-
The Stamp Act; its effects in America; Virginia leads
the Opposition to it; riots and
destruction of property in
Boston; petitions against the Stamp Act in England;
repeal
of the Stamp Act; rejoicings at its repeal in England and
America; the
Declaratory Act.
283-293
-
Containing extracts of the celebrated speeches of
Mr. Charles Townsend and Colonel Barré on
passing the
Stamp Act
294
-
Remarks on the speeches of the Right Honourable Mr.
Townsend and Colonel Barré; Puritan
treatment of the Indians
296
-
Containing the speeches of Lords Chatham and Camden
on the Stamp Act and its repeal
302
-
Dr. Franklin's evidence at the Bar of the House of Commons
308
-
Authority of Parliament over the British Colonies.
317-322
-
Summary of Events from the Repeal of the Stamp Act,
March, 1766, to the end of
the year.
323-328
-
1767.—A New Parliament; first Act against the
Province of New York; Billeting
soldiers on the Colonies.
329-336
-
Raising a revenue by Act of Parliament in the Colonies
330
-
Three Bills brought in, and passed by Parliament, to
raise a revenue in the Colonies
331
-
Vice-Admiralty Courts and the Navy employed as custom-house
officers
334
-
The effect of these Acts and measures in the Colonies
335
-
Events of 1768.—Protests and Loyal Petitions of the
Colonists against the English Parliamentary Acts for
raising revenues in the Colonies.
337-352
-
Petition to the King
337
-
Noble circular of the Massachusetts Legislative
Assembly to the Assemblies of the other Colonies,
on
the unconstitutional and oppressive Acts of the British
Parliament
338
-
This circular displeasing to the British Ministry, and
strongly condemned by it in a circular from the
Earl of
Hillsborough
341
-
Admirable and patriotic reply of the Virginia House of
Burgesses to the Massachusetts circular
342
-
Similar replies from the Legislative Assemblies of
other Colonies
343
-
Excellent answer of the General Assembly of Maryland to
a message of the Governor on the same subject
344
-
The effects of Lord Hillsborough's circular letter to the
Colonial Governors
345
-
Experiment of the newly asserted power of Parliament to
tax and rule the Colonies, commended at
Boston and in
Massachusetts
348
-
Three causes for popular irritation; seizures; riotous
resistance; seven hundred soldiers landed, and
required to
be provided for, which was refused; the Provincial Assembly
and its proceedings; ships of
war in Boston Harbour
348
-
Events of 1769.—Unjust imputations of Parliament on
the loyalty of the Colonists,
and misrepresentations of
their just and loyal petitions.
353-363
-
Manly response to these imputations on the part of the
Colonists, and their assertion of British
constitutional
rights, led by the General Assembly of Virginia
355
-
Dissolution of Colonial Assemblies; agreements for the
non-importation of British manufactured
goods entered
into by the Colonists
356
-
The General Assembly of Massachusetts refuse to legislate
under the guns of a land and naval force;
Governor
Barnard's reply
357
-
Proceedings of the Governor and House of Assembly on
quartering troops in Boston
358
-
Governor Barnard's recall and character (in a note)
359
-
Origin of the non-importation agreement in New York;
sanctioned by persons in the highest stations;
union of
the Colonies planned
360
-
Sons of Governors Barnard and Hutchinson refuse to enter
into the non-importation agreement
360
-
They were at length compelled to yield; humiliating
position of the soldiers in Boston; successful
resistance
of the importation of British goods
360
-
Joy in the Colonies by a despatch from Lord Hillsborough
promising to repeal the obnoxious
Revenue Acts, and to
impose no more taxes on the Colonies
361
-
The duty of threepence per pound on tea excepted
363
-
Events of 1770.—An eventful epoch.—Expectations
of reconciliation and union
disappointed.
