The Articles of Confederation and Perpetual Union, commonly known as the Articles of Confederation, served as the first constitution of the United States, establishing a loose alliance of sovereign states under a unicameral Congress with enumerated but limited powers.[1][2]Drafting commenced on July 22, 1776, with the final version approved by the Continental Congress on November 15, 1777, though full ratification required unanimous state approval and was delayed until March 1, 1781, when Maryland acceded following resolutions of western land disputes.[1][3]The Articles granted Congress authority primarily over foreign relations, war declaration, and treaty-making, but prohibited taxation, direct regulation of commerce, or coercion of states, rendering the central government dependent on voluntary state contributions that frequently fell short.[1][4]This structure facilitated key successes, including coordination of the Revolutionary War's conclusion and negotiation of the 1783 Treaty of Paris, by which Britain acknowledged American sovereignty.[1]Congress under the Articles also enacted the Northwest Ordinance of 1787, which organized governance of western territories, outlined paths to statehood on equal footing with originals, and prohibited slavery therein, providing a model for national expansion.[1][5]Yet persistent weaknesses—such as inability to enforce treaty obligations, suppress interstate conflicts, or address fiscal insolvency exemplified by Shays' Rebellion—exposed the system's inadequacies, spurring the Annapolis Convention of 1786 and ultimately the Philadelphia Constitutional Convention of 1787, where delegates drafted a stronger federal framework ratified as the U.S. Constitution in 1789.[1][4]
Origins and Adoption
Colonial and Revolutionary Context
The thirteen British colonies in North America, founded between 1607 and 1732, functioned under a system of salutary neglect that allowed colonial assemblies to handle local taxation, lawmaking, and militias, fostering habits of self-governance while acknowledging parliamentary supremacy in external affairs. This decentralized structure, rooted in charters from the Crown or proprietors, emphasized colonial sovereignty in internal matters but eroded after Britain's victory in the Seven Years' War (1756–1763), which left the empire with £130 million in debt and prompted efforts to centralize imperial control through revenue extraction from the colonies.Parliament's post-war measures, including the Sugar Act of 1764 and the Stamp Act of March 1765—which imposed direct taxes on legal documents, newspapers, and other printed materials without colonial consent—ignited unified resistance, as colonists argued these violated their rights as Englishmen to "no taxation without representation." The Stamp Act Congress, convened in New York in October 1765 by nine colonies, issued a Declaration of Rights and Grievances asserting that only colonial legislatures could tax residents, leading to boycotts that forced Parliament to repeal the act in 1766, though it affirmed its authority via the Declaratory Act. Escalating tensions followed with the Townshend Acts of 1767, taxing imports like tea, which provoked further non-importation agreements and events such as the Boston Massacre on March 5, 1770, where British troops killed five colonists amid crowd unrest. The Boston Tea Party on December 16, 1773, saw protesters dump 342 chests of tea into the harbor in defiance of the Tea Act, prompting Parliament's Coercive (Intolerable) Acts of 1774, which closed Boston's port and altered Massachusetts' charter, alienating moderates and unifying colonial opposition.In response, the First Continental Congress convened on September 5, 1774, in Philadelphia with delegates from twelve colonies, issuing the Continental Association to enforce economic boycotts and petitioning King George III for redress while coordinating colonial militias.[6] Armed conflict erupted on April 19, 1775, at Lexington and Concord, where British forces sought to seize colonial arms, resulting in 273 British casualties against 93 American losses and marking the Revolution's start. The Second Continental Congress, meeting from May 10, 1775, assumed de facto national governance, appointing George Washington as commander of the Continental Army on June 15, 1775, and issuing paper currency and treaties, yet operated without formal legal authority, relying on voluntary state contributions that proved inadequate for sustaining the war.[6][7]Thomas Paine's Common Sense, published January 10, 1776, sold over 100,000 copies in months and shifted public sentiment toward outright independence by decrying monarchical rule as incompatible with republican virtue, influencing the Congress to declare independence on July 4, 1776, which transformed the colonies into sovereign states united in rebellion but lacking mechanisms for collective defense, diplomacy, or resource allocation. Early military setbacks, including the failed invasion of Canada (1775–1776) and Washington's retreats, underscored the fragility of this loose alliance, as states prioritized local interests—such as New Jersey's militia refusing to cross state lines—necessitating a confederated framework to bind them in "perpetual union" against British reconquest and to secure foreign alliances, like the eventual 1778 treaty with France that provided 12,000 troops and naval support.[6][8] This revolutionary exigency, combined with colonists' aversion to centralized power forged by experiences under royal governors, shaped the push for a document preserving state sovereignty while enabling coordinated resistance.[9]
Drafting Process in 1777
The Continental Congress, preoccupied with the Revolutionary War, intermittently debated revisions to John Dickinson's initial 1776 draft of the Articles throughout early 1777, focusing on reconciling state sovereignty with limited central authority. Key disputes centered on congressional powers over commerce, taxation, and western territorial claims, where land-rich states like Virginia resisted ceding claims to a national domain that could fund war debts, while land-poor states such as Maryland and Delaware insisted on such cessions for equitable burden-sharing.[1][2] These tensions led to proposed amendments between April and October 1777, including adjustments to voting rules—ultimately retaining one vote per state—and restrictions on Congress's ability to regulate trade or impose direct taxes without state consent.[10]The British capture of Philadelphia in September 1777 forced Congress to relocate to York, Pennsylvania, accelerating the drafting process amid heightened urgency for unified governance following the American victory at Saratoga. In October, delegates intensified negotiations, compromising on territorial issues by including Article IX's provision allowing future amendments with nine-state approval, while deferring full resolution of land cessions to ratification. Dickinson's framework preserved strong stateautonomy, enumerating Congress's powers to declare war, conduct foreign affairs, and manage a common treasury, but explicitly barring interference in state internal affairs or a standing army without consent.[2][11]On November 15, 1777, after sixteen months of deliberation and over 40 substantive changes from the original draft, Congress formally adopted the revised Articles, signing the document as a "perpetual union" of sovereign states. This version emphasized mutual defense and alliance but lacked coercive mechanisms, reflecting delegates' wariness of centralized power derived from colonial experiences under British rule. The approval marked a pragmatic, if imperfect, consensus forged under wartime constraints, prioritizing confederation over consolidation.[2][11][1]
Ratification Challenges and Final Approval in 1781
The Continental Congress submitted the Articles of Confederation to the states for ratification on November 17, 1777, stipulating that the document would take effect only upon unanimous approval by all thirteen states.[12] Virginia led the process by ratifying on December 16, 1777, followed by South Carolina on February 5, 1778, and several others in quick succession during early 1778.[1] By July 1778, eight states had ratified, allowing provisional operation of Congress under the Articles, though full implementation required consensus.[13]Ratification stalled primarily due to disputes over vast western land claims held by states like Virginia, North Carolina, Connecticut, and Massachusetts, which extended to the Mississippi River and raised fears of imbalance favoring larger, land-rich states.[2] Landless states, including Maryland, Delaware, and New Jersey, insisted that these territories be ceded to Congress for collective disposal, arguing that exclusive state control would undermine confederation equity and enable dominance by claimant states.[1]Delaware and New Jersey eventually ratified in January 1779 and November 1778, respectively, amid wartime exigencies, but Maryland's legislature explicitly instructed its delegates in June 1778 to withhold approval until claimant states relinquished their claims, viewing retention as a threat to small states' interests.[13][2]Secondary challenges included internal state debates over sovereignty provisions and representation in Congress, though these were overshadowed by the territorial impasse.[2] As the Revolutionary War intensified, diplomatic pressure from French allies and domestic fiscal strains compelled resolution; Virginia, possessing the largest claims, signaled willingness to cede its northwest territory in late 1780, assuring Maryland of future transfer to national control.[14] This commitment satisfied Maryland's conditions, leading its assembly to ratify on February 2, 1781, with delegates signing the engrossed document on March 1, 1781.[13]Congress proclaimed the Articles in effect on March 1, 1781, marking the formal establishment of the Confederation government after nearly four years of delay.[2] The resolution hinged on the principle that national unity outweighed individual state territorial ambitions, setting a precedent for federal domain over unclaimed western lands, though Virginia's actual deed of cession was not formalized until 1784.[15] This unanimous ratification underscored the fragility of consensus in a loose alliance of sovereign states, where economic and strategic imperatives ultimately prevailed over parochial interests.[1]
Structural Provisions
Foundational Principles of State Sovereignty
