Tyranny is Tyranny
Chapter 4 of People's
History of the United States by Howard Zinn
Around 1776, certain
important people in the English colonies made a discovery that would prove
enormously useful for the next two hundred years. They found that by creating a
nation, a symbol, a legal unity called the United States, they could take over
land, profits, and political power from favorites of the British Empire. In the
process, they could hold back a number of potential rebellions and create a
consensus of popular support for the rule of a new, privileged leadership.
When we look at the American Revolution this way, it was a work of genius, and
the Founding Fathers deserve the awed tribute they have received over the
centuries. They created the most effective system of national control devised in
modem times, and showed future generations of leaders the advantages of
combining paternalism with command.
Starting with Bacon's Rebellion in Virginia, by 1760, there had been eighteen
uprisings aimed at overthrowing colonial governments. There had also been six
black rebellions, from South Carolina to New York, and forty riots of various
origins.
By this time also, there emerged, according to Jack Greene, "stable, coherent,
effective and acknowledged local political and social elites." And by the 1760s,
this local leadership saw the possibility of directing much of the rebellious
energy against England and her local officials. It was not a conscious
conspiracy, but an accumulation of tactical responses.
After 1763, with England victorious over France in the Seven Years' War (known
in America as the French and Indian War), expelling them from North America,
ambitious colonial leaders were no longer threatened by the French. They now had
only two rivals left: the English and the Indians. The British, wooing the
Indians, had declared Indian lands beyond the Appalachians out of bounds to
whites (the Proclamation of 1763). Perhaps once the British were out of the way,
the Indians could be dealt with. Again, no conscious forethought strategy by the
colonial elite, but a growing awareness as events developed.
With the French defeated, the British government could turn its attention to
tightening control over the colonies. It needed revenues to pay for the war, and
looked to the colonies for that. Also, the colonial trade had become more and more important to the British economy, and more
profitable: it had amounted to about 500,000 pounds in 1700 ' but by 1770 was
worth 2,800,000 pounds.
So, the American leadership was less in need of English rule, the English more
in need of the colonists' wealth. The elements were there for conflict.
The war had brought glory for the generals, death to the privates, wealth for
the merchants, unemployment for the poor. There were 25,000 people living in New
York (there had been 7,000 in 1720) when the French and Indian War ended. A
newspaper editor wrote about the growing "Number of Beggers and wandering Poor"
in the streets of the city. Letters in the papers questioned the distribution of
wealth: "How often have our Streets been covered with Thousands of Barrels of Flour for
trade, while our near Neighbors can hardly procure enough to make a Dumplin to
satisfy hunger?"
Gary Nash's study of city tax lists shows that by the early-1770s, the top 5
percent of Boston's taxpayers controlled 49% of the city's taxable assets. In
Philadelphia and New York too, wealth was more and more concentrated.
Court-recorded wills showed that by 1750 the wealthiest people in the cities
were leaving 20,000 pounds (equivalent to about $2.5 million today).
In Boston, the lower classes began to use the town meeting to vent their
grievances. The governor of Massachusetts had written that in these town
meetings "the meanest Inhabitants. . . by their constant Attendance there
generally are the majority and outvote the Gentlemen, Merchants, Substantial
Traders and all the better part of the Inhabitants."
What seems to have happened in Boston is that certain lawyers,
editors, and
merchants of the upper classes, but excluded from the ruling circles close to
England-men like James Otis and Samuel Adams-organized a "Boston Caucus" and
through their oratory and their writing "molded laboring-class opinion, called
the 'mob' into action, and shaped its behaviour." This is Gary Nash's
description of Otis, who, he says, "keenly aware of the declining fortunes and
the resentment of ordinary townspeople, was mirroring as well as molding popular
opinion."