364-373
-
Collisions between the soldiers and inhabitants in Boston
365
-
The soldiers insulted and abused
365
-
The Boston Massacre; the soldiers acquitted by a Boston jury
365
-
The payment of official salaries independent of the
Colonies another cause of dissatisfaction
366
-
What had been claimed by the old American Colonies contended
for in Canada, and granted,
to the satisfaction and progress
of the country
367
-
Lord North's Bill to repeal the Colonial Revenue Acts,
except the duty on tea, which he refused to
repeal until
"America should be prostrate at his feet"
368
-
Governor Pownall's speech and amendment to repeal the
duty on tea, rejected by a majority of 242
to 204
369
-
Associations in the Colonies against the use of tea
imported from England
370
-
The tea duty Act of Parliament virtually defeated in America
370
-
The controversy revived and intensified by the agreement
between Lord North and the East India
Company, to remit
the duty of a shilling in the pound on all teas exported
by it to America, where the
threepence duty on the pound
was to be collected
371
-
Combined opposition of English and American merchants,
and the Colonists from New Hampshire to
Georgia, against
this scheme
372
-
Events of 1771, 1772, 1773.—The East India Company's
tea rejected in every province of
America; not a chest of
its tea sold; resolutions of a public meeting in Philadelphia
on the subject, the model for those of other Colonies.
374-387
-
The Governor, Hutchinson, of Massachusetts, and his
sons (the consignees), alone determined to
land the tea
at Boston
376
-
The causes and affair of throwing the East India Company's
tea into the Boston Harbour, as stated on
both sides
377
-
The causes and the disastrous effect of the arrangement
between the British Ministry and the East India
Company
381
-
The King the author of the scheme; His Majesty's
condemnation of the petitions and remonstrances from
the Colonies (in a note)
382
-
Governor Hutchinson's proceedings, and his account of
the transactions at Boston
383
-
His vindication of himself, and description of his
pitiable condition
383
-
Remarks on the difference between his conduct and that of
the Governors of other provinces
387
-
Events of 1774.—All classes in the Colonies
discontented; all classes and all the
provinces reject
the East India Company's tea.
388-402
-
Opposition to the tea duty represented in England as
"rebellion," and the advocates of colonial rights
designated "rebels" and "traitors"
388
-
Three Acts of Parliament against the inhabitants of
Boston and of Massachusetts, all infringing and
extinguishing the heretofore acknowledged constitutional
rights and liberties of the people
389
-
Debates in Parliament, and misrepresentations of the
English press on American affairs
390
-
Lord North explains the American policy; the Bill to
punish the town of Boston; petitions against it from
the
agent of Massachusetts and the city of London; debates on
it in the Commons and Lords
394
-
Distress of Boston; addresses of sympathy, and contributions
of relief from other towns and provinces;
generous conduct
of the inhabitants of Massachusetts and Salem
395
-
The second penal Bill against Massachusetts, changing
the constitution of the government of the province
396
-
Third penal Bill for the immunity of governors,
magistrates, and other public officers in Massachusetts
396
-
The fourth Act of Parliament, legalizing the quartering
of the troops in Boston
397
-
The effects of these measures in the Colonies the reverse
of what their authors and advocates had
anticipated; all
the Colonies protest against them
397
-
General Gage's arrival in Boston, and courteous reception,
as successor to Governor Hutchinson—his
character (in a note)
398
-
Meeting of the Massachusetts Legislature; adjournment to
Salem; their respectful, loyal, but firm reply
to the
Governor's speech; his bitter answer
399
-
Courteous, loyal, and patriotic answer of the Assembly
to the Governor's speech
400
-
The House of Assembly proceed with closed doors, and
adopt, by a majority of 92 to 12, resolutions
declaring
the necessity of a meeting of all the Colonies to consult
together upon the present state of the
Colonies
401
-
Curious dissolution of the last Legislature held in
the Province of Massachusetts, according to the tenor
of
its Charter (in a note)
401
-
1774, Continued until the Meeting of the First
General Congress in September.
403-408
-
Resolutions in all the Colonies in favour of a general
Convention or Congress, and election of
delegates to it
403
-
General sympathy and liberality on behalf of the town
of Boston
404
-
How information on subjects of agitation was rapidly
diffused throughout the Colonies
405
-
The Act of Parliament changing the Constitution of
Massachusetts without its consent gave rise to
the
American Revolution; the authority of that Act never
acknowledged in Massachusetts
407
-
General Congress or Convention at Philadelphia,
September and October, 1774.
