was trickling through
wherever it could find an opening, slowly wearing channels, until finally,
when the obstacles were overcome, it broke through with a rush.</p>
<p>Twenty years before the Revolution the expanding population had reached
the mountains and was
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_56" id="Page_56">56</SPAN></span>
ready to go beyond. The difficulty of crossing the
mountains was not insuperable, but the French and Indian War, followed by
Pontiac’s Conspiracy, made outlying frontier settlement dangerous if
not impossible. The arbitrary restriction of western settlement by the
Proclamation of 1763 did not stop the more adventurous but did hold back
the mass of the population until near the time of the Revolution, when a
few bands of settlers moved into Kentucky and Tennessee and rendered
important but inconspicuous service in the fighting. But so long as the
title to that territory was in doubt no considerable body of people would
move into it, and it was not until the Treaty of Peace in 1783 determined
that the western country as far as the Mississippi River was to belong to
the United States that the dammed-up population broke over the mountains
in a veritable flood.</p>
<p>The western country and its people presented no easy problem to the United
States: how to hold those people when the pull was strong to draw them
from the Union; how to govern citizens so widely separated from the older
communities; and, of most immediate importance, how to hold the land
itself. It was, indeed, the question of the ownership of the land beyond
the mountains which
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_57" id="Page_57">57</SPAN></span>
delayed the ratification of the Articles of
Confederation. Some of the States, by right of their colonial charter
grants “from sea to sea,” were claiming large parts
of the western region. Other States, whose boundaries were fixed, could
put forward no such claims; and, as they were therefore limited in their
area of expansion, they were fearful lest in the future they should be
overbalanced by those States which might obtain extensive property in the
West. It was maintained that the Proclamation of 1763 had changed this
western territory into “Crown lands,” and as, by the
Treaty of Peace, the title had passed to the United States, the
non-claimant States had demanded in self-defense that the western land
should belong to the country as a whole and not to the individual States.
Rhode Island, Maryland, and Delaware were most seriously affected, and
they were insistent upon this point. Rhode Island and at length Delaware
gave in, so that by February, 1779, Maryland alone held out. In May of
that year the instructions of Maryland to her delegates were read in
Congress, positively forbidding them to ratify the plan of union unless
they should receive definite assurances that the western country would
become the common property of the United States. As the consent of all
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_58" id="Page_58">58</SPAN></span>
of the Thirteen States was necessary to the establishment of the
Confederation, this refusal of Maryland brought matters to a crisis. The
question was eagerly discussed, and early in 1780 the deadlock was broken
by the action of New York in authorizing her representatives to cede her
entire claim in western lands to the United States.</p>
<p>It matters little that the claim of New York was not as good as that of
some of the other States, especially that of Virginia. The whole situation
was changed. It was no longer necessary for Maryland to defend her
position; but the claimant States were compelled to justify themselves
before the country for not following New York’s example. Congress
wisely refrained from any assertion of jurisdiction, and only urgently
recommended that States having claims to western lands should cede them in
order that the one obstacle to the final ratification of the Articles of
Confederation might be removed.</p>
<p>Without much question Virginia’s claim was the strongest; but the
pressure was too great even for her, and she finally yielded, ceding to
the United States, upon certain conditions, all her lands northwest of the
Ohio River. Then the Maryland delegates were empowered to ratify the
Articles of Confederation.
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_59" id="Page_59">59</SPAN></span>
This was early in 1781, and in a very short
time the other States had followed the example of New York and Virginia.
