George Mason and the American Revolution

When tensions between Great Britain and the American colonies first began, George Mason was devoting his time to the operations of his plantation and to his land ventures with the Ohio Company. Mason was the treasurer of the Ohio Company, an organization that invested in land located in the Ohio River Valley. The Seven Years War, known as the French and Indian War in the American colonies, unofficially began in 1753. The fighting between Great Britain and France (and France’s Indian allies) on American soil was, in Mason’s words, disastrous for the company’s land claims. The war was precipitated by competing French and British claims of the Ohio country.  In 1753, the French began to build more forts throughout the country and declared that any English who traded or trespassed there would be made prisoners.  The British quickly mobilized, and much of the Ohio country land claimed by the Ohio Company was used for military purposes.  Roads established by the company became military transport lines, and an Ohio Company  trading post at the forks of the Ohio River became Fort Duquesne and later Fort Pitt.  Once the British gained control of Fort Pitt, various Virginia groups sought further western land grants, and claims soon overlapped between military and private interests, as well as between competing land companies.  Also, Governor Dinwiddie promised Ohio Company land to Virginians who fought in the campaigns. To further complicate the issue, boundary disputes between Pennsylvania and Virginia involved lands around Fort Pitt claimed by the Ohio Company.

Mason was in the midst of trying to reaffirm the original Ohio Company charter when the British government concluded the Seven Years War by the Peace of Paris Treaty signed on February 10, 1763.  Even after the fighting had ended, Britain had maintained troops in the colonies to prevent expansion beyond the frontier created by the Proclamation of 1763. The war had proved costly for Great Britain and the remaining troops further increased the financial burden. Consequently, government officials in England began looking for new sources of revenue and decided the colonists should contribute to their own defense. Thus British Parliament began to pass a series of acts aimed at generating revenue. They started on April 5, 1764 with the Revenue Act (or Sugar Act) that imposed various import duties on foreign cloth, sugar, indigo, and coffee brought into the colonies. On April 19, 1764, they passed the Currency Act that prohibited plantation colonies from issuing money. One year later, they passed the Stamp Act that required purchase of tax stamps to be affixed to newspapers, pamphlets, documents, playing cards, licenses, dice, etc. And in May 1765, Parliament passed the Quartering Act that required colonies to provide food and lodging for British Soldiers.

The colonists, who resented the closing of the frontier and doubted the British troops’ ability to protect anyone, declared the acts unjust and an infringement on the colonists’ rights to assess their own taxes. As early as 1764, the Virginia General Assembly had declared that only the House of Burgesses had the right to tax Virginians, thus setting the tone for future conflicts. In the summer of 1765, colonists reacted to British Parliament’s acts, especially the Stamp Act, by adopting resolutions protesting the taxation policy, boycotting all stamped paper, and by banding together to intimidate those who tried to collect the tax or who did not comply with resistance. In December 1765, George Mason drafted a plan that gave landlords a means of evading the Stamp Act, an action that propelled him into active participation in the protests against British colonial regulations.

In late February 1766, a group of merchants in London sent a letter to the colonists, directed specifically to the merchants of New York, that admonished the colonists for their combative reactions to taxation, and pleaded with them to comply with the demands of, and express gratitude to, their Mother-Country. The letter was published in several colonial newspapers, including the Virginia Gazette (Purdie) on May 16, 1766. In early June 1766, after reading the letter, George Mason responded to what he saw as their unfair criticism:

TO THE COMMITTEE OF MERCHANTS IN LONDON:
. . .There is a Passion natural to the Mind of man, especially a free Man, which renders him impatient of Restraint. Do you, does any sensible Man think that three or four Millions of People, not naturally defective in Genius, or in Courage, who have tasted the Sweets of Liberty in a Country that doubles it’s Inhabitants every twenty Years, in a Country abounding in such Variety of Soil & Climate, capable of producing not only the Necessarys, but the Conveniencys & Delicacys of Life, will long submit to Oppression; . . . Such another Experiment as the Stamp-Act wou’d produce a general Revolt in America. . .

Meanwhile, however, the colonists learned in May that Parliament had repealed the Stamp Act, but then passed the Declaratory Act that asserted Parliament’s right to make laws for the colonies. In their celebration over the Stamp Act’s defeat, they mostly ignored the Declaratory Act.