We have here a forecast of the long history of American politics, the
mobilization of lower-class energy by upper-class politicians, for their own
purposes. This was not purely deception; it involved, in part, a genuine
recognition of lower-class grievances, which helps to account for its
effectiveness as a tactic over the centuries. As Nash puts it:
| James Otis, Samuel Adams, Royall Tyler, Oxenbridge Thacher, and a host of other Bostonians, linked to the artisans and laborers through a network of neighborhood taverns, fire companies, and the Caucus, espoused a vision of politics that gave credence to laboring-class views and regarded as entirely legitimate the participation of artisans and even laborers in the political process. |
In 1762, Otis, speaking against the conservative rulers of the Massachusetts colony represented by Thomas Hutchinson, gave an example of the kind of rhetoric that a lawyer could use in mobilizing city mechanics and artisans:
| I am forced to get my living by the labour of my hand; and the sweat of my brow, as most of you are and obliged to go thro' good report and evil report, for bitter bread, earned under the frowns of some who have no natural or divine right to be above me, and entirely owe their grandeur and honor to grinding the faces of the poor. .. . |
Boston seems to have been
full of class anger in those days. In 1763, in the Boston Gazette, someone wrote
that "a few persons in power" were promoting political projects "for keeping the
people poor in order to make them humble."
This accumulated sense of grievance against the rich in Boston may account for
the explosiveness of mob action after the Stamp Act of 1765. Through this Act,
the British were taxing the colonial population to pay for the French war, in
which colonists had suffered to expand the British Empire. That summer, a
shoemaker named Ebenezer MacIntosh led a mob in destroying the house of a rich
Boston merchant named Andrew Oliver. Two weeks later, the crowd turned to the
home of Thomas Hutchinson, symbol of the rich elite who ruled the colonies in
the name of England. They smashed up his house with axes, drank the wine in his
wine cellar, and looted the house of its furniture and other objects. A report
by colony officials to England said that this was part of a larger scheme in
which the houses of fifteen rich people were to be destroyed, as part of "a War
of Plunder, of general levelling and taking away the Distinction of rich and
poor."
It was one of those moments in which fury against the rich went further than
leaders like Otis wanted. Could class hatred be focused against the pro-British
elite, and deflected from the nationalist elite? In New York, that same year of the Boston house attacks, someone wrote to the
New York Gazette, "Is it equitable that 99, rather 999, 1 should suffer for the
Extravagance or Grandeur of one, especially when it is considered that men
frequently owe their Wealth to the Impoverishment of their Neighbors?" The
leaders of the Revolution would worry about keeping such sentiments within
limits.
Mechanics were demanding political democracy in the colonial cities: open
meetings of representative assemblies, public galleries in the legislative
halls, and the publishing of roll-call votes, so that constituents could check
on representatives. They wanted open-air meetings where the population could
participate in making policy, more equitable taxes, price controls, and the
election of mechanics and other ordinary people to government posts.
Especially in Philadelphia, according to Nash, the consciousness of the lower
middle classes grew to the point where it must have caused some hard thinking,
not just among the conservative Loyalists sympathetic to England, but even among
leaders of the Revolution. "By mid1776, laborers, artisans, and small tradesmen,
employing extralegal measures when electoral politics failed, were in clear
command in Philadelphia." Helped by some middle-class leaders (Thomas Paine,
Thomas Young, and others), they "launched a full-scale attack on wealth and even
on the right to acquire unlimited private property."
During elections for the 1776 convention to frame a constitution for
Pennsylvania,-a. Privates Committee urged voters to oppose "great and overgrown
rich men. . . they will be too apt to be framing distinctions in society." The
Privates Committee drew up a bill of rights for the convention, including the
statement that "an enormous proportion of property vested in a few individuals
is dangerous to the rights, and destructive of the common happiness, of mankind;
and therefore every free state hath a right by its laws to discourage the
possession of such property."
In the countryside, where most people lived, there was a similar conflict of
poor against rich, one which political leaders would use to mobilize the
population against England, granting some benefits for the rebellious poor, and
many more for themselves in the process. The tenant riots in New Jersey in the
1740s, the New York tenant uprisings of the 1750s and 1760s in the Hudson
Valley, and the rebellion in northeastern New York that led to the carving of
Vermont out of New York State were all more than sporadic rioting. They were
longlasting social movements, highly organized, involving the creation of
countergovernments. They were aimed at a handful of rich landlords, but with the
landlords far away, they often had to direct their anger against other, closer
farmers who had leased the disputed land from the owners.
Just as the Jersey rebels
had broken into jails to free their friends, rioters in the Hudson Valley
rescued prisoners from the sheriff and one time took the sheriff himself as
prisoner. The tenants were seen as "chiefly the dregs of the People," and the
posse that the sheriff of Albany County led to Bennington in 1771 included the
privileged top of the local power structure.