Certain of the conditions imposed by Virginia were not acceptable to
Congress, and three years later, upon specific request, that State
withdrew the objectionable conditions and made the cession absolute.</p>
<p>The territory thus ceded, north and west of the Ohio River, constituted
the public domain. Its boundaries were somewhat indefinite, but subsequent
surveys confirmed the rough estimate that it contained from one to two
hundred millions of acres. It was supposed to be worth, on the average,
about a dollar an acre, which would make this property an asset sufficient
to meet the debts of the war and to leave a balance for the running
expenses of the Government. It thereby became one of the strong bonds
holding the Union together.</p>
<blockquote>
<p>“Land!” was the first cry of the storm-tossed mariners of
Columbus. For three centuries the leading fact of American history has
been that soon after 1600 a body of Europeans, mostly Englishmen, settled
on the edge of the greatest piece of unoccupied agricultural land in the
temperate zone, and proceeded to subdue it to the uses of man. For three
centuries the chief task of American mankind has been to go up
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_60" id="Page_60">60</SPAN></span>
westward against the land and to possess it. Our wars, our independence,
our state building, our political democracy, our plasticity with respect
to immigration, our mobility of thought, our ardor of initiative, our
mildness and our prosperity, all are but incidents or products of this
prime historical fact. ¹</p>
</blockquote>
<div class="footer">
<SPAN name="footer_60-1" name="footer_60-1"></SPAN>
<p class="footer">
¹ Lecture by J. Franklin Jameson before the Trustees of the
Carnegie Institution, at Washington, in 1912, printed in the
<i>History Teacher’s Magazine</i>,
vol. iv, 1913, p. 5.</p>
</div>
<p>It is seldom that one’s attention is so caught and held as by the
happy suggestion that American interest in land—or rather interest
in American land—began with the discovery of the continent. Even a
momentary consideration of the subject, however, is sufficient to indicate
how important was the desire for land as a motive of colonization. The
foundation of European governmental and social organizations had been laid
in feudalism—a system of landholding and service. And although
European states might have lost their original feudal character, and
although new classes had arisen, land-holding still remained the basis of
social distinction.</p>
<p>One can readily imagine that America would be considered as El Dorado,
where one of the rarest commodities as well as one of the most precious
possessions was found in almost unlimited quantities and could be had for
the asking. It is no wonder
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_61" id="Page_61">61</SPAN></span>
that family estates were sought in America and that to the lower classes
it seemed as if a heaven were opening on earth. Even though available
land appeared to be almost unlimited in quantity and easy to acquire, it
was a possession that was generally increasing in value. Of course
wasteful methods of farming wore out some lands, especially in the South;
but, taking it by and large throughout the country, with time and
increasing density of population the value of the land was increasing.
The acquisition of land was a matter of investment or at least of
speculation. In fact, the purchase of land was one of the favorite
get-rich-quick schemes of the time. George Washington was not the only
man who invested largely in western lands. A list of those who did would
read like a political or social directory of the time. Patrick Henry,
James Wilson, Robert Morris, Gouverneur Morris, Chancellor Kent, Henry
Knox, and James Monroe were among them. ¹</p>
<div class="footer">
<SPAN name="footer_61-1" name="footer_61-1"></SPAN>
<p class="footer">
¹ Not all the speculators were able to keep what they acquired.
Fifteen million acres of land in Kentucky were offered for sale in 1800
for non-payment of taxes. Channing, <i>History of the United
States,</i> vol. iv, p. 91.</p>
</div>
<p>It is therefore easy to understand why so much importance attached to the
claims of the several States and to the cession of that western land by
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_62" id="Page_62">62</SPAN></span>
them to the United States. But something more was necessary. If the land
was to attain anything like its real value, settlers must be induced to
occupy it. Of course it was possible to let the people go out as they
pleased and take up land, and to let the Government collect from them as
might be possible at a fixed rate. But experience during colonial days had
shown the weakness of such a method, and Congress was apparently
determined to keep under its own control the region which it now
possessed, to provide for orderly sale, and to permit settlement only so
far as it might not endanger the national interests. The method of land
sales and the question of government for the western country were
recognized as different aspects of the same problem. The Virginia offer of
cession forced the necessity of a decision, and no sooner was the Virginia
offer framed in an acceptable form, in 1783, than two committees were
appointed by Congress to report upon these two questions of land sales and
of government.</p>
<p>Thomas Jefferson was made chairman of both these committees. He was then
forty years old and one of the most remarkable men in the country. Born on
the frontier—his father from the upper middle class, his mother
“a Randolph”—he had
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_63" id="Page_63">63</SPAN></span>
been trained to an outdoor life; but he was also a prodigy in his studies
and entered William and Mary College with advanced standing at the age of
eighteen. Many stories are told of his precocity and ability, all of which
tend to forecast the later man of catholic tastes, omnivorous interest,
and extensive but superficial knowledge; he was a strange combination of
natural aristocrat and theoretical democrat, of philosopher and practical
politician. After having been a student in the law office of George Wythe,
and being a friend of Patrick Henry, Jefferson early espoused the cause of
the Revolution, and it was his hand that drafted the Declaration of
Independence. He then resigned from Congress to assist in the organization
of government in his own State. For two years and a half he served in the
Virginia Assembly and brought about the repeal of the law of entailment,
the abolition of primogeniture, the recognition of freedom of conscience,
and the encouragement of education. He was Governor of Virginia for two
years and then, having declined reëlection, returned to Congress in
1783. There, among his other accomplishments, as chairman of the
committee, he reported the Treaty of Peace and, as chairman of another
committee, devised and persuaded Congress to adopt
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_64" id="Page_64">64</SPAN></span>
a national system of coinage which in its essentials is still in use.</p>
<p>It is easy to criticize Jefferson and to pick flaws in the things that he
said as well as in the things that he did, but practically every one
admits that he was closely in touch with the course of events and
understood the temper of his contemporaries. In this period of transition
from the old order to the new, he seems to have expressed the genius of
American institutions better than almost any other man of his generation.
