In the months before the beginning of the
American Revolutionary War, a group of powerful Marylanders formed an association that eventually took the form of a
convention in Annapolis. This group made preparations to form a new government for Maryland and sent representatives to participate in the
Continental Congress. The eighth session decided that the continuation of an ad hoc government by the convention was not a good mechanism for governing the state and that a more permanent and structured government was needed. So, on July 3, 1776, they resolved that a new convention be elected that would be responsible for drawing up their first
state constitution, one that did not refer to parliament or the king, but would be a government
"...of the people only." This being said, the elite men that had power in the original colonial government did not want to lose this power under a new constitution. They wanted to democratize the government as little as possible in order to stay in power but also to stop any sort of uprising from gaining traction. The committee of men creating the constitution were very wealthy and notable in their society including
Charles Carroll of Carrollton and
William Paca. , who helped create the Maryland Constitution. On August 1, all freemen with property elected delegates for the
Maryland Constitutional Convention of 1776. They began meeting on August 14, drafted the constitution, and adjourned on November 11. The document was not submitted to the people for
ratification. The Assembly of Freemen would not meet again, as it was replaced by the new state government established by the 1776 constitution.
Thomas Johnson became the state's first elected governor. ==Pre-Constitution Structure of Government==