The land rioters saw their battle as poor against rich. A witness at a rebel
leader's trial in New York in 1766 said that the farmers evicted by the
landlords "had an equitable Title but could not be defended in a Course of Law
because they were poor and. . . poor men were always oppressed by the rich."
Ethan Allen's Green Mountain rebels in Vermont described themselves as "a poor
people. . . fatigued in settling a wilderness country," and their opponents as
"a number of Attorneys and other gentlemen, with all their tackle of ornaments,
and compliments, and French finesse."
Land-hungry farmers in the Hudson Valley turned to the British for support
against the American landlords; the Green Mountain rebels did the same. But as
the conflict with Britain intensified, the colonial leaders of the movement for
independence, aware of the tendency of poor tenants to side with the British in
their anger against the rich, adopted policies to win over people in the
countryside.
In North Carolina, a powerful movement of white farmers was organized against
wealthy and corrupt officials in the period from 1766 to 1771, exactly those
years when, in the cities of the Northeast, agitation was growing against the
British, crowding out class issues. The movement in North Carolina was called
the Regulator movement, and it consisted, says Marvin L. Michael Kay, a
specialist in the history of that movement, of "class-conscious white farmers in
the west who attempted to democratize local government in their respective
counties." The Regulators referred to themselves as "poor Industrious peasants,"
as "labourers," "the wretched poor," "oppressed" by "rich and powerful . . .
designing Monsters."
The Regulators saw that a combination of wealth and political power ruled North
Carolina, and denounced those officials "whose highest Study is the promotion of
their wealth." They resented the tax system, which was especially burdensome on
the poor, and the combination of merchants and lawyers who worked in the courts
to collect debts from the harassed farmers. In the western counties where the
movement developed, only a small percentage of the households had slaves, and 41
percent of these were concentrated, to take one sample western county, in less
than 2 percent of the households. The Regulators did not represent servants or
slaves, but they did speak for small owners, squatters, and tenants.
A contemporary account of the Regulator movement in Orange County describes the situation:
| Thus were the people of Orange insulted by The sheriff, robbed and plundered . . . neglected and condemned by the Representatives and abused by the Magistracy; obliged to pay Fees regulated only by the Avarice of the officer; obliged to pay a Tax which they believed went to enrich and aggrandise a few, who lorded it over them continually; and from all these Evils they saw no way to escape; for the Men in Power, and Legislation, were the Men whose interest it was to oppress, and make gain of the Labourer. |
In that county in the
1760s, the Regulators organized to prevent the collection of taxes, or the
confiscation of the property of tax delinquents. Officials said "an absolute
Insurrection of a dangerous tendency has broke out in Orange County," and made
military plans to suppress it. At one point seven hundred armed farmers forced
the release of two arrested Regulator leaders. The Regulators petitioned the
government on their grievances in 1768, citing "the unequal chances the poor and
the weak have in contentions with the rich and powerful."
In another county, Anson, a local militia colonel complained of "the
unparalleled tumults, Insurrections, and Commotions which at present distract
this County." At one point a hundred men broke up the proceedings at a county
court. But they also tried to elect farmers to the assembly, asserting "that a
majority of our assembly is composed of Lawyers, Clerks, and others in
Connection with them. . . ." In 1770 there was a large-scale riot in
Hillsborough, North Carolina, in which they disrupted a court, forced the judge
to flee, beat three lawyers and two merchants, and looted stores.
The result of all this was that the assembly passed some mild reform
legislation, but also an act "to prevent riots and tumults," and the governor
prepared to crush them militarily. In May of 1771 there was a decisive battle in
which several thousand Regulators were defeated by a disciplined army using
cannon. Six Regulators were hanged. Kay says that in the three western counties
of Orange, Anson, and Rowan, where the Regulator movement was concentrated, it
had the support of six thousand to seven thousand men out of a total white
taxable population of about eight thousand.
One consequence of this bitter conflict is that only a minority of the people in
the Regulator counties seem to have participated as patriots in the
Revolutionary War. Most of them probably remained neutral.
Fortunately for the Revolutionary movement, the key battles were being fought in
the North, and here, in the cities, the colonial leaders had a divided white
population; they could win over the mechanics, who were a kind of middle class,
who had a stake in the fight against England, who faced competition from English
manufacturers. The biggest problem was to keep the propertyless people, who were
unemployed and hungry in the crisis following the French war, under control.