The Articles of Confederation enshrined state sovereignty as the bedrock of the new union, positioning the states as independent entities voluntarily associating for limited common purposes. Article II unequivocally declared: "Each state retains its sovereignty, freedom and independence, and every Power, Jurisdiction and right, which is not by this confederation expressly delegated to the United States, in Congress assembled."[2] This reservation of undelegated powers ensured that the Continental Congress operated solely as an agent of the states, lacking inherent authority and deriving legitimacy from explicit grants, such as those for war declaration, treaty negotiation, and territorial management outlined in subsequent articles.[2][1]Complementing this, Article III framed the confederation as a "firm league of friendship" entered into "for their common defence, the security of their Liberties, and their mutual and general welfare," deliberately avoiding language of national supremacy or consolidation.[2] States thus preserved full control over internal affairs, including taxation, commerce regulation, and militia organization, reflecting the framers' intent—evident in the 1777 drafting debates—to prevent the monarchical overreach experienced under British rule by distributing authority among sovereign polities.[16] This decentralized model prioritized state autonomy, with Congress unable to coerce compliance or override state laws, as affirmed by the absence of enforcement mechanisms beyond persuasion or mutual agreements.[17]Article XIII further buttressed sovereignty by mandating unanimous state consent for any alterations to the Articles, effectively granting each state veto power over amendments and preserving the original balance of powers.[2] Violations of this principle, such as unilateral state actions in foreign policy, were curtailed only through delegated congressional oversight, but states retained primary jurisdiction over domestic sovereignty, including property rights and local governance.[1] This framework, ratified by all 13 states by March 1, 1781, embodied a contractual union where state independence preceded and circumscribed federal functions, influencing later debates on federalism.[2]
Enumeration of Congressional Powers
Article IX of the Articles of Confederation delineated the specific powers vested in the United States in Congress assembled, emphasizing a limited central authority subordinate to state sovereignty. These powers were explicitly enumerated to address collective needs arising from the Revolutionary War and postwar coordination, such as foreign relations and interstate adjudication, while deliberately excluding taxation, internal commerce regulation, and coercive enforcement mechanisms.[18] The enumeration reflected delegates' intent to prevent monarchical overreach, drawing from colonial experiences under British rule where centralized power had been abused.[2]Congress held sole and exclusive right and power over declaring peace and war (barring exceptions in Article VI prohibiting unilateral state actions), sending and receiving ambassadors, and entering treaties and alliances—provided no commercial treaty restrained state legislatures from imposing imposts, duties, or trade prohibitions on foreigners equivalent to those on their own citizens.[18] It could establish rules for legal captures on land or water, determine prize divisions from forces in national service, grant letters of marque and reprisal during peace, and appoint courts for trying high-seas piracies and felonies or hearing final appeals in capture cases, with the restriction that no congressional member serve as judge.[18]In interstate matters, Congress served as the ultimate appellate body for disputes over boundaries, jurisdiction, or other causes between states, employing a structured process: upon petition, parties appointed commissioners or judges via mutual consent or congressional lottery from state-nominated lists, with judgments final and binding even if one party defaulted, though no state could lose territory for national benefit.[18] Similar procedures applied to private land claims under conflicting state grants post-jurisdictional settlement. Congress also exclusively regulated coin alloy and value (whether national or state-struck), standardized weights and measures nationwide, managed trade and affairs with non-state-member Indians without infringing state legislative rights within limits, established interstate post offices with postage to cover costs, and appointed all continental land and naval officers (except regimental), commissioned officers, and made rules for forces' government and operations.[18]Further operational powers included appointing a Committee of the States (one delegate per state) for recess management of general affairs, other necessary committees and civil officers, and a presiding member limited to one year in any three; ascertaining and appropriating funds for public expenses (via state requisitions); borrowing money or emitting bills on national credit with semiannual state accounts; building and equipping a navy; and setting land force numbers with proportional state quotas based on white inhabitants, binding states to raise, officer, arm, and equip troops at national expense, adjustable if a state could not safely meet extras.[18]Major decisions required assent from at least nine states, including war declarations, treaties, coinage, military appropriations, bill emissions, borrowings, naval construction, force raisings, and commander appointments; other questions needed a majority, except adjournments.[18]Congress could adjourn within the year to any U.S. place for no more than six months, publish monthly journals (secreting sensitive treaty, alliance, or military parts), and record yeas and nays on request, furnishing transcripts to state legislatures excluding confidential sections.[18]
Restrictions on Central Authority and Interstate Relations
The Articles of Confederation imposed strict limitations on the central government's authority to ensure the sovereignty of individual states remained paramount. Congress possessed no power to impose direct taxes, relying instead on requisitions apportioned among the states based on land values, which states could choose to pay or withhold.[2] This mechanism, outlined in Article VIII, reflected colonial wariness of centralized fiscal control akin to parliamentary taxation without representation.[2] Similarly, Article IX denied Congress authority over interstate commerce regulation, prohibiting duties or imposts on trade between states except by unanimous consent, thereby allowing states to erect barriers that fragmented economic unity.[2]Absence of executive and judicial branches further curtailed central enforcement; congressional resolutions carried advisory weight only, with no mechanism to compel state compliance or adjudicate federal matters. Amendments to the Articles demanded unanimous ratification by state legislatures, a threshold that paralyzed reform efforts, as evidenced by repeated failures to grant taxation powers despite economic distress post-1781.[4] These constraints prioritized state autonomy over national cohesion, yielding a confederation where federal actions hinged on voluntary state cooperation.[1]Provisions governing interstate relations aimed to foster amity while subordinating state actions to collective oversight. Article IV guaranteed free inhabitants of each state privileges and immunities equivalent to those of native citizens in others, including free ingress, egress, and equal trade treatment, while barring discriminatory imposts absent congressional approval.[2] Fugitives from justice faced extradition upon demand, promoting accountability across borders.[2] Article VI explicitly forbade states from entering alliances, confederations, or treaties with foreign powers or each other without congressional consent, and prohibited independent declarations of war, maintenance of standing armies in peacetime exceeding specified limits, or coining money, all to prevent fractious disunity.[2]Article IX empowered Congress to arbitrate territorial and jurisdictional disputes between states via appointed commissioners, with decisions binding upon confirmation by involved parties or Congress, though enforcement remained problematic without coercive tools.[2] Navigation of shared waterways required mutual consent for exclusive claims, underscoring cooperative imperatives.[2] These rules, while promoting rudimentary interstate harmony, underscored the confederation's fragility, as state-centric incentives often undermined federal mediation.[19]
Operational Framework of Congress
Organizational Mechanics and Voting Rules
The Congress of the Confederation operated as a unicameral body composed exclusively of delegates appointed by state legislatures, with each state selecting between two and seven delegates annually on the first Monday in November, reserving the right to recall them at any time and appoint replacements for the remainder of the year.[2][1] No individual could serve as a delegate for more than three years within any six-year period, and delegates received no compensation from the national government, with expenses borne by their respective states.[2] This structure emphasized state sovereignty, as delegates remained subject to instructions from their state legislatures and could not bind their states beyond the scope of those directives.[9]A quorum required the presence of delegates from a majority of the states—specifically seven out of thirteen—to conduct business, ensuring that decisions reflected broad interstate consensus while preventing domination by fewer states.[20] Voting occurred on a one-state, one-vote basis, regardless of population or delegation size, with each state's vote determined internally by its delegates, typically via majority agreement among those present from that state.[2][1] For routine matters, such as adjourning from day to day, a simple majority of states in attendance sufficed; however, critical actions—including declaring war, concluding treaties or alliances, coining money, emitting bills of credit, appointing a commander-in-chief, or building naval vessels—demanded assent from at least nine states.[20][2]Congress elected one of its members as president to preside over sessions, with no individual permitted to hold the office for more than one year at a time, serving primarily in a ceremonial and administrative capacity without executive enforcement powers.[2] Sessions convened annually unless adjourned otherwise, with Congress empowered to relocate meetings within the United States and adjourn for no longer than six months at a stretch; during recesses, a Committee of the States—comprising one delegate per state—could exercise limited powers, excluding those requiring nine-state approval.[20] Proceedings were documented in a journal published monthly, omitting sensitive sections on treaties, alliances, or military operations, while yeas and nays on any question could be recorded upon a delegate's request, promoting transparency subject to security needs.[2] This framework prioritized collective deliberation over individual or proportional representation, reflecting the confederal emphasis on state equality amid the absence of coercive central authority.[1]
Executive and Judicial Elements
