King↩
Without question,
the next most important notes to those which have been considered are
the notes of Rufus King, that have not received the attention they
deserve, because of the form in which they were first printed. The
original notes are, in the main, memoranda taken at the time in the
Convention on
odds and ends of paper.25 Each sheet or scrap of paper is dated and most of them are endorsed with date and [xx] substance of the contents, so that in only one or two cases can there be any doubt as to the place and order of the notes.
It is altogether probable that Rufus King was induced by the printing of the Journal and Yates, Secret Proceedings,
to prepare his notes for publication. At any rate, many years after the
Convention was over, he attempted to put his notes into better form.26
In doing this work, although in most cases he did not venture to change
the substance of his earlier records, he did drop out the dates in a
number of instances; he sometimes omitted important items or notes,
either unintentionally or because he could not understand them; and in a
few cases, at least one or two of which are important, he modified his
original notes. It was this revised copy that was printed (1894) as an
appendix to volume I of the Life and Correspondence of Rufus King.
The editor, Doctor Charles R. King, grandson of Rufus King, attempted
to insert some of the omitted items, but as he evidently was not
familiar with the other records of the Convention his well-meant efforts
only added to the confusion. The original notes are reprinted in the
present edition.
Within the last
few years there have been brought to light the notes and memoranda of
proceedings in the Convention found among the papers of some of the
delegates. The greater part of this material has been printed in the American Historical Review,
and in the present edition the texts as there printed have been used,
although in most cases they have been compared with the original
documents. The care shown in preparing these documents for publication,
and the accuracy of printing these texts in the Review, have made necessary almost no changes, and those but minor ones.
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