He possessed a quality that enabled him, in the Declaration of
Independence, to give voice to the hopes and aspirations of a rising
nationality and that enabled him in his own State to bring about so many
reforms.</p>
<p>Just how much actual influence Thomas Jefferson had in the framing of the
American land policy is not clear. Although the draft of the committee
report in 1784 is in Jefferson’s handwriting, it is altogether
probable that more credit is to be given to Thomas Hutchins, the
Geographer of the United States, and to William Grayson of Virginia,
especially for the final form which the measure took; for Jefferson
retired from the chairmanship and had already gone to Europe when the
Land Ordinance was adopted by Congress in 1785. This ordinance
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_65" id="Page_65">65</SPAN></span>
has been superseded by later enactments, to which references are usually
made; but the original ordinance is one of the great pieces of American
legislation, for it contained the fundamentals of the American land system
which, with the modifications experience has introduced, has proved to be
permanently workable and which has been envied and in several instances
copied by other countries. Like almost all successful institutions of that
sort, the Land Ordinance of 1785 was not an immediate creation but was a
development out of former practices and customs and was in the nature of a
compromise. Its essential features were the method of survey and the
process for the sale of land. New England, with its town system, had in
the course of its expansion been accustomed to proceed in an orderly
method but on a relatively small scale. The South, on the other hand, had
granted lands on a larger scale and had permitted individual selection in
a haphazard manner. The plan which Congress adopted was that of the New
England survey with the Southern method of extensive holdings. The system
is repellent in its rectangular orderliness, but it made the process of
recording titles easy and complete, and it was capable of indefinite
expansion. These were matters of cardinal
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_66" id="Page_66">66</SPAN></span>
importance, for in the course of one hundred and forty
years the United States was to have under its control nearly two thousand
million acres of land.</p>
<p>The primary feature of the land policy was the orderly survey in advance
of sale. In the next place the township was taken as the unit, and its
size was fixed at six miles square. Provision was then made for the sale
of townships alternately entire and by sections of one mile square, or 640
acres each. In every township a section was reserved for educational
purposes; that is, the land was to be disposed of and the proceeds used
for the development of public schools in that region. And, finally, the
United States reserved four sections in the center of each township to be
disposed of at a later time. It was expected that a great increase in the
value of the land would result, and it was proposed that the Government
should reap a part of the profits.</p>
<p>It is evident that the primary purpose of the public land policy as first
developed was to acquire revenue for the Government; but it was also
evident that there was a distinct purpose of encouraging settlement. The
two were not incompatible, but the greater interest of the Government was
in obtaining a return for the property.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_67" id="Page_67">67</SPAN></span>
The other committee of which Jefferson was chairman made its report of a
plan for the government of the western territory upon the very day that
the Virginia cession was finally accepted, March 1, 1784; and with some
important modifications Jefferson’s ordinance, or the Ordinance of
1784 as it was commonly called, was ultimately adopted. In this case
Jefferson rendered a service similar to that of framing the Declaration of
Independence. His plan was somewhat theoretical and visionary, but largely
practical, and it was constructive work of a high order, displaying not so
much originality as sympathetic appreciation of what had already been done
and an instinctive forecast of future development. Jefferson seemed to be
able to gather up ideas, some conscious and some latent in men’s
minds, and to express them in a form that was generally acceptable.</p>
<p>It is interesting to find in the Articles of Confederation (Article XI)
that, “Canada acceding to this confederation, and joining in
the measures of the United States, shall be admitted into, and entitled to
all the advantages of this Union: but no other colony shall be admitted
into the same unless such admission be agreed to by nine States.”
