Stamp Act Congress

Stamp Act Congress

Coat of arms or logo

New York's City Hall, Seat of Congress. 1790 hand-colored engraving by Amos Doolittle, depicting Washington's April 30, 1789 inauguration.
Type
Type
History
Established October 7, 1765
Disbanded October 25, 1765
Preceded by Albany Congress
Succeeded by First Continental Congress
Leadership
Chairman
Secretary
John Cotton
Seats 27 from 9 colonies
Meeting place
City Hall, New York ( later called Federal Hall)

The Stamp Act Congress or First Congress of the American Colonies was a meeting held between October 7 and 25, 1765 in New York City, consisting of representatives from some of the British colonies in North America; it was the first gathering of elected representatives from several of the American colonies to devise a unified protest against new British taxation. Parliament had passed the Stamp Act, which required the use of specially stamped paper for legal documents, playing cards, calendars, newspapers and dice for virtually all business in the colonies, and was going into effect on November 1.

The Congress was organized in response to a circular letter distributed by the colonial legislature of the Province of Massachusetts Bay, and consisted of delegates from nine of the eighteen British colonies in North America. All nine of the attending delegations were from the Thirteen Colonies that eventually formed the United States of America. Although sentiment was strong in some of the other colonies to participate in the Congress, a number of royal governors took steps to prevent the colonial legislatures from meeting to select delegates.

The Congress met in the building now known as Federal Hall, and was held at a time of widespread protests in the colonies, some of which were violent, against the Stamp Act's implementation. The delegates discussed and united against the act, issuing a Declaration of Rights and Grievances in which they claimed that Parliament did not have the right to impose the tax because it did not include any representation from the colonies. Members of six of the nine delegations signed petitions addressed to Parliament and King George III objecting to the Act's provisions.

The extra-legal nature of the Congress caused alarm in Britain, but any discussion of the congress's propriety were overtaken by economic protests from British merchants whose business with the colonies suffered as a consequence of the protests and their associated non-importation of British products. These economic issues prompted the British Parliament to repeal the Stamp Act, but it passed the Declaratory Act the same day, to express its opinion on the basic constitutional issues raised by the colonists; it stated that Parliament could make laws binding the American colonies "in all cases whatsoever."[1]

Background

Main article: Stamp Act 1765
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In the aftermath of the French and Indian War, the British Parliament sought to increase revenues from its overseas colonies, where the cost of stationing troops had become significant.[2] Parliament first passed the Sugar and Currency Acts in 1764, specifically aimed at raising money for the Crown,[1] through the tighter regulation of colonial trade. These acts had brought protests from colonial legislatures, but had skirted the idea of direct taxation by structuring their revenues as trade-related excise duties. Prime Minister George Grenville noted at the time of the Sugar Act's passage that a stamp tax might also be necessary, immediately raising concern and protest in the colonies.[3]

With the Stamp Act of 1765, Parliament attempted to raise money through direct taxation on the colonies for the first time. The act required that all sorts of printed material carry a stamp (purchased from a government agent) to show that the tax had been paid. Use of the stamped paper was required for newspapers, books, court documents, commercial papers, land deeds, almanacs, dice, and playing cards. The revenue was to help finance the operations of the empire, including the cost of stationing troops in the colonies, without seeking revenue through the established colonial assemblies (a method that had a history of failure).[4]

Call for congress

In June 1765, the Massachusetts Assembly drafted a letter, which was sent to the legislatures of "the several Colonies on this Continent" to "consult together on the present circumstances of the colonies".[5] Nine colonies ultimately selected delegates to attend the congress: Massachusetts, Rhode Island, Connecticut, New York, New Jersey, Pennsylvania, Delaware, Maryland, and South Carolina.[6] All of the delegates selected were members of their colonial legislative bodies.[7]

The methods by which delegates were selected were in some cases unorthodox. In Delaware, then known as the "Three Lower Counties" of the Penn proprietors, assembly members held informal meetings in each of the three counties, in each case selecting the same three delegates.[8] In New York, the assembly had been prorogued and was judged unlikely to be summoned by Lieutenant Governor Colden to consider the Massachusetts letter. The assembly's committee of correspondence, consisting of its New York City delegates, discussed the letter and decided under the circumstances to assume the authority to represent the colony.[9] New Jersey's assembly politely declined to send delegates before adjourning in late June, but after political sentiment against the Stamp Act became more pronounced, Speaker Robert Ogden called an extra-legal assembly (since only the governor could officially call it into session) in late September that chose three delegates. Governor William Franklin was upset at this action, but took no action beyond protesting the unusual meeting.[10] Maryland's assembly, prorogued because of a smallpox outbreak, was finally called into session by Governor Horatio Sharpe to consider the Massachusetts letter on September 23, and delegates were chosen.[11]

James Otis, Jr. (portrait by Joseph Blackburn) was described by John Adams as the soul of the congress.