One year later, on June 29, 1767, Parliament Passed the Townshend Revenue Acts that imposed import duties on British glass, red and white lead, painter’s colors, paper, and tea and suspended the New York Assembly for not complying with the Quartering Act. In February 1768, Boston leaders wrote the Circular Letter that called for colonies to join in opposing Great Britain’s recent policies. Many colonies formally approved the letter in their assemblies. In April 1768 the Virginia General Assembly formally protested the Townshend Acts and in May 1769, in an address to the King, the Virginia House of Burgesses once again claimed their exclusive right to levy their own taxes. In response to this defiant act, the British governor dissolved the Virginia Assembly on May 19, 1769.  The Assembly, however, reconvened at the Raleigh Tavern in Williamsburg and took up discussion of nonimportation.

Throughout the previous year, other colonies had been implementing nonimportation agreements and associations that pledged citizens to boycott British goods until grievances were redressed. Virginia joined these colonies that spring, and George Mason was a key contributor to this process of protest. He, George Washington, and other leaders had been writing back and forth exchanging ideas on how nonimportation should proceed, and on April 5, 1769 Mason wrote to Washington about what effect that policy might have on Virginia and the tension with Great Britain:

Our All is at Stake, & the little Conveniencys & Comforts of Life, when set in Competition with our Liberty, ought to be rejected not with Reluctance but with Pleasure. . . it is amazing how much this (if adopted in all the Colonys) wou’d lessen the American Imports, and distress the various Traders & Manufacturers in Great Britain–This wou’d quickly awaken their Attention–they wou’d see, they wou’d feel the Oppressions we groan under, & exert themselves to procure us Redress. . .

On May 18, George Washington presented to the burgesses at the Raleigh Tavern a set of nonimportation resolutions that had been drafted by him and George Mason a few days before.  The burgesses adopted this plan, which became known as the Virginia Association.  Mason provided further thoughts about nonimportation on June 7, 1770, in a letter to Richard Henry Lee. Mason expressed contempt for those who, for their own personal gain, did not comply with nonimportation:

Every Member of Society is in Duty bound to contribute to the Safety & Good of the Whole; and when the Subject is of such Importance as the Liberty & Happiness of a Country, every inferior Consideration, as well as the Inconvenience to a few Individuals, must give place to it; nor is this any Hardship upon them; as themselves & their Posterity are to partake of the Benefits resulting from it.

Tensions escalated between Great Britain and the Colonies during the Spring of 1770. On March 5, 1770, the Boston Massacre occurred when a crowd of colonists and British Troops clashed in front of the Customs House in Boston. Apparently, snowballs and rubbish were thrown at the soldiers, and at some point, the soldiers opened fire, killing three men and wounding others, some fatally. At about that time, however, in April 1770, British Parliament repealed the Townshend Acts, but retained the tax on tea. Royal Governor Bernard of Massachusetts also called the Massachusetts Assembly into meeting again. Colonists, despite the continued tax on tea, felt that Parliament had finally redressed their grievances and ended their embargo on British Goods. The years between 1770 and 1772 proved a period of commercial prosperity for the colonies and tensions between Great Britain and the colonies eased somewhat.

In early December 1770, in a letter written most likely to George Brent, Mason expressed some optimism, yet remained cautious, about the future:

We are not without Hopes that, when Men’s Passions have had time to cool & Reason takes Place, this most desireable End may be attain’d, & that happy Harmony restored which for more than a Century produced such mutual Benefits to both Countrys . . . But shou’d the oppressive System of taxing us without our Consent be continued. The Flame, however smother’d now, will break out with redoubled Ardour, & the Spirit of Opposition (Self-defence is its’ proper Name) wear a more formidable Shape then ever-more formidable, because more natural & practicable. . .
. . .We have always acknowledged we are always ready to recognize the Sovereignty of Great Britain but we will not submit to have our own Money taken out our Pockets without our Consent; because if any Man or any Set of Men take from us without our Consent or that of our Representatives one shilling in the Pound we have not Security for the remaining nineteen. We owe to our Mother-Country the Duty of Subjects but will not pay her the Submission of Slaves.