The Articles of Confederation established no independent executive branch, vesting administrative functions instead in Congress itself through ad-hoc appointments and committees.[1]Congress could appoint committees of its members or individual delegates to manage specific executive duties, such as conducting foreign correspondence, overseeing military affairs, or handling financial matters, reflecting a deliberate diffusion of power to prevent centralized authority.[2] These committees operated without formal departments, leading to fragmented and often inefficient execution, as seen in the reliance on temporary boards for war and treasury functions during the 1780s.[1]Article V provided for a President of Congress, elected annually by delegate ballot from among the members, whose role was primarily ceremonial and parliamentary: presiding over sessions, signing official documents, and advancing agenda items without veto power or command over forces.[2] The president served a one-year term and was ineligible for immediate reelection, ensuring rotation and limiting influence; for instance, John Hanson held the office from November 5, 1781, to November 4, 1782, managing correspondence but lacking substantive executive authority.[21] To address governance during recesses, Article X authorized a Committee of the States, comprising one delegate per state, empowered to exercise most congressional functions except those requiring nine or unanimous state approval, such as declaring war or altering treaties.[2] This committee convened sporadically, as in 1784, but its limited quorum and scope underscored the system's vulnerability to inaction when Congress adjourned.[22]Judicial authority under the Articles was similarly confined to Congress, with no permanent federal courts or judiciary. Article IX granted Congress exclusive power to constitute temporary tribunals for trying pirates, high-seas felonies, and captures, as well as to arbitrate interstate disputes over boundaries, jurisdiction, or private claims between citizens of different states—but only if the involved parties or states consented to congressional adjudication.[2] This mechanism functioned as a court of last resort for confederation matters, yet lacked enforcement mechanisms, relying on state compliance; for example, boundary disputes like Pennsylvania v. Connecticut in 1782 were resolved by congressional decree, but outcomes depended on voluntary adherence.[22] Congress could not compel testimony or punish contempt beyond its limited appellate role, contributing to unresolved cases and highlighting the absence of coercive judicial power.[2]These elements prioritized state sovereignty over national efficacy, as evidenced by Article II's affirmation that each state retained "its sovereignty, freedom, and independence," subordinating federal institutions to collective state action.[2] The design stemmed from revolutionary fears of monarchical overreach, but empirically fostered paralysis, such as during Shays' Rebellion in 1786–1787, where Congress lacked judicial or executive tools for rapid suppression.[1]
Daily Governance and Committees
The Confederation Congress managed daily governance through an extensive system of committees and appointed officials, compensating for the absence of a separate executive branch as stipulated in the Articles of Confederation. Article IX granted Congress authority to appoint "such other committees and civil officers as may be necessary for managing the general affairs of the United States under their direction," enabling the delegation of routine administrative tasks.[2] These bodies handled executive-like functions, including oversight of finance, war, and foreign relations, while remaining accountable to congressional approval for major actions.[22]A primary intersessional mechanism was the Committee of the States, authorized under Article V to comprise one delegate from each of the thirteen states, with powers to execute select congressional functions during recesses—excluding war declarations, treaties, or state admissions—upon a quorum of nine members. Appointed on June 4, 1784, in Annapolis, the committee convened but frequently failed to achieve quorum due to delegate absenteeism and state priorities, rendering it largely ineffective for sustained governance.[22][23]To streamline operations, Congress in 1781 created semi-autonomous executive departments headed by non-delegates: the Department of Foreign Affairs on January 10, 1781, with Robert R. Livingston serving as secretary from August 10, 1781; the Department of War; and the Superintendency of Finance under Robert Morris from May 1781 to November 1784. These entities managed procurement, diplomacy, and fiscal policy, yet their autonomy was limited by dependence on congressional funding requisitions and state compliance, often leading to delays and inefficiencies.[1][24]Standing committees further supported daily affairs, such as the Board of Treasury—established in 1776 with five members—which superintended expenditures, audited accounts, and coordinated requisitions from states, though chronically under-resourced. Ad hoc and select committees investigated disputes, drafted legislation, and executed policies, processing the bulk of operational work amid frequent quorum shortfalls; for instance, between 1783 and 1786, Congress often operated with fewer than nine states present, relying on committees to maintain continuity.[25] This decentralized approach preserved state sovereignty but contributed to fragmented decision-making, as committees lacked coercive authority over states or independent revenue.[2]
Performance in Key Policy Domains
Fiscal Policies and Taxation Failures
Under the Articles of Confederation, Congress possessed no independent authority to levy taxes or duties, depending entirely on voluntary requisitions from state legislatures to fund national expenditures, with quotas apportioned according to each state's estimated value of land.[2] Article VIII mandated that "the taxes for paying that proportion shall be laid and levied by the authority and direction of the legislatures of the several States within the time agreed upon by the United States in Congress assembled," placing the onus of collection and compliance solely on states without any federal enforcement mechanism.[2] This decentralized approach stemmed from wartime suspicions of centralized power but created a structural vulnerability, as states retained full control over revenue generation through property taxes, excises, or other local means, often prioritizing domestic needs amid post-war economic distress including deflation, debt burdens, and agricultural slumps.[26]Compliance with requisitions was chronically low, reflecting a classic collective action problem where individual states benefited from national services—such as debt servicing for Revolutionary War loans from France and the Netherlands totaling over $11 million by 1783—without bearing full costs, leading to systematic underfunding.[27] Between 1781 and 1787, Congress requisitioned roughly $10 million from the states to cover civil government, military pensions, and interest on domestic and foreign debts, yet received only about $1.5 million, with no state fulfilling its full quota and Georgia contributing nothing.[9][28] For instance, in 1784, Congress requested $3 million for the year, but states paid less than $1.2 million by 1786, exacerbating arrears that reached $40 million in continental certificates by mid-decade.[26] This shortfall directly impaired Congress's ability to redeem certificates issued to soldiers and suppliers, contributing to events like the 1783 Newburgh threats of mutiny over unpaid wages and broader fiscal paralysis that halted loan negotiations abroad.[9]Attempts to remedy these deficiencies through constitutional amendments faltered on the requirement of unanimous state approval, underscoring the system's rigidity. In February 1781, Congress proposed a 5 percent impost on imports to generate independent revenue estimated at $400,000–$500,000 annually, but initial ratification efforts stalled amid state rivalries over trade advantages.[29] A revised proposal in April 1783, offering a temporary 25-year impost with proceeds dedicated to debt service, secured approval from 12 states but was vetoed by Rhode Island, which feared loss of tariff revenue to federalcontrol and prioritized its own fiscal autonomy.[9][29] Without such powers, Congress resorted to issuing more interest-bearing certificates, inflating the debt without resolution and eroding creditor confidence, as foreign lenders like Dutch bankers withheld further advances due to evident repayment incapacity.[27]The resultant fiscal impotence not only perpetuated national insolvency but also amplified interstate economic discord, as states imposed retaliatory tariffs and emitted depreciated paper money, further complicating revenue flows and trade.[30] Empirical evidence from state payment records reveals patterns of deliberate delay, with wealthier states like Virginia and Pennsylvania occasionally overpaying to signal leadership while smaller ones cited hardship, yet overall evasion stemmed from the absence of penalties, rendering requisitions hortatory rather than binding.[31] This causal chain—decentralized taxauthority without coercion—ultimately discredited the Confederation's framework, as quantified shortfalls demonstrably prevented stabilization of the public credit essential for economic recovery.[26]
Military Mobilization and Defense Efforts
Under the Articles of Confederation, Congress held exclusive authority to declare war, make peace, appoint military officers of ranks above colonel, and determine the necessary number of land forces and naval vessels, but it lacked power to coerce states into compliance with troop or funding requisitions.[2] Article IX stipulated that states would furnish their quotas of continental troops and officers as apportioned by Congress based on population estimates, with each state maintaining internal control over militia organization and training for local defense.[2] This requisition system, intended to avoid a coercive central military, resulted in chronic shortfalls, as states prioritized domestic fiscal constraints and local militias over national calls.[32]During the final phases of the Revolutionary War from 1781 to 1783, Congress issued multiple requisitions for reinforcements to the Continental Army, including a 1781 call for over 15,000 additional troops following mutinies in the Pennsylvania Line, yet states met only partial fractions of these demands, contributing approximately 53% of levied men overall from 1777 to 1783.[32] Supply shortages exacerbated these gaps; for instance, requisitions for provisions like beef and flour in 1782 went largely unfulfilled, forcing the army to forage locally and rely on depreciated paper currency, which undermined enlistment incentives and operational readiness. The system's voluntary nature, without enforcement mechanisms, led to uneven state performance, with wealthier states like Virginia providing more proportionally while smaller ones lagged, ultimately delaying campaigns and prolonging reliance on French aid until the 1783 Treaty of Paris.[33]Postwar defense efforts focused on frontier security against Native American raids and British encroachments, but mobilization proved even more deficient without wartime urgency. Congress authorized a small regular force of about 700 men in 1784 for western posts, supplemented by state rangers, yet recruitment stalled due to unpaid soldiers and state non-compliance with funding requisitions, leaving garrisons understrength at key sites like Fort Pitt.[34] In response to escalating hostilities in the Northwest Territory, where tribes allied with residual British influence from retained forts like Detroit conducted raids killing hundreds of settlers annually by 1786, Congress requisitioned 1,340 troops in October 1786 for offensive operations, but states supplied fewer than 700 by mid-1787, mostly short-term enlistees inadequate for sustained campaigns.[35] This shortfall prevented eviction of British forces violating the Treaty of Paris and exposed territories to unchecked aggression, as state militias proved ineffective for coordinated frontierdefense without central logistics or pay.[36]The requisition model's causal failure stemmed from states' incentives to free-ride, treating national defense as a public good with diffuse benefits, leading to cumulative deficits that eroded Congress's credibility and military capacity by 1787.[31] No standing navy was built, leaving coastal and riverine defenses to ad hoc state vessels, while diplomatic efforts to negotiate Native land cessions faltered without credible military backing, as tribes exploited perceived U.S. weakness.[34] These mobilization constraints highlighted the Articles' structural limits in projecting force, contributing to calls for constitutional reform to enable direct federal levies and taxation for defense.[37]
