(December 13, 1730 – April 13, 1778) was an editor of the Virginia Declaration of Rights.
The delegates to the Wheeling Convention argued that under the Declaration of Rights, any change in the form of government had to be approved by a referendum.
Virginia | West Virginia | Richmond, Virginia | University of Virginia | Norfolk, Virginia | Alexandria, Virginia | Virginia Woolf | European Court of Human Rights | Declaration of Independence | Winchester, Virginia | Williamsburg, Virginia | Quantico, Virginia | Virginia Tech | Human Rights Watch | Governor of Virginia | Charlottesville, Virginia | Lexington, Virginia | Fairfax, Virginia | Arlington, Virginia | McLean, Virginia | West Virginia University | United States Declaration of Independence | Roanoke, Virginia | Virginia Military Institute | Army of Northern Virginia | Charleston, West Virginia | Virginia House of Delegates | Wheeling, West Virginia | Parkersburg, West Virginia | Lynchburg, Virginia |
In her review of the history behind the Sixth Amendment, Kime argued that James Madison could have drafted a more comprehensive right to "call for evidence" (as existed in the Virginia Declaration of Rights) but failed to do so.