I'm assuming you are referring to the New Hampshire Constitution of 1776 (written four months before the Declaration of Independence). The chief differences between the 1776 Constitution and the US Constitution are a lack of Bill of Rights, and no executive branch. The two branches were a house of representatives, and a council. The council was originally appointed with the intention of a popular vote if a universal constitution wasn't written, because ultimately this constitution seemed to be written as an emergency constitution until a multi-colony constitution was created.
The first colony to adopt its own constitution was: New Hampshire.
It established the guidelines for he first government of the Plymouth Colony.
It established the guidelines for he first government of the Plymouth Colony.
New Hampshire was the first colony to declare its independence from Great Britain and to establish its own government (Jan. 1776 New Hampshire became the ninth colony to separate from Britain The government of new Hampshire is a democratic republic form of state government similar to the united states.
The first colony established in America was Virginia.
The Massachusetts Bay Colony was the first colony in what is today New England. At that point contained what is now the states of Massachusetts Maine, Rhode Island, and New Hampshire
The Virginia colony was the first to establish a representative government. The House of Burgesses was established in Virginia in 1619.
NO
new Hampshire
New Hampshire
The first colony to adopt its own constitution was: New Hampshire.
John Mason.