Referring to the historical ties that existed between the
Basque Country and the United States, some authors stress the admiration felt by
John Adams, second president of the U.S., for the Basques'
historical form of government. Adams, who on his tour of Europe visited
Biscay, was impressed. He cited the Basques as an example in
A defense of the Constitution of the United States, as he wrote in 1786: "In a research like this, after those people in Europe who have had the skill, courage, and fortune, to preserve a voice in the government, Biscay, in
Spain, ought by no means to be omitted. While their neighbours have long since resigned all their pretensions into the hands of kings and priests, this extraordinary people have preserved their ancient language, genius, laws, government, and manners, without innovation, longer than any other nation of Europe. Of
Celtic extraction, they once inhabited some of the finest parts of the ancient Boetica; but their love of liberty, and unconquerable aversion to a foreign servitude, made them retire, when invaded and overpowered in their ancient feats, into these mountainous countries, called by the ancients
Cantabria..." "...It is a republic; and one of the privileges they have most insisted on, is not to have a king: another was, that every new lord, at his accession, should come into the country in person, with one of his legs bare, and take an oath to preserve the privileges of the lordship". Authors such as Navascues, and the Basque-American
Pete T. Cenarrusa, former Secretary of the State of
Idaho, agree in stressing the influence of the
Foruak or Charters of Biscay [Code of Laws in Biscay] on some parts of the
U.S. Constitution. John Adams traveled in 1779 to Europe to study and compare the various forms of government then found on the Old Continent. The American Constitution was approved by the first thirteen states on 17 September 1787. ==Migration and sheepherding==