A CENTURY and a half had now passed since the first
colony had been planted on American soil. The colonists were fast ripening
into fitness for independence. They had increased with marvellous rapidity.
Europe never ceased to send forth her superfluous and needy thousands.
America opened wide her hospitable arms and gave assurance of liberty and
comfort to all who came. The thirteen colonies now contained a population of
about three millions.
They
were eminently a trading people, and their foreign commerce was already
large and lucrative. New England built ships with the timber of her
boundless forests, and sold them to foreign countries. She caught fish and
sent them to the West Indies. She killed whales and sent the oil to England.
New York and Pennsylvania produced wheat, which Spain and Portugal were
willing to buy. Virginia clung to the tobacco-plant, which Europe was not
then, any more than she is now, wise enough to dispense with. The swampy
regions of Carolina and Georgia produced rice sufficient to supply the
European demand. As yet cotton does not take any rank in the list of
exports. But the time is near. Even now Richard Arkwright is brooding over
improvements in the art of spinning cotton. When these are perfected the
growing of cotton will rise quickly to a supremacy over all the industrial
pursuits.
England had not
learned to recognize the equality of her colonists with her own people. The
colonies were understood to exist not for their own good so much as for the
good of the mother country. Even the chimney-sweepers, as Lord Chatham
asserted, might be heard in the streets of London talking boastfully of
their subjects in America. Colonies were settlements "established in distant
parts of the world for the benefit of trade." As such they were most
consistently treated. The Americans could not import direct any article of
foreign production. Everything must be landed in England and re-shipped
thence, that the English merchant might have profit. One exemption only was
allowed from the operation of this law—the products of Africa, the unhappy
negroes, were conveyed direct to America, and every possible encouragement
was given to that traffic. Notwithstanding the illiberal restrictions of the
home government, the imports of America before the Revolution had risen
almost to the value of three millions sterling.
New England had very early, established her magnificent
system of Common Schools. For two or three generations these had been in
full operation. The people of New England were now probably the most
carefully instructed people in the world. There could not be found a person
born in New England unable to read and write. It had always been the
practice of the Northern people to settle in townships or villages where
education was easily carried to them. In the South it had not been so. There
the Common Schools had taken no root. It was impossible among a population
so scattered. The educational arrangements of the South have never been
adequate to the necessities of the people.
In
the early years of America, the foundations were laid of those differences
in character and interest which have since produced results of such
magnitude. The men who peopled the Eastern States had to contend with a
somewhat severe climate and a comparatively sterile soil. These
disadvantages imposed 111)011 them habits habits of industry and frugality.
Skilled labour alone could be of use in their circumstances. They were thus
mercifully rescued from the curse of slavery—by the absence of temptation,
it may be, rather than by superiority of virtue. Their simple purity of
manners remained long uncorrupted. The firm texture of mind which upheld
them in their early difficulties remained unenfeebled. Their love of liberty
was not perverted into a passion for supremacy. Among them labour was not
degraded by becoming the function of a despised race. In New England labour
has always been honourable. A just- minded, self-relying, self-helping
people, vigorous in acting, patient in enduring—it was evident from the
outset that they, at least, would not disgrace their ancestry.