During 1771 and 1772, Mason had turned his attention to Ohio Company affairs, buying headrights for lands and reviewing Virginia’s charter laws. In the Fall and Winter of 1772, however, a series of incidents occurred that intensified the colonists’ suspicions about Great Britain’s motives, and returned George Mason’s attention to the colonies’ situation. Customs Commissioners from England had remained in the colonies, overseeing revenue ships that continued to exact tolls from small vessels transporting goods to shore. The Gaspee Incident on June 10, 1772, when Rhode Islanders burned one of those revenue ships that had grounded, heightened tensions. Furthermore, In Massachusetts, Royal Governor Hutchinson announced that the judges of the Superior Court would receive their salaries from customs revenues.  Hutchinson’s own salary had come from customs revenues since 1768, and this angered colonists because it dissociated royal officers from the assembly.

Responding to these developments, citizens of Boston formed a Committee of Correspondence in October 1772, with the purpose of preparing a statement of colonial rights, listing violations, and communicating these with other towns and colonies, hoping they would follow suit. This action succeeded in evoking resentment and ire towards Great Britain once again and a new set of hostilities erupted. On May 10, 1773, British Parliament passed the Tea Act that gave the East India Company a monopoly on tea imported by the colonists and reasserted Parliament’s right to tax the colonies. The Boston colonists responded by staging the Boston Tea Party on Dec. 16, 1773. Parliament, in turn, punished Boston in March and April 1774, by passing the Coercive Acts (Intolerable Acts) that closed the port of Boston, restricted Massachusetts government and town meetings, and quartered British troops in Boston. This act outraged colonists across America and proved the pivotal point in the conflict, as many believed they could not go back to peaceful relations with Great Britain.

In May 1774, Mason traveled to Williamsburg to obtain concessions for his land grants, and coincidentally was present when, on May 24, 1774, the Virginia House of Burgesses adopted a resolution declaring June 1 (the day the Port of Boston was to be closed) a day of fasting, humiliation, and prayer in Virginia. Mason fully supported this endeavor and instructed his friend Martin Cockburn to, “tell my dear little family that I charge them to pay strict attention to it, and that I desire my three eldest sons, and my two eldest daughters, may attend church in mourning , if they have it, as I believe they have.” On May 27, Lord Dunmore, Virginia’s royal governor, again dissolved the General Assembly for its defiant act, and again, the delegates met at Raleigh Tavern to continue their business.  There, they proposed an annual “general congress” of all the colonies and formed a new nomimportation association. They also instructed each county to hold elections for a special August meeting of the House of Burgesses, called the Virginia Convention.

In July 1774, Fairfax County freeholders met to choose their representatives. They elected George Washington and Charles Broadwater and while the freeholders adjourned to consider ways of forcing Great Britain to redress American grievances, Washington met with George Mason at Mount Vernon. Here the two men and others wrote the Fairfax County Resolves in response and opposition to the Intolerable Acts. It stated the actions to be taken against British aggression, and represented a sharp turn in British-American relations, as they went farther than most protests by recommending that a continental congress devise “a general and uniform Plan for the Defence and Preservation of our common Rights . . .”  Resolution number two stated:

2. Resolved that the most important and valuable Part of the British Constitution, upon which it’s very Existence depends, is the fundamental Principle of the People’s being governed by no Laws, to which they have not given their Consent, by Representatives freely chosen by themselves; who are affected by the Laws they enact equally with their Constituents; to whom they are accountable, and whose Burthens they share; in which consists the Safety and Happiness of the Community: for if this Part of the Constitution was taken away, or materially altered, the Government must degenerate either into an absolute and despotic Monarchy, or a tyrannical Aristocracy, and the Freedom of the People be annihilated.

That summer, other colonies agreed to send delegates to the conference proposed by Virginia to discuss recent events and to form some concerted action against Great Britain. From August 1-6, 1774, the delegates at the first Virginia Convention chose delegates for the colony-wide convention. On September 1, 1774, the First Continental Congress met in Philadelphia and delegates there agreed to boycott all British Goods, to send petitions of grievances to the king, and to meet again in the coming year. Meanwhile, George Mason served on the Fairfax County Committee of Safety that had been created to enforce the Fairfax Resolves.  There, he oversaw the formation of an independent militia company for Fairfax County. In April 1775, his remarks on annual elections for the company reflected his political philosophy on the eve of the Revolution.

