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Historical Background
AT PHILADELPHIA in the summer of 1776, the Delegates
to the Continental Congress courageously signed a document declaring the
Independence of the Thirteen American Colonies from Great Britain. Not
only did the Declaration of Independence create a Nation, but it also
pronounced timeless democratic principles. Enshrined today in the
National Archives Building at Washington, D.C., it memorializes the
founding of the United States and symbolizes the eternal freedom and
dignity of Man.
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George III, King of England
during the War for Independence, was the focus of colonial
hatred. (Oil, date unknown, by Allan Ramsay,
Library of Congress.) |
BY the time the Continental Congress adopted the
Declaration in July 1776, the War for Independence had been underway for
more than a year. Failing to obtain satisfactory redress from the mother
country for their economic and political grievances during the previous
decade, the colonists had finally resorted to armed conflict.
These grievances had come to a head shortly after the
French and Indian War (1754-63). Long and costly, the war depleted the
royal treasury and added the financial burden of administering the vast
territory acquired from France. Britain levied new, direct taxes in the
Colonies and tightened customs controls.
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The Revolutionaries utilized
this exaggerated version of the Boston Massacre (1770) by Paul Revere to
nourish resentment of British troops. (Engraving, 1770, by Paul Revere, Library of
Congress.) |
The colonists, accustomed to considerable economic
freedom, resented these measures. A number of Americans also felt that
some sort of conspiracy existed in England to destroy their liberties
and self-government. They believed that the mission of the large force
of redcoats assigned to the Colonies actually was internal suppression
rather than protection from a nonexistent external threat, especially
since the French had been expelled. Particularly aggravating was the
realization that the new tax levies supported the force. Some of the
discontent was regional in nature. Indebtedness to British creditors
irritated Southern planters. Commercial interests in the Middle Colonies
disliked the prohibition on manufacturing certain products. Frontier
settlers and speculators were irked at restrictions on westward
expansion and the Indian trade.
In various places, peaceful protest and harassment of
tax and customs collectors gave way to rioting and mob violence. In New
York and Massachusetts, clashes with British troops culminated in
bloodshed. Realizing that some of these disturbances stemmed from
agitation in the colonial assemblies, which had enjoyed wide autonomy,
the Crown tightened its control over them. Disputes between legislators
and the King's officials, once spasmodic, became commonplace. In some
instances, notably in Virginia and Massachusetts, the Royal Governors
dissolved the assemblies. In these and a few other provinces the Whigs
separated from their Tory, or Loyalist, colleagues, met extralegally,
and adopted retaliatory measures. Nearly all the Colonies formed
special "committees of correspondence" to communicate with each
otherthe first step toward unified action.
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"The Bostonians Paying the
Excise-Man or Tarring & Feathering," a British cartoon satirizing
colonial methods of protest. (ithograph, 1830,
by either William or John Pendleton, after a cartoon, 1774, published in
London, Library of Congress.) |
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In retaliation for the Boston
Tea Party (1773), the Crown imposed rigid limitations on the freedom of
Massachusetts citizens. (Lithograph, 1846, by
Nathaniel Currier, Library of Congress.) |
In May 1774, in retaliation for the "Boston Tea
Party," Parliament closed the port of Boston and virtually abolished
provincial self-government in Massachusetts. These actions stimulated
resistance across the land. That summer, the Massachusetts lower house,
through the committees of correspondence, secretly invited all 13
Colonies to attend a convention. In response, on the fifth of September,
55 Delegates representing 12 Colonies, Georgia excepted, assembled at
Philadelphia. They convened at Carpenters' Hall and organized the First
Continental Congress.
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A rare contemporary engraving of
the British-American clash in 1775 at North Bridge, near Concord,
Mass. (Engraving, 1775, by Amos Doolittle,
National Park Service.) |
Sharing though they did common complaints against the
Crown, the Delegates propounded a wide variety of political opinions.
Most of them agreed that Parliament had no right to control the internal
affairs of the Colonies. Moderates, stressing trade benefits with the
mother country, believed Parliament should continue to regulate
commerce. Others questioned the extent of its authority. A handful of
Delegates felt the answer to the problem lay in parliamentary
representation. Most suggested legislative autonomy for the Colonies.
Reluctant to sever ties of blood, language, trade, and cultural
heritage, none yet openly entertained the idea of complete independence
from Great Britain.
After weeks of debate and compromise, Congress
adopted two significant measures. The first declared that the American
colonists were entitled to the same rights as Englishmen everywhere and
denounced any infringement of those rights. The second, the Continental
Association, provided for an embargo on all trade with Britain. To
enforce the embargo and punish violators, at the behest of Congress
counties, cities, and towns formed councils, or committees, of
safetymany of which later became wartime governing or
administrative bodies. When Congress adjourned in late October, the
Delegates resolved to reconvene in May 1775 if the Crown had not
responded by then.
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Headlines of a broadside showing
American alarm over the Battle of Concord. The two rows of coffins at
the top represent slain militiamen. (Detail
from broadside, publisher unknown, National Park
Service.) |
In a sense the Continental Congress acted with
restraint, for while it was in session the situation in Massachusetts
verged on war. In September, just before Congress met, British troops
from Boston had seized ordnance supplies at Charlestown and Cambridge
and almost clashed with the local militia. The next month, Massachusetts
patriots, openly defying royal authority, organized a Revolutionary
provincial assembly as well as a military defense committee. Whigs in
three other coloniesMaryland, Virginia, and New Hampshirehad
earlier that year formed governments. By the end of the year, all the
Colonies except Georgia and New York had either set up new ones or taken
control of those already in existence. During the winter of 1774-75,
while Parliament mulled over conciliatory measures, colonial militia
units prepared for war.
The crisis came in the spring of 1775, predictably in
Massachusetts. Late on the night of April 18 the Royal Governor, Gen.
Thomas Gage, alarmed at the militancy of the rebels, dispatched 600
troops from Boston to seize a major supply depot at Concord. Almost
simultaneously the Boston council of safety, aware of Gage's intentions,
directed Paul Revere and William Dawes to ride ahead to warn militia
units and citizens along the way of the British approach, as well as
John Hancock and Samuel Adams, who were staying at nearby Lexington.
Forewarned, the two men went into hiding.
About 77 militiamen confronted the redcoats when they
plodded into Lexington at dawn. After some tense moments, as the sorely
outnumbered colonials were dispersing, blood was shed. More flowed at
Concord and much more along the route of the British as they retreated
to Boston, harassed most of the way by an aroused citizenry. What had
once been merely protest had evolved into open warfare; the War for
Independence had begun.
http://www.cr.nps.gov/history/online_books/declaration/intro.htm
Last Updated: 04-Jul-2004
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