The men of the South were very differently
circumstanced. Their climate was delicious; their soil was marvellously
fertile; their products were welcome in the markets of the world; unskilled
labour was applicable in the rearing of all their great staples. Slavery
being exceedingly profitable, struck deep roots very early. It was easy to
grow rich. The colonists found themselves not the employers merely, but the
owners of their labourers. They became aristocratic in feeling and in
manners, resembling the picturesque chiefs of old Europe rather than more
prosaic growers of tobacco and rice. They had the virtues of chivalry, and
also its vices. They were generous, open-handed, hospitable. But they were
haughty and passionate, improvident, devoted to pleasure and amusement more
than to work of any description. Living apart, each on his own plantation,
the education of children was frequently imperfect, and the planter himself
was bereft of that wholesome discipline to mind and to temper winch
residence among equals confers. The two great divisions of States—those in
which slavery was profitable, and those in which it was unprofitable—were
unequally yoked together. Their divergence of character and interest
continued to increase, till it issued in one of the greatest of recorded
wars. Up to the year 1764, the Americans
cherished a deep reverence and affection for the mother country. They were
proud of her great place among the nations. They gloried in the splendour of
her military achievements. They copied her manners and her fashions. She was
in all things their model. They always spoke of England as "home." To be an
Old England man was to be a person of rank and importance among them. They
yielded a loving obedience to her laws. They were governed, as Benjamin
Franklin stated it, at the expense of a little pen and ink. When money was
asked from their Assemblies, it was given without grudge. "They were led by
a thread," —such was their love for the land which gave them birth.
Ten or twelve years came and went. A marvellous change
has passed Ul)Ofl the temper of the American people. They have bound
themselves by great oaths to use no article of English manufacture—to engage
in no transaction which can put a shilling into any English pocket. They
have formed "the inconvenient habit of carting"--that is, of tarring and
feathering and dragging through the streets such persons as avow friend-
ship for the English Government. They burn the Acts of the English
Parliament by the hands of the common hangman. They slay the King's
soldiers. They refuse every amicable proposal. They east from them for ever
the King's authority. They hand down a dislike to the English name, of which
some traces lingered among them for generations.
By what unhallowed magic has this change been wrought
so swiftly? By what process, in so few years, have three millions of people
been taught to abhor the country they so loved?
The ignorance and folly of the English Government
wrought this evil. But there is little cause for regret. Under the fuller
knowledge of our modern time, colonies are allowed to discontinue their
connection with the mother country when it is their wish to do so. Better
had America one in pee. But better she went, even in wrath and bloodshed,
than continued in paralyzing dependence upon England. For many years
England had governed her American colonies harshly, and in a spirit of
undisguised selfishness. America was ruled, not for her own good, but for
the good of English commerce. She was not allowed to export her products
except to England. No foreign ship might enter her ports. Woollen goods were
not allowed to be sent from one colony to another. At one time the
manufacture of hats was forbidden. In a liberal mood Parliament removed that
prohibition, but decreed that no maker of hats should employ any negro
workman, or any larger number of apprentices than two. Iron-works were
forbidden. Up to the latest hour of English rule the Bible was not allowed
to be printed in America.
The Americans had
long borne the cost of their own government and defence. But in that age of
small revenue and profuse expenditure on unmeaning continental wars, it had
been often suggested that America should be taxed for the purposes of the
home Government. Some one proposed that to Sir Robert Walpole in a time of
need. The wise Sir Robert shook his head. It must be a holder man than he
was who would attempt that. A man bolder, because less wise, was found in
due time. 1764 A.D.
The Seven Years' War had ended, and England had
added a hundred millions to her national debt. The country was suffering, as
countries always do after great wars, and it was no easy matter to fit the
new burdens on to the national shoulder. The hungry eye of Lord Grenville
searched where a new tax might be laid. The Americans had begun visibly to
prosper. Already their growing wealth was the theme of envious discourse
among English merchants. The English officers who had fought in America
spoke in glowing terms of the magnificent hospitality which had been
extended to them. No more need be said. The House of Commons passed a
resolution asserting their right to tax the Americans. No solitary voice was
raised against this fatal resolution. Immediately after, an Act was passed
imposing certain taxes UI)Ofl silks, coffee, sugar, and other articles. The
Americans remonstrated. They were willing, they said, to vote what moneys
the King required of them, but they vehemently denied the right of any
Assembly in which they were not represented to take from them any portion of
their property. They were the subjects of the King, but they owed no
obedience to the English Parliament. Lord Grenville went on his course. He
had been told the Americans would complain but submit, and he believed it.