We came equals into this world, and equals shall we go out of it. All men are by nature born equally free and independent. To protect the weaker from the injuries and insults of the stronger were societies first formed; . . . Every society, all government, and every kind of civil compact therefore, is or ought to be, calculated for the general good and safety of the community. Every power, every authority vested in particular men is, or ought to be, ultimately directed to this sole end; and whenever any power or authority whatever extends further, or is of longer duration than is in its nature necessary for these purposes, it may be called government, but it is in fact oppression . . .In all our associations; in all our agreements let us never lose sight of this fundamental maxim–that all power was originally lodged in, and consequently is derived from, the people. We should wear it as a breastplate, and buckle it on as our armour.

On April 19, 1775 shots were fired at Lexington and Concord and the American Revolution officially began. On May 10, 1775 the Second Continental Congress convened.  George Washington had been chosen to represent Virginia at this conference, so George Mason was selected to replace Washington as a Fairfax County delegate to the third Virginia Convention, scheduled to meet in Richmond in July.  On June 15, the Second Continental Congress placed George Washington in charge of the Continental Army. Now Washington’s seat at the Second Continental Congress stood vacant, so in August 1775, George Mason was appointed to take Washington’s seat at the Second Continental Congress. Mason refused, however, and was instead appointed to Virginia’s Committee of Safety in charge of raising a militia for Virginia’s defense. The Committee of Safety also became responsible for carrying on the functions of government when Virginia’s royal governor, Lord Dunmore, departed Virginia for safer ground. George Mason reluctantly agreed to serve Virginia in this capacity.

Mason continued to hold a seat at the fourth Virginia Convention that met in Williamsburg on December 5, 1775, and again at the fifth and final Convention that met in May, 1776. On May 15, 1776 the Second Continental Congress in Philadelphia advised the Colonies to establish their own governments.  The Virginia Convention responded by passing a resolution calling for a direct act by the Continental Congress to strike for independence. The delegates also appointed a drafting committee to write a bill of rights and a constitution for Virginia. George Mason headed the committee and Edmund Pendleton wrote Thomas Jefferson a few days later, “The Political Cooks are busy in preparing the dish, and as Colo Mason seems to have the Ascendancy in the great work, I have Sanguine hopes it will be framed so as to Answer it’s end, Prosperity to the Community and Security to Individuals . . .” 9 In late May 1776, Mason submitted a first draft of the Virginia Declaration of Rights to the Committee, and on May 27, 1776, the committee added onto Mason’s draft and submitted it to the Convention. While waiting for the Convention to adopt his Declaration of Rights, Mason wrote a first draft of the Virginia Constitution and submitted it to the Convention. On June 12, 1776, the final draft of the Virginia Declaration of Rights was passed. And on June 28, the Convention adopted the final draft of the Virginia Constitution.

The other colonies followed Virginia’s lead and established their own constitutions and bills of rights. Many borrowed freely from Mason’s ideas and words. On June 7, 1776, Richard Henry Lee, representing Virginia at the Second Continental Congress, had proposed a resolution formally declaring the colonies independent. On July 2, 1776, the Continental Congress adopted Lee’s proposal and on July 4, 1776, the Declaration of Independence was formally announced to the world. The preamble to the Declaration of Independence echoes many of the ideas put forth in Mason’s Declaration of Rights. This reflects the shared philosophy between many of the founding fathers, such as Jefferson, Mason, Washington, and Madison.

Following the Declaration of Independence, the Second Continental Congress immediately began to prepare a new compact to unite the thirteen colonies and on November 17, 1777, passed the Articles of Confederation. In February 1781, Maryland became the last colony to ratify the Articles. In that same year, General Charles Cornwallis surrendered to General George Washington, ending the hostilities of the American Revolution. And in 1783, the Treaty of Paris between Great Britain and the United States formally ended the American Revolution. In 1777, George Mason had been elected a delegate to Virginia’s new government that he had helped create, and he continued to serve in the Virginia House of Delegates until 1780, when he did not attend the session in the new Capitol of Richmond due to poor health. He had also remained on Fairfax County’s Committee of Safety. In 1781, he retired from public life, yet continued to remain involved in the affairs of Virginia and the new nation. Six years later, despite poor health and his aversion to long trips, George Mason traveled to Philadelphia for the Federal Convention of 1787, and became one of the leading contributors to the formation of the United States Constitution.