409-421
-
The word Congress "defined"
409
-
Each day's proceedings commenced with prayer; each
Province allowed but one vote
410
-
The members of the Congress and their constituents
throughout the Colonies thoroughly loyal,
while
maintaining British constitutional rights
410
-
The declaration of rights and grievances by this
Congress (in a note)
411
-
The explicit, loyal, and touching address and petition of
this Congress to the King
414
-
Manly and affectionate appeal to the British nation
416
-
The address of the members of the Congress to their
constituents—a temperate and lucid exposition
of their
grievances and sentiments
417
-
Reasons for giving a summary and extracts of these
addresses of the first General Congress
418
-
General elections in England hastened; adverse to the Colonies
419
-
The King's speech at the opening of the new Parliament,
the 30th of November, and answers of both
Houses
419
-
Opposition in both Houses; protest in the Lords
420
-
The proceedings of the first American Congress reach
England before the adjournment of Parliament for
the
Christmas holidays, and produce an impression favourable
to the Colonies; hopes of a change of the
Ministerial policy in regard to the Colonies
420
(1775.)
-
The re-assembling of Parliament the 20th of January;
letters from Colonial
Governors, revenue and military officers,
against the Colonists opposed to the
Ministerial Policy and
the Parliamentary Acts; the Ministry, supported by
Parliament,
determine upon continuing and strengthening the coercive policy
against the Colonies.
422-432
-
The Earl of Chatham's amendment and speech in the Lords,
against the coercive policy of the
Ministry and in behalf
of Colonial rights, supported by other Lords and
numerous politicians
423
-
Lord Suffolk in favour of coercion; Lord Camden against it,
and in favour of the rights of the
Colonies; Lord Chatham
and others denounced by the King (in a note)
424
-
The amendment negatived by a majority of 68 to 18; but the
King's own brother, the Duke of
Cumberland, was one of the
minority; yet the King boasted of the "handsome majority" in
support
of his coercive policy
425
-
The Earl of Chatham's bill "to settle the troubles in
America," not allowed a first reading in the
Lords
425
-
Petitions from various towns in England, Scotland, and
Ireland against the American policy of
the ministry
425
-
Petition to the Commons from Dr. Franklin, Mr. Bollan,
and Mr. Lee, Colonial agents, praying to
be heard at
the bar of the House in support of the petition of the
American Continental Congress,
rejected by a
majority of 218 to 68
426
-
Dr. Franklin's dismissal from office; his success in
office; his sentiments on the rejection of
the petitions
of the Colonies and punishment of their agents (in a note)
426
-
Lord North's resolution for an address (given entire) to
the King, endorsing the coercive policy,
and denouncing
complaints and opposition to it in America as "rebellion"
426
-
Remarks on the gross inaccuracies and injustice and
empty promises of this address
428
-
Debates in the Commons on Lord North's address to the King
429
-
Mr. Fox's amendment to Lord North's address rejected by a
majority of 304 to 105
430
-
Second great debate on Lord North's warlike resolution for an
address to the King, and Lord John
Cavendish's amendment to
it; speakers on both sides
430
-
Lord North's address, made the joint address of both Houses
of Parliament, presented to the King,
with His Majesty's reply
431
-
Remarks on the King's reply, and the proceedings of Parliament
in respect to the Colonies
431
-
The Ministry and Parliament virtually declare war against the
Colonies
432
(1775, Continued.)
-
Parliament proceeds to pass an Act to punish the New
England Colonies for
sympathising with Massachusetts, by
restricting their trade to England and
depriving them of
the Newfoundland Fisheries.