Foreign Diplomacy and Treaty Negotiations
Under the Articles of Confederation, Article IX vested Congress with exclusive authority to appoint ambassadors and other ministers to foreign courts, enter into treaties, and manage all aspects of diplomacy, while Article VI prohibited individual states from conducting separate negotiations or alliances without congressional consent.[1] This framework centralized foreign policy but lacked mechanisms to enforce treaty compliance, as Congress could not compel states to fulfill obligations or regulate commerce effectively.[38] Diplomats operated under congressional instructions, yet practical necessities often required independent judgment, as seen in the negotiation of pivotal agreements that secured American independence.The Treaty of Alliance with France, signed on February 6, 1778, exemplified early diplomatic success, committing France to military support against Britain in exchange for mutual defense guarantees and American recognition of French territorial claims.[39] Negotiated by Benjamin Franklin, Silas Deane, and Arthur Lee in Paris, it provided critical naval and troop reinforcements, including over 12,000 French soldiers and decisive fleet actions at Yorktown in 1781, without which the Revolution might have faltered.[39] Although formalized before the Articles' full ratification in 1781, Congress under the Articles upheld and extended these commitments, demonstrating the system's capacity for binding international partnerships despite internal divisions.[1]The Treaty of Paris, concluded on September 3, 1783, marked the Confederation's most consequential diplomatic achievement, with American commissioners John Adams, Benjamin Franklin, and John Jay securing British recognition of U.S. independence, generous territorial boundaries extending to the Mississippi River, and fishing rights off Newfoundland.[40] Defying congressional directives to coordinate with France, Jay insisted on direct bilateral talks, yielding preliminary articles in November 1782 that Congress ratified on January 14, 1784, after state approvals.[41] This outcome, negotiated amid Britain's war fatigue and American military persistence, empirically validated the decentralized diplomatic approach by averting French influence over postwar terms and establishing the U.S. as a sovereign entity in Europe.[40]Postwar diplomacy exposed structural limitations, as Britain retained control of northwestern forts beyond the treaty deadline of 1783, citing American failures to honor provisions for Loyalist compensation and debt recovery, which Congress could not enforce against noncompliant states.[1] Similarly, negotiations with Spain over Mississippi River navigation stalled; Secretary of Foreign AffairsJohn Jay's 1786 proposed treaty conceding temporary closure of the river for southern trade access to Spanish ports was rejected by Congress due to southern opposition, highlighting sectional vetoes that undermined unified bargaining.[38] These episodes, compounded by the absence of commercial treaty powers, allowed European powers to impose discriminatory tariffs and restrictions, eroding U.S. leverage despite initial gains in recognition and alliance-building.[42]
Regulation of Commerce and Economic Coordination
The Articles of Confederation vested no direct authority in Congress to regulate interstate or foreign commerce, leaving such powers primarily with the states.[4] This omission stemmed from the framers' emphasis on state sovereignty, as articulated in Article II, which reserved to each state its "sovereignty, freedom and independence."[2] Article VI further restricted states by prohibiting imposts or duties on imports and exports without congressional consent—except those strictly for inspection, clearance, or execution of laws—and barring states from entering compacts, treaties, or agreements with foreign powers that could affect trade.[2] Despite these limits, states retained broad discretion over internal trade regulations, navigation laws, and port fees, often leading to protectionist measures that impeded cross-state flows.Article IX granted Congress authority to establish standard weights and measures, regulate the alloy and value of coin (though without enforcement power), and manage a postal system, but these provisions fell short of enabling unified economic coordination.[3]Congress could also enter into treaties and alliances, yet any commercial agreements required state ratification or compliance, rendering them ineffective against uncooperative legislatures.[43] In practice, this decentralized approach fostered interstate barriers; for instance, states like New York imposed discriminatory fees on goods from neighboring states transiting its ports, while others enacted tariffs on imports from sister states, fragmenting the domestic market and raising costs for merchants.[44] Such policies, unchecked by central oversight, contributed to economic inefficiencies, as evidenced by retaliatory trade disputes that disrupted supply chains and discouraged investment between 1781 and 1787.[4]Externally, the lack of regulatory power hampered responses to foreign trade restrictions, particularly Britain's post-1783 retention of western forts and exclusion of American vessels from West Indian ports, which flooded U.S. markets with cheap Britishgoods without reciprocalaccess.[4]Congress attempted coordination through resolutions, such as the 1785 call for states to grant retaliatory powers against discriminatory nations, but nine states' approval was needed for implementation, and compliance was sporadic.[43] Absent uniform tariffs or navigation acts, the Confederation could not negotiate binding commercial treaties or protect nascent industries, exacerbating balance-of-payments deficits and state-level indebtedness.[2] These structural gaps in commerce regulation underscored the causal link between fragmented authority and stalled economic recovery, as states prioritized local interests over national cohesion, ultimately prompting calls for reform at the 1786 Annapolis Convention focused on trade impediments.[4]
Achievements and Empirical Successes
Territorial Acquisitions and Ordinances
Under the Articles of Confederation, Congress successfully negotiated the cession of western land claims from several states, consolidating approximately 236 million acres into a national public domain by 1786. This process began with New York's cession of its western claims on February 1, 1780, followed by Virginia's formal deed of cession for lands northwest of the Ohio River, accepted by Congress on March 1, 1784, after Virginia's legislature approved it in January 1781 and December 1783. Massachusetts ceded its western lands in April 1785, Connecticut followed in September 1786, and South Carolina completed its cession in 1787, resolving overlapping colonial charters that had threatened interstate conflict and balkanization. These transfers, prompted by Article IX's authority for Congress to manage "common property," averted the creation of rival state-like entities in the trans-Appalachian West and provided a revenue base through land sales, marking a rare instance of effective federal coordination amid fiscal weakness.[14][45][5]The Land Ordinance of 1785, enacted on May 20, formalized the surveying and disposal of these ceded lands, establishing the rectangular Public Land Survey System that divided territories into six-mile-square townships, each subdivided into 36 one-square-mile sections. Minimum sale prices were set at one dollar per acre, with auctions required for tracts of at least 640acres, and Section 16 of every township reserved for public schools to promote education. This system, applied initially to the Seven Ranges in eastern Ohio, generated modest revenue—about $100,000 by 1788—while standardizing settlement and reducing disputes over irregular boundaries inherited from colonial grants. Its emphasis on orderly, grid-based expansion contrasted with haphazard European colonial practices and laid the groundwork for westward migration under federal oversight.[46][47]Complementing the 1785 ordinance, the Northwest Ordinance of July 13, 1787, organized the Northwest Territory—encompassing modern Ohio, Indiana, Illinois, Michigan, Wisconsin, and part of Minnesota—into a provisional government with civil rights protections, including habeas corpus, trial by jury, and religious freedom for inhabitants. It prohibited slavery in the territory, mandated support for public schools, and outlined a three-stage path to statehood: initial congressional appointment of a governor and judges, transition to an elected assembly upon 5,000 free male inhabitants, and admission as equals upon reaching 60,000 population, potentially yielding 3 to 5 states without taxation for territorial support beyond a decade. This framework not only facilitated controlled expansion but also preempted separatist movements by integrating new areas as coequals, demonstrating Congress's capacity for forward-looking policy despite lacking coercive powers.[48][49]These measures collectively transformed vague British cessions under the 1783 Treaty of Paris into a cohesive national asset, funding about one-third of federal expenses by 1789 and establishing precedents for non-slave expansion and republican governance that influenced the Constitution. Unlike failures in taxation or commerce, territorial policy succeeded through voluntary state cooperation and pragmatic administration, preserving unity in a vast domain claimed by Native American tribes but asserted by Congress via military posts and diplomacy.[50][51]
Preservation of National Independence
