I don't really think that its in the constitution, but don't believe everything you see on the internet. All I know is that the Bill of Rights of added to the constitution so the anti- federalists would settle down.
At the end of the Constitution. After all of the Articles of the US Constitution are the Amendments of the US Constitution. After Article VII and the names of signers and a brief statement saying that the Constitution was passed, then come the Amendments.
The most notable antifederalist from Virginia is Patrick Henry. Henry was invited to the Continental Congress but opted out in order to fight the new Constitution from the outside. Other antifederalists from Virginia include George Mason, a drafter of the Bill of Rights and Richard Henry Lee, drafter of the Declaration and a later Senator.
By making the Bill of Rights.
Article V of US constitution deals with the procedure of introducing amendments in US constitution. It entails that both houses of US Congress must pass the said amendment with a two third majority after which the amendment is sent to states for ratification.
Hugh Williamson was not an Anti Federalist. Although his views started to lean toward the Anti Federalist views, he was still considered a Federalist.
for a new constitution and a bill of rights
nothing
The Bill of Rights
No John Jay was not an antifederalist...he was one of three people to write the federalist papers advocating the ratification of the constitution. James Madison wrote the Virginia Plan, the Constitution, and the Bill of Rights...
The antifederalist argued about the constition
they believed the rights of the people were not protected.
Antifederalist fears that the Constitution would destroy liberties.
There were several antifederalists. Jefferson was considered the leading antifederalist. Other antifederalists include Patrick Henry and George Mason. Antifederalists opposed the constitution.
Relate the glorious revolution of 1688 to the first 10 amendments to the us constitution. What did they have in common?
Alexander Hamilton
Alexander Hamilton
Whether a bill of rights was necessary to include in the Constitution