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2. Tennessee 1795 Constitutional Convention, Davidson County
3. Tennessee 1795 Constitutional Convention, Greene County
4. Tennessee 1795 Constitutional Convention, Hawkins County
5. Tennessee 1795 Constitutional Convention, Jefferson County
6. Tennessee 1795 Constitutional Convention, Knox County
7. Tennessee 1795 Constitutional Convention, Sevier County
8. Tennessee 1795 Constitutional Convention, Sullivan County
9. Tennessee 1795 Constitutional Convention, Sumner County
10. Tennessee 1795 Constitutional Convention, Tennessee County
11. Tennessee 1795 Constitutional Convention, Washington County
12. Tennessee 1796 Electoral College
13. Tennessee 1796 House of Representatives, Blount County
14. Tennessee 1796 House of Representatives, Jefferson County
15. Tennessee 1796 House of Representatives, Knox County
16. Tennessee 1796 House of Representatives, Sevier County
17. Tennessee 1796 State Senate, Blount County
18. Tennessee 1796 State Senate, Jefferson County
19. Tennessee 1796 State Senate, Knox County
20. Tennessee 1796 State Senate, Sevier County
21. Tennessee 1796 U.S. House of Representatives
22. Tennessee 1797 U.S. House of Representatives
23. Tennessee 1797 U.S. Senate
24. Tennessee 1797 U.S. Senate
25. Tennessee 1798 State Senate, Knox County, Special
26. Tennessee 1798 U.S. Senate
27. Tennessee 1799 Governor
28. Tennessee 1799 State Senate, Montgomery and Robertson Counties
29. Tennessee 1799 U.S. House of Representatives
30. Tennessee 1800 Electoral College
31. Tennessee 1801 Governor
32. Tennessee 1801 U.S. House of Representatives
33. Tennessee 1801 U.S. House of Representatives, Special
34. Tennessee 1803 Governor
35. Tennessee 1803 House of Representatives, Anderson, Knox and Roane Counties
36. Tennessee 1803 House of Representatives, Washington County
37. Tennessee 1803 State Senate, Anderson, Knox and Roane Counties
38. Tennessee 1803 State Senate, Carter and Washington Counties
39. Tennessee 1803 U.S. House of Representatives
40. Tennessee 1803 U.S. Senate
41. Tennessee 1803 U.S. Senate, Ballot 2
42. Tennessee 1803 U.S. Senate, Ballot 3
43. Tennessee 1803 U.S. Senate, Ballot 4
44. Tennessee 1803 U.S. Senate, Special
45. Tennessee 1804 Electoral College, District 1
46. Tennessee 1804 Electoral College, District 2
47. Tennessee 1804 Electoral College, District 3
48. Tennessee 1804 Electoral College, District 4
49. Tennessee 1804 Electoral College, District 5
50. Tennessee 1805 Governor
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The state of Tennessee originally was the western district of North Carolina. It formally separated from the mother state in 1790, at which time it became the federal Territory South of the River Ohio. In 1795 territorial Governor William Blount called for a constitutional convention, and on February 6, 1796, the convention unanimously approved a document and submitted it to the government in Philadelphia. The House of Representatives subsequently supported Tennessee's bid for statehood, but Senate Federalists disliked the constitution for a number of reasons. A conference committee managed to resolve major differences, however, and Congress formally recognized the state of Tennessee in May 1796.
The 1796 constitution comprised eleven articles, the eleventh being a declaration of rights that included free navigation of the Mississippi River. Both the executive and the judiciary were firmly under the control of the bicameral General Assembly. In terms of democratic practices, the constitution gave the right to vote to all freemen over twenty-one and did not impose any explicit racial restrictions, which meant that Tennessee's miniscule but growing free black population had the franchise as well. The constitution also provided for a written ballot and apportioned representation on the basis of taxable inhabitants. Elections for both governor and the General Assembly were held once every two years.
Tennessee was universally Jeffersonian by 1796, but that fact masks significant political complexity. During Tennessee's territorial phase, a small clique of surveyors and speculators had controlled government institutions. They used land accumulation to establish themselves, and they maintained political control because no formal mechanism existed for ordinary settlers to undermine their authority. At the turn of the nineteenth century, however, a burst of militia elections gave ordinary Tennesseans access to positions of community importance. These elections also established a precedent for political opposition. Soon the elite had to construct broad constituencies in an increasingly vibrant popular democracy.
This shifting political culture coincided with remarkable economic and demographic development, particularly in the region surrounding Nashville. Between 1796 and 1801 the population there grew 200 percent, and by 1815 many of the 292,590 residents were committed to cotton and tobacco cultivation. Commercial agriculture in turn created a mercantile class that integrated "Middle" Tennessee into a global economy. Yet competition associated with this economy created unforeseen popular divisions. Even as planting and merchant interests looked to the government to expedite commercial growth, ordinary farmers believed that limited land accessibility and excessive debt threatened their stability. They therefore used the political sphere to contest more expansive definitions of progress. These debates helped establish "party" interests out of the universal Jeffersonian political culture, and such divisions were solidified through the panic of 1819.
Middle Tennessee's development stood in sharp contrast to that of the eastern district, which was bounded by the Appalachian Mountains in the east and Cumberland Plateau in the west, and where the soil was generally too poor for significant commercial farming. The region's more self-contained existence made for less dynamic economic development between 1787 and 1825, an issue noted by early nineteenth-century leaders of both regions.
Bibliography
- Abernethy, Thomas Perkins.
From Frontier to Plantation in Tennessee: A Study in Frontier Democracy. Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press, 1932. - Cumfer, Cynthia.
Separate Peoples, One Land: The Minds of Cherokees, Blacks and Whites on the Tennessee Frontier. Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press, 2007. - Finger, John R.
Tennessee Frontiers: Three Regions in Transition. Bloomington: Indiana University Press, 2001. - Ray, Kristofer.
Middle Tennessee, 1775–1825: Progress and Popular Democracy on the Southwestern Frontier. Knoxville: University of Tennessee Press, 2007. - Remini, Robert.
Andrew Jackson and the Course of American Empire, 1767–1821. New York: Harper & Row, 1977. - The Tennessee Encyclopedia of History and Culture
- Tennessee Documentary History 1796-1850