Throughout the platform round icons are events relating to individuals and their right to have an opinion in particular debates:
Person joining a committee
Person leaving a committee
Person elected to a position
Roll-call
Parchment-coloured, square icons relate to the creation and amending of documents:
Create a new proposal
Create a new document that is a line-by-line revision of another document (noted by the pen icon in the corner)
Document amendment proposed
Document taken from another committee (note arrow in corner)
Amendment taken from another committee
Debate a proposal
Documents that have an explicit subtype can be displayed with a slightly different icon:
Legislative text
Formal Resolutions
A message to be sent elsewhere
A petition to be considered
Rules and Orders of Business
Diamond-shaped, purple icons relate to decisions taken:
Drop a proposal
Refer a proposal to another committee
Adopt a proposal
Other vote (continue debate)
Reject a proposal
Postpone a debate
Blue, hexagon-shaped icons relate to 'procedural' proposals that do not directly alter text but affect how a committee does its work (and are usually used only for transient things, such as a point of order.)
Procedural motion
Procedural motion with sub-decisions
Debate on a procedural motion
None
In 1819 John Quincy Adams oversaw a printed publication of the Journal of the Convention. This collection holds links to the Archive.org copy.
Cite as: Archive.org copy of the 1819 Journal Publication, Quill Project at Pembroke College (Oxford, accessed 2025)
List of conventions with resources
To see where the resources are in the convention, click on the corresponding convention below.
Locations of resources in the convention
To see highlight the related resources to the session in the convention, click on the corresponding coloured circle below or the highlighted committee.
Details
In 1819 the Journal of the Convention was published as, Journal, acts and proceedings of the convention, assembled at Philadelphia, Monday, May 14, and dissolved Monday, September 17, 1787, which formed the Constitution of the United States.
Further information can be found here:
https://archive.org/details/journalactsproce1819unit
and here:
https://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt?id=njp.32101007082603;view=1up;seq=7
A collection of documents relating to the publication of this 1819 edition can be found at:
https://catalog.archives.gov/search?q=:&f.parentNaId=1253477&f.level=item&sort=naIdSort%20asc
Collection associations (2)