In Boston, the economic grievances of the lowest classes mingled with anger
against the British and exploded in mob violence. The leaders of the
Independence movement wanted to use that mob energy against England, but also to
contain it so that it would not demand too much from them.
When riots against the Stamp Act swept Boston in 1767, they were analyzed by
the commander of the British forces in North America, General Thomas Gage, as
follows:
| The Boston Mob, raised first by the Instigation of Many of the Principal Inhabitants, Allured by Plunder, rose shortly after of their own Accord, attacked, robbed, and destroyed several Houses, and amongst others, that of the Lieutenant Governor. . . . People then began to be terrified at the Spirit they had raised, to perceive that popular Fury was not to be guided, and each individual feared he might be the next Victim to their Rapacity. The same Fears spread thro' the other Provinces, and there has been as much Pains taken since, to prevent Insurrections, of the People, as before to excite them. |
Gage's comment suggests
that leaders of the movement against the Stamp Act had instigated crowd action,
but then became frightened by the thought that it might be directed against
their wealth, too. At this time, the top 10 percent of Boston's taxpayers held
about 66 percent of Boston's taxable wealth, while the lowest 30 percent of the
taxpaying population had no taxable property at all. The propertyless could not
vote and so (like blacks, women, Indians) could not participate in town
meetings. This included sailors, journeymen, apprentices, servants.
Dirk Hoerder, a student of Boston mob actions in the Revolutionary period, calls
the Revolutionary leadership "the Sons of Liberty type drawn from the middling
interest and well-to-do merchants. . . a hesitant leadership," wanting to spur
action against Great Britain, yet worrying about maintaining control over the
crowds at home.
It took the Stamp Act crisis to make make this leadership aware of its dilemma.
A political group in Boston called the Loyal Nine -- merchants" distillers,
shipowners, and master craftsmen who opposed the Stamp Act -- organized a
procession in August 1765 to protest it. They put fifty master craftsmen at the
head, but needed to mobilize shipworkers from the North End and mechanics and
apprentices from the South End. Two or three thousand were in the procession
(Negroes were excluded). They marched to the home of the stampmaster and burned
his effigy. But after the "gentlemen" who organized the demonstration left, the
crowd went further and destroyed some of the stampmaster's property. These were,
as one of the Loyal Nine said, "amazingly inflamed people." The Loyal Nine
seemed taken aback by the direct assault on the wealthy furnishings of the
stampmaster.
The rich set up armed patrols. Now a town meeting was called and the same
leaders who had planned the demonstration denounced the violence and disavowed
the actions of the crowd. As more demonstrations were planned for November 1,
1765, when the Stamp Act was to go into effect, and for Pope's Day, November 5,
steps were taken to keep things under control; a dinner was given for certain
leaders of the rioters to win them over. And when the Stamp Act was repealed,
due to overwhelming resistance, the conservative leaders severed their
connections with the rioters. They held annual celebrations of the first
anti-Stamp Act demonstration, to which they invited, according to Hoerder, not
the rioters but "mainly upper and middle-class Bostonians, who traveled in
coaches and carriages to Roxbury or Dorchester for opulent feasts."
When the British Parliament turned to its next attempt to tax the colonies, this
time by a set of taxes which it hoped would not excite as much opposition, the
colonial leaders organized boycotts. But, they stressed, "No Mobs or Tumults,
let the Persons and Properties of your most inveterate Enemies be safe." Samuel
Adams advised: "No Mobs-No Confusions-No Tumult." And James Otis said that "no
possible circumstances, though ever so oppressive, could be supposed sufficient
to justify private tumults and disorders. . . ."
Impressment and the quartering of troops by the British were directly hurtful to
the sailors and other working people. After 1768, two thousand soldiers were
quartered in Boston, and friction grew between the crowds and the soldiers. The
soldiers began to take the jobs of working people when jobs were scarce.
Mechanics and shopkeepers lost work or business because of the colonists'
boycott of British goods. In 1769, Boston set up a committee "to Consider of
some Suitable Methods of employing the Poor of the Town, whose Numbers and
distresses are dayly increasing by the loss of its Trade and Commerce."
