In 1891, more than 25 years after the conclusion of the Civil War, Missouri Senator George Graham Vest, a former congressman for the Confederacy and chief drafter of Missouri’s 1861 Secession Ordinance, argued that the framers of the Constitution never addressed whether states have the right to secede from the Union–instead claiming that this question had been “inherited” and remained unanswered since 1789.
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Reconstructionism: Rediscovering the…
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In 1891, more than 25 years after the conclusion of the Civil War, Missouri Senator George Graham Vest, a former congressman for the Confederacy and chief drafter of Missouri’s 1861 Secession Ordinance, argued that the framers of the Constitution never addressed whether states have the right to secede from the Union–instead claiming that this question had been “inherited” and remained unanswered since 1789.