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Our Lives, Our Fortunes and Our Sacred Honor

Page 58

by Richard R. Beeman


  boycott of British trade, plea for, 35–38

  Committee of Correspondence, 21, 23, 32, 36, 144, 145, 146

  Dorchester Heights, victory at, 335

  increase of British troops in, 144

  military occupation of, 32

  report to Congress of siege of, 105–107

  role of in resistance, 15, 32

  Sons of Liberty, 18–19, 23, 42, 214

  Stamp Act, protests against, 18–19

  Boston Gazette, 69, 70

  Boston Port Bill or Act (1774), 28, 402

  Boycott of British trade

  New York’s response, 33–34

  Philadelphia’s response, 37–38

  previous uses, 185

  support of by Maryland, 38

  support of by Virginia, 9, 39

  Boyd, Julian, 250

  Bradford, Thomas, 320

  Bradford, William, 320

  Bradford, William, Jr., 348

  Braxton, Carter, 347, 357

  Breed’s Hill, 239–241, 274

  British, reaction to Congress’s Address, 181

  Bullock, Archibald, 259

  Bunker Hill, Battle of, 239–241, 274

  Burke, Edmund, 25–26, 168, 177, 179–181, 204, 274, 276, 279

  Burnett, Edmund Cody, 235

  Bute, Lord (John Stuart, 3rd Earl of Bute), 166

  Cabot (ship), 268

  Campbell, Lord William, 285

  A Candid Examination of the Mutual Claims of Great Britain and the Colonies; with a Plan of Accommodation, on Constitutional Principles (Galloway), 132

  Carleton, Guy, 298

  Carpenters’ Hall, 54, 80

  Carter, Landon, 347

  The Case of the Officers of Excise (Paine), 308

  Caswell, Richard, 260

  Chalmers, James, 325

  Charleston, South Carolina, 268

  Chase, Samuel, 6, 120, 142, 151, 268, 335, 363–364

  Chatham, Lord (William Pitt, the Elder), 177–178, 204, 279

  Checkley, Elizabeth, 16–17

  Chew, Benjamin, 138

  City Tavern, 36, 48, 54, 79, 136, 188, 247, 255

  Clark, Abraham, 2

  Clinton, George, 184, 198

  Cochran, John, 282

  Coercive Acts (1774), 28–29, 111, 401

  Colden, Cadwallader, 129

  Cole, Nicholas, 357

  College of Philadelphia, 54

  Colonial legislatures, autonomy, 13

  Committee of Fifty-One, 33–34, 99

  Committee of Five, 396, 406, 407, 408

  Committee on Parliamentary Statutes, 108

  Committees, local governing, 185–187

  Committees, congressional, method of appointing, 108–109, 388–389

  Committees of correspondence, 21–22

  Committees of safety, 190, 222

  Common Sense (Paine), 6, 118, 244

  on absurdity of British rule, 317

  on advocates of reconciliation, 318

  on American capability of attaining independence, 317–318

  attack on concept of monarchy, 314–316

  criticism of Quakerism, 324–325

  impact of on American public, 320, 326, 328

  on paths to independence, 319

  popular success of, 319–320

  reaction of second congress to, 320–322

  Concord, Massachusetts, 175, 192

  Connecticut

  committees of correspondence in, 22

  committees of safety, 222

  Powder Alarm, response to, 105, 107

  relationship with royal authority, 282, 343–344

  support for independence by, 359, 370

  Connecticut Gazette, 320

  Considerations on the Nature and Extent of the Legislative Authority of the British Parliament (Wilson), 302, 313

  Constitutional Gazette, 328

  Continental Army

  articles of war, 263

  assault on Quebec, Canada, 298–299

  capture of Montreal, Canada, 298

  creation, 226

  financing, 235

  free blacks, enlistment, 293

  lack of discipline, 261–262

  occupation of Dorchester Heights, Boston, 334–335

  officers, 233–234

  volunteer army, disadvantages, 266–267

  Cranch, Richard, 68

  Crane, Stephen, 56

  Crown Point, fort at, 222

  Cruger, Henry, 280

  Cushing, Thomas, 42, 57, 105, 109, 119, 121, 138, 151, 175, 193, 305, 358

  Dartmouth, 2nd Earl of, (William Legge), 21, 25, 176, 183, 184, 191, 192, 274, 275, 276, 278, 279

