The Commonwealth of Pennsylvania has been governed by five
constitutions between 1776 and 1968. Before that, the province of Pennsylvania
was governed for almost a century by four successive constitutions, referred to
as The Frame of Government.
The first Frame of Government 1682, also known as Penn's
Charter, was written by William Penn while he was still in England, and was
repudiated by Pennsylvania's Colonial Assembly. In the preface, Penn stated his
political philosophy on government: "Any government is free to the people under
it ... where the laws rule and the people are a party to those laws."
The provision for amending the Frame of Government, Section
XXIII, states, "No act ... to alter, change, or diminish the form, or effect, of
the charter ... without the consent of the governor, his heirs, or assigns, and
six parts of seven of the said freemen in provincial Council and General
Assembly." Changes appeared in the second Frame of Government, also written by
Penn. This was approved by the colony's bicameral General Assembly in 1683 and
became the colony's constitution.
In 1696, the colony received its third Frame of Government.
This constitution was written by William Markham, the proprietor's deputy
governor and Penn's cousin. This version, known as Markham's Frame, was regarded
as the constitution until Penn came back to Pennsylvania in December 1699. Penn
signed the fourth Frame of Government in October 1701 when he left Pennsylvania
for England, where he died in 1718. This last frame, also known as the Charter
of Privileges, was drafted for the first time in conjunction with members of the
Provincial Assembly.
The Assembly by this time had power to make its own rules and
initiate all legislation. The constitution continued to evolve, following the
English tradition of permitting constitutional changes to occur through the
ordinary legislative process. It was the basic constitution for the next 75
years and it virtually ended proprietary rule by giving self-government to
Pennsylvania.
In 1751, the Assembly ordered a bell to commemorate the 50th
anniversary of the Charter of Privileges. The bell was inscribed with the words
"Proclaim liberty throughout the land unto all the inhabitants thereof." This
bell cracked on first ringing, was recast twice, and today it is known as the
Liberty Bell.
As the colony grew in population and wealth, disputes arose
over the respective powers of the elective Provincial Assembly and the appointed
Provincial Governor. Divisions were developing between the established eastern
city interest and the expanding western frontier, between the farmer and the
city dweller, between the working man and the capitalist, and between the
settler and the land speculator.
As a result of general dissatisfaction with the proprietary
government, there were petitions to make Pennsylvania a royal province, while
other more radical elements urged the drafting of a new constitution and called
for independence from England. The first Continental Congress was a turning
point for most citizens who had expected the Congress to propose a new
relationship between England and the colonies. Instead, the second
Constitutional Congress on May 15, 1776, passed a resolution urging all colonies
to draft and adopt constitutions.
Philadelphia Convention
Less then two weeks after the Declaration of Independence, the citizens of
Philadelphia were inspired to form a convention for drafting a constitution for
the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania. The Provincial Assembly and the governor were
ignored, and the convention not only entered upon the task of forming the
constitution, but superseded the old government by assuming the legislative
power of the commonwealth and establishing a Council of Safety with extensive
powers to rule in the interim.
The elected delegates debated, drafted, and on Sept. 28, 1776,
passed and proclaimed the Bill of Rights and Constitution of the Commonwealth of
Pennsylvania signed by "Benj. Franklin, Prest." The Constitution of 1776
provided that the power of amending the constitution would rest with a Council
of Censors as it found necessary. The Constitution of 1776 was considered one of
the most democratic state governmental structures of the times, even though it
was not submitted to the electorate for ratification or adoption.
In March of 1789, the General Assembly passed a resolution
submitting to the people the question of calling a convention to draft a new
Constitution. The General Assembly provided by statute for the election of
delegates to a constitutional convention and gave the people a chance to examine
the changes and make their will known to the elected delegates. The new
Constitution went into effect on Sept. 2, 1790; but the electorate had not voted
on the calling of the convention or the adoption of its drafts.
While the Constitution of 1776 reflected the radical
revolutionary reality of the day, the Constitution of 1790 represented the
political thinking of the conservatives who began gaining control of the
government after the Revolution.
Instead of boycotting the government, as many had done right
after the Revolution, they resolved to work within the constitution for its
amendment. The ensuing struggle for constitutional amendment was centered on the
exclusive powers given the Council of Censors.
By 1810 popular petitions for constitutional revision flooded
the legislature, but the legislature did not respond. In 1812, resolutions
continued to be introduced for a constitutional convention but the resolutions
failed. The movement for revision continued until 1835 when by an act, the
qualified electors were permitted to vote at the next general election "for or
against" calling a constitutional convention. In 1836, an act provided that the
draft of the new provisions would be submitted to the electorate for approval or
rejection.
In 1837, a convention was called to revise the state's laws
and during the long period of revision, one of the primary objects of criticism
had been the broad appointive powers of the governor. The resulting Constitution
of 1838 introduced many reforms. One of the more important provisions allowed
for the amending of the constitution without the necessity of calling a
convention. Passage of a proposed amendment by two successive legislatures and
its ratification by the electorate was all that was required.
The Pennsylvania Constitution of 1874 is the longest and the
most detailed under which the commonwealth has been governed, but it did not
change the procedure for amending the constitution. The need for constitutional
reform was felt widely, but referendum questions on a new constitutional
convention were defeated for the next 75 years.
The 1935 Constitutional Revision Commission headed by William
A. Schnader was defeated by referendum in 1953. A new commission appointed in
1957, and headed by Superior Court Judge Robert E. Woodside, did not take the
convention route, but instead drafted amendments. These amendments were
applauded everywhere except in the legislature where they were all either
defeated or ignored.
Project Constitution Schnader also tried the amendment route,
and in 1961 persuaded the Pennsylvania Bar Association to create "Project
Constitution" which drafted a proposed new constitution. This new constitution
was a composite of existing language, most of the Woodside Commission proposals,
bits and pieces borrowed from other states, and also some new ideas. It was the
first time that any state had attempted to revise its entire constitution.
Also in 1961, the Committee for State Constitutional Revision
led by Milton J. Shapp got underway and in 1963 forced the legislature to call
for a referendum on a constitutional convention. The referendum failed, but
Schnader immediately proposed a new Constitutional Revision Commission to study
the bar association's proposals, and early in 1964 these were transmitted
through the governor to the legislature as draft amendments.
A newly formed citizen's organization, A Modern Constitution
for Pennsylvania Inc., contributed much to this effort, even though some of the
"Project Constitution" amendments had already been approved by the legislature.
The 1967 legislature gave priority to constitutional revision and passed a
convention enabling bill as well as the amendments awaiting second passage.
The convention considered all the bar association's proposals.
On April 23, 1968, the electorate of Pennsylvania approved the constitutional
revisions, and the 94-year-old constitution was modernized. But the Constitution
of 1968 did not change the amending process, even though no part of the 1874
Constitution escaped some kind of rewriting or rearrangement.