INTRODUCTION. 61 
neur Morris and Robert R. Livingston, who also were eminent lawyers, gave to 
that instrument the form in which it was adopted by the convention. Upon pro- 
mulgating the constitution, the convention appointed a council of safety, which 
was invested with all the powers requisite for the security and preservation of the 
state, until a governor and legislature should be duly chosen and qualified to act 
under the new constitution. This council, thus invested with absolute power, 
nobly justified the confidence reposed in them by the convention, by the wisdom, 
firmness, energy and moderation which they displayed in that trymg emergency. 
Their names were John Morin Scott, Robert R. Livingston, Christopher T'appen, 
Abraham Yates, junior, Gouverneur Morris, Zephaniah Platt, John Jay, Charles 
De Witt, Robert Harpur, Jacob Cuyler, Thomas Tredwell, Pierre Van Cort- 
landt, Matthew Cantine, John Sloss Hobart and Jonathan B. Tompkins. 
George Clinton was elected governor, John Jay appointed chief justice, and 
Robert R. Livingston chancellor, under the new constitution. Philip Schuyler 
was appointed, in 1775, a representative in the congress of the United States, 
and soon afterwards major-general in the continental army. Mr. Jay subsequently 
filled the trusts of chief justice of the United States, governor of New-York and 
minister to the court of St. James. The name of Schuyler, although eclipsed 
during the revolutionary contest by personal and partizan jealousies, is neverthe- 
less destined to maintain a place in the military annals of that period, second only 
to his, whois without a compeer inthe homage of mankind. Woodhull fell a martyr 
in battle, sustaining the cause he had so ably maintained in the councils of the 
state. The genius of Gouverneur Morris, as well as that of Robert R. Livingston, 
will be found impressed upon many a page, in which we are hereafter to record 
the social, moral and physical improvement of the State. 
If to Massachusetts belongs the honor of cradling the revolution, and to Vir- 
ginia that of having given birth to the author of the declaration of independence, 
and to the immortal chief who conducted the armies until its establishment, New- 
York may, with equal justice, lay claim to the honor of having produced the 
statesman who chiefly secured the adoption of the federal constitution, and put 
