"THE OLDEST FUNCTIONING WRITTEN CONSTITUTION IN THE WORLD": MASSACHUSETTS CONSTITUTION, 1805 BOSTON PRINTING WITH THE DECLARATION, U.S. CONSTITUTION & WASHINGTON’S FAREWELL ADDRESS, IN ORIGINAL BOARDS
(MASSACHUSETTS) (CONSTITUTION) ADAMS, John. Constitution of the State of Massachusetts, and that of the United States; The Declaration of Independence, with President Washington's Farewell Address. Boston: Printed for the State, by Manning & Loring, 1805. Small octavo (4-1/2 by 7 inches), original boards early rebacked in brown sheep; pp. (1-3), 4-54, (55-57), 58-84, (85-87), 88-92, (93-95), 96-119 (1). $1200.
First edition of the 1780 Massachusetts Constitution—"one of the great enduring documents of the American Revolution"—to be published together in one volume with the U.S. Constitution, the Declaration of Independence and Washington's 1796 Farewell Address, in original boards.
The 1780 Massachusetts Constitution "is the oldest functioning written constitution in the world… [and] one of the most admirable, long-lasting achievements of John Adams' life… A Declaration of Rights, following the Preamble and preceding the Constitution itself," stated in Adams' initial draft that "all men were 'born equally free and independent'—words Adams had taken from the Virginia Declaration of Rights." Though the Massachusetts constitutional convention would "approve nearly all of his draft," it preferred "what Jefferson had written in the Declaration of Independence… [and] revised the first article of the Declaration of Rights, that all men were 'born equally free and independent,' to read that all men were 'born free and equal." "As time would prove, Adams had written one of the great, enduring documents of the American Revolution" (McCullough, John Adams, 220-25). This 1805 edition, published the year Jefferson began his second presidential term, is the first to contain a printing of that groundbreaking work along with the federal Constitution, the Declaration of Independence, and Washington's 1796 Farewell Address. "First edition, with distinguishing imprint words: 'Printed for the State, by Manning & Loring' and without printer's advertisement following page 119" (Matyas 05-03). Shaw & Shoemaker 8861. Sabin 45692. Early owner signature.
Text generally fresh, edge-wear with early dampstaining to rear board. Very desirable in original boards.