We sometimes forget–I do, anyway–that the US Constitution is not the only or even the first written constitution in the United States. The US Constitution was ratified on June 21, 1788, the day New Hampshire became the ninth state to ratify it. The first written constitution in what became the United States was Connecticut’s “Fundamental Orders,” written in 1638, superseded in 1662, by the Charter of Connecticut. New Hampshire is the first independent state to have a written constitution, ratifying its constitution on January 5, 1776. It was replaced on June 2, 1784, by its current constitution, which contains the following words:
All persons have the right to keep and bear arms in defense of themselves, their families, their property and the state.
I’m licensed to practice in Wyoming, Utah, and Michigan. I practice in the first two states. Interested in their constitutional history as it relates to the right to bear arms, I look at each of their constitutions. Here, for your reading pleasure, is what I found:
Wyoming: Article 1, Section 24 Right to Bear Arms
The right of citizens to bear arms in defense of themselves and of the state shall not be denied.
Utah: Article I, Section 6. [Right to bear arms.]
The individual right of the people to keep and bear arms for security and defense of self, family, others, property, or the state, as well as for other lawful purposes shall not be infringed; but nothing herein shall prevent the Legislature from defining the lawful use of arms.
Michigan: Article I § 6
Every person has a right to keep and bear arms for the defense of himself and the state.
Whole books can be and probably have been written on the bolded words in these three articles. I have to tell you that I’m really interested in what Utah’s courts have said about that last sentence in Utah’s contribution to the genre, especially in what the word “defining” means. If and when I find out, I’ll get back to you.
By the way, here’s the Second Amendment to compare:
A well regulated Militia, being necessary to the security of a free State, the right of the people to keep and bear Arms, shall not be infringed.
I love the Second Amendment, but for my own personal protection, I’d choose any one of the three states’s declaration of my right to bear arms as my first line of defense in any prosecution for violating firearms law.