The real importance of this article lay in the suggestion
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_68" id="Page_68">68</SPAN></span>
of an enlargement of the Confederation. The Confederation was never
intended to be a union of only thirteen States. Before the cession of
their western claims it seemed to be inevitable that some of the States
should be broken up into several units. At the very time that the
formation of the Confederation was under discussion Vermont issued a
declaration of independence from New York and New Hampshire, with the
expectation of being admitted into the Union. It was impolitic to
recognize the appeal at that time, but it seems to have been generally
understood that sooner or later Vermont would come in as a
full-fledged State.</p>
<p>It might have been a revolutionary suggestion by Maryland, when the
cession of western lands was under discussion, that Congress should have
sole power to fix the western boundaries of the States, but her further
proposal was not even regarded as radical, that Congress should
“lay out the land beyond the boundaries so ascertained into
separate and independent states.” It seems to have been
taken as a matter of course in the procedure of Congress and was accepted
by the States. But the idea was one thing; its carrying out was quite
another. Here was a great extent of western territory which would be
valuable only as it could
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_69" id="Page_69">69</SPAN></span>
be sold to prospective settlers. One of the
first things these settlers would demand was protection—protection
against the Indians, possibly also against the British and the Spanish,
and protection in their ordinary civil life. The former was a detail of
military organization and was in due time provided by the establishment of
military forts and garrisons; the latter was the problem which
Jefferson’s committee was attempting to solve.</p>
<p>The Ordinance of 1784 disregarded the natural physical features of the
western country and, by degrees of latitude and meridians of longitude,
arbitrarily divided the public domain into rectangular districts, to the
first of which the following names were applied: Sylvania, Michigania,
Cherronesus, Assenisipia, Metropotamia, Illinoia, Saratoga, Washington,
Polypotamia, Pelisipia. The amusement which this absurd and thoroughly
Jeffersonian nomenclature is bound to cause ought not to detract from the
really important features of the Ordinance. In each of the districts into
which the country was divided the settlers might be authorized by
Congress, for the purpose of establishing a temporary government, to adopt
the constitution and laws of any one of the original States. When any such
area should have twenty thousand free
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_70" id="Page_70">70</SPAN></span>
inhabitants it might receive authority from Congress to establish a
permanent constitution and government and should be entitled to a
representative in Congress with the right of debating but not of voting.
And finally, when the inhabitants of any one of these districts should
equal in number those of the least populous of the thirteen original
States, their delegates should be admitted into Congress on an equal
footing.</p>
<p>Jefferson’s ordinance, though adopted, was never put into operation.
Various explanations have been offered for this failure to give it a fair
trial. It has been said that Jefferson himself was to blame. In the
original draft of his ordinance Jefferson had provided for the abolition
of slavery in the new States after the year 1800, and when Congress
refused to accept this clause Jefferson, in a manner quite characteristic,
seemed to lose all interest in the plan. There were, however, other
objections, for there were those who felt that it was somewhat indefinite
to promise admission into the Confederation of certain sections of the
country as soon as their population should equal in number that of the
least populous of the original States. If the original States should
increase in population to any extent, the new States might never be
admitted.
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_71" id="Page_71">71</SPAN></span>
But on the other hand, if from any cause the population of one
of the smaller States should suddenly decrease, might not the resulting
influx of new States prove dangerous?</p>
<p>But the real reason why the ordinance remained a dead letter was that,
while it fixed the limits within which local governments might act, it
left the creation of those governments wholly to the future. At Vincennes,
for example, the ordinance made no change in the political habits of the
people. “The local government bowled along merrily under this
system. There was the greatest abundance of government, for the more the
United States neglected them the more authority their officials
assumed.” ¹ Nor could the ordinance operate until settlers
became numerous. It was partly, indeed, to hasten settlement that the
Ordinance of 1785 for the survey and sale of the public lands was passed.
