Courage and Consequence – He Was In the Room and Didn’t Like What He Heard
Luther Martin was in the room when the Constitution was written — and the only delegate who walked out and told the world what he saw. A Princeton-educated lawyer and Maryland’s attorney general, Martin broke the Convention’s oath of secrecy in November 1787 and delivered to the Maryland legislature the most detailed insider account of the Philadelphia proceedings that Americans would ever read. He warned about consolidated federal power, an unchecked judiciary, the risk of an executive becoming a monarch, and the absence of a Bill of Rights. He was ignored, ridiculed, and politically sidelined. Maryland ratified the Constitution 63 to 11. Martin died in 1826 in an unmarked grave, in Aaron Burr’s house, while Jefferson and Adams were buried with full honors the same week. His account — Genuine Information — survived him. Historian Gordon Wood said Martin was full of predictions and most of them came true. This is the story of the man who told the truth and paid for it.
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