The Articles of Confederation vested exclusive authority over foreign affairs in the Congress of the Confederation, including the power to appoint ambassadors, negotiate treaties, and manage relations with foreign powers, thereby centralizing diplomacy to prevent disunity among the states that could jeopardize national sovereignty.[1][42] Article VI explicitly prohibited individual states from entering into treaties, alliances, or confederations without Congressional consent, or from engaging in war unless actually invaded, which safeguarded against fragmented negotiations that might invite British reconquest or European meddling during the fragile post-revolutionary period.[1] This structure ensured a singular national voice in international dealings, preserving the independence declared in 1776 by avoiding the pre-Articles risks of states pursuing separate peaces, as some had considered during the Revolutionary War.[52]A primary empirical success was the negotiation and ratification of the Treaty of Paris on September 3, 1783, under Congressional authority granted by the Articles, which compelled Britain to formally recognize the United States as a free, sovereign, and independent nation.[41][53] The treaty delineated generous boundaries—from the Atlantic to the Mississippi River and north to the Great Lakes—effectively securing territorial integrity against British claims and establishing the young republic's place among nations without reverting to colonial status.[41] Congress ratified the treaty on January 14, 1784, fulfilling its diplomatic mandate despite lacking enforcement mechanisms for British compliance on issues like frontier forts, yet the core achievement of de jure independence endured without immediate foreign subversion.[53]By maintaining state sovereignty domestically while unifying external policy, the Articles forestalled the dissolution of the confederation into quarreling entities vulnerable to divide-and-conquer tactics by powers like Britain or Spain, who probed weaknesses through border disputes and trade restrictions in the 1780s.[1][50] This framework enabled the establishment of diplomatic relations with France, the Netherlands, and others via treaties such as the 1778 alliance with France, which had been precursors but were formalized under the Articles' oversight, reinforcing global acknowledgment of American independence until internal fiscal strains prompted reform.[9]
Facilitation of Post-War Recovery
The Confederation Congress, empowered by the Articles to manage public lands ceded by states after the Revolutionary War, played a pivotal role in post-war recovery by enacting policies that monetized western territories and spurred orderly settlement. Following the Treaty of Paris on September 3, 1783, which ended hostilities and recognized U.S. independence, the nation grappled with massive war debts exceeding $40 million, deflationary pressures, and disrupted trade; yet Congress's authority over undeveloped lands—totaling over 200 million acres by 1784—provided a non-tax revenue stream to service obligations without infringing state sovereignty.[1][9]The Land Ordinance of 1785, adopted May 20, formalized a rectangular survey system dividing the Northwest Territory into townships of 36 square miles, each subdivided into 640-acresections sold at auction for a minimum $1 per acre, with one section per township reserved for public schools to foster long-term development.[54] This generated initial revenues—approximately $100,000 from the first Ohio surveys in 1787—and mitigated debt by converting speculative frontier claims into structured assets, while minimum price floors prevented fire-sale devaluation that could exacerbate eastern economic stagnation.[9] By standardizing land titles and access, the ordinance reduced disputes that had hampered pre-war speculation, enabling settlers to secure clear property rights and invest in agriculture, which underpinned export growth in tobacco and grain by the mid-1780s.Complementing this, the Northwest Ordinance of July 13, 1787, established provisional governance for the territory, prohibiting slavery to align with northern interests while guaranteeing civil liberties, religious freedom, and trial by jury, and stipulating statehood upon reaching 60,000 free inhabitants without compromising equality in Congress.[48] These provisions accelerated migration—population in the region rose from negligible in 1783 to over 5,000 by 1790—channeling demobilized soldiers and European immigrants into productive farming, which boosted national output and alleviated urban unemployment amid post-war recession.[9] Empirical indicators of recovery included a rebound in per capita income and foreign trade volumes by 1785-1786, with U.S. exports climbing 20% annually post-ordinances, as land sales funded debt retirement and frontier expansion absorbed surplus labor.Congress further aided stabilization by overseeing British troop withdrawals, completed November 25, 1783, in New York and other posts, restoring access to ports and fisheries secured in the treaty, which revived coastal commerce disrupted since 1775.[1] Though requisitions from states lagged, these territorial initiatives demonstrated causal efficacy: by prioritizing asset liquidation over coercive taxation, the Articles framework preserved interstate comity while laying empirical foundations for economic resurgence, evidenced by reduced default risks on continental securities and emerging investor confidence by 1787.
Inherent Weaknesses and Causal Failures
Structural Impotence in Revenue Generation
Under the Articles of Confederation, the Continental Congress lacked the power to levy taxes directly on individuals or impose duties on imports and exports, rendering it structurally dependent on requisitions from the states for revenue.[2] Article VIII mandated that all war charges and other expenses for common defense or general welfare be funded from a common treasury, with each state's contribution determined proportionally to the value of land within its borders, as estimated by Congress; however, the actual collection of these funds through taxes was to be executed solely by state legislatures within timelines set by Congress.[2] This delegation preserved state sovereignty over fiscal matters but eliminated any coercive mechanism for the central authority to enforce compliance, leaving revenue generation vulnerable to state-level discretion and resistance.[55]Empirical evidence underscores this impotence: between 1781 and 1787, Congress issued requisitions totaling approximately $10 million to cover national debts and operations, yet states remitted only about $1.5 million, a compliance rate below 15 percent.[9] Factors contributing to this shortfall included post-Revolutionary War economic distress, with states facing their own debts and depreciated currencies; competing local priorities, such as funding state militias and infrastructure; and political opposition to transferring resources upward, as state assemblies often viewed federal requests as infringing on autonomy.[9] Without independent revenue, Congress resorted to issuing paper money, which fueled inflation, or borrowing from foreign lenders like France and Dutch bankers, accumulating interest-bearing debts estimated at $11.7 million by 1783 while lacking means to service them.[9]This revenue deficiency manifested in operational paralysis, exemplified by the inability to pay Continental Army arrears—soldiers received minimal wages, with many owed over a year's pay by 1783—exacerbating mutinies and recruitment failures.[9] Attempts to remedy the issue, such as the 1781 proposal for a 5 percent impost on imports to be collected by Congress, faltered due to unanimous state ratification requirements, with Rhode Island's veto in 1782 blocking implementation despite approval by twelve states.[9] Consequently, the federal government's fiscal weakness not only hindered debt repayment—national obligations stood at around $40 million by 1784, including state-held portions—but also undermined credibility in international negotiations, as creditors doubted repayment capacity absent structural reform.[9] The reliance on unenforceable requisitions thus represented a core causal failure, prioritizing confederal decentralization over effective national coordination.
Erosion of Interstate Harmony
Under the Articles of Confederation, Article IX designated Congress as the final arbiter for interstate disputes, including boundary conflicts and jurisdictional questions, yet its lack of coercive authority often prolonged tensions and allowed states to pursue unilateral actions.[56] This structural weakness manifested in recurring boundary disagreements, such as the protracted Wyoming Valley conflict between Pennsylvania and Connecticut, where Connecticut settlers claimed lands under its 1662 charter, leading to armed clashes known as the Pennamite Wars from the 1760s into the 1780s.[57] In December 1782, a congressional court issued the Trenton Decree, affirming Pennsylvania's jurisdiction and invalidating Connecticut's claims, marking the first federal adjudication under the Articles; however, enforcement relied on state compliance, and sporadic violence persisted until a 1786 treaty.[58]Trade rivalries further strained relations, as states, absent central regulation of commerce, enacted discriminatory tariffs and barriers against neighbors. New York, controlling access to the Hudson River, levied imposts on goods from New Jersey and Connecticut in the mid-1780s, prompting New Jersey legislators to threaten retaliatory canals or duties and Connecticut to consider similar measures, exacerbating economic fragmentation reminiscent of colonial-era mercantilism.[26] Such retaliatory impulses threatened to Balkanize the postwar economy, with states prioritizing local interests over collective harmony; for instance, Virginia and Maryland negotiated a bilateral compact in 1785 to improve Potomac Rivernavigation and establish joint fisheries regulations, initially without congressional involvement, highlighting states' willingness to form ad hoc alliances that bypassed the Confederation's weak framework.[59]The Vermont territory's bid for autonomy exemplified deeper fissures, as it declared independence in 1777 amid overlapping claims by New York and New Hampshire, refusing integration into the Confederation and issuing its own currency and governance until 1791.[60] During the 1780s, Vermont's leaders, led by Ethan Allen, explored alliances with Britain via the Haldimand negotiations, leveraging border disputes to extract concessions from neighboring states and Congress, which lacked power to compel resolution or prevent such separatist maneuvers.[61] These episodes, compounded by inconsistent adherence to Article IV's provisions for fugitive rendition and full faith and credit—where states occasionally harbored debtors or criminals from others—undermined mutual trust, fostering perceptions of disunion and accelerating demands for a more robust federal mechanism to enforce interstate amity.[62]
Inadequate Response to Domestic Instability
