The State of Arkansas has held eight Constitutional Conventions: 1836, 1861, 1864, 1868, 1874, 1917, 1969, and 1979. Despite this, the state has only had five constitutions in its history, those of 1836, 1861 (which only changed "United States of America" to "Confederate States of America"), 1864, 1868, and 1874. Arkansas has held three constitutional conventions (called the Sixth, Seventh, and Eight Constitutional Conventions, respectively) since 1874. None of these drafts were ratified.
1836 Constitutional Convention In 1833, much of Arkansas was eager to be admitted as a state, but leaders of the prominent
Conway-Johnson family had concerns about the taxation necessary to support state government on a low population, as well as political concerns. But when
Michigan was preparing to enter the Union as a free state,
Ambrose Sevier rose in the
United States Congress to apply for statehood. Congress was hesitant to admit another pro-slavery state due to the tense equality achieved under the
Missouri Compromise, but when paired with a free state, the balance of power in the
United States Senate would not be upset. The
9th Arkansas Territorial General Assembly appropriated $60 for rent and $6 for firewood, (a total of $ in today's dollars) to territorial governor
William Fulton to host a constitutional convention. Following the General Assembly's bill authorizing a constitutional convention, Fulton tried to halt the convention, but
Attorney General,
Benjamin F. Butler ruled the assemblage legal. The General Assembly fought over apportionment of delegates between the two "halves" of the state: the upland northwest with a largely white population, and the agrarian southeast, with an economy and society based on slavery and plantation agriculture, who sought to adopt an apportionment where slaves counted as three-fifths of the free white population, mirroring the
three-fifths Compromise.
David Walker led the northwest in ultimately counting only free white population in the apportionment of districts; with 26 delegates from the northwest and 26 from the southeast. Convening in Little Rock on January 4, 1836, the convention quickly sought to re-litigate apportionment, this time for the
Arkansas Senate. Ultimately, a compromise was reached giving the northwest and southeast regions eight senators each, with one from central Arkansas (
Pulaski,
Saline, and
White counties). The constitution was viewed as a democratic document for the period. The legislature was the most powerful branch; it selected US Senators, supreme court and circuit judges, and all state offices other than governor. It could override a gubernatorial veto with a simple majority and had no term limits imposed on members. The governor had four-year terms but was limited to serving eight years in every twelve. State representatives and county officials were elected by popular vote. Only white males were allowed to vote, but there was no property ownership requirement and
poll taxes were banned except for raising funds for county government. It was ratified by the convention on January 30, 1836, with all delegates except Walker and Nathan Ross (the
Mississippi County delegate who did not attend the convention) signing the document. Delegate
Charles F.M. Noland was selected to messenger the constitution to
Washington D.C. for congressional approval. He did not arrive until March 8; Sevier instead presented a duplicate printed in the
Arkansas Gazette to Congress on February 4 to begin discussion and debate. After passing both houses of Congress, on June 15 of that year, President
Andrew Jackson signed the act making Arkansas the 25th state.
1861 Constitution The first constitution was vague and short. The second Arkansas state constitution was adopted by the
Arkansas Secession Convention when Arkansas seceded from the Union on May 6, 1861. This constitution was very similar to the original except for its references to
The Confederate States of America and added protections for
slavery.
1864 Constitution On December 8, 1863, by
United States President Abraham Lincoln issued a
presidential proclamation that would come to be known as the
ten percent plan to allow Confederate states to return to the Union. The Civil War was still underway in Arkansas, with a Confederate-loyal state government in exile at
Washington, Arkansas and much of the northern part of the state under a tenuous Federal control. The economy of Arkansas was in shambles and guerrilla warfare ravaged the countryside and small towns throughout the war. Major General
Frederick Steele began reorganizing a state government following the
Battle of Bayou Fourche, whereby Federals captured Little Rock. By January 1864, the requisite 10% of the state's voters had taken the loyalty oath to the Constitution necessary to begin preparing for restoration to the Union. Arkansas Unionists from 24 of the state's 57 counties met for a constitutional convention in Little Rock. Since the convention was not called by a formal body, representation was not apportioned in advance, and some counties were not represented at all. Of the 24 convention members, a group of 12 were selected to draft the new constitution. The convention adopted a provisional document largely similar to the 1836 constitution, except repudiated slavery and secession, and declaring the constitution of 1861 "null and void".
Slavery was abolished in this constitution, but there was no provision as to civil rights for freedmen, or former slaves. This was the first constitution to allow popular election of the constitutional offices (secretary of state, auditor, treasurer, and the newly created position of
lieutenant governor of Arkansas) as well as judges. The convention sent the Constitution to a vote of the people on March 18, 1864, alongside a new slate of Republican state officials. Some areas of the state remained under Confederate control during the election, and many war-torn areas were virtual no-man's land. Despite a turnout of slightly more than 12,000 total voters, the Constitution was adopted and new officials were installed.
Grandison Royston was elected president of the convention,
Augustus H. Garland served as a legal advisor and instrumental force behind the new constitution. This version reflects attitudes related to the war and its aftermath. The delegates gave the most power to
county governments, including for legal issues, transportation, taxation and spending. The power of the governor was significantly curtailed. State officials' terms were dropped from four years to two years, and more state positions were required to be filled by popular election, rather than appointment by the governor. This is the constitution that the state uses today, with some 87 amendments and various other changes. The constitution produced was ratified by voters and remains the state's constitution. ==Amending the Constitution== Arkansas has passed numerous amendments – 102 at last count. The current Constitution allows for two methods of amendment. However, each method is shown in a separate section. Under Section 22 of Article 19, either house of the General Assembly may propose amendments. The amendment requires majority approval of both houses in a recorded vote, publication in at least one newspaper in each county for six months prior to the next election of the Assembly, and majority approval of the voters. However, the Section places further restrictions on legislative amendments, requiring each amendment to appear separately on the ballot and limiting the number per ballot to three. Under Section 1 of Article 5 (as amended by Amendment 7), ten percent of legal voters may propose an amendment by
initiative, requiring majority approval of the voters. The proposed amendment must be filed with the Arkansas Secretary of State not less than four months before the election, and 30 days prior to the election the petitioners (at their own expense) must publish the amendment "in some paper of general circulation". Unlike legislative amendments, there are no limits on the number of amendments by initiative that may be proposed on any one ballot. ==Ratified amendments==