On March 5, 1770, grievances of ropemakers against British soldiers taking their
jobs led to a fight. A crowd gathered in front of the" customhouse and began
provoking the soldiers, who fired and killed first Crisp us Attucks, a mulatto
worker, then others. This became known as the Boston Massacre. Feelings against
the British mounted quickly. There was anger at the acquittal of six of the
British soldiers (two were punished by having their thumbs branded and were
discharged from the army). The crowd at the Massacre was described by John
Adams, defense attorney for the British soldiers, as "a motley rabble of saucy
boys, negroes, and molattoes, Irish teagues and outlandish jack tarrs." Perhaps
ten thousand people marched in the funeral procession for the victims of the
Massacre, out of a total Boston population of sixteen thousand. This led England
to remove the troops from Boston and try to quiet the situation.
Impressment was the background of the Massacre. There had been impressment riots
through the 1760s in New York and in Newport, Rhode Island, where five hundred
seamen, boys, and Negroes rioted after five weeks of impressment by the British.
Six weeks before the Boston Massacre, there was a battle in New York of seamen
against British soldiers taking their jobs, and one seaman was killed.
In the Boston Tea Party of December 1773, the Boston Committee of
Correspondence, formed a year before to organize anti-British actions,
"controlled crowd action against the tea from the start," Dirk Hoerder says. The
Tea Party led to the Coercive Acts by Parliament, virtually establishing martial
law in Massachusetts, dissolving the colonial government, closing the port in
Boston, and sending in troops. Still, town meetings and mass meetings rose in
opposition. The seizure of a powder store by the British led four thousand men
from all around Boston to assemble in Cambridge, where some of the wealthy
officials had their sumptuous homes. The crowd forced the officials to resign.
The Committees of Correspondence of Boston and other towns welcomed this
gathering, but warned against destroying private property.
Pauline Maier, who studied the development of opposition to Britain in the
decade before 1776 in her book From Resistance to Revolution,
emphasizes the moderation of the leadership and, despite their desire for
resistance, their "emphasis on order and restraint." She notes: "The officers
and committee members of the Sons of Liberty were drawn - 'almost entirely, from
the middle and upper-classes of colonial society." In Newport, Rhode
Island, for instance, the Sons of Liberty, according to a contemporary writer,
"contained some Gentlemen of the First, Figure in Town for Opulence, Sense and
Politeness." In North Carolina "one of the wealthiest of the gentlemen and freeholders" led the Sons of
Liberty. Similarly in Virginia and South Carolina. And "New York's leaders, too,
were involved in small but respectable independent business ventures." Their
aim, however, was to broaden their organization, to develop a mass base of wage
earners.
Many of the Sons of Liberty groups declared, as in Milford, Connecticut, their
"greatest abhorrence" of lawlessness, or as in Annapolis, opposed "all riots or
unlawful assemblies tending to the disturbance of the public tranquility." John
Adams expressed the same fears: "These tarrings and featherings, this breaking
open Houses by rude and insolent Rabbles, in Resentment for private Wrongs or in
pursuing of private Prejudices and Passions, must be discountenanced."
In Virginia, it seemed clear to the educated gentry that something needed to be
done to persuade the lower orders to join the revolutionary cause, to deflect
their anger against England. One Virginian wrote in his diary in the spring of
1774: "The lower Class of People here are" in tumult on account of Reports from
Boston, many of them expect to be press'd & compell'd to go and fight the
Britains!" Around the time of the Stamp Act, a Virginia orator addressed the
poor: "Are not the gentlemen made of the same materials as the lowest and
poorest; among you? . . . Listen to no doctrines which may tend to divide us, i
but let us go hand in hand, as brothers. . . ."
It was a problem for which the rhetorical talents of Patrick Henry were superbly
fitted. He was, as Rhys Isaac puts it, "firmly attached to the world of the
gentry," but he spoke in words that the poorer whites of Virginia could
understand. Henry's fellow Virginian Edmund Randolph recalled his style as
"simplicity and even carelessness. . . . His pauses, which for their length
might sometimes be feared to dispell the attention, invited it the more by
raising the expectation."
Patrick Henry's oratory in Virginia pointed a way to relieve class tension
between upper and lower classes and form a bond against the British. This was to
find language inspiring to all classes, specific enough in its listing of
grievances to charge people with anger against the British, vague enough to
avoid class conflict among the rebels, and stirring enough to build patriotic
feeling for the resistance movement.
