Bill Kaufman

The Anti-Federalist Luther Martin of Maryland is known to us—if he is known
at all—as the wild man of the Constitutional Convention: a verbose, frequently
drunken radical who annoyed the hell out of James Madison, George Washington,
Gouverneur Morris, and the other giants responsible for the creation of the Constitution
in Philadelphia that summer of 1787. In Bill Kauffman’s rollicking account of
his turbulent life and times, Martin is still something of a fitfully charming
reprobate, but he is also a prophetic voice, warning his heedless contemporaries
and his amnesiac posterity that the Constitution, whatever its devisers’ intentions,
would come to be used as a blueprint for centralized government and a militaristic
foreign policy. In Martin’s view, the Constitution was the tool of a counterrevolution
aimed at reducing the states to ciphers and at fortifying a national government
whose powers to tax and coerce would be frightening. Martin delivered the most
forceful and sustained attack on the Constitution ever levied—a critique that
modern readers might find jarringly relevant. And Martin’s post-convention career,
though clouded by drink and scandal, found him as defense counsel in two of the
great trials of the age: the Senate trial of the impeached Supreme Court justice
Samuel Chase and the treason trial of his friend Aaron Burr. Kauffman’s Luther
Martin is a brilliant and passionate polemicist, a stubborn and admirable defender
of a decentralized republic who fights for the principles of 1776 all the way
to the last ditch and last drop. In remembering this forgotten founder, we remember
also the principles that once animated many of the earliest—and many later—American
patriots.