Civics In A Year
He signed all four major American revolutionary documents, helped craft the constitutional structure we still argue about, and yet most people can’t tell you a single detail about him. We’re talking about Roger Sherman, the “forgotten founder that shouldn’t be forgotten,” and we’re making a serious case for bumping him into the Founders’ top tier based on impact, not celebrity. We walk through Sherman’s improbable rise from shoemaker to self-taught lawyer to one of Connecticut’s most important judges, then trace why he keeps landing at the center of the founding era: the Continental Congress, the Declaration’s drafting committee, the Articles of Confederation, and the Constitutional Convention. Along the way, we unpack why he’s so easy to miss in modern history telling: he’s not a clean writer, not a magnetic speaker, deeply pious, and he dies in 1793 before later political battles make other founders famous. The heart of the conversation is constitutional design. Sherman fights to preserve limited and enumerated powers, helps drive the Connecticut Compromise, and wins key federalism battles against broader national “plenary” power. We also dig into his skepticism of executive power, his concern about war-making authority, and his surprising role in the Bill of Rights debate, including why he insists amendments go at the end and how he helps shape the 10th Amendment. If you care about federalism, states’ rights, checks and balances, and what the Constitution actually means, this one will sharpen your view. Subscribe for more deep dives, share this episode with a fellow civics nerd, and leave a review telling us whether Roger Sherman belongs on the Founders’ A team. Check Out the Civic Literacy Curriculum [https://civics.asu.edu/civic-literacy-curriculum]! School of Civic and Economic Thought and Leadership [https://scetl.asu.edu/] Center for American Civics [https://civics.asu.edu/]
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