Next session an Act was passed imposing Stamp Duties on America. The measure
awakened no interest. Edmund Burke said he had never been present at a more
languid debate. In the House of Lords there was no debate' at all. With so
little trouble was a continent rent away from the British Empire.
1765 A.D.
Benjamin Franklin told the house of Commons that
America would never submit to the Stamp Act, and that no power on earth
could enforce it. The Americans made it impossible for Government to mistake
their sentiments. Riots, which swelled from day to clay into dimensions more
"enormous and alarming," burst forth in the New England States. Everywhere
the stamp distributers were compelled to resign their offices. One
unfortunate man was led forth to Boston Common, and made to sign his
resignation in presence of a vast crowd. Another, in desperate health, was
visited in his sick-room and obliged to pledge that if he lived lie would
resign. A universal resolution was come to that no English goods would be
imported till the Stamp Act was re- pealed. The colonists would 11eat
nothing, drink nothing, wear nothing, that comes from England," while this
great injustice endured. The Act was to come into force on the 1st of
November. That day the bells rang out funereal peals, and the colonists wore
the aspect of men on whom some heavy calamity has fallen. But the Act never
came into force. Not one of Lord Grenville's stamps was ever bought or sold
in America. Some of the stamped paper was burned by the mob. The rest was
hidden away to save it from the same fate. Without stamps, marriages were
null; mercantile transactions ceased to be binding; suits at law were
impossible. Nevertheless the business of human life went on. Men married;
they bought, they sold; they went to law—illegally, because without stamps.
But no harm came of it.
1766 A.D.
England heard with amazement that America refused to
obey the law. There were some who demanded that the Stamp Act should be
enforced by the sword. But it greatly moved the English merchants that
America should cease to import their Pods. William Pitt—not yet Earl of
Chatham—denounced the Act, and said he was glad America had resisted. Pitt
and the merchants triumphed, and the Act was repealed. There was
illumination in the city that night. The city bells rang for joy. The ships
in the Thames displayed all their colours. The saddest heart in all London
was that of poor King George, who never ceased to lament "the fatal repeal
of the Stamp Act." All America thrilled with joy and pride when news arrived
of the great triumph. They voted Pitt a statue. They set apart a day for
public rejoicing. All prisoners for debt were set free. A great deliverance
had been granted, and the delight of the gladdened people knew no bounds.
The danger is over for the present. But whosoever governs America now has
need to walk warily.
It was during the
agitation arising out of the Stamp Act that the idea of a General Congress
of the States was suggested. A loud cry for union had arisen. "Join or die
"was the prevailing sentiment. The Congress met in New York. It did little
more than discuss and petition. It is interesting merely as one of the first
exhibitions of a tendency towards federal union in a country whose destiny,
in all coming time, this tendency was to fix.
The repeal of the Stamp Act delayed only for a little the fast-coming
crisis. A new Ministry was formed, with the Earl of Chatham at its head. But
soon the great Earl lay sick and helpless, and the burden of government
rested on incapable shoulders. Charles Townshend, a clever, captivating, but
most indiscreet man, became the virtual Prime Minister. The feeling in the
public mind had now become more unfavourable to America. Townshend proposed
to levy a variety of taxes from the Americans. The most famous of his taxes
was one of threepence per pound on tea. All his proposals became law.
This time the more thoughtful Americans began to
despair of justice. The boldest scarcely ventured yet to suggest revolt
against England, so powerful and so loved. But the grand final refuge of
independence was silently brooded over by many. The mob fell back on their
customary solution. Great riots occurred. To quell these disorders English
troops encamped on Boston Common. The town swarmed with red-coated men,
every one of whom was a humiliation. Their drums beat on Sabbath, and
troubled the orderly men of Boston even in church. At intervals fresh
transports dropped in, bearing additional soldiers, till a great force
occupied the town. The galled citizens could ill brook to be thus bridled.
