none
The Constitution was signed in 1787. Pittsburgh was still a small town in the far western edge of the known area of the continent.
New York delegate Alexander Hamilton was born on Nevis, an island in the British West Indies. Technically, all of the signers were born in a country other than the United States, as it did not exist until it was signed.
No Jews signed the U.S. Constitution. However, if your question is really whether all of the signers were Christian, the answer to that is also no. Many were, but several were Deists or agnostics. The opposition to the involvement of God in public affairs at the Convention was made evident when Benjamin Franklin suggested that the Convention begin each session with a prayer, and the objections to this idea were so strong that it was never even brought to a vote. "Deism" means that a person believes, based solely on reason, in a God who created the universe, but then abandoned it, exerting no control over life and no influence on natural phenomena, and giving no supernatural revelation.
No
There is no surname that is used only by Jews. There are many surnames that are used both by Jews and non-Jews. Therefore, any surname that is used by a Jewish family is Jewish, and any surname that is used by a non-Jewish family is not Jewish. So any surname can be both Jewish and non-Jewish at the same time.
Yes.
There were 7 articles in the original Constitution.
The present Louisiana constitution follows the federal constitution more closely than any of earlier states constitution
yes because many constitution are hard to change
No, Uta Thyra Hagen was a German-born actress. Though she studied along with many Jewish colleagues, she did not have any Jewish family relations whatsoever.
David Barton of www.wallbuilders.com will have that answer. I have heard him give the number on radio interviews. >The following website says it was 27-- but I think it is more. Check with David Barton's site above. Good luck!http://www.cwfa.org/familyvoice/2001-11/20-24.asp
Like any constitution, Ireland's is a long document with many things in it. See the link below.