  Dartmouth (ship), 11, 23

  Dawes, William, 193

  Deane, Silas, 44, 47, 58, 142, 267

  on Benjamin Franklin, 243

  on delegates’ reaction to news of uprising in Boston, 106

  description of George Washington, 50, 231

  descriptions of southern delegates, 136–137

  as emissary to France, 339

  impression of Philadelphia, 55–56

  on John Dickinson’s plea for reconciliation, 203, 206

  on Thomson’s election as secretary, 85

  Deane, Simon, 187

  Death, William, 306

  Declaration of Independence

  closing argument, 404–405

  comparison to Virginia Declaration of Rights, 396–397, 399, 402–403

  distribution, 417–418

  drafting, 393–394

  editing, 408–413

  first use of term “United states,” 405

  Indians, mention of harassment by, 410–411

  list of grievances, 398–405

  Preamble, 394–398

  reading of draft to Congress, 407

  selection of drafting committee, 387–390

  signing, 414–416

  signing, Jefferson’s account, 413

  slave trade, mention of, 409–410

  Declaration of Rights and Grievances, 150–154

  “The Declaration of the Causes and Necessity of Taking Up Arms,” 247–250

  Declaratory Act (1766), 19

  Dehart, John, 56

  DeLancey, James, 34

  Delaware

  Caesar Rodney’s ride to Philadelphia, 377–378

  criticism of British policies, 88–89

  indecision about independence, 359, 362, 374, 375

  organization of new government, 362

  slavery in, 158

  vote for independence, 377

  Dickinson, John, 58, 60, 148, 151, 159, 242, 251, 288, 329, 339, 347, 352, 354

  abstention from vote on independence, 378–379

  address to people of Quebec, drafting, 169

  admiration for, 7

  as advocate for Olive Branch Petition, 251–253

  ambivalence of, 325–326, 331–332

  assessment of first congress, 170

  as author of address to American colonies, 165

  collaboration with Thomas Jefferson, 249–250

  as commander of Philadelphia militia, 332, 380

  continued hope for reconciliation, 167, 170, 202–206, 249, 251–252, 301, 302–303, 359, 471n3

  Declaration on Taking Arms, role of in, 249

  education, 75

  on Galloway’s Plan of Union, 133

  instructions for Pennsylvania delegation, 349–350

  John Adams, relationship with, 64, 78, 167

  Joseph Galloway, enmity toward, 77

  King George III, petition to, 248, 251–253

  Letters from a Farmer in Pennsylvania, 35, 74–75, 150

  as member of Pennsylvania Assembly, 76, 133, 332, 349, 359–360

  objection to premature declaration of independence, 353

  personality traits, 35

  political career, 76–77

  proposals for second congress, 202–206

  report on American rights, 149–150

  response t
o Boston’s pleas for support, 35–37

  speech on delaying independence (July 1, 1776), 370–372

  speech to New Jersey legislature, 290

  Dickinson, Polly Norris, 75

  Dickinson, Walter, 77

  “Dissertation on the Canon and Feudal Law” (Adams), 69

  Dorchester Heights, Boston, Massachusetts, 334

  Drayton, John, 3

  Drinker, Henry, 37

  Drummond, Lord (Thomas Lundin), 301–303

  Duane, James, 56, 98, 110, 139, 142, 145, 150, 153, 159, 169, 235, 301, 312, 329, 364

  on meeting place for Congress, 80

  outline of agenda for second congress, 115–117

  support for Galloway’s Plan of Union, 128–130

  Duche, Jacob, 106, 200, 281

  Dunlap, John, 329, 417

  Dunmore, 4th Earl of (John Murray)

  challenges to authority, 189

  dissolution of House of Burgesses, 39

  Dunmore’s Proclamation, 291–292

  Dunmore’s War, 292

  insistence on Lord North’s proposals, 257

  naval attack on Norfolk, Virginia, 297

  offer of freedom to slaves and indentured servants, 291–292

  Patrick Henry, hostility toward, 95, 172, 183

  retreat of, 293

  Dyer, Eliphalet, 47, 56, 58, 60, 109, 169, 231, 258

  East India Company, 22–24

  Eden, William, 274

  Eleanor (ship), 11, 23

  Ellis, Joseph, 267

  An Enquiry into the Causes of the Alienation of the Delaware and Shawnee Indians from the British Interest (Thomson), 86