The ministers prayed to Heaven for deliverance from the presence of the
soldiers. The General Court of Massachusetts called vehemently on the
Governor to remove them. The Governor had no powers in that matter. Tie
called upon the court to make suitable provision for the King's troops, —a
request which it gave the court infinite pleasure to refuse.
1770 A.D.
The universal
irritation broke forth in frequent brawls between soldiers and people. One
wintry moonlight night in March, when snow and ice lay about the streets of
Boston, a more than usually determined attack was made upon a party of
soldiers. The mob thought the soldiers dared not fire without the order of a
magistrate, and were very bold in the strength of that belief. It proved a
mistake. The soldiers did fire, and the blood of eleven slain or wounded
persons stained the frozen streets. This was "the Boston Massacre," which
greatly inflamed the patriot antipathy to the mother country.
Two or three unquiet years passed. No progress towards
a settlement of differences had been made. From all the colonies there came,
loud and unceasing, the voice of complaint and remonstrance. It fell upon
unheeding ears. England was committed. To her honour be it said, it was not
in the end for money that she alienated her children. The tax on tea must be
maintained to vindicate the authority of England. But when the tea was
shipped, such a drawback was allowed that the price would actually have been
lower in America than it was at home.
The
Americans had, upon the whole, kept loyally to their purpose of importing no
English goods, specially no goods on which duty could be levied.
Occasionally, a patriot of the more worldly-minded sort yielded to
temptation, and secretly despatched an order to England. He was forgiven, if
penitent. If obdurate, his name was published, and a resolution of the
citizens to trade no more with a person so unworthy soon brought him to
reason. But, in the main, the colonists were true to their bond, and when
they could no longer smuggle they ceased to import.
1773 A.D.
The
East India Company accumulated vast quantities of unsaleable tea. A market
must be found. Several ships were freighted with tea, and sent out to
America. Cheaper tea was never seen in America, but it bore upon it the
abhorred tax which asserted British control over the property of Americans.
Will the Americans, long bereaved of the accustomed beverage, yield to the
temptation, and barter their honour for cheap tea I The East India Company
never doubted it. But the Company knew nothing of the temper of the American
people. The ships arrived at New York and Philadelphia. These cities stood
firm. The ships were promptly sent home—their hatches unopened—and duly bore
their rejected cargoes back to the Thames.
When the ships destined for Boston showed their tall masts in the bay, the
citizens ran together to hold council. It was Sabbath, and the men of Boston
were strict. But here was an exigency, in presence of which all ordinary
rules are suspended. The crisis has come at length. If that tea is landed it
will he sold, it will be used, and American liberty will become a byword
upon the earth. Samuel Adams was the true King
in Boston at that time. lie was a man in middle life, of cultivated mind and
stainless reputation—a powerful speaker and writer—a man in whose sagacity
and moderation all men trusted. He resembled the old Puritans in his stern
love of liberty—his reverence for the Sabbath—his sincere, if somewhat
formal, observance of all religious ordinances. He was among the first to
see that there was no resting-place in this struggle short of independence.
"We are free," he said, "and want no King." The men of Boston felt the power
of his resolute spirit, and manfully followed where Samuel Adams led.
It was hoped that the agents of the East India Company
would have consented to send the ships home. But the agents refused. Several
days of excitement and ineffectual negotiation ensued. People flocked in
from the neighbouring towns. The time was spent mainly in public meeting.
The city resounded with impassioned discourse. But meanwhile the ships lay
peacefully at their moorings, and the tide of patriot talk seemed to flow in
vain. Other measures were visibly necessary. One day a meeting was held, and
the excited people continued in hot debate till the shades of evening fell.