²</p>
<div class="footer">
<SPAN name="footer_71-1" name="footer_71-1"></SPAN>
<p class="footer">
¹ Jacob Piat Dunn, Jr., <i>Indiana: A Redemption from
Slavery,</i> 1888.</p>
<SPAN name="footer_71-2" name="footer_71-2"></SPAN>
<p class="footer">
² Although the machinery was set in motion, by the appointment
of men and the beginning of work, it was not until 1789 that the survey
of the first seven ranges of townships was completed and the land
offered for sale.</p>
</div>
<p>In the meantime efforts were being made by Congress to improve the
unsatisfactory ordinance for the government of the West. Committees were
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_72" id="Page_72">72</SPAN></span>
appointed, reports were made, and at intervals of weeks or months the
subject was considered. Some amendments were actually adopted, but
Congress, notoriously inefficient, hesitated to undertake a fundamental
revision of the ordinance. Then, suddenly, in July, 1787, after a brief
period of adjournment, Congress took up this subject and within a week
adopted the now famous Ordinance of 1787.</p>
<p>The stimulus which aroused Congress to activity seems to have come from
the Ohio Company. From the very beginning of the public domain there was a
strong sentiment in favor of using western land for settlement by
Revolutionary soldiers. Some of these lands had been offered as bounties
to encourage enlistment, and after the war the project of soldiers’
settlement in the West was vigorously agitated. The Ohio Company of
Associates was made up of veterans of the Revolution, who were looking for
homes in the West, and of other persons who were willing to support a
worthy cause by a subscription which might turn out to be a good
investment. The company wished to buy land in the West, and Congress had
land which it wished to sell. Under such circumstances it was easy to
strike a bargain. The land, as we have seen, was
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_73" id="Page_73">73</SPAN></span>
roughly estimated at one dollar an acre; but, as the company wished to
purchase a million acres, it demanded and obtained wholesale rates of
two-thirds of the usual price. It also obtained the privilege of paying at
least a portion in certificates of Revolutionary indebtedness, some of
which were worth about twelve and a half cents on the dollar. Only a
little calculation is required to show that a large quantity of land was
therefore sold at about eight or nine cents an acre. It was in connection
with this land sale that the Ordinance of 1787 was adopted.</p>
<p>The promoter of this enterprise undertaken by the Ohio Company was
Manasseh Cutler of Ipswich, Massachusetts, a clergyman by profession who
had served as a chaplain in the Revolutionary War. But his interests and
activities extended far beyond the bounds of his profession. When the
people of his parish were without proper medical advice he applied himself
to the study and practice of medicine. At about the same time he took up
the study of botany, and because of his describing several hundred species
of plants he is regarded as the pioneer botanist of New England. His next
interest seems to have grown out of his Revolutionary associations, for it
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_74" id="Page_74">74</SPAN></span>
centered in this project for settlement of the West, and he was appointed
the agent of the Ohio Company. It was in this capacity that he had come to
New York and made the bargain with Congress which has just been described.
Cutler must have been a good lobbyist, for Congress was not an efficient
body, and unremitting labor, as well as diplomacy, was required for so
large and important a matter. Two things indicate his method of procedure.
In the first place he found it politic to drop his own candidate for the
governorship of the new territory and to endorse General Arthur St. Clair,
then President of Congress. And in the next place he accepted the
suggestion of Colonel William Duer for the formation of another company,
known as the Scioto Associates, to purchase five million acres of land on
similar terms, “but that it should be kept a profound
secret.” It was not an accident that Colonel Duer was
Secretary of the Board of the Treasury through whom these purchases were
made, nor that associated with him in this speculation were
“a number of the principal characters in the city.”
