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15 Interesting Facts and Figures About the U.S. Constitution

There's more to the U.S. Constitution than the Bill of Rights—there's the original document plus a total of 27 additional amendments. Here are interesting facts and figures you may not know about this important document that is the cornerstone of the American government.

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bill of rights
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The Bill of Rights

In 1789, James Madison, the “Father of the Constitution,” who at the time was a U.S. Congressional Representative from Virginia and would go on to serve as the fourth President of the United States, proposed 19 amendments meant to answer the objections that had already been raised by the States regarding the Constitution, which had been ratified only two years earlier. The House of Representatives approved 17 of the amendments, of which the Senate approved 12. Those 12 amendments were then sent to the state legislatures for approval. Only ten amendments were ultimately approved by three-fourths of the state legislatures; Virginia was the tenth out of the existing 14 states to do so, giving them the final go-ahead on December 15, 1791. Those ten bills became known at The Bill of Rights. Of the two proposed amendments that didn’t get ratified in 1791, one finally did in 1992.

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voting booth
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Popular vote vs. Electoral College

When the 39 men signed the Constitution, they signed into law one of the most contentious processes in the world: an election mechanism still being debated today. James Wilson, who represented Pennsylvania at the Constitutional Convention in 1787, originally proposed that the President be chosen by popular vote. But according to the National Archives and Records Administration, “the Founding Fathers established the Electoral College in the Constitution as a compromise between election of the President by a vote in Congress and election of the President by a popular vote of qualified citizens.” It’s been an often debated idea ever since. Per ConstitutionFacts.com, there have been 500 proposed amendments to change the Electoral College process, but this “indirect” system of electing the president is, of course, still intact—as we all were reminded in November 2016 when the winner of the popular vote, Democratic candidate Hillary Clinton, lost the election. Understanding the Electoral College is one of the confusing questions many are too embarrassed to ask about the American government.

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U.S. Supreme Court in Autumn - Washington DC, United Sates
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The Constitution didn’t form a democracy

Most Americans consider the United States a democracy, but the framers of the Constitution were not, in fact, trying to create a democracy. Interestingly, the word “democracy” doesn’t even appear in the U.S. Constitution—not once. In fact, according to the National Archives, when Benjamin Franklin was asked if the delegates to the Constitutional Convention had created a monarchy or a republic, he replied, “A republic, if you can keep it.” The difference is that “in a democracy, the majority rules, but a republic has a government by the people with checks and balances and a constitution for all to adhere to,” explains the National Archives. This is why hate speech is protected under the Constitution. 

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Patriotic Apple Pie
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We owe the Constitution for our Thanksgiving naps

The first national “Thanksgiving Day,” to be celebrated on November 26, 1789, was established by President George Washington as a way of “‘giving thanks’ for the Constitution,” according to the National Constitution Center in Philadelphia. So have an extra slice of cranberry sauce with your turkey leg, and before you nod off for a nap in front of the TV during an NFL game, give a nod of thanks to our first president. Of course, the holiday had been celebrated more than a century before by the Pilgrims; the idea that the original celebration was a religious holiday is just one of many common myths about Thanksgiving.

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indepence hall room
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Much more than a heated debate

It was a hot and humid summer of 1787 in Philadelphia, and yet to ensure secrecy during the meetings, the windows of Independence Hall were kept shut during the Constitutional Convention, according to The Gilder Lehrman Institute of American History. When you add in the fact that thick wool was the unfortunate fashion trend of the day, you can imagine the sweat and the smell coming from our Founding Fathers while they hammered out the laws that still govern our land and provide heated debate today. It can still be sticky hot in summertime, but Philadelphia will always be one of the 16 best American cities for history buffs.

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Federal Hall and George Washington statue
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Our first president didn’t want to attend the Convention

The Constitutional Convention lasted nearly four hot months, from late May to mid-September 1787, and yet the delegates nearly didn’t get to hear from our eventual first president. After the war and helping to gain independence from England, it had been Washington’s goal to return to life as a country squire during his retirement at Mount Vernon. Amazingly, according to the Fred W. Smith National Library for the Study of George Washington at Mount Vernon, Washington “had to be convinced even to attend the Convention…James Madison and General Henry Knox were eventually able to persuade Washington to make the trip to Philadelphia for the proceedings.” Here are more amazing facts you never knew about America.

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Veteran's Saluting
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His Highness the President of the United States of America…

Believe it or not, “His Highness the President of the United States of America and Protector of Their Liberties” was one of the proposed titles for the position that eventually became known simply as “The President of the United States.” How does your knowledge stack up? Take the U.S. Citizenship test that only 40 percent of Americans can actually pass!