No progress was made. At length Samuel Adams stood up in the dimly-lighted
church, and announced, "This meeting can do nothing more to save the
country." With a stern shout the meeting broke up. Fifty men disguised as
Indians hurried down to the wharf, each man with a hatchet in his hand. The
crowd followed. The ships were hoarded the chests of tea were brought on
deck, broken up, and flung into the bay. The approving citizens looked on in
silence. It was felt by all that the step was grave and eventful in the
highest degree. So still was the crowd that no sound was heard but the
stroke of the hatchet and the splash of the shattered chests as they fell
into the sea. All questions about the disposal of those cargoes of tea at
all events are now solved.
This is what
America has done. It is for England to make the next move. Lord North was
now at the head of the British Government. It was his lordship's belief that
the troubles in America sprang from a small number of ambitious persons, and
could easily, by proper firmness, be suppressed. "The Americans will be
lions while we are lambs," said General Gage. The King believed this. Lord
North believed it. In this deep ignorance he proceeded to deal with the
great emergency. Ile closed Boston as a port for the landing and shipping of
goods. lie imposed a fine to indemnify the East India Company for their lost
teas. lie withdrew the Charter of Massachusetts. Ile authorized the Governor
to send political offenders to England for trial. Great voices were raised
against these seventies. Lord Chatham, old in constitution now, if not in
years, and near the close of his career, pled for measures of conciliation.
Edmund Burke justified the resistance of the Americans. Their opposition was
fruitless. All Lord North's measures of repression became law; and General
Gage, with an additional force of soldiers, was sent to Boston to carry them
into effect. Gage was an authority on American affairs. lie had fought under
Braddock. Among blind men the one-eyed man is king. Among the profoundly
ignorant, the man with a little knowledge is irresistibly persuasive. "Four
regiments sent to Boston," said the hopeful Gage, "will prevent any
disturbance." He was believed; but, unhappily for his own comfort, he was
sent to Boston to secure the fulfilment of his own prophecy. Ile threw up
some fortifications and lay as in a hostile city. The Americans appointed a
day of fasting and humiliation. They did more. They formed themselves into
military companies. They occupied themselves with drill. They laid up stores
of ammunition. Most of them had muskets, and could use them. He who had no
musket now got one. They hoped that civil war would be averted, but there
was no harm in being ready.
1774 A.D.
While General Gage was throwing up his fortifications
at Boston, there met at Philadelphia a Congress of dele- gates, sent by the
States, to confer in regard to the troubles which were thickening round
them. Twelve States were represented. Georgia as yet paused timidly on the
brink of the Perilous enterprise. They were notable men who met there, and
their work is held in enduring honour. "For genuine sagacity, for singular
moderation, for solid wisdom," said the great Earl of Cliatham, "the
Congress of Philadelphia shines unrivalled." The low-roofed quaint old room
in which their their meetings were held, became one of the shrines which
Americans delight to visit. George Washington was there, and his massive
sense and copious knowledge were a supreme guiding power. Patrick Henry,
then a young man, brought to the council a wisdom beyond his years, and a
fiery eloquence, which, to some of his hearers, seemed almost more than
human. He had already proved his unfitness for farming and for shop-keeping.
lie was now to prove that he could utter words which swept over a continent,
thrilling men's hearts like the voice of the trumpet, and rousing them to
heroic deeds. John Routledge from South Carolina aided him with an eloquence
little inferior to his own. Richard Henry Lee, with his Roman aspect, his
bewitching voice, his ripe scholarship, his rich stores of historical and
political knowledge, would have graced the highest assemblies of the Old
World. John Dickenson, the wise farmer from the banks of the Delaware, whose
Letters had (lone so much to form the public sentiment—his enthusiastic love
of England overborne by his sense of wrong— took regretful but resolute part
in withstanding the tyranny of the English Government.