George Mason’s Pursuit of Religious Liberty in Revolutionary Virginia

by Daniel Driesbach

The contributions of Thomas Jefferson and James Madison to religious liberty in Virginia and the new nation are exhaustively chronicled and rightly celebrated. George Mason (1725-1792), by contrast, has received neither the credit nor the attention given his more famous contemporaries for his unwavering devotion to the cause of religious rights. He was the principal draftsman of Article XVI of the Virginia Declaration of Rights, a seminal, post-colonial statement on the rights of conscience. In legislative chambers and behind the scenes, Mason was a deft, untiring strategist in the bitter contests to guarantee religious freedom and to end the legal favors enjoyed by the established church in Virginia. Few among the founding generation have had such an enduring impact on the rights of conscience and yet, received so little public recognition as George Mason. He was a towering figure in the struggle to craft a distinctively American doctrine of religious liberty and church-state relations for both the Commonwealth and the nation.Very little has been written that focuses on Mason’s pursuit of religious freedom in Virginia. This is an unfortunate omission in the existing scholarship. This article examines Mason’s most important contribution to the cause of religious liberty – his authorship of Article XVI of the Virginia Declaration of Rights.

Architect of the Virginia Declaration of Rights

George Mason was a Fairfax County delegate to the Virginia Convention, filling the seat vacated by George Washington who had been appointed commander-in-chief of a continental army. The Convention, which convened in Williamsburg on 6 May 1776, was arguably the most noteworthy political body ever assembled in the Commonwealth’s history. Composed largely of veterans of the old House of Burgesses, the Convention, on 15 May, passed a resolution instructing the Commonwealth’s delegates at the Continental Congress to press for a declaration of independence from England. The assembly also appointed a committee to prepare a state declaration of rights and plan of civil government. Among those appointed to the committee were Mason and the young, untested delegate from Orange County, James Madison, Jr.

George Mason, whose considerable talents were well-known in the Commonwealth, was the chief architect of the Declaration of Rights. Some time in late May, Mason prepared a list of ten proposals to which others were added by Thomas Ludwell Lee and the committee. The Virginia Declaration was printed in draft form, thoroughly debated, and amended before it was passed unanimously on 12 June 1776.

The genius of Mason’s Declaration, as Thomas Jefferson said of his own Declaration of Independence, was not in the “originality of principle of sentiment… [Rather,] it was intended to be an expression of the American mind” with its brilliant “harmonizing sentiments of the day.” William C. Rives characterized Mason’s Declaration as “a condensed, logical and luminous summary of the great principle of freedom inherited by us from our British ancestors; the extracted essence of the Magna Charta, the Petition of Rights, the Acts of the Long Parliament, and the doctrines of the Revolution of 1688 as expounded by Lock, – distilled and concentrated through the alembic of his own powerful and discriminating mind. There is nothing more remarkable in the political annals of America than this paper. It has stood the rude test of every vicissitude.”

Committee drafts of the Declaration were printed and circulated widely up and down the Atlantic seaboard in late May and June, and ita had an immediate and “profound impact on other Americans [in nascent states] whose task it was to create new governments.” “[B]y the time the last cannonade of the Revolution sounded,” Robert A. Rutland observed, “every state either had fashioned a separate bill of rights or had passed statutes with similar provisions. In a good many cases the work was done with scissors, pastepot, and a copy of the Virginia Declaration – a fact that did not escape Mason’s notice. It is, perhaps, not too much to acclaim the Declaration of Rights, which Mason boasted was the “first in American,” as “an intellectual guidepost of the American Revolution.” This seminal document secured for Mason an honored seat among the literati of the Revolution.

George Mason and the Rights of Conscience

Drawing on principles expressed in John Locke’s Letter Concerning Toleration, Mason included an article on religion in the “first draught” of the Virginia Declaration. His original proposal declared:

That as Religion, or the Duty which we owe to our divine and omnipotent Creator, and the Manner of discharging it, can be governed only by Reason and Conviction, not by Force or Violence; and therefore that all Men shou’d enjoy the fullest Toleration in the Exercise of Religion, according to the Dictates of Conscience, unpunished and unrestrained by the Magistrate, unless, under Colour of Religion, any Man disturb the Peace, the Happiness, or Safety of Society, or of Individuals. And that it is the mutual Duty of all, to practice Christian forbearance, Love and Charity towards Each other.

The committee slightly amended Mason’s initial version before it was laid before the Convention on 27 May. It is this text that was printed and distributed widely in the Commonwealth and other colonies:

That Religion, or the duty which we owe to our CREATOR, and the manner of discharging it, can be directed only by reason and conviction, not by force or violence; and therefore, that all men should enjoy the fullest toleration in the exercise of religion, according to the dictates of conscience, unpunished and unrestrained by the magistrate, unless, under colour of religion, any man disturb the peace, the happiness, or safety of society. And that it is the mutual duty of all to practice Christian forbearance, love and charity towards each other.