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American Flag memorial
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Rhode Island’s boycott

The small seaside state boycotted the 1787 Constitutional Convention, because of its distrust of a powerful federal government, according to History.com. In 1790, Rhode Island would be the last of the original 13 states to ratify the Constitution and only did so on the condition that a Bill of Rights be included. Its neighboring state, Connecticut, is nicknamed “the Constitution State”—but not because it was the first to sign the U.S. Constitution. It’s because the Fundamental Orders of 1638/1639, a document that some consider “the first written constitution,” were written there. Find out more about Connecticut’s nickname, as well as 23 other U.S. state facts everyone gets wrong.

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Selective focus image of the United States Constitution with quill pen, glasses and candle holder
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One man physically wrote the Constitution

John Shallus, a clerk for the Pennsylvania General Assembly and the gentleman who physically wrote the Constitution down on four large sheets of vellum parchment paper, was paid for his services. Shallus was given a tight two-day deadline and was paid $30 (roughly $800 in today’s money) for his scribe services, according to History.com. It’s possible that the quick turnaround led to some of the grammatical and spelling errors in the final document.

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Replica of the United States Constitution
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It’s, not its

It’s one of the most common grammar mistakes made today—and yesterday. The next time someone roasts you for getting “it’s” and “its” wrong, point out that even the Founding Fathers messed this up in the U.S. Constitution—Article 1, Section 10, to be specific, according to the Christian Science Monitor. Every American should know the major differences between the Constitution and the Declaration of Independence.

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Only 39 signatures

Considering it was debated for months and was destined to become a legendary legal document, you would think there would be more than 39 signatures on it, but the U.S. Constitution was signed by only 39 men. In fact, only 70 delegates were in Philadelphia in 1787 for the Constitutional Convention and only 55 of those regularly attended the six-days-a-week, 10-A.M.-to-3-P.M. sessions.

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The original Constitution is always kept safe

The original U.S. Constitution has been on display in the National Archives in Washington, D.C., since 1952. Tourists line up every day to get a look at the famous four pages of parchment displayed behind protective glass framed with titanium. “To preserve the parchment’s quality, the cases contain argon gas and are kept at 67 degrees Fahrenheit with a relative humidity of 40 percent,” according to ConstitutionFacts.com. See how much you know about the Constitution’s companion, the Declaration of Independence.

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Gavel and american flag, symbol for jurisdiction
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11,000 amendments

There have been more than 11,000 amendments introduced in Congress since the Constitution was first ratified. Only 33 of those have gone to the states to be ratified and 27 have received the necessary approval from the states to actually become amendments to the Constitution, reports the Constitution Center, which is located across the street from Independence Hall in Philadelphia where the famous document was debated and signed in 1787. What do you know about the ones that made the cut? Take our quiz to find out just how well you know the amendments to the Constitution.

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Globe close-up of USA
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Small country, smaller constitution

The growth of the U.S. Constitution hasn’t matched the expansion of the U.S. population. Originally, the Constitution contained just 4,543 words—including all the signatures! Only four sheets of 28 3/4-inch x 23 5/8-inch parchment paper were required to contain the laws that would govern a nation destined to grow by leaps and bounds. Today, with the 27 amendments, the U.S. Constitution contains a grand total of 7,591 words.

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Two young adult women voting in a voting booth
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Some women could vote before the 19th amendment passed

The 19th amendment states that the right of citizens to vote “shall not be denied or abridged by the United States or by any State on account of sex.” This landmark amendment was passed on June 4, 1919, and ratified on August 18, 1920, but way out west, a full 50 years earlier, women were already gaining their rights. On December 10, 1869, “Wyoming passed the first unconditional law in the United States permanently guaranteeing women their inherent right to vote and hold office,” according to Travel Wyoming.

Still just a territory back then, Wyoming’s statehood was actually delayed because what is now known as The Equality State refused to budge in order to gain admission into the Union, a nation that wasn’t providing equal opportunity for women to vote and hold political office. Per Travel Wyoming, “When invited to join the Union only if women’s suffrage was revoked, Wyoming’s legislature said, ‘We will remain out of the Union one hundred years rather than come in without the women.'” In 1890, Wyoming became the 44th state—and the first state in the Union where women had full voting rights.

Later this year, a large Women’s Suffrage mural will be unveiled in downtown Cheyenne, at the site where the historic vote to allow women to vote took place 150 years ago. It’s worth a visit to Cheyenne to have a fantastic modern meal at The Metropolitan Downtown and pay respects to the territory that started it all as we as a nation continue to push for the Equal Rights Amendment, another piece of legislation all Americans should know about.

Jeff Bogle
Jeff is a freelance writer who specializes in travel, cars and parenting. In addition to contributing to numerous publications, including the Washington Post, Esquire, Travel + Leisure and Fodor’s, he has written two parenting books. An award-winning photographer, he lives in the suburbs of Philadelphia with his wife, cats and an adorable dog named Ollie.