We have the assurance of Washington that the members of
this Congress did not aim at independence. As yet it was their wish to have
wrongs redressed and to continue British subjects. Their proceedings give
ample evidence of this desire. They drew up a narrative of their wrongs. As
a means of obtaining redress, they adopted a resolution that all commercial
intercourse with Britain should cease. They addressed the King, imploring
his majesty to remove those grievances which endangered their relations with
him. They addressed the people of Great Britain, with whom, they, said, they
deemed a union as their greatest glory and happiness; adding, however, that
they would not be hewers of wood and drawers of water to any nation in the
world. They appealed to their brother colonists of Canada for support in
their peaceful resistance to oppression. But Canada, newly conquered from
France, was peopled almost wholly by Frenchmen. A Frenchman of that time was
contented to enjoy such an amount of liberty and property as his King was
pleased to permit. And so from Canada there came no response of sympathy or
help.
Here Congress paused. Some members believed, with
Washington, that their remonstrances would be effectual. Others, less
sanguine, looked for no settlement but that which the sword might bring.
They adjourned, to meet again next May. This is enough for the present. What
further steps the new events of that coming summer may call for, we shall be
prepared, with God's help, to take.
England
showed no relenting in her treatment of the Americans. The King gave no
reply to the address of Congress. The Houses of Lords and of Commons refused
even to allow that address to be read in their hearing. The King announced
his firm purpose to reduce the refractory colonists to obedience. Parliament
gave loyal assurances of support to the blinded monarch. All trade with the
colonies was forbidden. All American ships and cargoes might be seized by
those who were strong enough to do so. The alternative presented to the
American choice was without disguise. The Americans had to fight for their
liberty, or forego it. The people of England had, in those days, no control
over the government of their country. All this was managed for them by a few
great families. Their allotted part was to toil hard, pay their taxes, and
be silent. If they had been permitted to speak, their voice would have
vindicated the men who asserted the right of self-government--a right which
Englishmen themselves were not to enjoy for many a long year.
1775 A. D.
General Gage had learned that considerable stores of
ammunition were collected at the village of Concord, eighteen miles from
Boston. He would seize them in the King's name. Late one April night eight
hundred soldiers set out on this errand. They hoped their coining would be
unexpected, as care had been taken to prevent the tidings from being carried
out of Boston. But as they marched, the clang of bells and the firing of
guns gave warning far and near of their approach. In the early morning they
reached Lexing- ton. Some hours before, a body of militia awaited them
there. But the morning was chill and the hour untimely. The patriots were
allowed to seek the genial shelter of the tavern. They were pledged to
appear at beat of drum. Seventy of them did so, mostly, we are told, "in a
confused state." Major Pitcairn commanded them to disperse. The patriots did
not at once obey the summons. It was impossible that seventy volunteers
could mean to fight eight hundred British soldiers. It is more likely they
did not clearly understand what was required of them. Firing ensued. The
Americans say that the first shot came from the British. Major Pitcairn
always asserted that he himself saw a countryman give the first fire from
behind a wail. It can never be certainly known. There was now firing enough.
The British stood and shot, in their steady unconcerned way, at the poor
mistaken seventy. The patriots fled fast. Eighteen of their number did not
join the flight. These lay in their blood on the village green, dead or
wounded men. Thus was the war begun between England and her colonies.
The British pushed on to Concord, and destroyed all the
military stores they could find. It was not much, for there had been time to
carry off nearly everything. By noon the work was done, and the wearied
troops turned their faces towards Boston.
They
were not suffered to march alone. All that morning grim-faced yeomen—of the
Ironside type, each man with a musket in his hand—had been hurrying into
Concord. The British march was mainly on a road cut through dense woods. As
they advanced, the vengeful yeomanry hung upon their flanks and rear. On
every side there streamed forth an incessant and murderous fire. The men
fell fast. No effort could dislodge those deadly but almost unseen foes.
During all the terrible hours of that return march the fire of the Americans
never flagged, and could seldom be returned. It was sunset ere the soldiers,
half dead with fatigue, got home to Boston. In killed, wounded, and
prisoners, this fatal expedition had cost nearly three hundred men. The
blood shed at Lexington had been swiftly and deeply avenged.
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