The Montana Constitution Collection
The Montana Constitution Collection is a project of the Maureen and Mike Mansfield Center and the Blewett School of Law. It contains a record of Montana’s constitutional history leading through the 1972 Constitutional Convention.
In the rush to ratify a constitution while political conditions were favorable to statehood, the 1889 Constitutional Convention largely readopted the 1884 Constitutional Convention, which in turn borrowed heavily from the 1876 Colorado Constitution. As Professors Larry Elison and Fritz Snyder explain, “The 1889 Constitution was enacted more as a tool to achieve statehood than to provide a well-thought-out structure of governance for the new state.” The chairman of that Convention, William Andrews Clark, expressed the delegates’ understanding that given the inevitable changes the new state would undergo, “[T]he genius and wisdom of our successors will eliminate, supplement, and amend” the text of the new constitution.
Eight decades took their toll on the 1889 Constitution’s utility for a changing state. The Constitution, and, therefore, state government, became increasingly rigid and unresponsive to the people. In response, Montana became the only state from the so-called “class of 1889” states admitted in that year (Idaho, Montana, North Dakota, South Dakota, Washington, and Wyoming), and the only state in the Rocky Mountains and Pacific Northwest, to adopt a second constitution.
The 1960s reapportionment revolution reallocated political power from rural areas to cities and towns under the principle of one-person, one-vote. In 1967 the reconstituted Legislature commissioned a report “to determine if [the 1889 Constitution] is adequately serving the current needs of the people." The resulting Legislative Council Report concluded that just 48% of the sections in the 1889 Constitution were adequate in that they did not “present a major obstacle to effective government.” The 1969 Legislature responded to the Council’s work with the appointment of a Constitutional Revision Commission and a referendum on calling a constitutional convention. More than sixty-five percent of Montana voters approved the call for a Constitutional Convention in November 1970. The state elected 100 delegates to the Convention in November 1971. After three days of orientation after the elections, the delegates formally convened in Helena on January 17, 1972 and met for 54 days. The delegates signed the proposed constitution and adjourned on March 24, 1972. Just over half of Montanans voting on the new constitution ratified it in June 1972. All but the legislative apportionment provisions of the 1972 Constitution took effect on July 1, 1973.
The Convention record spreads across several sets of documents. A seven-volume set published in 1979 and 1981 by the Montana Legislative Council contains a core of materials: convention rules and personnel; committees and witness lists; delegate proposals and committee reports; and a verbatim transcript of floor debates and votes. Before the Convention, the professional staff of the Montana Constitutional Convention Commission collected and prepared a series of documents to inform the delegates: Papers containing primary sources and prior studies by the Legislative Council and Constitutional Revision Commission, Memos concerning the organization of a constitutional convention, and Studies of subject-matter areas likely to be addressed in a new constitution. This collection also includes several less prominent but important sources: committee minutes and testimony providing a source for several key proposals and debates, the original 1972 and subsequent voter information pamphlets explaining the plain meaning of provisions, and contemporaneous and more recent commentaries on the constitutional debates.
Adapted from Professor Anthony Johnstone's article: The Constitutional Initiative in Montana, 71 Mont. L. Rev. 325 (2010).
Use these links or the images below to browse the collection.
- 1884 Constitution and Proceedings
- 1889 Constitution and Proceedings
- 1972 Commission Memos
- 1972 Commission Papers
- 1972 Commission Studies
- 1972 Committee Minutes and Testimony
- 1972 Committee Proposals
- 1972 Constitutional Convention and Proceedings
- 1972 Montana Constitution Context & Commentary
- 1972 Montana Constitutional Convention Exhibit (hosted on Montana History Portal)
- 1972 Montana Constitutional Convention Oral Histories
- "In the Crucible of Change" (hosted at Montana Tech)
- "Last Best Constitution: a Video Retrospective" (hosted on Montana History Portal)
- Montana Constitution Wiki (Montana Constitutional Law course project)
- Voter Information Pamphlets (1972-2020)
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John C. Sheehy's statement about Article XI, Section 8
John C. Sheehy
John C. Sheehy's statement to the Education and Public Lands Committee about Article XI, Section 8.