  Fairfax, Bryan, 156

  Fairfax County Resolutions, 156

  Faneuil Hall, Boston, 23

  Faquier, Francis, 32, 246

  The Federalist Papers, 97

  Ferling, John, 133

  Finkelman, Paul, 410

  First Continental Congress

  absenteeism, 165

  address to American colonists, 164–165, 452–453n2

  address to King George III, 165–168, 169

  address to people of Great Britain, 163–164

  agenda, 115–117

  on America’s place in British Empire, 118–119

  anti-Catholic bias in, 153

  appointment of committees, 108

  Articles of Association, 155–162

  changing impressions of delegates, 135–137

  choice of term “president,” 84

  collective delegate profile, 57–61

  colonial agents in London, letter to, 168, 453n8

  “congress,” evolution of term, 83–84

  Declaration of Rights and Grievances, 150–154

  on English constitution vs. natural rights, 117–118

  establishment of rules for voting, 91, 96, 99–102

  evolution of, 173–174

  exports to Great Britain, ban on, 119

  Galloway’s Plan of Union, reaction to, 130–131, 133–134

  George III, letter to, 138–143

  Grand Committee, 108–110

  independence, ambivalence about, 2

  instructions to delegations, 88–89, 119–121

  news of siege of Boston, reaction to, 105–107

  non-exportation to Britain, 119, 120–122, 125, 138, 143–144, 154–155, 157

  non-importation and non-exportation, agreements on, 155

  non-importation of British goods, 99, 114, 119–120, 122, 125, 128, 129, 132, 136, 143, 156

  objectives, 63, 88

  opening day attendees, 56–57

  Philadelphia hospitality to, 137–138

  president, election, 81

  public support for, 182

  Quebec, address to citizens, 168–169

  Quebec Act, debate about, 152–154

  response to Boston and General Gage, 144–147

  secrecy, rule of, 102–104

  secretary, election of, 84–85

  selection of Carpenters’ Hall as meeting place, 79–81

  single colonial militia, suggestion, 139–140

  slave trade, 157–159

  Suffolk Resolves, approval, 115

  Flower, Milton, 332

  Floyd, William, 56

  Folsom, Nathaniel, 48, 56, 109

  Fort Chambly, 298

  Fort Duquesne, 227

  Fort Ticonderoga, 201, 221–222, 223, 334

  Fort William and Mary, 282

  Franklin, Benjamin, 53, 54, 76, 85, 168, 198, 205, 242, 251, 257, 265, 266, 312, 335, 336, 339, 354, 378

  “Albany Plan of Union,” 255

  “Articles of Confederation and Perpetual Union,” 255–256

  in the “cockpit” with Wedderburn, 25–27

  as colonial agent in London, 168, 176, 243

  on Common Sense, 321

  election to Second Continental Congress, 243

  Thomas Pain, letter of introduction for, 309

  “Vindication,” 244–245

  vote in favor of independence, 375

  Franklin, Deborah, 3

  Franklin, William, 287, 362, 374

  Frederick, Prince of Wales, 273

  Gadsden, Christopher, 6, 44, 47, 60, 101, 120, 142, 155, 159, 268, 286

  Gage, Thomas, 28, 107, 144

  Bunker and Breed’s Hill, attack on, 239–241

  Lexington and Concord, attack on, 193

  orders to crack down on resistance, 191–192

  removal as Massachusetts military governor, 275–276

  report on Battle of Bunker Hill, 274

  Galloway, Grace Growden, 123

  Galloway, Joseph, 35, 57, 79, 108, 110, 115, 117, 145, 162, 169

  absence from second congress, 198–199, 329

  aspirations as king, 272–275

  assessment of congress, 170–171

  assessment of New England delegates, 32, 48–49

  background, 123

  A Candid Examination of the Mutual Claims of Great Britain and the Colonies; with a Plan of Accommodation, on Constitutional Principles, 132