433-441
-
Parliament passes a second Act to punish in the same way
all the Colonies, for the same reason
as those of the New
England Colonies, except New York, Delaware, North Carolina;
these
Provinces decline the exception
433
-
Much expected from the General Assembly of New York, which
had not endorsed the first
Continental Congress; the
Assembly meets and adopts a petition and remonstrances on
the
grievances of all the Colonies, including Massachusetts;
this address, adopted as late as May, 1775,
a Loyal United
Empire Document; extracts from this admirable and statesmanlike
address
434
-
Mr. Burke, in a conciliatory speech, proposes to present
this memorial to the House of Commons
437
-
Lord North opposes it
438
-
Mr. Fox defends it, and moves against its rejection
438
-
Governor Johnstone justifies the reception of it by example
439
-
Lord North's amendment to reject the petition adopted by a
majority of 186 to 67
439
-
The memorial, after debate, rejected by the House of Lords
440
-
Reflections of the royal historian on the effect upon the
public mind in England from the rejection of the
New York
Assembly's appeal by both Houses of Parliament (in a note)
440
-
The Colonists still persist in hopes of reconciliation and
the maintenance of their constitutional rights,
without
entertaining a thought of independence
441
(1775, Continued.)
-
The second Continental Congress in America.
442-458
-
The second Continental Congress meets at Philadelphia,
in the month of September
442
-
Number and character of its members
442
-
Their credentials and instructions to seek remedies for
grievances, but not separation from the
Mother Country;
mode of proceeding
443
-
Noble and affectionate petition to the King
443
-
This petition read in the House of Commons the 7th of
December, 1775, but rejected
444
-
Penn, the agent of the Congress, not asked a question
when he presented the petition, and was
refused an
interview by the King (in a note)
444
-
The King's answer a proclamation declaring the petition
"rebellion" and the petitioners "rebels"
445
-
The effect of this proclamation upon the Continental
Congress, and of the accompanying announcement,
that the
army and navy were to be greatly increased, and seventeen
thousand mercenary soldiers from
Hanover and Hesse were
to be engaged to bring the Colonists to absolute submission
446
-
Refusal of English Generals and soldiers to fight against
the Colonists (in a note)
446
-
Bombardment and burning of Falmouth (now Portland) by
Captain Mowat, of the British navy
(two accounts of
it, in a note)
446
-
The large majority of the Congress yet opposed to
independence, but were unanimously in favour
of energetic
measures for the defence of their constitutional rights
448
-
Tom Paine's appeal to the Colonists, called Common Sense,
the first publication in America
against monarchy
450
-
But the majority of the Congress opposed to republicanism
450
-
The exact time when the leading men of the Colonies
conceived the measure of independence not
certainly known
451
-
Prompted by the now-known King's own personal acts and
hostility to the American Colonists
451
-
Deprecated by South Carolina in May, 1775, after the bloody
affair of Concord and Lexington (in a note)
451
-
Disclaimed by Dr. Franklin in 1773
452
-
Disclaimed by Washington and Jefferson until after the
middle of the year 1775
453
-
Though urged by President Dwight (of Yale), discountenanced
by leading New Englanders in July, 1775
453
-
Retrospect of events and position of affairs between
Great Britain and the Colonies at the close
of the year 1775
454
(The Year 1775 and beginning of 1776.)
-
An eventful year; preparation in England to reduce
Colonists to absolute submission; self-asserted authority
of Parliament.