The Articles of Confederation endowed the central government with no direct authority to quell domestic insurrections or enforce order within states, confining Congress to advisory requisitions on state militias without coercive mechanisms. Article II preserved state sovereignty over undelegated powers, including internal policing, while Article IX permitted Congress to request but not compel military aid from states for mutual defense, leaving national responses to unrest contingent on voluntary compliance. This structure proved inadequate when state governments faced overwhelming or localized threats, as Congress lacked taxation powers to fund operations or a standing force to intervene independently.[63]An early illustration emerged in the Philadelphia Mutiny of June 20, 1783, when roughly 400 unpaid soldiers from the Pennsylvania Line, frustrated by arrears in wartime pay, marched on the State House—site of the Confederation Congress—demanding immediate compensation and threatening violence. Congress urgently petitioned Pennsylvania's executive council to mobilize militia for protection, but state officials demurred, wary of provoking further escalation without legislative approval. Consequently, Congress abandoned Philadelphia for Princeton, New Jersey, on June 21, 1783, after negotiating partial payments with the mutineers through intermediaries; this relocation underscored the federal body's physical vulnerability and reliance on potentially reluctant state support amid domestic military discontent.[64][65]Shays' Rebellion, spanning August 1786 to February 1787, epitomized these deficiencies on a larger scale in Massachusetts, where post-Revolutionary economic depression—marked by plummeting crop prices, heavy state taxes to retire war debts, and widespread farm foreclosures—ignited farmer uprisings against creditor courts. Beginning with armed bands closing county courthouses in September 1786 to halt debt prosecutions, the insurgency culminated on January 25, 1787, when approximately 1,500 rebels under Daniel Shays assaulted the Springfield federal armory for weapons; state-allied forces repelled them with musket volleys and cannon fire, killing four insurgents and wounding about twenty.[66][67]Governor James Bowdoin countered by commissioning General Benjamin Lincoln to command a 4,400-man militia, assembled via emergency taxes and private loans from Boston merchants totaling over $40,000, as legislative funding lagged. Lincoln's troops surprised and scattered Shays' main force of around 1,200 at Petersham on February 3–4, 1787, capturing supplies and compelling the rebels' dispersal into Vermont and New Hampshire; subsequent trials convicted over 100 participants, though most received pardons by 1788. Congress, on October 30, 1786, requisitioned 1,340 continental troops from five states to assist Massachusetts but delivered no effective national force, as states fulfilled quotas unevenly and belatedly, forcing the state to bear the burden alone.[66][67]These episodes revealed causal flaws in the confederal design: without centralized fiscal or executive authority, Congress could neither preempt unrest through debt relief nor marshal resources swiftly, fostering perceptions of governmental frailty that eroded public confidence. While states ultimately quelled the disturbances, the reliance on ad hoc, privately augmented militias highlighted risks of uneven enforcement and elite capture, intensifying elite anxieties—evident in George Washington's correspondence decrying "discontents"—and catalyzing interstate calls for structural overhaul to safeguard republican stability.[66][63]
Exposure to External Threats
The Confederation Congress possessed no authority to compel states to furnish troops or funds for national defense, rendering the United States unable to maintain a standing army or navy sufficient to deter foreign encroachments.[37][42] This structural limitation, rooted in the Articles' emphasis on state sovereignty, left the young nation dependent on voluntary state contributions, which proved unreliable amid competing local priorities and fiscal exhaustion from the Revolutionary War.[1] As a result, external powers exploited perceived American disunity, violating treaties and territorial boundaries without fear of unified retaliation.[42]Britain's retention of military forts in the Northwest Territory, including Detroit and Niagara, directly contravened the 1783 Treaty of Paris, which mandated their evacuation.[36]London justified this by pointing to American failures to honor treaty provisions, such as compensating Loyalists for confiscated property and recovering pre-war debts owed to British creditors—obligations Congress could not enforce upon reluctant states.[36] Without coercive power over interstate compliance or the means to project military force, the Confederation appeared impotent, allowing Britain to arm Native American tribes and sustain influence beyond recognized borders, thereby undermining U.S. claims to the Ohio Valley.[42]Spain similarly capitalized on federal weaknesses by closing the Mississippi River to American navigation in June 1784, severing vital trade routes for western settlers and exacerbating economic distress in states like Virginia and Kentucky.[68] Diplomatic efforts, including negotiations led by Secretary of Foreign Affairs John Jay with Spanish envoy Diego de Gardoqui in 1785–1786, collapsed due to sectional divisions: northern states prioritized commercial access to Spanish ports, offering concessions on the river in exchange, while southern delegates blocked any deal, highlighting Congress's inability to forge a cohesive national policy.[68][69]Spain, controlling New Orleans and allying with frontier tribes, faced no credible military threat from a disarmed confederation, prolonging the impasse until the 1795 Pinckney's Treaty under the new Constitution.[68]Frontier conflicts with Native American confederacies, fueled by British and Spanish arms from retained outposts, further exposed defensive frailties, as Congress relied on ad hoc state militias that varied in readiness and coordination.[35] Efforts to negotiate land cessions or mount expeditions faltered without assured funding or troops; for instance, a small federal force under the Articles prioritized eviction of white squatters over offensive operations, allowing tribes like the Western Confederacy to raid settlements unchecked.[35][34]Maritime vulnerabilities compounded these land-based threats, particularly from Barbary corsairs who, upon U.S. independence, seized American merchant vessels lacking British naval protection—capturing eleven ships between 1784 and 1793.[70][71] With no capacity to build or fund a navy, Congress negotiated tribute payments totaling over $1 million by 1795, draining scarce resources and signaling weakness to Mediterranean powers like Algiers and Tripoli.[70][42] This reliance on diplomacy without military backing perpetuated annual ransoms and captives, underscoring how the Articles' prohibition on direct taxation and central military authority invited opportunistic aggression from distant adversaries.[71]
Reform Dynamics and Replacement
Emerging Pressures from Economic Crises
The conclusion of the Revolutionary War in 1783 left the United States burdened with substantial public debts, estimated at approximately $40 million for the Continental Congress and additional state obligations totaling around $25 million, exacerbated by the central government's inability under the Articles of Confederation to levy taxes directly and its reliance on voluntary state contributions that were frequently inadequate or delayed.[72][73] This fiscal impotence contributed to a severe economic depression from 1784 to 1785, characterized by plummeting agricultural prices—wheat falling from 6 shillings per bushel in 1770s wartime levels to 2 shillings by 1785—and widespread business failures, as states imposed retaliatory tariffs on interstate commerce to generate revenue, fragmenting the domestic market and stifling trade.[74][72]Farmers and smallholders, many of whom had borrowed heavily during the war to supply goods and services, faced mounting foreclosures and property seizures as state legislatures, desperate to service their own debts, enacted stringent tax policies favoring hard currency payments amid a scarcity of specie; Massachusetts, for instance, required taxes in specie or its equivalent, leading to over 1,600 debt-related imprisonments by 1786.[66][67] The Confederation Congress's lack of authority to regulate interstate commerce or emit currency uniformly allowed states to issue depreciated paper money, fueling inflation followed by deflationary collapses, with Continental dollars losing nearly all value by 1781 and state emissions similarly eroding confidence in 1785-1786.[4][2]These pressures culminated in Shays' Rebellion, an armed uprising from August 1786 to February 1787 in western Massachusetts, where indebted farmers led by Daniel Shays closed courts to halt foreclosures and marched on a Springfield armory, protesting not only local tax burdens but the broader structural failures of the confederal system that prevented coordinated debt relief or economic stabilization.[66][67] Although suppressed by a privately funded militia under General Benjamin Lincoln, the rebellion highlighted the Confederation's vulnerability, as Congress lacked the power to call out a national force or compel state militias effectively, prompting nationalists like James Madison to argue that economic instability stemmed causally from the absence of coercive federal taxing and regulatory powers essential for creditworthiness and internal order.[4][72] Foreign creditors, observing America's default risks—evident in the failure to repay $11.7 million in Dutch loans by 1787—further withheld capital, intensifying the crisis and underscoring the need for reformed governance to restore fiscal credibility.[73][74]
Path to the 1787 Constitutional Convention
The weaknesses of the Articles of Confederation in regulating interstate commerce prompted initial regional efforts toward reform. On March 21, 1785, commissioners from Virginia and Maryland convened at George Washington's Mount Vernon estate to negotiate navigation rights on the Potomac River and Chesapeake Bay, resulting in the Mount Vernon Compact signed on March 28, which established joint oversight and recommended a multi-state convention for uniform commercial regulations.[75][76] This agreement highlighted the confederation's lack of authority over trade barriers, as states imposed tariffs and restrictions independently, exacerbating economic fragmentation.[77]Virginia's General Assembly, acting on the compact's broader recommendation, passed a resolution on January 21, 1786, inviting all states to an Annapolis Convention starting September 11, 1786, to devise solutions for commerce and "other objects of general concern."[78] Only five states—New York, New Jersey, Pennsylvania, Delaware, and Virginia—sent delegates, limiting attendance due to logistical issues and skepticism about federal overreach.[79] On September 14, Alexander Hamilton presented a report acknowledging the Articles' defects in executing laws and regulating trade, proposing a national convention in Philadelphia on May 2, 1787 (later adjusted to May 14), with powers to revise the Articles and report changes to Congress for state ratification.[79][78]Congress debated the Annapolis report amid growing fiscal distress, including war debt and currency instability, before resolving on February 21, 1787, to authorize "a Convention of delegates who shall have been appointed by the several states" to assemble in Philadelphia "for the sole and express purpose of revising the Articles of Confederation."[80] This endorsement, passed by a vote of nine states to one with one divided, constrained the convention to amendments rather than wholesale replacement, though delegates later exceeded this mandate.[81]Concurrent domestic unrest amplified urgency for reform. Shays' Rebellion, erupting in August 1786 in western Massachusetts, involved indebted farmers protesting high taxes and foreclosures through armed court shutdowns and attacks on armories, culminating in the failed assault on the Springfield arsenal on January 25, 1787, suppressed by state militia under General Benjamin Lincoln.[82] The uprising exposed the confederation's impotence in quelling internal threats without direct taxation or military coercion powers, prompting figures like George Washington to warn of anarchy and endorse a stronger union, thus bolstering momentum for the Philadelphia meeting.[83][84]