  Charles Thomson, opposition to, 84–85

  John Dickinson, relationship with, 74, 76–77

  personality traits, 123, 133

  “Plan of a Proposed Union Between Great Britain and the Colonies,” 7, 125–128

  political career, 123–124

  on Samuel Adams, 132

  Garth, Charles, 276

  Gates, Horatio, 229, 234, 333

  George II, King, 227, 273

  George III, King, 129, 138, 141, 166, 184, 308, 316

  colonial grievances against, 400–404

  declaration of state of rebellion in colonies, 177

  dismissal of General Gage, 275–276

  early years, 272–273

  interpretation of American rebellion, 276–277

  Proclamation for Suppressing Rebellion and Sedition, 276–277

  refusal to acknowledge Address to the King, 176–177

  refusal to read Olive Branch petition, 276, 277

  speech to Parliament, 278–279, 301

  statue made into musket bullets, 418

  Georgia

  absence from first congress, 39

  presence at second congress, 184, 198

  slave trade and, 409

  support for independence, 356

  Gerry, Elbridge, 234, 305, 358

  Goddard, William, 138

  Goldsborough, Robert, 58, 162

  Gooch, William, 82

  Graff, Jacob, 385, 392

  Grafton, 3rd Duke of (Augustus Fitzroy), 275, 277, 279

  Grand Committee, 108–110

  Greenleaf, Stephen, 19

  Grenville, George, 14

  Gridley, Jeremy, 66

  Gwinnett, Button, 356

  Hall, Lyman, 198, 356

  Hamilton, Andrew, 53

  Hancock, John, 23, 65, 71, 188, 194, 197, 198, 226

  background, 210

  on Common Sense, 305

  el
ection as president of Second Continental Congress, 218

  escape from British troops, 175, 193–194

  Governor Hutchinson, rapprochement with, 216

  at Harvard, 210–211

  interest in appointment as army commander-in-chief, 229–230

  the Liberty affair, 213–214, 215

  as merchant, 211–212

  on military situation in Canada, 336

  Samuel Adams, relationship with, 215–218

  signing of Declaration of Independence, 415

  stolen letters, use of, 217–218

  Hanover, New Jersey, 174

  Haring, John, 59

  Harrison, Benjamin, 49, 57, 58, 101, 140, 159, 165, 188, 218, 265, 266, 354, 370

  Hartley, David, 178

  Henry, John, 92

  Henry, Patrick, 8, 39, 49, 50, 59, 110, 119, 120, 139, 142, 159, 165, 166, 172, 233, 253

  anti-Catholic bias, 153

  arming colonies, support for, 140

  attack on Galloway’s Plan of Union, 130–131

  background, 92–93

  campaign for resolution for independence, 357

  on dissolution of government, 91–92

  five resolutions, 94–95

  George Washington, friendship with, 45–46

  in House of Burgesses, 94–95

  law practice, 93–94

  “liberty or death” speech, 183

  personality traits, 92

  on proportional representation, 96

  on trade concessions to British, 206

  Virginia militia, commander, 260, 291

  Henry, Sarah Shelton, 93

  Henry, Sarah Winston, 92

  Henry, Viscount Bolingbroke, 272

  Hewes, Joseph, 197, 331

  Heyward, Thomas, 377

  Hill, Henry, 281

  Hillsborough, Earl of (Wills Hill), 25

  HMS Tamar (ship), 286

  Hooper, William, 58, 121, 140

  Hopkins, Stephen, 56, 59, 109, 151

  Hopkinson, Francis, 373

  House, Eliza, 47

  House, Mary, 47

  Houstounn, John, 259

  Howe, William, 334–335

  Humphreys, Charles, 57, 375, 378

  Hutchinson, Thomas, 18, 19, 21, 23–25, 28, 65, 70, 191, 216–217, 399

  The Idea of a Patriot King (Bolingbroke), 272

  Impartial Administration of Justice Act (1774), 28

  Independence Hall (formerly Pennsylvania State House), 53

  Indians, as means of harassing colonists, 402–403

  Jay, John, 34, 56, 57, 58, 59, 110, 117, 142, 163, 169, 224, 242, 251, 288, 290, 301–302, 312, 329, 339, 365

  address to people of Great Britain, 164

  personality traits, 97–98

  political career, 98

  on Quebec Act, 153

  resolution to delay decision on independence, 366–367

  suggestion to pay for tea destroyed in Boston, 139

  Jay, Mary Van Cortlandt, 97

  Jay, Peter, 97

  Jay, Sarah Van Brugh Livingston, 97

 

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