459-478
-
Oppressive Acts of Parliament enumerated, with the
measures of employing foreign soldiers, Indians,
and
slaves; and all with the express sanction of the King,
and while Colonists professed loyalty,
and asked for
nothing but the redress of grievances and restoration
of rights which they had
heretofore enjoyed
459
-
The loyalty and effective services of the Colonists
in the English and French war, and the experience
and
skill they thereby acquired in military affairs;
their superiority as marksmen
460
-
They desire to provide for their own defence, and
for the support of their own civil government, as
aforetime, and as is done in the provinces of the
Canadian Dominion, but this is opposed by
the King and
his ministers
460
-
General Gage (Governor of Massachusetts, and
Commander-in-Chief of the British in America)
commences the first attack upon the Colonists, by
ordering soldiers at night to seize Colonial arms
and ammunition; sends 800 soldiers to Concord for
that purpose; driven back to Lexington with
heavy loss; loss of the Colonists
460
-
The affair of Concord and Lexington followed by the
Battle of Bunker's Hill; numbers engaged
on both sides
460
-
In the Battle of Bunker's Hill, as well as the previous
conflicts, the first shot was fired by the British
soldiers upon the Colonists, who, by order and policy,
acted strictly on the defensive
461
-
English account of the Battle of Bunker's Hill, by the
royal historian, Dr. Andrews (in a note)
461
-
Lord Dunmore, Governor of Virginia, about the same
time, committed outrages upon the inhabitants
of
Virginia similar to those which General Gage
committed upon the people of Massachusetts
462
-
Traditional and deep loyalty of the Virginians, and
their aversion to revolution, but resolved to
defend their rights
464
-
Lord Dunmore (by order of the Secretary of State)
assembles the Burgesses of Virginia, to deliberate
and decide upon Lord North's so-called "conciliatory
proposition" to the Colonies; the proposition
rejected; Mr. Jefferson's report upon, quoted;
an admirable document, eulogized in the strongest terms
by the Earl of Shelburne; how viewed by the French
Foreign Minister, Vergennes (in a note)
464
-
Lord Dunmore issues a proclamation to free the slaves;
on the night of the 20th of April sends a body
of
marines to seize and carry off a quantity of gunpowder,
belonging to the Colony, stored in a
magazine at
Williamsburg; excitement of the inhabitants, and
their demand for the restoration of the
powder; Lord
Dunmore threatens, but is at length compelled to
return the value of the powder
465
-
Lord Dunmore's threat to free the slaves, and letter
to the Secretary of State, as to how, with aid "of
a
small body of troops and arms," he could raise an
ample force "among the Indians and negroes
and other
persons"
466
-
Horror and alarm in the South at Lord Dunmore's
threat to free the slaves, and preparation for
resistance (in a note)
466
-
Lord Dunmore (moved by his fears) leaves the
Government House, and goes on board of a ship of
war
at Norfolk, almost twelve miles from
Williamsburg, the seat of government
466
-
The House of Burgesses remonstrate with Lord Dumnore
for leaving the seat of government; entreat
him to
return, and assure him and his family of perfect
safety; but he refuses, seizes a private printing
establishment and two printers, and issues
proclamations and attempts to govern from a ship of war
467
-
Lord Dunmore commands the water by a small flotilla of
war vessels, and frequently landed forces to
seize arms,
&c.; attempt to destroy the town of Hampton; is repelled
by the inhabitants, and volunteer
rifle companies come
to their aid; the first battle in Virginia; its success
with the Virginians
467
-
Account of this affair, and of Lord Dunmore's policy,
by the English Annual Register (in a note)
468
-
In consequence of Lord Dunmore's failure against the
town of Hampton, he issues a proclamation
from on
board the war ship William, off Norfolk, declaring
martial law throughout the Colony,
"requiring all persons
capable of bearing arms to repair to His Maiesty's standard,
or be considered
as traitors;" and declaring all
indentured servants, negroes and others, appertaining
to rebels,
who were able and willing to bear arms,
and who joined His Majesty's forces, to be free
468
-
Remarks of the English Annual Register on this
abominable proclamation.
469
-
Lord Dunmore's conduct unlawful, as well as unjust and inhuman
470
-
The men on Lord Dunmore's fleet distressed for want of
provisions, which the inhabitants on land
refused to
supply: in consequence of which the town of Norfolk
(the first commercial town in Virginia)
is reduced to
ashes
471
-
Account of this barbarous transaction by the English
Annual Register and Mr. Bancroft (in a note);
remarks
upon, by the English and American press; effect of its
announcement upon the mind
of Washington
472
-
The conduct and situation of the Governors of South
and North Carolina similar to that of Lord
Dunmore
in Virginia (in a note)
472
-
The loyal Churchmen of Virginia, and the loyal
Presbyterians of the two Carolinas, receive the same
treatment from Dunmore, Campbell, and Martin, as the
"republican" Congregationalists did from
General Gage
473
-
Each of the three Southern Governors betook themselves
to ships; all the Colonists treated with like
severity
473
-
The King's speech at the meeting of Parliament, October
26th, 1775, and discussion upon it
474
-
Congress of 1776: Proceedings preliminary to, and
adoption of the Declaration of
Independence; a copy of
the Declaration itself.