The colonies that were not represented at the congress did not send delegates for a variety of reasons. The Virginia and Georgia assemblies were deliberately prevented from meeting by their governors.[12] New Hampshire chose not to send delegates due to an ongoing financial crisis in the colony; by the time some assembly members sought to reconsider this decision, the assembly had adjourned and Governor Benning Wentworth refused to call it into session.[13] North Carolina Lieutenant Governor William Tryon had prorogued the assembly for other reasons, and there was apparently no action taken to request a special session, despite public protests and opposition to the act by Speaker John Ashe.[14] Nova Scotia (which then included present-day Prince Edward Island and New Brunswick) declined to send delegates, despite significant economic connections to Massachusetts, and a strong presence of expatriate New Englanders in its assembly. Dominated by financial interests connected to England, the assembly never even considered a protest resolution against the Stamp Act.[15] Quebec, Newfoundland, and East and West Florida did not have colonial assemblies, and were not invited.[16]

When word of the pending congress reached London, the Lords of Trade were so disturbed that they wrote to the king that "this is a matter of the utmost importance to the Kingdom and legislature of Great Britain... and proper only for the consideration of Parliament."[17] Communications being slow, by the time Parliament was informed about its existence, the Stamp Act Congress was already in session.[17] The trade commissioners also noted that "this appears to us to be the first instance of any General Congress appointed by the Assemblies of the Colonies without the Authority of the Crown, a Measure which we Conceive of dangerous Tendency in itself".[18]

Proceedings

New York's Acting Governor Cadwallader Colden thought the Congress was unauthorized and illegal.

Delegates began to arrive in New York in late September, and a preliminary meeting was held by four delegations on September 30; what was discussed then is not known.[17] The first session of the Congress was held on October 7, in New York's City Hall (now known as Federal Hall). It elected Timothy Ruggles, a conservative Massachusetts delegate, as its chairman, narrowly rejecting James Otis, whom John Adams described as the soul of the body. John Cotton, the deputy secretary of the Massachusetts General Court, had been retained by the Massachusetts delegation to make a formal record, was chosen as the body's secretary and record keeper.[19] The selection of Ruggles as a delegate had been engineered by Massachusetts Governor Francis Bernard in the hopes of limiting the effectiveness of the congress.[20] His success in being elected chairman was due at least in part to the perception that Otis, a populist firebrand, "might give their meeting an ill grace."[21]

The formal sessions of the Stamp Act Congress were conducted behind closed doors, although some of its business may have been conducted in informal sessions held in coffeehouses and other establishments in the evenings. Lieutenant Governor Colden, unable to prevent the meeting, called it an "illegal convention", noting that "[w]hatever possible pretences may be used for this meeting their real intentions may be dangerous."[22] The delegates were clear that they were in fact loyal to the Crown. New York delegate Robert R. Livingston wrote that the Congress was designed to insure the unity of the British empire, for "if I really wished to see America in a state of independence, I should desire as one of the most effectual means to that end that the stamp act should be inforced."[23]

Little is known of the debates in congress. The official congressional journal, in an apparently deliberate move, only contains the barest details of official actions, and none of the participants kept private journals. As a result, accounts of the congress are based on fragmentary records from contemporary letters and publications.[24] In addition to selecting officers, the first sessions examined the credentials of each of the delegations; despite the unorthodox methods by which some were chosen, no delegates were rejected. They also debated on how voting in the body should take place, eventually agreeing that each delegation would cast a single vote.