James Madison and Religious Liberty

Although James Madison was interested in all portions of the Virginia Declaration, only the final article providing for religious toleration stirred him to action. In “his first important public act,” Madison objected to Mason’s use of the word “toleration” because it implied that religious exercise was a mere privilege that could be granted or revoked at the pleasure of the civil state, and was not assumed to be an equal right wholly exempt from the cognizance of the civil state and subject only to the dictates of a free conscience. Madison wanted to replace “toleration” with the concept of absolute equality in religious belief and exercise.

To be sure, Mason’s proposal went further than any previous declaration in force in Virginia. However, it did not go far enough to satisfy Madison. As early as 1774, Madison had come to think of religious toleration (the ultimate objective of most reformers of his day) as only the halfway point on the road to religious liberty. He eventually concluded that religious toleration – granted either by the civil state of by a religious authority – was inconsistent with freedom of conscience and was a woefully inadequate objective.

Historically speaking, religious toleration is to be contrasted with religious liberty. The former often assumes an established church and is always a revocable grant of the civil state rather than a natural, unalienable right. In Madison’s mind, the right of religious exercise was too important to be cast in the form of a mere privilege allowed by the ruling civil polity and enjoyed as a grant of governmental benevolence. Rather, he viewed religious liberty as a natural and unalienable right, possessed equally by all citizens, which must be beyond the reach of civil magistrates.

Madison’s proposed revisions to Article XVI punctuated his aversion to the concept of toleration with a natural rights argument that all mena are equally entitled to the free exercise of religion. It is not certain when Madison offered his amendments; however, they followed the Committee revision of 27 May. He first suggested the following alternative:

That Religion or duty we owe to our Creator, and the manner of discharging it, being under the direction of reason and conviction only, not of violence or compulsion, all men are equally entitled to the full and free exercise of it accord[in]g to the dictates of Conscience; and therefore that no man or class of men ought, on account of religion to be invested with peculiar emoluments or privileges; nor subjected to any penalties or disabilities unless under &c.

Significantly, Madison retained the clause: “That Religion or the duty we owe our Creator, and the manner of discharging it…” The retention of this line suggests that both Mason and Madison construed “religion” as belief of a Creator and all of the duties arising from that belief. This notion is consistent with definitions of religion commonly used at the time, and it included deists but excluded atheists.

Most importantly, Madison replaced Mason’s clause, “all Men should enjoy the fullest Toleration in the Exercise of Religion” with the phrase, “all men are equally entitled to the full and free exercise of [religion] according to the dictates of Conscience.” Madison thus jettisoned the language of toleration and moved toward the concept of absolute religious liberty. Key to this restatement was the word “equally,” which was retained in subsequent drafts. This language meant that the unlearned Separate Baptists of central Piedmont had religious rights equal to those of the well-heeled Anglican aristocrats of Tidewater.

The clause stating “that no man or class of men ought, on account of religion to be invested with peculiar emoluments or privileges” was the most radical feature of Madison’s revisions. It would have effectively terminated legal and financial support of ecclesiastical establishment in Virginia. (“[M]an or class of men” is a reference to a clergyman or religious sect.) Religious assessments would arguably have been proscribed. Furthermore, by striking out “force” and replacing it with “compulsion,” Madison was expanding the protection afforded religious citizens to include a prohibition on all pressure or interference by the civil state in matters of conscience. Madison’s revisions would have arguably deprived the Commonwealth of legal and financial power to support any church or clergy or to control the religious beliefs of citizens in any way.

Clearly, this revision was unacceptable to most delegates and, perhaps, to most Virginians. Unable to muster sufficient support for passage of this amendment, Madison drafted a second alternative providing for the free exercise of religion but carefully avoiding disestablishing the Anglican Church.

That religion, or duty which we owe to our CREATOR, and the manner of discharging it, can be directed only by reason and conviction, not by force or violence; and therefore, that men are equally entitled to enjoy the free exercise of religion, according to the dictates of conscience, unpunished and unrestrained by the magistrate, Unless the preservation of equal liberty and the existence of the State are manifestly endangered; And that it is the mutual duty of all to practice Christian forbearance, love, and charity towards each other.

