- President of the Continental Congress
The President of the Continental Congress was the presiding officer of the
Continental Congress , the convention of delegates that emerged as the first national government of theUnited States during theAmerican Revolution . The president was a delegate elected by the other delegates to preside over meetings of Congress. He was not the equivalent of a modernhead of state , and had less authority than the governors of the individual colonies or states.cite web |url=http://www.archontology.org/nations/us/us1/01_congress.php |title=United States of America: Congress: 1776-1789 |publisher=Archontology.org |accessdate=2008-05-19]The first President of Congress was
Peyton Randolph , who was elected onSeptember 5 1774 . The term of the last president,Cyrus Griffin , ended onNovember 2 1788 . Because of the limited role of the office, the Presidents of Congress are among the lesser known leaders of the American Revolution. The best-known President of Congress isJohn Hancock , remembered for his large, bold signature on the Declaration of Independence, which was adopted and signed during his presidency.Title and role
The presiding officer of the Continental Congress was usually styled "President of the Congress" or "President of Congress". After the
Articles of Confederation were adopted onMarch 1 ,1781 , the Continental Congress, previously officially known as simply "The Congress", became officially known as "The United States in Congress Assembled." [Edward Cody Burnett, "The Continental Congress" (New York: Norton, 1941), 502–3.] Thereafter, the president was occasionally referred to as the "President of the United States in Congress Assembled", although "President of the Congress" continued to be used in most official documents.The office of President of Congress had little relationship to the later office of
President of the United States , beyond a similarity of name. As historian Edmund Burnett wrote:[T] he President of the United States is scarcely in any sense the successor of the presidents of the old Congress. The presidents of Congress were almost solely presiding officers, possessing scarcely a shred of executive or administrative functions; whereas the President of the United States is almost solely an executive officer, with no presiding duties at all. Barring a likeness in social and diplomatic precedence, the two offices are identical only in the possession of the same title. [Burnett, "Continental Congress", 34.]
List of presidents
The following men served as the president of the
First Continental Congress :*
Peyton Randolph (September 5 ,1774 ndashOctober 21 ,1774 )
*Henry Middleton (October 22 ,1774 ndashOctober 26 ,1774 )The following men served as the president of the
Second Continental Congress :*
Peyton Randolph (May 10 ,1775 ndashMay 23 ,1775 )
*John Hancock (May 24 ,1775 ndashOctober 31 ,1777 )
*Henry Laurens (November 1 ,1777 ndashDecember 9 ,1778 )
*John Jay (December 10 ,1778 ndashSeptember 27 ,1779 )
* Samuel Huntington (September 28 ,1779 ndashMarch 1 ,1781 )When the
Articles of Confederation were ratified onMarch 1 ,1781 , no elections were held or even discussed for a selecting a new president.Burnett, "Continental Congress", 503.] Instead, Samuel Huntington continued to serve as President of Congress until he asked to be relieved due to ill health onJuly 6 1781 . OnJuly 9 ,Samuel Johnston was selected as Huntington's replacement, but he declined the office the next day, and soThomas McKean was elected as the next presiding officer.The following men served as President of Congress after the ratification of the Articles of Confederation:
* Samuel Huntington (
March 1 ,1781 ndashJuly 9 ,1781 )
*Thomas McKean (July 10 ,1781 ndashNovember 4 ,1781 )
*John Hanson (November 5 ,1781 ndashNovember 3 ,1782 )
*Elias Boudinot (November 4 ,1782 ndashNovember 2 ,1783 )
*Thomas Mifflin (November 3 ,1783 ndashOctober 31 ,1784 )
*Richard Henry Lee (November 30 ,1784 ndashNovember 6 ,1785 )
*John Hancock (November 23 ,1785 ndashJune 5 ,1786 ) Due to Hancock's failing health, he did not report to Congress, and the following two chairmen acted as president in his stead:
** David Ramsay (November 23 ,1785 ndashMay 12 ,1786 )
**Nathaniel Gorham (May 15 ,1786 ndashJune 5 ,1786 )
*Nathaniel Gorham (June 6 ,1786 ndashNovember 5 ,1786 )
*Arthur St. Clair (February 2 ,1787 ndashNovember 4 ,1787 )
*Cyrus Griffin (January 22 ,1788 ndashMarch 4 ,1789 )References
External links
* [http://www.snopes.com/history/american/hanson.htm "First in Piece"] , article on snopes.com that discounts the myth that John Hanson was the first President of the United States. Presidents of Congress have been forgotten, the authors say, because "the office wasn't one of much importance."
* [http://www.archontology.org/nations/us/us1/01_congress.php Presidents of the Continental Congress] at Archontology.org
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