The early substantive debates centered around issues raised by the Stamp Act and the earlier Sugar Act. The delegates spent a significant amount of time discussing the differences between direct ("internal") taxation and the regulation of trade (or "external taxation"), and seeking formal justification of the idea that only the colonial assemblies had the right to levy internal taxes.[25] Fairly early in the deliberations the delegates agreed to produce a statement of rights which would form the foundation for petitions the congress would submit to Parliament and the king. According to Delaware delegate Caesar Rodney, the drafting of this statement was made difficult by the desire to balance the colonists' rights with the royal prerogative and the acknowledged powers of Parliament.[26]

On October 19, the delegates adopted the Declaration of Rights and Grievances, a document primarily intended for local political discussion.[27] Over the next few days separate committees drafted three documents: an address to the king, a memorial to the House of Lords, and a petition to the House of Commons. Separate committees worked over the next few days to draft these, which were accepted after debate and revision by the delegates on October 22 and 23. When the issue of signing these documents was discussed on October 24, matters suddenly became more complicated. The delegations from Connecticut and South Carolina refused to sign the documents, citing their instructions specifically denying such power. New York's delegation also refused, citing the informality with which it had been selected.[28] From the other six delegations, New Jersey's Robert Ogden and Massachusetts' Timothy Ruggles both refused to sign, sparking a heated argument. Ruggles eventually moved that no one sign the documents, and that they instead be sent unsigned to the colonial assemblies. James Otis pointed out that the Massachusetts assembly had authorized its delegation to sign any jointly agreed documents, and that Ruggles' suggestion undermined the purpose of the congress to present a united front.[29] Although the other delegates from the six colonies did sign the petitions, Ruggles and Ogden did not, and both were called before their respective assemblies to justify their actions. Ruggles in his defense admitted that he was opposed to the substance of the documents, and Ogden argued weakly that he thought separate petitions would be more effective than a joint one. (Others noted that Parliament had already ignored such petitions.)[30] Ruggles and Thomas McKean had an angry exchange over the matter, resulting in Ruggles challenging McKean to a duel. The duel did not take place, and Ruggles left New York early the next morning.[31] The congress met again on October 25, at which time the petitions were signed, and arrangements were made for the transmission of some of the documents to England, and the making of copies for the non-participating colonies.[32]

Declaration and petitions

Wikisource has original text related to this article:

The Declaration of Rights contains fourteen statements. The first six lay groundwork, proclaiming loyalty to the crown, and asserting that, according to the Rights of Englishmen and the more general "freedom of a people", only representatives chosen by the colonists could levy taxes. Because Parliament did not have such representatives, it could not levy taxes. The seventh statement asserts that the Rights of Englishmen afford all colonists the right to trial by jury. The remaining statements protest the unconstitutionality of the Stamp Act, express the economic consequences act (which, among other things, would reduce trade to the detriment of English manufacturers), and reiterated the rights of the colonists to petition the crown and Parliament.

The petitions directed to the House of Lords and the king were written in flattering tones, gently stating the liberties the colonists had enjoyed as British subjects and hoping they would retain them. The petition to the Lords specifically acknowledged "due Subordination to that August Body the British Parliament."[27] In contrast, the petition addressed to the House of Commons was more detailed, advancing economic arguments against the Stamp Act and requesting the repeal of legislation creating a jury-less vice admiralty court at Halifax. It also reiterated the supremacy of Parliament.[33]

Reaction

Copies of the petitions left New York on two ships, including one that had arrived during the Congress, carrying stamped paper.[34] Lord Dartmouth, the colonial secretary, rejected the petition to the Lords, saying it was an inappropriate document. The House of Commons cited several reasons not to consider the petition, including: it had been submitted by an unconstitutional assembly; it denied Parliament's right to levy taxes; acceptance of the petition would constitute an admission that Parliament had erred. The weak Rockingham Ministry, laboring for support against political opponents, rallied merchant interests in opposition to the Stamp Act, and it was repealed primarily on the strength of economic arguments advanced by these interests. To address the constitutional issues raised by the North American protests, Parliament also passed the Declaratory Act, claiming the authority to legislate for the colonies "in all cases whatsoever".[35]

Legacy

This Congress is generally viewed as one of the first organized and coordinated political actions of the American Revolution, even though its participants were not at all interested in independence from Great Britain.[36] Despite significant political differences and disagreements between the Thirteen Colonies, tensions occasioned by the harsh Parliamentary response to the 1773 Boston Tea Party prompted the calling of the First Continental Congress, which produced a united response to the Intolerable Acts of 1774. Colonies such as Quebec and Nova Scotia that had only moderate opposition to the Stamp Act continued to act moderately through the rising protests, and remained Loyal during the American Revolutionary War.

