yes
Religious Freedom
Charles Pinckney was a signer of the Constitution. He signed the document because it incorporated points of his own plan within its pages.
Pinckney's Treaty
Charles Pinckney, a prominent South Carolina politician and Founding Father, faced opposition from various factions during his career. His most notable enemies included Federalists who opposed his Democratic-Republican alignment and rival politicians within South Carolina who challenged his influence, such as those aligned with the pro-slavery factions and other political leaders like John C. Calhoun. Additionally, Pinckney's support for states' rights sometimes put him at odds with more centralized government advocates.
Only if you're in the United States of Columbia.
Stand up for your rights, support the Tenth Amendment, ignore illegal federal laws, elect people who support your rights and the rights of your state.
Pinckney Plan, the details of more than thirty provisions for a new constitution, was introduced by Charles Pinckney at the Constitutional Convention on May 29, 1787. Pinckney is credited with the notion of the separation of church and state; he is remembered for his stand on religious freedom. Pinckney is said to have coined the phrase, "the legislature of the United States shall pass no law on the subject of religion," though this wording does not appear until the First Amendment of the Bill of Rights (1789). Although Pinckney's original plan was lost, the details have been reconstructed from convention records.
Pinckney's Treaty
it guaranteed individuals certain rights
Pinckney's Treaty guaranteed Americans free shipping rights on the Mississippi river and defined the boundaries of the United States with the Spanish colonies.
Thomas Pinckney negotiated a treaty with Spain that defined the Spanish-US boundary line and Mississippi River navigation rights.