U.S. Constitution & Amendments Dates to Remember
September 3, 1783
The United States and Great Britain sign the Treaty of Paris and Great
Britain signs a separate treaty with France and Spain.
September 3, 1783
The United States and Great Britain sign the Treaty of Paris and Great
Britain signs a separate treaty with France and Spain.
December 23, 1783
General George Washington resigns his commission as the
Commander-in-Chief of the Continental Army.
January 14, 1784
The official end of the Revolutionary War takes place when Congress
ratifies the Treaty of Paris.
February 24, 1785
Congress appoints John Adams to be the United States ambassador to Great
Britain.
March 10, 1785
Congress appoints Thomas Jefferson to be the United States ambassador to
France.
March 28, 1785
Delegates from Maryland and Virginia meet at Mt. Vernon to discuss
navigation conflicts on the Potomac River and Chesapeake Bay. George
Washington serves as host and it becomes known as the Mount Vernon
Conference.
May 25, 1787
The Constitutional Convention opens with a quorum of seven states in
Philadelphia to discuss revising the Articles of Confederation.
Eventually, all states but Rhode Island are represented.
July 13, 1787
Congress passes the Northwest Ordinance which sets up a process by which
a territory becomes a state. The ordinance also calls for the banning of
slavery in the Northwest Territory.
July 16, 1787
Roger Sherman proposes the Connecticut Compromise — an agreement between
the two extremes of the Virginia and New Jersey Plans that dealt with
representation in the legislative branch of government (Congress). It
has also been referred to as the Great Compromise.
September 17, 1787
Representatives from 12 state delegations approve the Constitution. 39
delegates sign it of the 42 present, and the Convention formally
adjourns.
October 27, 1787
A series of articles in support of the ratification are published in New
York’s “The Independent Journal.” They become known as the "Federalist
Papers.”
December 7, 1787
Delaware is the first state to ratify the Constitution.
June 21, 1788
The Constitution becomes effective for the ratifying states when New
Hampshire is the ninth state to ratify it.
February 4, 1789
The first presidential election takes place but the results will not be
known until April 6.
March 4, 1789
The first Congress under the Constitution convenes in New York City.
April 1, 1789
Frederick Augustus Muhlenberg from Pennsylvania is chosen as the first
Speaker of House.
April 6, 1789
George Washington is elected the first President of the United States
under the Constitution with 69 electoral votes. John Adams is elected
Vice President with 34 votes.
April 30, 1789
George Washington is inaugurated as the first President of the United
States.
June 8, 1789
James Madison introduces the proposed Bill of Rights in the House of
Representatives.
July 27, 1789
Congress organizes the first executive department and names it the
Department of State on September 15.
August 7, 1789
Congress organizes the War Department.
September 2, 1789
Congress organizes the Treasury Department.
September 11, 1789
Alexander Hamilton is appointed Secretary of the Treasury.
September 24, 1789
Congress establishes a Supreme Court, 13 district courts, 3 ad hoc
circuit courts, and the position of Attorney General.
September 25, 1789
Congress approves 12 amendments and sends them to the states for
ratification.
September 26, 1789
Edmund Randolph is appointed Attorney General, John Jay as Chief Justice
of the Supreme Court, Thomas Jefferson as Secretary of State.
November 20, 1789
New Jersey is the first state to ratify the Bill of Rights.
February 2, 1790
The Supreme Court convenes for the first time.
May 29, 1790
Rhode Island is the last state to ratify the Constitution.
December 6, 1790
The capital of the country “moves” from New York to Philadelphia until
the new capital along the Potomac is completed.
March 4, 1791
Vermont becomes a part of the Union as the 14th state.
December 15, 1791
Virginia ratifies the Bill of Rights, and 10 of the 12 proposed
amendments become part of the U.S. Constitution.

