IntroductionIn this letter to Dutee Pearce, Thomas Dorr, certainly exalted from the overwhelming support citizens gave the People’s Constitution just a few weeks before, is however leery of challenges that might arise in the Rhode Island General Assembly. Dorr references U.S. Circuit Court Judge John Pitman and Brown University Professor William Giles Goddard, staunch conservatives deeply opposed to efforts of the Suffrage Association. Dorr, however, believes that the two men had at one point earlier in the century supported free suffrage. Samuel Atwell, a pro-suffrage representative from Glocester, had introduced a bill to terminate the Charter government. LetterProvidence, Jan. 17, '42. Dear Sir,
I write in haste this evening to ask
The Assembly are in the most extraordinary
of the People has been decisively expressed; and will be as decisively & thoughtfully executed. If the Legislature do not give way, they will be run over by the Government of the People. Yours Truly, T. W. Dorr QuestionsHow does the conservative ideological position differ from Dorr’s constitutional vision? Spend time with the “Road Not Taken” collection to help develop a fuller understanding of the conservative position. |