479-491
-
Meeting of Congress at Philadelphia, the 12th of May,
1776; state of the Colonies
479
-
Formidable preparations in England; effect of them upon
the Colonies different from that expected in
England
479
-
The thirteen Colonies a unit for the defence of their
constitutional rights and liberties
479
-
Separation from England not even yet contemplated;
though resisting the King they were loyal to the
constitution and liberties of the Kingdom, as were the
Barons at Runnymede when they resisted
King John to maintain
constitutional rights; the words of Washington and the New York
Provincial Congress (in a note)
480
-
The question of questions with the Congress; one
Republican, but the others professedly Monarchists;
Samuel Adams, his character and writings
481
-
Independence first moved in Congress, May, 1776; how
manipulated and promoted; not the
spontaneous uprising
of the people
482
-
Agitation to prepare the minds of the people for independence
482
-
The writings of Tom Paine the chief instrument of
creating hatred to monarchy and a desire for
independence (in a note)
483
-
Congress itself divided on the question of independence;
what Provinces opposed to or not
prepared for independence
483
-
Resolution for independence; long debates; postponed
for three weeks, by a vote of seven to
five Colonies
484
-
Committee to prepare a Declaration appointed
485
-
Agitation to promote independence
485
-
Three days' debates on the question of independence
485
-
Decision to vote by Colonies, and that the decision on
each question should be reported to the
world as
unanimous, whatever might be the votes in Congress
486
-
On the question of independence, six Colonies
were in the affirmative and six in the negative;
how Pennsylvania was brought over to vote for
independence, by one of its members being
induced
to absent himself; and how the votes of other Colonies
were obtained for the affirmative
(in a note)
486
-
The Declaration of Independence reported, discussed,
amended, and adopted, but not unanimously,
though so
reported (in a note)
487
-
Remarks on the voting of Congress on the Declaration
of Independence
487
-
Copy of the Declaration of Independence
488
-
Declaration of Independence Discussed.
492-517
-
The Author's sympathy with the Colonists, and advocacy
of their rights as British subjects, and their
right to
defend them by force of arms
492
-
Preliminary remarks on the impolicy and injustice to
many thousands on both sides of the Atlantic
of the
Declaration of Independence
493
-
The pure and exalted character of the advocates of
Colonial rights, and high eulogy upon them and
their
descendants, by the Earls of Chatham and Shelburne,
both of whom were opposed to the
separation of the Colonies
from the mother country
494
-
Homage to the motives and patriotism of the fathers
of American Independence; the provocation
which they
had received; the successes of the Colonists on the
field of battle before the Declaration of Independence,
and their disasters afterwards; but for having committed
themselves to such Declaration,
they would to all appearance
have obtained within a twelvemonth all they had desired,
without the
shedding of blood, without the unnatural alliance
with France, much less a war of seven years
495
-
I. The Declaration of Independence a renunciation of
all the principles on which the General Congress,
Provincial Legislatures and Convention professed to
act from the beginning of the contest; proofs
and
illustrations
496
-
II. The Declaration of Independence was a violation of
good faith to those statesmen and numerous
other parties in
England who had, in and out of Parliament, defended and
supported the rights and
character of the Colonies during
the whole contest; proofs and illustrations
499
-
III. The Declaration of Independence was also a violation,
not only of good faith, but of justice to the
numerous
Colonists who adhered to connexion with the mother country;
proofs and illustrations
501
-
IV. The Declaration of the 4th of July, 1776, was the
commencement of persecutions and proscriptions
and confiscation
of property against those who refused to renounce the oaths
which they had taken,
as well as the principles and traditions
which had until then been professed by their persecutors and
oppressors as well as by themselves; proofs and illustrations
504
-
The plea of tyranny (in a note)
504
-
Numbers, character, and position of Loyalists at the time,
as stated by American writers; laws passed
against them
504
-
The beneficial results of the Congress had it adhered to
the former principles of its members, and acted
justly
to all parties
507
-
V. The Declaration of Independence was the commencement
of weakness in the army of its authors,
and of defeats
in their field of battle; proofs and illustrations
508
-
VI. The Declaration of Independence was the avowed
expedient and prelude for an alliance with France
and
Spain against the Mother Country; proofs and illustrations;
the secret and double game played
between the
Congress and France, both before and after the Declaration of
Independence
513
THE
LOYALISTS OF AMERICA
AND
THEIR TIMES.
