What “Large Majority” Meant in 1814

What “Large Majority” Meant in 1814 In the early 19th century, the phrase “large majority” was widely used in legislative journals, political correspondence, and newspapers to describe the outcome of a vote. While the term remains in use today, its meaning in 1814 reflected the political and linguistic conventions of that period — not a … Read more

Forgery and Recomposition: The Denison Signature and the 1813 Connecticut Committee Report on the Titles of Nobility Amendment

Trumpie Bad

By Stanley Ivan Evans Abstract Recent forensic comparison of Connecticut’s 1813 legislative documents concerning the Titles of Nobility Amendment (TONA) reveals material and handwriting anomalies suggesting that the official committee report held today was rewritten on new paper, with the authentic signature of House Clerk William Denison replicated by another hand. This finding bears directly … Read more

Did Connecticut Ratify the Titles of Nobility Amendment?

I'll be damned

A documentary and forensic case study (1813–1818) Thesis The best reading of the federal record is that Connecticut was counted as having ratified the Titles of Nobility Amendment (TONA) in 1813, and that a later executive-side annotation in early 1818—the lone word “Not,” added to an existing endorsement—reversed the appearance of that status in State … Read more

  Did Connecticut Ratify the Titles of Nobility Amendment? A documentary and forensic case study (1813–1818) Thesis The best reading of the federal record is that Connecticut was counted as having ratified the Titles of Nobility Amendment (TONA) in 1813, and that a later executive-side annotation in early 1818—the lone word “Not,” added to an … Read more

The Article V Denominator: No Law Then, No Law Now

Newer States on Titles of Nobility Amendment

Thesis From 1810–1819—and still today—no statute, constitutional clause, or Supreme Court holding defines whether “three-fourths of the several States” in Article V refers to (i) the number of States when Congress proposed an amendment, (ii) the number of States when ratification was completed, or (iii) some hybrid (e.g., freezing the denominator unless later-admitted States “definitively … Read more

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE Virginia Adopted TONA

Virginia Flag

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE Researcher Releases Virginia Evidence Packet Showing State-Level Adoption of the Titles of Nobility Amendment (TONA) Virginia’s official volumes state “Amendments to Constitution adopted”; State Department copy marked “C.1.” (Chapter One) confirms publication to federal authorities; Supreme Court precedent supports validity of the state’s assent Oakland, CA — October 13 2025— Researcher Stanley … Read more

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE Researcher Releases Evidence Packet Indicating Alterations in 1813 Connecticut Committee Report on Federal Amendment Side-by-side images, signature comparisons, and a contemporaneous federal circular call for an official authentication review Oakland, CA— October 13 2025 — Researcher Stanley Ivan Evans today released an evidence packet suggesting that a key 1813 Connecticut General Assembly committee … Read more

Did Connecticut Adopt the Titles of Nobility Amendment?

Was there any political reason for Connecticut to reject TONA in May 1813? ChatGPT said: Excellent question — and this goes straight to the heart of the historical and political context of Connecticut in 1813. The short answer is no compelling political reason existed in May 1813 for Connecticut to reject the Titles of Nobility … Read more

Reconsideration and Record Substitution: Connecticut’s 1814 Reversal on the Titles of Nobility Amendment

Reconsideration and Record Substitution: Connecticut’s 1814 Reversal on the Titles of Nobility Amendment By Stanley I. Evans AbstractThis Article examines Connecticut’s apparent reversal on the Titles of Nobility Amendment (TONA) between 1813 and 1814 and argues that the committee report now preserved as the official record was most plausibly rewritten during the political upheaval following … Read more

The Long Suppression of TONA: How a Ratification Story Got Buried in Plain Sight

Thesis: From 1813 to 1817, the federal government repeatedly acted and printed as if the Titles of Nobility Amendment (TONA) had been adopted. After Congress centralized “certification” procedures in 1818, later editors and agencies rewrote the public memory of those years. What followed wasn’t one dramatic cover-up so much as a century-long administrative suppression: decisions, … Read more

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