PRESIDENT OF THE CONTINENTAL CONGRESS

(Redirected from President of the United States in Congress Assembled)
The 'President of the Continental Congress' was the presiding officer of the Continental Congress. He was elected by the delegates to the congress. After the Articles of Confederation were adopted on March 1, 1781, the office was known as the 'President of the United States in Congress Assembled'.
The office of President of the Continental Congress is probably most analogous to the modern-day Speaker of the United States House of Representatives. Like the Speaker, the President of the Continental Congress was expected to refrain from participating in debate, and was expected to vote last and only if his vote would be decisive. However, unlike the Speaker, the President of the Continental Congress had no power to assign delegates to committees.
The most famous President of the Continental Congress may be John Hancock, who presided over the Continental Congress when the Declaration of Independence was adopted and signed. His large and bold signature on the declaration has led to his name becoming a slang term for a signature.

Contents
Changes under the Articles of Confederation
“President of the United States”
List of Presidents
Footnotes
References
See also
External links

Changes under the Articles of Confederation


The Articles of Confederation replaced the Continental Congress and imposed a few changes on the office of the President. As mentioned before, the formal title of the presiding officer became “The President of the United States, in Congress Assembled”, reflecting the change in the name of the congress to “The United States, in Congress Assembled”. Except for John Hanson, most of the Presidents used this title only for treaties and on the diplomatic credentials for ministers.
In their only explicit mention of the office, the Articles also term limited the President of the Continental Congress. A delegate could not serve as President of the Continental Congress in more than one year out of any three.

“President of the United States”


The formal title of “President of the United States, in Congress Assembled” was often shortened to simply “President of the United States”. Prior to the Lee Resolution of independence, the position was simply the President of Congress for the United Colonies of America.
While the office of President of the Continental Congress had had little relationship to the modern office of President of the United States beyond the name, John Hancock did assume the position of Head of State when independence was declared. A key difference is that the President of the United States—under the Constitution—is the head of the executive branch of government, while the President of the Continental Congress was the chair of a body that most resembled a legislature, although it possessed legislative, executive, and judicial powers. While today's President can be seen as the most powerful single person in the country, the word ''president'' itself harkens back to this legacy of being merely one who presides over an assembly for a fixed time - the antithesis of a King.

List of Presidents


The following men served as the President of the First Continental Congress:

Peyton Randolph (September 5, 1774October 21, 1774) and

Henry Middleton (October 22, 1774October 26, 1774)
The following men served as the President of the Second Continental Congress:

Peyton Randolph (May 10, 1775May 23, 1775)

John Hancock (May 24, 1775October 31, 1777)

Henry Laurens (November 1, 1777December 9, 1778)

John Jay (December 10, 1778September 27, 1779)

Samuel Huntington (September 28, 1779March 1, 1781)[1]
The following men served as President of the United States in Congress Assembled:

Samuel Huntington (March 1, 1781[2]July 9, 1781)

Thomas McKean (July 10, 1781November 4, 1781)[3]

John Hanson (November 5, 1781November 3, 1782)

Elias Boudinot (November 4, 1782November 2, 1783)

Thomas Mifflin (November 3, 1783October 31, 1784)

Richard Henry Lee (November 30, 1784November 6, 1785)

John Hancock (November 23, 1785June 5, 1786) Due to Hancock's failing health the following two people acted as president in his stead:[1]


★ ''David Ramsay (November 23, 1785May 12, 1786)''


★ ''Nathaniel Gorham (May 15, 1786June 5, 1786)''

Nathaniel Gorham (June 6, 1786November 5, 1786)

Arthur St. Clair (February 2, 1787November 4, 1787)

Cyrus Griffin (January 22, 1788March 2nd, 1789)

Footnotes



1. On March 1 1781 the title of the office changed, but Samuel Huntington remained president.
2. Continuation of term begun before official change of title.
3. Thomas McKean was the first President simply titled “President of the United States” in an official document.


References


; Books
:
President Who? Forgotten Founders, Klos, Stanley, , , Estoric.com, 2004, ISBN 0-9752627-6-9
; Web
:
Urban Legends Reference Pages: Business (First in Piece) Mikkelson, Barbara and David P.

See also



Continental Congress

Articles of Confederation

United States Constitution

Constitutional Convention

Annapolis Convention (1786)

President of the United States

External links



The Presidents of the USA Before Washington - (BBC's h2g2 encyclopedia entry)

So Who Was Our First President?

This article provided by Wikipedia. To edit the contents of this article, click here for original source.

psst.. try this: add to faves