Acts Passed at a Congress

Acts Passed at a Congress
of the
United States of America, Begun and
Held at the City of New-York . . . .
New York: F. Childs and J. Swaine,
printers to the United States, 1789
Law Library (92.3) (
November 21, 2002
)
Content
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The first session of the First Congress met at New York from March
4 to September 29, 1789. It established procedures for dealing with
the President, passed laws establishing the executive departments
(State, War, Treasury) and the federal judiciary, and set the tariff
on imports, which supplied most of the revenue of the federal government.
The major objection to the new Constitution had been the absence
of a Bill of Rights, and only after both houses of Congress approved
the Bill of Rights on September 25 did the last two holdout states,
North Carolina and Rhode Island, agree to join the Union. This copy
bears George Washington's signature on the title page and includes
the texts of laws, appropriations and the proposed amendments to
the Constitution that formed the Bill of Rights.
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