Tom Paine's Common Sense, which appeared in early 1776 and became the
most popular pamphlet in the American colonies, did this. It made the first
bold argument for independence, in words that any fairly literate person could
understand: "Society in every state is a blessing, but Government even in its
best state is but a necessary evil. . . ."
Paine disposed of the idea of the divine right of kings by a pungent history of
the British monarchy, going back to the Norman conquest of 1066, when William
the Conqueror came over from France to set himself on the British throne: "A
French bastard landing with an armed Banditti and establishing himself king of
England against the consent of the natives, is in plain terms a very paltry
rascally original. It certainly hath no divinity in it."
Paine dealt with the practical advantages of sticking to England or being
separated; he knew the importance of economics:
| I challenge the warmest advocate for reconciliation to show a single advantage that this continent can reap by being connected with. Great Britain. I repeat the challenge; not a single advantage is derived. Our corn will fetch its price in any market in Europe, and our imported goods must be paid for by them where we will. . . . |
As for the bad effects of the connection with England, Paine appealed to the colonists' memory of all the wars in which England had involved them, wars costly in lives and money:
| But the injuries and disadvantages which we sustain by that connection are without number. . . . any submission to, or dependence on, Great Britain, tends directly to involve this Continent in European wars and quarrels, and set us at variance with nations who would otherwise seek our friendship. . . . |
He built slowly to an emotional pitch:
| Everything that is right or reasonable pleads for separation. The blood of the slain, the weeping voice of nature cries, 'TIS TIME TO PART. |
Common Sense
went through twenty-five editions in 1776 and sold hundreds of thousands of
copies. It is probable that almost every literate colonist either read it or
knew about its contents. Pamphleteering had become by this time the chief
theater of debate about relations with England. From 1750 to 1776 four hundred
pamphlets had appeared arguing one or another side of the Stamp Act or the
Boston Massacre or the Tea Party or the general questions of disobedience to
law, loyalty to government, rights and obligations.
Paine's pamphlet appealed to a wide range of colonial opinion angered by
England. But it caused some tremors in aristocrats like John Adams, who were
with the patriot cause but wanted to make sure it didn't go too far in the
direction of democracy. Paine had denounced the so-called balanced government of
Lords and Commons as a deception, and called for single-chamber-representative
bodies where .-the people could be represented. Adams denounced Paine's plan as
"so democratical, without any restraint or even an attempt at any equilibrium or
counter-poise, that it must produce confusion and every evil work." Popular
assemblies needed to be checked, Adams thought, because they were "productive of
hasty results and absurd judgements."
Paine himself came out of "the lower orders" of England-a staymaker, tax
official, teacher, poor emigrant to America. He arrived in Philadelphia in 1774,
when agitation against England was already strong in the colonies. The artisan
mechanics of Philadelphia, along with journeymen, apprentices, and ordinary
laborers , were forming a politically conscious militia, "in general damn'd
riff-raff -- dirty, mutinous, and disaffected," as local aristocrats described
them. By speaking plainly and strongly\ he could represent those politically
conscious lower-class people (he opposed property qualifications for voting in
Pennsylvania). But his great concern seems to have been to speak for a middle
group. "There is an extent of riches, as well as an extreme of poverty, which,
by harrowing the circles of a man's acquaintance, lessens his opportunities of
general knowledge."
Once the Revolution was under way, Paine more and more made it clear that he was
not for the crowd action of lower-class people like those militia who in 1779
attacked the house of James Wilson. Wilson was a Revolutionary leader who
opposed price controls and wanted a more-conservative government than was given
by the Pennsylvania Constitution of 1776. Paine became an associate of one of
the wealthiest men in Pennsylvania, Robert Morris, and a supporter of Morris's
creation, the Bank of North America.
Later, during the controversy over adopting the Constitution, Paine would once
again represent urban artisans, who favored a strong central government. He
seemed to believe that such a government could represent some great common
interest. In this sense, he lent himself perfectly to the myth of the Revolution
-- that it was on behalf of a united people.