Controversies Over Legitimacy of Dissolution
The Philadelphia Convention of 1787, convened by the Confederation Congress on February 21, 1787, to propose amendments to the Articles of Confederation, exceeded its limited mandate by drafting an entirely new constitution rather than revising the existing framework.[85] Article XIII of the Articles stipulated that no alterations could be made without agreement in Congress and subsequent confirmation by the legislatures of every state, emphasizing the perpetual nature of the union.[2] The convention's proposal bypassed this unanimity requirement by recommending ratification through state conventions, with only nine states needed to establish the new government, a provision embedded in the proposed Constitution itself (Article VII).Critics, including prominent Anti-Federalists, contended that this process constituted an unlawful dissolution of the confederal government. Patrick Henry, who declined to attend the convention suspecting ulterior motives, argued during Virginia's ratifying convention in June 1788 that the Philadelphia assembly had violated its instructions to amend rather than supplant the Articles, rendering the new document illegitimate without unanimous state consent.[86] George Mason similarly objected, asserting that the convention's actions ignored Article XIII's explicit barriers to change, potentially dissolving the sovereignty of dissenting states like Rhode Island and North Carolina, which initially refused ratification.[87] These arguments framed the Constitution as an extralegal overthrow, akin to a coup against the binding compact among states, with the Confederation Congress's transmission of the document to states on September 28, 1787, seen by detractors as complicit acquiescence under pressure from collapsing confederal authority.[88]Federalists countered that strict adherence to Article XIII was untenable given the Articles' demonstrated incapacities, such as inability to raise revenue or suppress insurrections, justifying a return to popular sovereignty as the ultimate source of legitimacy. James Madison, in Federalist No. 40, acknowledged the convention's departure from procedural norms but defended it as a necessary improvisation, arguing that the people's original revolutionary authority superseded rigid confederal rules when the union's survival demanded it.[89] Empirical failures under the Articles—evidenced by events like Shays' Rebellion in 1786-1787 and chronic interstate disputes—provided causal grounds for this view, as the confederal structure had empirically failed to maintain order or security, rendering literal enforcement of perpetuity self-defeating.[63]The controversy persisted into ratification debates, where nine states approved by June 21, 1788 (New Hampshire as the ninth), precipitating the new government's formation despite four states' non-consent, effectively sidelining Article XIII without formal repeal.[90]North Carolina and Rhode Island eventually ratified in 1789 and 1790 under duress from the operational federal apparatus, but Anti-Federalists maintained this coerced acquiescence did not retroactively legitimize the dissolution, highlighting a foundational tension between contractual fidelity and pragmatic governance. Modern scholarly assessments often characterize the transition as revolutionary rather than strictly constitutional, underscoring that the Constitution's endurance derived from its superior functionality rather than unassailable legality under prior law.[87][50]
Final Operations and Transition to Constitution
The Confederation Congress, operating under the Articles, submitted the proposed Constitution to the states for ratification on September 28, 1787, thereby facilitating its dissemination while continuing to handle ongoing confederal duties such as foreign correspondence and territorial administration.[91] This action marked a pivotal shift, as Congress refrained from endorsing or debating the document's content, deferring to state conventions per the convention's resolution.[85] In the ensuing months, the Congress managed sparse legislative output amid growing distractions from state-level ratification debates, including the passage of minor ordinances on commerce and debt management, though quorum failures frequently halted proceedings due to delegate absences.[77]Upon notification of New Hampshire's ratification as the ninth state on June 21, 1788—received by Congress on July 2—it formally acknowledged that the Constitution had achieved the threshold for implementation specified in its Article VII, without requiring further confederal approval.[92] On September 13, 1788, the Congress adopted a resolution outlining operational timelines for the new government, stipulating that presidential electors convene on the first Wednesday in January 1789, the Senate organize prior to that, and the full Congress assemble no later than March 4, 1789.[93] This measure addressed procedural gaps in the Constitution itself, ensuring continuity; subsequent sessions in late 1788 focused narrowly on transitional logistics, such as notifying state executives of ratification statuses and coordinating electoral mechanics, as attendance plummeted with delegates anticipating the federal regime.[94]By early 1789, the Confederation Congress convened its final meetings with minimal functionality, conducting no substantive legislation after December 1788 owing to persistent quorum shortages and the redirection of political energies.[91] The body adjourned sine die on March 2, 1789, effectively dissolving as the constitutional framework activated four days later when the new Congress achieved quorum in New York.[93] The handover proceeded without rupture or explicit repeal mechanism; Article VI of the Constitution declared it the "supreme Law of the Land," rendering the Articles obsolete by establishing federal supremacy over conflicting prior agreements among the states.[85] This causal supersession stemmed from the ratifications' cumulative effect, bypassing the Articles' Article XIII requirement for unanimous consent to alterations, as the convention's extralegal origins prioritized practical governance renewal over strict procedural fidelity.[77]
Evaluations and Lasting Interpretations
Federalist Critiques and Empirical Justifications for Change
Federalists, including Alexander Hamilton and James Madison, contended that the Articles of Confederation established a mere "firm league of friendship" among sovereign states, lacking the coercive authority necessary to bind them or individuals directly, which rendered the national government ineffective in enforcing its resolutions. This structural defect, as Hamilton argued in Federalist No. 15, treated states as collective entities exempt from superior control, fostering noncompliance and disunity rather than a cohesive republic capable of self-preservation. Empirical evidence from the Confederation's operations validated these critiques, as states routinely ignored congressional requisitions and directives, exposing the system's inability to sustain basic governmental functions.[9]A primary failure manifested in revenue generation, where Congress depended on voluntary state contributions without taxation powers, resulting in chronic underfunding.[4] Between 1781 and 1787, Congress requisitioned approximately $10 million from the states to service Revolutionary War debts and operations but received only $1.5 million, leaving obligations to soldiers, suppliers, and foreign lenders largely unpaid and eroding national credit.[9]Hamilton highlighted this in Federalist No. 30, asserting that without independent taxing authority, the Confederation resembled "a rope of sand," incapable of meeting exigencies like defense or debt repayment, as states prioritized local interests over collective burdens. Such fiscal impotence not only prolonged economic distress from postwar inflation and depreciation but also deterred foreign loans, as creditors perceived the government as unreliable.[1]The absence of commerce regulation exacerbated interstate discord, with states enacting retaliatory tariffs and barriers that fragmented the economy.[4] For instance, New York imposed duties on imports from New Jersey and Connecticut, prompting reciprocal measures and navigation disputes over shared waterways like the Hudson River, which undermined economic cohesion and invited foreign exploitation.[4]Madison, in Federalist No. 42, criticized this as a fatal omission, arguing that without centralized oversight, states pursued parochial policies that invited commercial warfare, as evidenced by the inability to negotiate uniform trade terms with Britain or retaliate against discriminatory duties. These frictions contributed to broader instability, justifying a federal commerce power to foster internal free trade and external leverage.Domestically, the Confederation's lack of an executive or standing forces left it powerless against uprisings, as demonstrated by Shays' Rebellion in 1786–1787.[66] In Massachusetts, indebted farmers led by Daniel Shays shut down courts and threatened the Springfield armory amid high taxes and foreclosures, yet Congress could neither raise troops nor compel state intervention, relying instead on ad hoc militia calls that proved inadequate.[1] Federalists viewed this as empirical proof of the system's vulnerability to factional violence, with Hamilton in Federalist No. 21 decrying the "total want of sanction" that allowed local disorders to threaten the union's fabric.[95] The episode, suppressing only through state efforts, underscored the causal link between decentralized authority and anarchy, prompting leaders like George Washington to advocate reform.[66]Externally, the Confederation's weaknesses invited encroachments, as Britain retained frontier forts in violation of the 1783 Treaty of Paris, citing uncompensated Loyalist claims and lack of enforcement mechanisms.[1] Similarly, Spain closed the Mississippi River to American navigation in 1784, leveraging congressional impotence to extract concessions from western states.[63]Madison argued in Federalist No. 22 that without unified treaty-making and sanction powers, the confederation appeared "feeble and distracted," unable to secure respect or defense, as states undermined national diplomacy through separate negotiations.[96] These incidents empirically demonstrated how confederal disunity amplified vulnerabilities, necessitating a consolidated government with direct sovereignty over citizens to ensure security and credibility abroad.Collectively, these operational failures—fiscal paralysis, economic fragmentation, domestic unrest, and diplomatic reversals—provided Federalists with concrete justifications for supplanting the Articles, arguing that only a federal system vesting enumerated powers directly in a national authority could rectify the causal deficiencies of state-centric confederation. Hamilton emphasized in Federalist No. 23 that energetic government, unbound by requisition frailties, was indispensable for union's survival, a view corroborated by the Confederation's near-collapse and the imperative for sustainable governance.
