The success of the Revolution gave Americans the opportunity 
          to give legal form to their ideals as expressed in the Declaration of 
          Independence, and to remedy some of their grievances through state constitutions. 
          As early as May 10, 1776, Congress had passed a resolution advising 
          the colonies to form new governments "such as shall best conduce to 
          the happiness and safety of their constituents." Some of them had already 
          done so, and within a year after the Declaration of Independence, all 
          but three had drawn up constitutions.  
        The new constitutions showed the impact of democratic 
          ideas. None made any drastic break with the past, since all were built 
          on the solid foundation of colonial experience and English practice. 
          But each was also animated by the spirit of republicanism, an ideal 
          that had long been praised by Enlightenment philosophers.  
        
        Naturally, the first objective of the framers of the 
          state constitutions was to secure those "unalienable rights" whose violation 
          had caused the former colonies to repudiate their connection with Britain. 
          Thus, each constitution began with a declaration or bill of rights. 
          Virginia's, which served as a model for all the others, included a declaration 
          of principles, such as popular sovereignty, rotation in office, freedom 
          of elections and an enumeration of fundamental liberties: moderate bail 
          and humane punishment, speedy trial by jury, freedom of the press and 
          of conscience, and the right of the majority to reform or alter the 
          government.  
        Other states enlarged the list of liberties to guarantee 
          freedom of speech, of assembly and of petition, and frequently included 
          such provisions as the right to bear arms, to a writ of habeas corpus, 
          to inviolability of domicile and to equal protection under the law. 
          Moreover, all the constitutions paid allegiance to the three-branch 
          structure of government -- executive, legislative and judiciary -- each 
          checked and balanced by the others.  
        Pennsylvania's constitution was the most radical. In 
          that state, Philadelphia artisans, Scots-Irish frontiersmen and German-speaking 
          farmers had taken control. The provincial congress adopted a constitution 
          that permitted every male taxpayer and his sons to vote, required rotation 
          in office (no one could serve as a representative more than four years 
          out of every seven) and set up a single-chamber legislature.  
        
        The state constitutions had some glaring limitations, 
          particularly by more recent standards. Constitutions established to 
          guarantee people their natural rights did not secure for everyone the 
          most fundamental natural right -- equality. The colonies south of Pennsylvania 
          excluded their slave populations from their inalienable rights as human 
          beings. Women had no political rights. No state went so far as to permit 
          universal male suffrage, and even in those states that permitted all 
          taxpayers to vote (Delaware, North Carolina and Georgia, in addition 
          to Pennsylvania), office-holders were required to own a certain amount 
          of property.