Most of the official papers of the Congress have not survived. One copy of its journal, from the papers of Caesar Rodney, survives in the library at Rowan University in Glassboro, New Jersey,[37] and a second exists in the Connecticut state archives.[38] The Maryland copy of the journal, although the original is lost, was transcribed into its assembly's records and printed in 1766.[39] Inconsistencies within and between these documents make it uncertain whether any is an accurate representation of the official journal (which was probably taken to Massachusetts and was not located by Weslager in his research).[40]

Delegates

Name Province Notes
William Bayard New York Bayard, 38, was a wealthy New York City merchant. When the Revolutionary War broke out, he sided with the Loyalists, raising a provincial regiment for the British Army. His lands were confiscated; he died in England in 1804.[41]
Joseph Borden New Jersey Borden, 46, was a merchant, major landowner, and reputed to be one of the wealthiest men in New Jersey. His father founded Bordentown.[42]
Metcalf Bowler Rhode Island Bowler, 39, was a London-born farmer and merchant. Despite apparent sympathy for the cause of independence, he was in the 20th century unmasked as a spy for the British during the Revolutionary War.[43]
George Bryan Pennsylvania Bryan, an Irish immigrant aged about 34, was a Philadelphia businessman. He later served on the Pennsylvania Supreme Court.[44]
John Cruger New York Cruger, 55, was the Mayor of New York City, and had a long history of public service.[9]
John Dickinson Pennsylvania Dickinson, 33, was a lawyer from a wealthy family, who was active in Pennsylvania and Delaware politics. He later became one of the United States Founding Fathers, penning the influential Letters from a Farmer in Pennsylvania, drafting the Articles of Confederation, and signing the United States Constitution.[44]
Eliphalet Dyer Connecticut Dyer, 44, was a lawyer and land speculator. He was eventually appointed a judge in Connecticut, rising to be its chief justice after independence, and was a delegate to the Continental Congresses.
Hendrick Fisher New Jersey A lay preacher and successful farmer from Bound Brook, Fisher (estimated to be in his 60s at the time of the congress) immigrated from the Electorate of the Palatinate (present-day Germany) as a child. He represented Somerset County in the assembly for many years.[45]
Christopher Gadsden South Carolina Gadsden, 41, was a wealthy Charleston merchant and plantation owner. He was an important figure in South Carolina's Sons of Liberty and later served in the Continental Army.[46]
William Johnson Connecticut Johnson, 38, was a neutralist lawyer who later was a leading drafter of the United States Constitution.[47]
Leonard Lispenard New York Lispenard, 49, was a wealthy New York City merchant of Huguenot descent. He later became a leader in the New York Sons of Liberty.[9]
Philip Livingston New York Livingston, 49, was a member of the powerful Livingston family and a successful businessman and politician. He supported independence during the Revolutionary War. Delegate Robert Livingston was his cousin.[9]
Robert Livingston New York Livingston, 47, was a major provincial landowner, justice on New York's Supreme Court, and cousin to delegate Philip Livingston. He died in 1775.[9]
Thomas Lynch South Carolina Lynch, 38, was a major South Carolina plantation owner. A friend of co-delegate Christopher Gadsden, he later actively supported independence,[48] but died in 1776.
Thomas McKean Delaware McKean, 31, was a judge and lawyer from New Castle. He served in the Continental Congresses and was a vocal advocate of independence. He was one of the principal drafters of the Articles of Confederation.
John Morton Pennsylvania Morton, 41, was a successful farmer and surveyor. He served in both Continental Congresses, and signed the United States Declaration of Independence.[44]
William Murdock Maryland Murdock, 55, was a major landowner and sheriff of Prince George's County. He died in 1769.[49]
Robert Ogden New Jersey Ogden, who turned 49 during the Congress, was speaker of the New Jersey assembly and a major landowner.[42] He was one of two delegates who refused to sign the congress's petitions for personal political reasons.[29]
James Otis Massachusetts Otis, 40, was a lawyer from a family with a long history of political opposition to the family of Massachusetts Lieutenant Governor Thomas Hutchinson. Otis is widely credited with popularizing the phrase "no taxation without representation" in response to Parliamentary tax bills.
Oliver Partridge Massachusetts Partridge, 53, was a major landowner, politician, and militia officer from western Massachusetts. Politically Loyalist, he remained neutral during the Revolutionary War, retaining his lands and the respect of his Patriotic neighbors.
Thomas Ringgold Maryland Ringgold, 50, was a merchant and landowner from Maryland's Eastern Shore. He died in 1772.[49]
Caesar Rodney Delaware Rodney, 37, was a landowner, politician, and militia commander from Kent County. During the Revolutionary War he was active in suppressing Loyalist dissent in Delaware, signed the Declaration of Independence, and served as Delaware's president from 1778 to 1781.
David Rowland Connecticut Rowland, 51, was a Yale-educated legislator and judge from Fairfield. He died in 1768.[50]
Timothy Ruggles Massachusetts Ruggles, 54, was a conservative lawyer with a long history of public service.[51] When the Revolutionary War broke out he remained Loyal, and was eventually resettled in Nova Scotia.
John Rutledge South Carolina Rutledge was at 26 the youngest delegate. The provincial attorney general at the time of the congress, he later served in a variety of pro-independence roles in South Carolina, and was briefly appointed Chief Justice of the United States by George Washington in 1795.[46]
Edward Tilghman Maryland Tilghman, 54, was from a powerful Maryland family, and had served in public office for many years. He was a leading member of the anti-proprietary party in the provincial assembly, where he later served as speaker.[49]
Henry Ward Rhode Island Ward, 33, was from a wealthy and politically powerful family. He and his brother Samuel, who was governor of Rhode Island at the time of the congress, both supported independence.[43]
Source unless otherwise specified: Weslager, pp. 107–108

