250th Anniversary of Signing First Constitution Celebrated in Concord

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Gathering celebrated 250th anniversary of signing New Hampshire's first Constitution.

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By PAULA TRACY, InDepthNH.org

CONCORD – Two hundred and fifty years ago, New Hampshire became the first colony to establish an independent government from Britain.

That milestone on Jan. 5, 1776 was recalled with a reading of the Constitution at the state archives, a social media post by Republican Gov. Kelly Ayotte noting it as one of many of the state’s “firsts” and a gathering in front of the State House by U.S. Rep. Maggie Goodlander, D-NH, as part of a 250th celebration by the grassroots organization Kent Street Coalition.

Ayotte posted on X that New Hampshire continues to accomplish many “firsts.”

The governor pointed to the Pine Tree Riot in Weare in 1772, when citizens refused to pay a timber tax which was considered the first act of defiance against Britain, to the presidential primaries as examples that “our First-in-the-Nation legacy is still going strong – Live Free or Die!” Ayotte posted on social media.

At 2 p.m., the New Hampshire Secretary of State’s office offered a reading of the 1776 Constitution by historical interpreter and Matthew Thornton reenactor Michael LePage, reflecting on New Hampshire’s leadership during the Revolutionary era, the collapse of royal authorities following Governor John Wentworth’s departure, and the creation of a people-centered government through the Provincial Congress.

The reading was completed with other reenactors shouting “Huzzah!” and taking off their three-pointed caps in approval.

Ashley Miller, New Hampshire’s state archivists, introduced the reading by noting that on Jan. 5, 1776, New Hampshire did more than respond to a political crisis.

“It helped light the path toward American independence – and for that, its place in history is secure.”

A little over an hour after that gathering at the archives, which was attended by a number of elected leaders and Constitutional enthusiasts, Democratic Congresswoman Goodlander joined with the Kent Street Coalition to offer remarks in celebration and honor of the 250th Anniversary of New Hampshire’s first Constitution. It included remarks from the Congresswoman and a reading of excerpts of the current New Hampshire Constitution.

The first written document, drafted in Exeter, created a government independent of Britain, a government answering to the people and not a king and it included provisions that if there could be some reconciliation they would be happy to return under British rule. But that, of course, never happened.

Goodlander and celebrants said the original written constitution helped establish enduring principles of democratic governance and the rule of law.

In front of the State House Arch on Main Street in Concord, Kent Street’s Nancy Brennan of Weare noted that while that constitution was replaced with the current document, signed in 1784, it set up “a government which was not ruled by a King,” she said to applause.

Goodlander said when she thinks about what was done here 250 years ago, “it was ordinary people who loved freedom…who believed in this basic, sacred and fragile idea that a government of and for the people is possible…and it will remain so.”

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