The Declaration of Independence brought that myth to its peak of eloquence. Each
harsher measure of British control -- the Proclamation of 1763 not allowing
colonists to settle beyond the Appalachians, the Stamp Tax, the Townshend taxes,
including the one on tea, the stationing of troops and the Boston Massacre, the
closing of the port of Boston and the dissolution of the Massachusetts
legislature -- escalated colonial rebellion to the point of revolution. The
colonists had responded with the Stamp Act Congress, the Sons of Liberty, the
Committees of Correspondence, the Boston Tea Party, and finally, in 1774, the
setting up of a Continental Congress -- an illegal body, forerunner of a future
independent government. It was after the military clash at Lexington and Concord
in April 1775, between colonial Minutemen and British troops, that the
Continental Congress decided on separation. They organized a small committee to
draw up the Declaration of Independence, which Thomas Jefferson wrote. It was
adopted by the Congress on July 2, and officially proclaimed July 4, 1776.
By this time there was already a powerful sentiment for independence.
Resolutions adopted in North Carolina in May of 1776, and sent to the
Continental Congress, declared independence of England, asserted that all
British law was null and void, and urged military preparations. About the same
time, the town of Malden, Massachusetts, responding to a request from the
Massachusetts House of Representatives that all towns in the state declare their
views on independence, had met in town meeting and unanimously called for
independence: ". . . we therefore renounce with disdain our connexion with a
kingdom of slaves; we bid a final adieu to Britain."
"When in the Course of human events, it becomes necessary for one people to
dissolve the political bands ... they should declare the causes. . . ." This was
the opening of the Declaration of Independence.
Then, in its second paragraph, came the powerful philosophical statement:
| We hold these truths to be self-evident. that all men are created equal, that they are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable Rights. that among these are Life, Liberty and the pursuit of Happiness. That to secure these rights, Governments are instituted among Men, deriving their just powers from the consent of the governed, that whenever any Form of Government becomes destructive of these ends, it is the Right of the People to alter or to abolish it and to institute new Government. . . . |
It then went on to list
grievances against the king, "a history of repeated injuries and usurpations,
all having in direct object the establishment of an absolute Tyranny over these
States." The list accused the king of dissolving colonial governments,
controlling judges, sending "swarms of Officers to harass our people," sending
in armies of occupation, cutting off colonial trade with other parts of the
world, taxing the colonists without their consent, and waging war against them,
"transporting large Armies of foreign Mercenaries to compleat the works of
death, desolation and tyranny."
All this, the language of popular control over governments, the right of
rebellion and revolution, indignation at political tyranny, economic burdens,
and military attacks, was language well suited to unite large numbers of
colonists, and persuade even those who had grievances against one another to
turn against England.
Some Americans were clearly omitted from this circle of united interest drawn by
the Declaration of Independence: Indians, black slaves, women. Indeed, one
paragraph of the Declaration charged the King with inciting slave rebellions and
Indian attacks:
| He has excited domestic insurrections amongst us, and has endeavoured to bring on the inhabitants of our frontiers, the merciless Indian Savages, whose known rule of warfare is an undistinguished destruction of all ages, sexes and conditions. |
Twenty years before the
Declaration, a proclamation of the legislature of Massachusetts of November
1755, declared the Penobscot Indians "rebels, enemies and traitors" and provided
a bounty: "For every scalp of a male Indian brought in . . . forty pounds. For
every scalp of such female Indian or male Indian under the age of twelve years
that shall be killed. . . twenty pounds. . . ."
Thomas Jefferson had written a paragraph of the Declaration accusing the King of
transporting slaves from Africa to the colonies and "suppressing every
legislative attempt to prohibit or to restrain this execrable commerce." This
seemed to express moral indignation against slavery and the slave trade
(Jefferson's personal distaste for slavery must be put alongside the fact that
he owned hundreds of slaves to the day he died). Behind it was the growing fear
among Virginians and some other "southerners about the growing number of black
slaves in the colonies (20 percent of the total population) and the threat of
slave revolts as the number of slaves increased. Jefferson's paragraph was
removed by the Continental Congress, because slaveholders themselves disagreed
about the desirability of ending the slave trade. So even that gesture toward
the black slave was omitted in the great manifesto of freedom of the American
Revolution.
The use of. the phrase "all men are created equal" was probably not a deliberate
attempt to make a statement about women. It was just that women were beyond
consideration as worthy of inclusion. They were politically invisible. Though
practical needs gave women a certain authority in the home, on the farm, or in
occupations like midwifery, they were simply overlooked in any consideration of
political rights, any notions of civic equality.