Jacob Kollock was also selected to represent the Delaware counties, and is known to have traveled to New York; however, there is no record of his attendance at the Congress' official sessions.[52] Joseph Fox, speaker of the Pennsylvania assembly, was also chosen as a delegate, but decided not to attend because conditions in Pennsylvania required his presence there.[53] Samuel Adams is often mistakenly listed as a delegate, but he is not on the list of delegates.[54]

Officers

See also

Footnotes

  1. 1 2 "America During the Age of Revolution, 1766–1767". Library of Congress. Retrieved 2012-03-22.
  2. Ritcheson, p. 16
  3. Ritcheson, pp. 19–28
  4. Morgan and Morgan, pp. 96–97
  5. Weslager, p. 60
  6. Morgan and Morgan, p. 108
  7. Weslager, p. 108
  8. Weslager, pp. 94–95
  9. 1 2 3 4 5 Weslager, p. 81
  10. Weslager, pp. 76–78
  11. Weslager, pp. 72–73
  12. Weslager, pp. 71, 99
  13. Weslager, p. 75
  14. Weslager, pp. 83–84
  15. Kerr, pp. 553–558
  16. Weslager, p. 61
  17. 1 2 3 Weslager, p. 121
  18. Weslager, p. 120
  19. Weslager, pp. 122–123
  20. Morgan and Morgan, p. 109
  21. Morgan and Morgan, p. 110
  22. Weslager, p. 116
  23. Weslager, p. 109
  24. Weslager, p. 126
  25. Weslager, pp. 126–127, 130–132
  26. Weslager, pp. 126–127
  27. 1 2 Weslager, p. 146
  28. Weslager, p. 143
  29. 1 2 Weslager, p. 149
  30. Weslager, pp. 149–151
  31. Weslager, p. 154
  32. Weslager, p. 157–159
  33. Weslager, p. 147
  34. Weslager, p. 159
  35. Morgan and Morgan, pp. 287–290
  36. Weslager, pp. 9–11
  37. Weslager, p. 171
  38. Weslager, p. 175
  39. Weslager, p. 172
  40. Weslager, pp. 171–173
  41. Weslager, p. 82
  42. 1 2 Weslager, p. 79
  43. 1 2 Weslager, p. 90
  44. 1 2 3 Weslager, p. 87
  45. Weslager, p. 80
  46. 1 2 Weslager, p. 92
  47. Weslager, p. 70
  48. Weslager, p. 93
  49. 1 2 3 Weslager, p. 74
  50. Weslager, p. 71
  51. Weslager, p. 66
  52. Weslager, p. 98
  53. Weslager, p. 86
  54. Weslager, p. 107

References

External links

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