- John Adams wrote the Massachusetts Constitution in 1779.
- The document however approved by the Massachusetts people in 1780.
- The Second Amendment of the United States Constitution included the words “the right to keep and to bear arms” for self-defense.
Many people might be unaware that the phrase “the right to keep and to bear weapons” predates the Bill of Rights in the midst of today’s contentious discussions regarding gun control and the Second Amendment. Years before the United States gained its freedom from England.
This sentence was written by the founding father and future president John Adams in 1779. When he was drafting the Massachusetts Constitution, the first written constitution in history.
He did so ten years before the Second Amendment of the United States Constitution included the language.
The Adams National Historical Park includes the location where Adams wrote the paper and its impactful contents.
Since the Supreme Court overturned a New York statute that had made it difficult for people to carry concealed guns.
The Second Amendment however widely regarded as having won thanks to the Supreme Court’s 6-3 ruling last Thursday, June 23.
The Massachusetts Constitution’s Article XVII, which Adams drafted in his office as a “subcommittee of one.”
The document however approved by the Massachusetts people in 1780. The American Revolution still raging in other colonies.
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The common defense however not mentioned in the US Constitution.
Adams was undoubtedly familiar with the feeling of the colonists. Famously, the lawyer defended the eight British soldiers accused of carrying out the massacre.
Two years before the American Revolution came to a conclusion and four years before the Treaty of Paris, which Adams helped to arrange, recognized American independence. Adams drafted the Massachusetts Constitution.
