To say that the Declaration of Independence, even by its own language, was
limited to life, liberty, and happiness for white males is not to denounce the
makers and signers of the Declaration for holding the ideas expected of
privileged males of the eighteenth century. Reformers and radicals, looking
discontentedly at history, are often accused of expecting too much from a past
political epoch-and sometimes they do. But the point of noting those outside the
arc of human rights in the Declaration is not, centuries late and pointlessly,
to lay impossible moral burdens on that time. It is to try to understand the way
in which the Declaration functioned to mobilize certain groups of Americans,
ignoring others. Surely, inspirational language to create a secure consensus is
still used, in our time, to cover up serious conflicts of interest in that
consensus, and to cover up, also, the omission of large parts of the human race.
The philosophy of the Declaration, that government is set up by the people to
secure their life, liberty, and happiness, and is to be overthrown when it no
longer does that, is often traced to the ideas of John Locke, in his Second
Treatise on Government. That was published in England in 1689, when the
English were rebelling against tyrannical kings and setting up parliamentary
government. The Declaration, like Locke's Second Treatise, talked about
government and political rights, but ignored the existing inequalities in
property. And how could people truly have equal rights, with stark differences
in wealth?
Locke himself was a wealthy man, with investments in the silk trade and slave
trade, income from loans and mortgages. He invested heavily in the first issue
of the stock of the Bank of England, just a few years after he had written his
Second Treatise as the classic statement of liberal democracy. As adviser to the
Carolinas, he had suggested a government of slaveowners run by forty wealthy
land barons.
Locke's statement of people's government was in support of a revolution in
England for the free development of mercantile capitalism at home and abroad.
Locke himself regretted that the labor of poor children "is generally lost to
the public till they are twelve or fourteen years old" and suggested that all
children over three, of families on relief, should attend "working schools" so
they would be "from infancy . . . inured to work."
The English revolutions of the seventeenth century brought representative
government and opened up discussions of democracy. But, as the English historian
Christopher Hill wrote in The Puritan Revolution: "The establishment of
parliamentary supremacy, of the rule of law, no doubt mainly benefited the men
of property." The kind of arbitrary taxation that threatened the security of
property was overthrown, monopolies were ended to give more free reign to
business, and sea power began to be used for an imperial policy abroad,
including the conquest of Ireland. The Levellers and the Diggers, two political
movements which wanted to carry equality into the economic sphere, were put down
by the Revolution.
One can see the reality of Locke's nice phrases about representative government
in the class divisions and conflicts in England that followed the Revolution
that Locke supported. At the very time the American scene was becoming tense, in
1768, England was racked by riots and strikes-of coal heavers, saw mill workers,
hatters, weavers, sailors because of the high price of bread and the miserable
wages. The Annual Register reviewed the events of the spring and summer of 1768:
| A general dissatisfaction unhappily prevailed among several of the lower orders of the people. This ill temper, which was partly occasioned by the high price of provisions, and partly proceeded from other causes, too frequently manifested itself in acts of tumult and riot, which were productive of the most melancholy consequences. |
"The people" who were,
supposedly, at the heart of Locke's theory of people's sovereignty were defined
by a British member of Parliament: "I don't mean the mob. . . . I mean the
middling people of England, the manufacturer, the yeoman, the merchant, the
country gentleman. . . "
In America, too, the reality behind the words of the Declaration of Independence
(issued in the same year as Adam Smith's capitalist manifesto, The Wealth of
Nations) was that a rising class of important people needed to enlist on
their side enough Americans to defeat England, without disturbing too much the
relations of wealth and power that had developed over 150 years of colonial
history. Indeed, 69 percent of the signers of the Declaration of Independence
had held colonial office under England.
When the Declaration of Independence was read, with all its flaming radical
language, from the town hall balcony in Boston, it was read by Thomas Crafts, a
member of the Loyal Nine group, conservatives who had opposed militant action
against the British. Four days after the reading, the Boston Committee of
Correspondence ordered the townsmen to show up on the Common for a military
draft. The rich, it turned out, could avoid the draft by paying for substitutes;
the poor had to serve. This led to rioting, and shouting, "Tyranny is Tyranny
let it come from whom it may."