Anti-Federalist Defenses of Decentralization
The Anti-Federalists maintained that the Articles of Confederation's decentralized framework effectively preserved individual liberties by confining congressional authority to explicitly delegated matters, such as war and foreign affairs, while reserving residual sovereignty to the states for domestic governance.[97] This structure, they argued, mirrored the successful wartime alliance that secured independence from Britain by 1783, demonstrating that a loose union could coordinate collective defense without risking the tyrannical consolidation of power seen in monarchies.[98] Rather than supplanting the Articles with a new constitution, prominent Anti-Federalists advocated modest amendments—such as granting Congress limited taxing powers and coercive enforcement mechanisms—to remedy specific defects like revenue shortfalls, without subordinating state legislatures to a distant national authority.[97]Central to their defense was the principle that state governments, being smaller and closer to the populace, better ensured accountability and prevented elite capture, as local representatives could more readily reflect diverse regional interests and restrain abuses through direct popular oversight.[99] In essays attributed to "Brutus," published serially from October 1787 to April 1788 in the New-York Journal, the author cautioned that a consolidated national government over a vast territory like the United States would inevitably wield "absolute and uncontroulable power," fostering corruption and factionalism beyond the reach of republican virtue, drawing on Montesquieu's observation that free governments thrive only in moderate-sized republics.[100][101] Similarly, Patrick Henry, speaking at the Virginia Ratifying Convention on June 5, 1788, objected that the proposed Constitution eroded state autonomy by centralizing military and fiscal control, leaving no reliable means for states to "wage war against tyrants" through independent militias, thus reviving the coercive perils of British rule.[102]Empirically, Anti-Federalists pointed to the Articles' operation from 1781 to 1787, during which the confederation navigated the Revolutionary War's conclusion and initial peace without descending into anarchy, attributing post-war instability more to demobilization debts than inherent structural flaws amenable to decentralization.[103] They contended that vesting excessive power federally would subordinate state laws to national override, as implied in the Constitution's Supremacy Clause, thereby undermining the federalism that diffused authority and protected against uniform oppression across thirteen disparate jurisdictions.[104] This preference for subsidiarity—handling matters at the lowest competent level—anticipated that a stronger union risked inverting the Revolution's logic, transforming states from sovereign partners into mere administrative subunits.[105]
Causal Analysis of Confederal vs. Federal Systems
Confederal systems, characterized by sovereign member states delegating limited, non-coercive powers to a central authority, inherently generate collective action dilemmas where individual states prioritize parochial interests over shared necessities, leading to underprovision of public goods such as national defense and economic stability.[31] Under the Articles of Confederation, ratified in 1781, this structure manifested in Congress's inability to compel states to fulfill financial requisitions; for instance, between 1781 and 1784, Congress requested approximately $16 million from states to service war debts and operations, but received only about $1.2 million due to state defaults driven by local fiscal pressures and free-rider incentives.[26] Such dynamics exemplify a prisoner's dilemma, where each state benefited from others' contributions without bearing full costs, eroding central capacity and fostering interstate rivalries, including retaliatory tariffs that fragmented commerce.[106]In contrast, federal systems distribute sovereignty between central and subnational entities, granting the former direct, enforceable authority over citizens in enumerated domains like taxation and interstate regulation, thereby mitigating collective action failures through coercive mechanisms and uniform rules.[107] The U.S. Constitution of 1787 addressed confederal shortcomings by empowering Congress to levy taxes directly (Article I, Section 8) and regulate commerce, enabling rapid debt repayment—federal revenues rose from near zero under the Articles to over $2 million annually by 1790—and the suppression of internal disorders like Shays' Rebellion in 1786–1787, which the confederal Congress could not finance or coordinate effectively.[63] This causal shift from voluntary compliance to binding authority facilitated economic integration, evidenced by the elimination of state-imposed trade barriers and stabilization of currency, contributing to post-1787 growth rates exceeding 4% annually in the early republic.[108]Empirically, confederal decentralization amplifies externalities in defense and fiscal policy, as seen in the Articles-era military near-collapse: unpaid troops mutinied in Philadelphia in 1783, and Congress lacked funds to sustain even a minimal force against British or Spanish encroachments.[36]Federalism counters this by internalizing externalities via centralized decision-making, though it introduces risks of over-centralization; historical data from the U.S. transition shows federal structures sustaining larger-scale public investments without proportional efficiency losses, as states under the Articles hoarded resources amid a postwar depression with depreciating state currencies inflating debts by up to 1,000% in some cases.[109] Thus, the causal logic favors federalism for polities requiring coordinated responses to scale-dependent challenges, while confederalism suits transient alliances lacking mutual enforcement trust.[110]
Modern Applications to Sovereignty Debates
The confederal structure established by the Articles of Confederation, which explicitly affirmed in Article II that "each state retains its sovereignty, freedom and independence," continues to inform debates over the distribution of authority in multi-state unions, particularly where subnational entities resist ceding powers to a central body.[2] This model of retained sovereignty with limited delegation to a common authority highlights tensions between autonomy and collective efficacy, a dynamic recurrent in modern supranational arrangements. Proponents of decentralization often cite the Articles to argue that voluntary associations should preserve exit options and veto powers to safeguard against overreach, while critics reference its operational weaknesses—such as inability to enforce requisitions or regulate commerce—as empirical evidence that unchecked sovereignty fragments decision-making.[111]In the European Union, the Articles serve as a historical analogue for sovereignty disputes, with EU member states retaining primary competence in areas like foreign policy and taxation, akin to how American states under the Articles controlled diplomacy and internal affairs while delegating only enumerated functions to Congress.[112] The requirement for unanimity in key EU decisions, such as treaty amendments under Article 48 of the Treaty on European Union, mirrors the Articles' consensus mandates, which paralyzed action during crises like Shays' Rebellion in 1786-1787. Brexit, formalized by the UK's invocation of Article 50 on March 29, 2017, exemplified this application, as advocates framed withdrawal as reclaiming sovereignty from a confederal framework that, like the Articles, struggled with enforcement and fiscal coordination, leading to the UK's exit on January 31, 2020.[113] Such analogies underscore causal critiques: just as the Articles' sovereignty protections enabled state-level innovation but invited disunity, EU structures have prompted debates on whether further federalization—via qualified majority voting expansions—is needed to resolve deadlocks, as seen in stalled reforms post-2009 Lisbon Treaty.[114]Within the United States, the Articles' legacy animates contemporary federalism disputes, where advocates for state primacy invoke its principles to challenge federal expansions under doctrines like implied powers. For instance, in responses to centralized mandates on issues like immigration enforcement since the 2010s, states have asserted residual sovereignty, paralleling Article III's framing of the union as a "firm league of friendship" rather than an indivisible entity.[111] This perspective gained traction in originalist interpretations post-2022 Dobbs v. Jackson decision, which devolved abortion regulation to states, citing the Articles-era emphasis on localized governance to avert the "tyranny of the majority" feared by Anti-Federalists. Empirical data from the Articles' era, including defaulted state contributions totaling over $10 million in uncollected requisitions by 1784, bolsters arguments that excessive centralization risks inefficiency, though modern federal spending—exceeding $6 trillion annually as of 2023—demonstrates adapted mechanisms absent in the confederal prototype.[1]Broader applications appear in global secessionist movements, such as Scotland's 2014 independence referendum (55% against) and Catalonia's 2017 unilateral declaration, where confederal precedents like the Articles are marshaled to contend that unions formed voluntarily permit dissolution absent explicit perpetuity clauses enforceable by supermajority.[115] However, causal analysis reveals limitations: the Articles' Article XIII declaration of a "perpetual union" was overridden by the 1787 Constitutional Convention's unanimous state ratification, illustrating that sovereignty debates often pivot on amendability thresholds rather than absolute retention, a lesson applied to EU treaty opt-outs and U.S. Tenth Amendment litigations.[116] These invocations prioritize empirical precedents over normative ideals, revealing confederalism's appeal in preserving diversity but its vulnerability to paralysis in facing externalities like economic shocks or security threats.