Congress Creates the Bill of Rights

Within the half-billion pages of records in the care of the Center for Legislative Archives, there are some special treasures from the First Congress that show how the ratification of the Constitution necessitated the creation of the Bill of Rights, and how the creation of the Bill of Rights, in turn, completed the Constitution.

Introducing Congress Creates the Bill of Rights, consisting of three elements: an eBook, a mobile app for tablets, and online resources for teachers and students. Each provides a distinct way of exploring how the First Congress proposed amendments to the Constitution in 1789.

eBook
The eBook focuses on James Madison’s leadership role in creating the Bill of Rights, effectively completing the U.S.Congress Creates the Bill of Rights eBook Constitution. Starting with the crises facing the nation in the 1780s, the narrative traces the call for constitutional amendments from the state ratification conventions. Through close examination of the featured document, Senate Revisions to the House Proposed Amendments to the U.S. Constitution, the reader goes inside the First Congress, as Madison and the leaders of rival political factions worked in the House and Senate to formulate amendments to change the recently ratified Constitution.

The eBook is available for download on our website  and available in iTunes and the iBookstore for your iPad, iPhone, and iPod Touch.

Mobile App
The mobile app is an interactive learning tool for tablets that situates the user in the proposals, debates, and revisions that shaped the Bill of Rights. Its menu-based organization presents a historic overview, a detailed study of the evolving language of each proposed amendment as it was shaped in the House and Senate, a close-up look at essential documents, and opportunities for participation and reflection designed for individual or collaborative exploration.

Close-up on Compromise

The app is available for download on your iPad in the App Store.

Online Resources
The online resources available for teachers and students present questions, lesson ideas, and supporting resources selected to facilitate learning with the app and eBook. Studying how Congress created the Bill of Rights teaches vital lessons about history and the timeless principles of our civic life. They also provide lessons about the history of representative government and will strengthen students’ understanding of their roles and responsibilities in civic life today.

UPDATE: The app is now available for download on Android devices in Google Play and as a PDF.

The Center for Legislative Archives is marking the 225thAnniversary of the First Congress by sharing documents from this formative time via TumblrTwitter, and Education Updates. Follow #Congress225 for more documents you can use in your classroom.

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