While retaining a regime of equality and liberty in religious exercise, Madison’s second revision abandoned the quixotic attempt to disestablish the church. He also dropped the word “compulsion,” “thus giving up the specific prohibition of religious control through civil processes.” Madison was successful, however, in cutting Mason’s “clause on disturbance of the peace down to the Lockeian principle of no interference with religion except to preserve civil society.” (Mason had given the magistrate latitude to restrain religious exercise that disturbed the tranquility not only of society but also of individuals.) The clause qualifying religious exercise that is deemed a danger to the civil state was totally eliminated in the final version.

Once again, delegates to the Virginia Convention declined to endorse Madison’s amendment as a whole. They were uncomfortable with any suggestion that Madison’s proposals might “sever the special relationship which bound Virginians to the church of their fathers.” The version finally adopted, however, included his clause declaring that “all men are equally entitled to the free exercise of religion.”

Madison’s amendments were apparently offered without sharp objection from Mason. A half century later, Madison casually reported to Mason’s grandson that the term “toleration” “had been admitted into the original draft of the Declaration of Rights but on a suggestion from myself was readily exchanged for the phraseology excluding it. This episode, importantly, brought Madison to the attention of his fellow delegates and distinguished him, along with Mason and Jefferson, as an able spokesman for the cause of religious liberty.

The First Legal Statement of Religious Liberty

In its final form, Article XVI of the Virginia Declaration of Rights provided:

That Religion, or the duty which we owe to our CREATOR, and the manner of discharging it, can be directed only by reason and conviction, not by force or violence; and therefore, all men are equally entitled to the free exercise of religion, according to the dictates of conscience, and that it is the mutual duty of all to practice Christian forbearance, love, and charity, towards each other.

The final version, observed L. John Van Til, lined “Creator,” “religion,” and “conscience.” “Religion is the way that a man relates to his Creator, but this relationship can be cared for only through conscience. Conscience employs reason and conviction, not force and violence; hence, conscience as the only way to discharge the duties of man toward his Creator must be at liberty. Significantly, the [article] adds that it is necessary therefore, to practice ‘Christian forbearance, love,, and charity towards each other.’ This language rests on two important assumptions: first, that the rights of conscience envisioned by the Virginia Convention were to be exercised in a theistic context, and, second, that it involves not only a relationship between one man and his God, but also the relationship of each man to his neighbor.

Article XVI was thus embedded in the organic law of the Commonwealth. Its impact on law and policy was immediate, reported Virginia historian Hamilton James Eckenrode. “Prosecution for religious sects and denominations “were placed on the same civil footing…Virginia,” Eckenrode boasted, “was ahead of the world, making the first legal statement of the principle of religious liberty.”

Mason is rightly revered as the principal author of the Virginia Declaration of Rights, and it is his version of the article on religion, nor Madison’s, that was widely circulated and influential in the former colonies. (Madison, it is recalled, did not offer his amendments until after the committee draft of the Virginia Declaration had been published and broadcast throughout the colonies and beyond.) Mason wrote the script that, with Madison’s felicitous revisions, forever changed the way Americans regard the rights on conscience.


Daniel L. Dreisbach, D.Phil (Oxford University) and J.D. (University of Virginia), is an associate professor of justice, law, and society at American University in Washington, D.C. He is the author of Religion and Politics in the Early Republic (University Press of Kentucky, 1996). This article is an excerpt from the Liberty Lecture he delivered at Gunston Hall on 14 October 1997. An expanded and updated version of this lecture was published in The Virginia Magazine of History and Biography, vol. 108, no. 1 (2000): 5-44.

This article was originally published in the Gunston Gazette (Gunston Hall Plantation Membership Newsletter), vol. 2, no. 2 (1997): I – VIII.

The Virginia Declaration of Rights – First Draft

The Virginia Convention met in Williamsburg on May 6, 1776, and by May 15th had passed a resolution calling for the Virginia delegates at the Continental Congress to move for independence. At the same time they formed a committee for drafting a bill of rights and a constitution for Virginia. George Mason took the lead on this project and his notes below are considered the first draft. To this draft eight additional propositions were added by the committee before it was read to the Convention on May 27, 1776. After debate, and several changes, the Declaration of Rights was passed unanimously on June 11, 1776.

[First Draft, ca. 20-26 May 1776]

A Declaration of Rights, made by the Representatives of the good People of Virginia, assembled in full Convention; and recommended to Posterity as the Basis and Foundation of Government.