CHAPTER I.
Introduction.—Two Classes of Emigrants—Two Governments for Seventy
Years—The "Pilgrim Fathers"—Their Pilgrimages and Settlement.
In proceeding to trace the development and characteristics of Puritanism
in an English colony, I beg to remark that I write, not as an
Englishman, but as a Canadian colonist by birth and life-long residence,
and as an early and constant advocate of those equal rights, civil and
religious, and that system of government in the enjoyment of which
Canada is conspicuous.
In tracing the origin and development of those views and feelings which
culminated in the American Revolution, in the separation of thirteen
colonies from Great Britain, it is necessary to notice the early
settlement and progress of those New England colonies in which the seeds
of that revolution were first sown and grew to maturity.
The colonies of New England resulted from two distinct emigrations of
English Puritans; two classes of Puritans; two distinct governments for
more than sixty years. The one class of these emigrants were called
"Pilgrim Fathers," having first fled from England to Holland, and thence
emigrated to New England in 1620, in the Mayflower, and called their
place of settlement "New Plymouth," where they elected seven Governors
in succession, and existed under a self-constituted government for
seventy years. The other class were called "Puritan Fathers;" the first
instalment of their emigration took place in 1629, under Endicot; they
were known as the Massachusetts Bay Company, and their final capital was
Boston, which afterwards became the capital of the Province and of the
State.
The characteristics of the separate and independent government of these
two classes of Puritans were widely different. The one was tolerant and
non-persecuting, and loyal to the King during the whole period of its
seventy years' existence; the other was an intolerant persecutor of all
religionists who did not adopt its worship, and disloyal from the
beginning to the Government from which it held its Charter.
It is essential to my purpose to compare and contrast the proceedings of
these two governments in relation to religious liberty and loyalty. I
will first give a short account of the origin and government of the
"Pilgrim Fathers" of New Plymouth, and then the government of the
"Puritan Fathers" of Massachusetts Bay.[1]
In the later years of Queen Elizabeth, a "fiery young clergyman," named
Robert Brown, declared against the lawfulness of both Episcopal and
Presbyterian Church government, or of fellowship with either
Episcopalians or Presbyterians, and in favour of the absolute
independence of each congregation, and the ordination as well as
selection of the minister by it. This was the origin of the Independents
in England. The zeal of Brown, like that of most violent zealots, soon
cooled, and he returned and obtained a living again in the Church of
England, which he possessed until his death; but his principles of
separation and independence survived. The first congregation was formed
about the year 1602, near the confines of York, Nottingham, and
Leicester, and chose for its pastor John Robinson. They gathered for
worship secretly, and were compelled to change their places of meeting
in order to elude the pursuit of spies and soldiers. After enduring many
cruel sufferings, Robinson, with the greater part of his congregation,
determined to escape persecution by becoming pilgrims in a foreign
land. The doctrines of Arminius, and the advocacy and sufferings of his
followers in the cause of religious liberty, together with the spirit of
commerce, had rendered the Government of Holland the most tolerant in
Europe; and thither Robinson and his friends fled from their persecuting
pursuers in 1608, and finally settled at Leyden. Being Independents,
they did not form a connection with any of the Protestant Churches of
the country. Burke remarks that "In Holland, though a country of the
greatest religious freedom in the world, they did not find themselves
better satisfied than they had been in England. There they were
tolerated, indeed, but watched; their zeal began to have dangerous
languors for want of opposition; and being without power or consequence,
they grew tired of the indolent security of their sanctuary; they chose
to remove to a place where they should see no superior, and therefore
they sent an agent to England, who agreed with the Council of Plymouth
for a tract of land in America, within their jurisdiction, to settle in,
and obtained from the King (James) permission to do so."[2]
During their twelve years' pilgrimage in Holland they were good
citizens; not an accusation was brought against any one of them in the
courts; they were honourable and industrious, and took to new trades for
subsistence. Brewster, a man of property, and a gentleman in England,
learned to be a printer at the age of forty-five. Bradford, who had been
a farmer in England, became a silk-dyer. Robinson became noted as a
preacher and controversialist against Arminianism.
