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The Continental Congress was the federal legislature of the
Thirteen Colonies and later of the United States from 1774 to 1789, a period that included the American Revolutionary War and the Articles of Confederation. There were two Continental Congresses.
The First Continental Congress
The First Continental Congress lasted only from September 5, 1774, to
October 26, 1774, in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.
The Second Continental Congress
The Second Continental Congress ran from May 10, 1775, to March 2, 1789, but met in different places at different times.
(See the external link below for the daily records of its proceedings.)
In 1775 the Congress began to support actual rebellion. They created the Continental Army and issued currency (the Continental Dollar).
Dates and Places of Sessions
- Sept. 5, 1774- Oct. 26, 1774 Philadelphia,
Pennsylvania
- May 10, 1775- Dec. 12, 1776
- Dec. 20, 1776- Mar. 4, 1777 Baltimore, Maryland
- Mar. 5, 1777- Sept. 18- 1777 Philadelphia
- Sept. 27, 1777 One Day Only Lancaster,
Pennsylvania
- Sept. 30, 1777- June 27, 1778 York, Pennsylvania
- July 2, 1778- June 21, 1783 Philadelphia
- June 30, 1783- Nov. 4, 1783 Princeton, New
Jersey
- Nov. 26, 1783- June 3, 1784 Annapolis, Maryland
- Nov. 1, 1784- Dec. 24, 1784 Trenton, New Jersey
- Jan 11, 1785- Nov. 4, 1785 New York, New York
- Nov. 7, 1785- Nov. 3, 1786
- Nov. 6, 1786- Oct. 30, 1787
- Nov. 5, 1787- Oct. 21, 1788
- Nov. 3, 1788- Mar. 2, 1789
See also
External links
- Full text of Journals of the Continental Congress, 1774-1789
Further reading
- Edmund C. Burnet;"The Continental Congress"; 1941; 1975 reprint, Greenwood Publishing, ISBN 0837183863.
- H. James Henderson; "Party Politics in the Continental Congress"; 1974, McGraw-Hill, ISBN 0070281432; 2002 (paperback)
reprint, Rowman & Littlefield, ISBN
0819165255.
- Lynn Montross; "The Reluctant Rebels; the Story of the Continental Congress, 1774-1789"; 1950, Harper; 1970
reprint, Barnes & Noble, ISBN
038903973X.
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