That all Men are born equally free and independant, and have certain inherent natural Rights, of which they can not by any Compact, deprive or divest their Posterity; among which are the Enjoyment of Life and Liberty, with the Means of acquiring and possessing Property, and pursueing and obtaining Happiness and Safety.

That Power is, by God and Nature, vested in, and consequently derived from the People; that Magistrates are their Trustees and Servants, and at all times amenable to them.

That Government is, or ought to be, instituted for the common Benefit and Security of the People, Nation, or Community. Of all the various Modes and Forms of Government, that is best, which is capable of producing the greatest Degree of Happiness and Safety, and is most effectually secured against the Danger of mal-administration. And that whenever any Government shall be found inadequate, or contrary to these Purposes, a Majority of the Community had an indubitable, inalianable and indefeasible Right to reform, alter or abolish it, in such Manner as shall be judged most conducive to the Public Weal.

That no Man, or Set of Men are entitled to exclusive or seperate Emoluments or Privileges from the Community, but in Consideration of public Services; which not being descendible, or hereditary, the Idea of a Man born a Magistrate, a Legislator, or a Judge is unnatural and absurd.

That the legislative and executive Powers of the State shoud be seperate and distinct from the judicative; and that the Members of the two first may be restraind from Oppression, by feeling and participating the Burthens they may lay upon the People; they should, at fixed Periods be reduced to a private Station, and returned, by frequent, certain and regular Elections, into that Body from which they were taken.

That no part of a Man’s Property can be taken from him, or applied to public uses, without the Consent of himself, or his legal Representatives; nor are the People bound by any Laws, but such as they have in like Manner assented to for their common Good.

That in all capital or criminal Prosecutions, a Man hath a right to demand the Cause and Nature of his Accusation, to be confronted with the Accusers or Witnesses, to call for Evidence in his favour, and to a speedy Tryal by a Jury of his Vicinage; without whose unanimous Consent, he can not be found guilty; nor can he be compelled to give Evidence against himself. And that no Man, except in times of actual Invasion or Insurrection, can be imprisoned upon Suspicion of Crimes against the State, unsupported by Legal Evidence.

That no free Government, or the Blessings of Liberty can be preserved to any People, but by a firm adherence to Justice, Moderation, Temperance, Frugality, and Virtue and by frequent Recurrence to fundamental Principles.

That as Religion, or the Duty which we owe to our divine and omnipotent Creator, and the Manner of discharging it, can be governed only by Reason and Conviction, not by Force or Violence; and therefore that all Men should enjoy the fullest Toleration in the Exercise of Religion, according to the Dictates of Conscience, unpunished and unrestrained by the Magistrate, unless, under Col- our of Religion, any Man disturb the Peace, the Happiness, or Safety of Society, or of Individuals. And that it is the mutual Duty of all, to practice Christian Forbearance, Love and Charity towards Each other.

That in all controversies respecting Property, and in Suits between Man and Man, the ancient Tryal by Jury is preferable to any other, and ought to be held sacred.

(That the freedom of the press, being the great bulwark of Liberty, can never be restrained but in a despotic government. That laws having a restrospect to crimes, & punishing offences committed before the existence of such laws, are generally dangerous, and ought to be avoided.)

N.B. It is proposed to make some alteration in this last article when reported to the house. Perhaps somewhat like the following That all laws having a retrospect to crimes, & punishing offences committed before the existence of such laws are dangerous, and ought to be avoided, except in cases of great, & evident necessity, when safety of the state absolutely requires them. This is thought to state with more precision the doctrine respecting ex post facto laws & to signify to posterity that it is considered not so much as a law of right, as the great law of necessity, which by the well known maxim is — allowed to supersede all human institutions.

Another is agreed to in committee condemning the use of general warrants; & one other to prevent the suspension of laws, or the execution of them.

The above clauses, with some small alterations, & the addition of one, or two more, have already been agreed to in the Committee appointed to prepare a declarition of rights; when this business is finished in the house, the committee will proceed to the ordinance of government.
T.L. Lee

The entire document is in George Mason’s handwriting, except for the end portion beginning “That the freedom of the press…” which is in Thomas Ludwell Lee’s hand.

The first draft manuscript of the Virginia Declaration of Rights is held by the Library of Congress.  Click through to see the pages online.