Bradford, the historian of their colony and its Governor for eleven
years, gives the chief reasons for their dispute in Holland and of their
desire to remove to America.[3]
As to what particular place these Pilgrims should select for settlement
in America, some were for Guiana, some for Virginia; but they at length
obtained a patent from the second or Northern Virginia Company for a
settlement on the northern part of their territory, which extended to
the fortieth degree of North latitude—Hutchinson Bay. "The Dutch
laboured to persuade them to go to the Hudson river, and settle under
the West India Company; but they had not lost their affection for the
English, and chose to be under their government and protection."[4]
Bancroft, after quoting the statement that "upon their talking of
removing, sundry of the Dutch would have them go under them, and made
them large offers," remarks: "But the Pilgrims were attached to their
nationality as Englishmen, and to the language of their times. A secret
but deeply-seated love of their country led them to the generous purpose
of recovering the protection of England by enlarging her dominions. They
were restless with the desire to live once more under the government of
their native land."[5] It appears from Bradford's History, as well as
from his Letter Book, and other narratives, that there were serious
disputes and recriminations among the Pilgrim exiles and their friends
in England, before matters could be arranged for their departure. But
only "the minor part [of Robinson's congregation], with Mr. Brewster,
their elder, resolved to enter upon this great work." They embarked at
Delft Haven, a seaport town on the River Maeser, eight miles from Delft,
fourteen miles from Leyden, and thirty-six miles from Amsterdam. The
last port from which they sailed in England was Southampton; and after a
tempestuous passage of 65 days, in the Mayflower, of 181 tons, with
101 passengers, they spied land, which proved to be Cape Cod—about 150
miles north of their intended place of destination. The pilot of the
vessel had been there before and recognised the land as Cape Cod; "the
which," says Bradford, "being made and certainly known to be it, they
were not a little joyful."[6] But though the Pilgrims were "not a
little joyful" at safely reaching the American coast, and at a place so
well known as Cape Cod; yet as that was not their intended place of
settlement, they, without landing, put again to sea for Hudson river
(New York), but were driven back by stress of weather, and, on account
of the lateness of the season, determined not to venture out to sea
again, but to seek a place of settlement within the harbour.
As the Pilgrims landed north of the limits of the Company from which
they received their patent, and under which they expected to become a
"body politic," it became to them "void and useless." This being known,
some of the emigrants on board the Mayflower began to make "mutinous
speeches," saying that "when they came ashore they would use their own
liberty, for none had power to command them." Under these circumstances
it was thought necessary to "begin with a combination, which might be as
firm as any patent, and in some respects more so." Accordingly, an
agreement was drawn up and signed in the cabin of the Mayflower by
forty-one male passengers, who with their families constituted the whole
colony of one hundred and one.[7] Having thus provided against disorder
and faction, the Pilgrims proceeded to land, when, as Bradford says,
they "fell upon their knees and blessed the God of heaven who had
brought them over the vast and furious ocean, and delivered them from
all the perils and miseries thereof, again to set their feet on the
firm and stable earth, their proper element."[8] Of the manner of their
settlement, their exposures, sufferings, labours, successes, I leave the
many ordinary histories to narrate, though they nearly all revel in the
marvellous.[9]
I will therefore proceed to give a brief account of the Plymouth
government in relation to religious liberty within its limits and
loyalty to the Mother Country.