These land deals were completed afterwards, but there is little doubt that
there was a direct connection between them and the adoption of the
ordinance of government.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_75" id="Page_75">75</SPAN></span>
The Ordinance of 1787 was so successful in its working and its renown
became so great that claims of authorship, even for separate articles,
have been filed in the name of almost every person who had the slightest
excuse for being considered. Thousands of pages have been written in
eulogy and in dispute, to the helpful clearing up of some points and to
the obscuring of others. But the authorship of this or of that clause is
of much less importance than the scope of the document as a working plan
of government. As such the Ordinance of 1787 owes much to
Jefferson’s Ordinance of 1784. Under the new ordinance a governor
and three judges were to be appointed who, along with their other
functions, were to select such laws as they thought best from the statute
books of all the States. The second stage in self-government would be
reached when the population contained five thousand free men of age; then
the people were to have a representative legislature with the usual
privilege of making their own laws. Provision was made for dividing the
whole region northwest of the Ohio River into three or four or five
districts and the final stage of government was reached when any one of
these districts had sixty thousand free inhabitants, for it might then
establish its
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_76" id="Page_76">76</SPAN></span>
own constitution and government and be admitted into the Union on an
equal footing with the original States.</p>
<p>The last-named provision for admission into the Union, being in the nature
of a promise for the future, was not included in the body of the document
providing for the government, but was contained in certain
“articles of compact, between the original States and the
people and States in the said territory, [which should] forever
remain unalterable, unless by common consent.” These articles
of compact were in general similar to the bills of rights in State
Constitutions; but one of them found no parallel in any State
Constitution. Article VI reads: “There shall be neither slavery nor
involuntary servitude in the said territory, otherwise than in the
punishment of crimes, whereof the party shall have been duly
convicted.” This has been hailed as a farsighted, humanitarian
measure, and it is quite true that many of the leading men, in the South
as well as in the North, were looking forward to the time when slavery
would be abolished. But the motives predominating at the time were
probably more nearly represented by Grayson, who wrote to James Monroe,
three weeks after the ordinance was passed: “The
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_77" id="Page_77">77</SPAN></span>
clause respecting slavery was agreed to by the southern members for the
purpose of preventing tobacco and indigo from being made on the northwest
side of the Ohio, as well as for several other political reasons.”</p>
<p>It is over one hundred and forty years since the Ordinance of 1787 was
adopted, during which period more than thirty territories of the United
States have been organized, and there has never been a time when one or
more territories were not under Congressional supervision, so that the
process of legislative control has been continuous. Changes have been made
from time to time in order to adapt the territorial government to changed
conditions, but for fifty years the Ordinance of 1787 actually remained in
operation, and even twenty years later it was specifically referred to by
statute. The principles of territorial government today are identical with
those of 1787, and those principles comprise the largest measure of local
self-government compatible with national control, a gradual extension of
self-government to the people of a territory, and finally complete
statehood and admission into the Union on a footing of equality with the
other States.</p>
<p>In 1825, when the military occupation of Oregon
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_78" id="Page_78">78</SPAN></span>
was suggested in Congress, Senator Dickerson of New Jersey objected,
saying, “We have not adopted a system of colonization and it is
to be hoped we never shall.” Yet that is just what America has
always had. Not only were the first settlers on the Atlantic coast
colonists from Europe; but the men who went to the frontier were also
colonists from the Atlantic seaboard. And the men who settled the States
in the West were colonists from the older communities. The Americans
had so recently asserted their independence that they regarded
the name of colony as not merely indicating dependence but as implying
something of inferiority and even of reproach. And when the American
colonial system was being formulated in 1783-87 the word
“Colony” was not used. The country under consideration was
the region west of the Alleghany Mountains and in particular the
territory north and west of the Ohio River and, being so referred to in
the documents, the word “Territory” became the term
applied to all the colonies.</p>
<p>The Northwest Territory increased so rapidly in population that in 1800 it
was divided into two districts, and in 1802 the eastern part was admitted
into the Union as the State of Ohio. The rest of
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_79" id="Page_79">79</SPAN></span>
the territory was divided in 1805 and again in 1809; Indiana was admitted
as a State in 1816 and Illinois in 1818. So the process has gone on.
There were thirteen original States and six more have become members of
the Union without having been through the status of territories, making
nineteen in all; while twenty-nine States have developed from the colonial
stage. The incorporation of the colonies into the Union is not merely a
political fact; the inhabitants of the colonies become an integral part
of the parent nation and in turn become the progenitors of new colonies.
If such a process be long continued, the colonies will eventually
outnumber the parent States, and the colonists will outnumber the citizens
of the original States and will themselves become the nation. Such has
been the history of the United States and its people. By 1850, indeed,
one-half of the population of the United States was living west of the
Alleghany Mountains, and at the present time approximately seventy per
cent are to be found in the West.</p>
<p>The importance of the Ordinance of 1787 was hardly overstated by Webster
in his famous debate with Hayne when he said: “We are accustomed
… to praise the lawgivers of antiquity; we help to perpetuate the
fame of Solon and Lycurgus;
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_80" id="Page_80">80</SPAN></span>
but I doubt whether one single law of any lawgiver,
ancient or modern, has produced effects of more distinct, marked and
lasting character than the Ordinance of 1787.” While improved
means of communication and many other material ties have served to hold
the States of the Union together, the political bond was supplied by the
Ordinance of 1787, which inaugurated the American colonial system.</p>
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