Fair Trials Guaranteed By the Seventh Amendment

Our founding fathers had experienced a country in which the monarchy had been both the judge and the jury. This one-sided system was terribly unfair. In response, they created the Seventh Amendment to ensure the people, not the government, decide if someone is innocent or guilty.

Tom Hand, creator and publisher of Americana Corner, discusses how the Seventh Amendment prevents a judge from overturning the verdict by a jury of one’s peers, and why that still matters today.


Images courtesy of Virginia Historical Society, The New York Public Library, The Metropolitan Museum of Art, Wikipedia.


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John Adams Dominates Second Continental Congress