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John H. Toole's statement on the Anti-Diversion Amendment
John H. Toole
John H. Toole's statement to the Revenue and Finance Committee on the Anti-Diversion Amendment to the Montana Constitution.
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Bicameral vs. Unicameral Legislature
Unknown
The author of this document supported a bicameral legislature for Montana. This document may be part of the Recommendations for the Legislative Article.
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Recommendations for the Legislative Article
Unknown
This document was submitted to the Legislative Committee and includes several recommendations for the Legislative Article.
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Virginia Blend testimony regarding providing equal rights
Virginia H. Blend
Virginia Blend's testimony to the Bill of Rights Committee regarding proposal number 10, providing for equal rights.
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Minutes of the fourteenth meeting of the Education and Public Lands Committee
Montana. Constitutional Convention (1971-1972). Education and Public Lands Committee
The subject of this meeting was the community college, vocational rehab, and the office of state superintendent.
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Minutes of the nineteenth meeting of the Executive Committee
Montana. Constitutional Convention (1971-1972). Executive Committee
This meeting included a discussion of Article VII.
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Minutes of the twentienth meeting of the Executive Committee
Montana. Constitutional Convention (1971-1972). Executive Committee
In this meeting, the committee heard presentations by a member of the Education Committee of the House of Representatives, a housewife, and individuals representing the Board of Pardons, the Office of Public Instruction, the Montana Federation of Teachers, and the Montana School Boards Association.
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Minutes of the twelfth meeting of the General Government and Constitutional Amendment Committee
Montana. Constitutional Convention (1971-1972). General Government and Constitutional Amendment Committee
In this meeting, the committee discussed Article XI, Section 1 and Article XI, Section 10. They also discussed Mr. Habedank's proposal on initiative and referendum.
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Minutes of the nineteenth meeting of the Judiciary Committee
Montana. Constitutional Convention (1971-1972). Judiciary Committee
In this meeting, the chairman assigned three subcommittees. The committee then discussed Article XIX and proposals 69 and 53.
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Minutes of the twentienth meeting of the Judiciary Committee
Montana. Constitutional Convention (1971-1972). Judiciary Committee
In this meeting, the committee heard testimony from Thomas J. Kearney, Roger J. Barnaby, Elmer Erickson, Hardin E. Todd, Francis Mitchell, J. Chan Ettien, and Joe Roberts.
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Minutes of the fifteenth meeting of the Legislative Committee
Montana. Constitutional Convention (1971-1972). Legislative Committee
In this meeting the committee discussed worksheet items.
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Minutes of the eleventh meeting of the Local Government Committee
Montana. Constitutional Convention (1971-1972). Local Government Committee
In this meeting the committee discussed delegate proposals 17, 40, 56, 97, and 126.
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Minutes of the eleventh meeting of the Natural Resources and Agriculture Committee
Montana. Constitutional Convention (1971-1972). Natural Resources and Agriculture Committee
The subject of this meeting was reclamation and the environment.
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Minutes of the fourteenth meeting of the Public Health, Welfare, Labor and Industry Committee
Montana. Constitutional Convention (1971-1972). Public Health, Welfare, Labor and Industry Committee
This meeting included a public hearing on labor.
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Minutes of the thirteenth meeting of the Public Health, Welfare, Labor and Industry Committee
Montana. Constitutional Convention (1971-1972). Public Health, Welfare, Labor and Industry Committee
This meeting included a public hearing on Article XVIII and all other proposals and subjects relating to labor.
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Minutes of the thirteenth meeting of the Revenue and Finance Committee
Montana. Constitutional Convention (1971-1972). Revenue and Finance Committee
This meeting included discussion of taxation Articles and testimony on investments and a legislative auditor.
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Statement from the Montana Stockgrowers Association regarding the Livestock Mill Levy
Mons L. Teigen
Statement to the Revenue and Finance Committee from the Montana Stockgrowers Association regarding the Livestock Mill Levy.
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Bob Campbell statement about full participation within the system
Bob Campbell
Bob Campbell's statement to the Bill of Rights Committee regarding proposal number 13 and full participation within the system.
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Bob Campbell statement about the right to privacy
Bob Campbell
Bob Campbell's statement to the Bill of Rights Committee regarding proposal number 33, the right to privacy.