While most members of Congress
sought a negotiated settlement with England,
independence advocates bided their time
By John Ferling
Smithsonian
magazine, July 2004
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 . . .
Laboring at his desk in the midst of a
Philadelphia heat wave in June 1776, Thomas Jefferson hastened to
complete a pressing assignment. A Congressional committee,
recognizing his “happy talent for composition,” had given the
33-yearold Jefferson responsibility for drafting a declaration of
independence, a document that Congress needed almost immediately.
Jefferson, one of Virginia’s seven delegates to the Second
Continental Congress, worked in his two-room apartment on the second
floor of a tradesman’s house at Market and Seventh streets, a
heavily trafficked corner. He rose before sunrise to write and,
after the day’s long Congressional session, he returned to his
lodging to take up his pen again at night.
Toward the end of his
life, Jefferson would say that his purpose had been to “place before
mankind the common sense of the subject.” Congress, he recalled,
required an “expression of the American mind.”
Jefferson well knew that America was at a
defining moment in its history. Independence would sever ties with a
long colonial past and propel the 13 states—and the new American
nation to which they would belong—into an extremely uncertain
future. Jefferson also knew that Congress wanted the declaration
completed by July 1, less than three weeks after he was given the
assignment.
No one appreciated better than he the irony in
the sudden desire for haste. Jefferson had been prepared to declare
independence perhaps as much as a year earlier, from the moment that
war against the mother country erupted on April 19, 1775. Yet
Congress had refused. In the 14 months since American blood had been
shed at Lexington and Concord, American soldiers had also died at
Bunker Hill, in the siege of Boston, and during an ill-fated
invasion of Canada. In addition, the Royal Navy had bombarded and
burned American towns, and the colonists’ commerce had been nearly
shut down by a British blockade. Still, Congress had not declared
independence.
But not even Jefferson, passionate advocate of
independence that he was, fully grasped the importance of the
document he was preparing. Nor did his colleague, John Adams of
Massachusetts, who had masterminded the arduous struggle within
Congress to declare independence. Focused singlemindedly on that
contentious undertaking, Adams regarded the actual statement itself
as a mere formality—he would call it “a theatrical show”—a necessary
instrument of propaganda. Jefferson, for his part, said little about
his accomplishment. Not long after his work was completed, he would
depart Philadelphia to return to his responsibilities in the
Virginia legislature. Still, he was more than mildly vexed that
Congress had made revisions—or “mutilations,” as he put it—to the
language of his original draft. Historians now agree that Congress’
alterations and excisions enhanced the Declaration’s power.
Jefferson’s magisterial opening passage, and indeed, much of his
original language, actually survived intact.
Today, the passage of time has dulled our memory
of the extent to which many Americans, including a majority in the
Continental Congress, were, for a very long period, reluctant to
break ties completely and irrevocably with Britain. The creation of
the document we have come to regard as the seminal expression of
revolutionary ardor was by no means in- evitable. More than
two-and-a-quarter centuries after the Declaration was signed, this
eloquent assertion of individual rights, reinstalled last September
in a state-of-the-art glass encasement at the National Archives in
Washington, D.C., can be assessed in all of its complexity—as the
product of the protracted political debate that preceded its
formulation.
By the summer of 1776, the patience of many
congressmen had been sorely tried by bitter wrangling over the
question of whether or not to declare independence. Many of the
legislators thought it nonsensical to fight a war for any purpose
other than independence, yet others disagreed. For month after
bloody month Congress had sat on its hands, prompting John Adams to
exclaim early in 1776 that America was caught “between Hawk and
Buzzard,” fighting a war it could not win unless it declared
independence from Britain, thereby prompting England’s enemies, most
prominently France, to aid in the struggle.
America’s war with the mother country had
commenced when a British army of nearly 900 men, acting on orders
from London, had marched from Boston to Concord, intending to
destroy a colonial arsenal and, if possible, capture ringleaders
John Hancock and Samuel Adams. The Second Continental Congress,
which assembled in Philadelphia just three weeks later, had barely
been gaveled to order when John Rutledge of South Carolina, a
35-year-old lawyer from Charleston, raised the critical question:
“Do We aim at independancy? or do We only ask for a Restoration of
Rights & putting of Us on Our old footing [as subjects of the
crown]?” It would take Congress 14 months to answer that question.
Congress quickly divided into two factions. One
felt that the British actions at Lexington and Concord in April
required nothing less than a clean break from the motherland; they
believed colonists would always be second-class citizens in the
British Empire. This faction would have declared independence in May
or June 1775. But a second faction, which comprised a substantial
majority in Congress, yearned to be reconciled with Britain. These
delegates believed in waging war only to compel London to accept
America’s terms—Rutledge’s “old footing”—to return to the way things
were before Parliament tried to tax Americans and claim unlimited
jurisdiction over them.
Opposition to Parliament had been growing since
it enacted the first American tax, the Stamp Act of 1765. At the
First Continental Congress, which met in Philadelphia in September
1774, some delegates wanted to force repeal of Parliament’s
repressive measures through a trade embargo. Amore conservative
faction had pushed for a compromise to provide American
representation in Parliament. In the end, Congress adopted the trade
boycott, and war had come. “Nothing,” wrote John Adams, “but
Fortitude, Vigour, and Perseverance can save Us.”
Most who had attended the First Continental
Congress now sat in the Second, where they were joined by several
fresh faces. For instance, Hancock, who had escaped capture at
Lexington thanks to Paul Revere’s timely warning, was now a member
of the Massachusetts delegation. Sixty-nineyear- old Benjamin
Franklin, who had just returned to Philadelphia after a decade in
London, had been named a delegate from Pennsylvania. Gone were those
from the First Continental Congress who refused to countenance a war
against Britain, prompting Richard Henry Lee of Virginia to observe
that a “perfect unanimity” existed in the Second Continental
Congress, at least on the war issue.
John Adams concurred that a “military Spirit”
that was “truly amazing” had seized the land. Militiamen were “as
thick as Bees,” he said, marching and drilling everywhere, including
in the steamy streets outside the Pennsylvania State House where
Congress met. His cousin, Samuel Adams, believed an equally militant
spirit gripped Congress and that every member was committed to “the
Defence and Support of American Liberty.” The Adams cousins soon
discovered, however, that while all in Congress supported the war,
sentiment for severing ties with Britain was strong only in New
England and Virginia. Reconciliationists prevailed everywhere else.
John Adams counseled patience. “We must Suffer
People to take their own Way,” he asserted in June 1775, even though
that path might not be the “Speedyest and Surest.” He understood
that to push too hard for independence was to risk driving
conservative Americans back into Britain’s arms. Thus, for most of
1775, the pro-independence faction never spoke openly of a break
with Britain. Adams likened America to that of “a large Fleet
sailing under Convoy. The fleetest Sailors must wait for the dullest
and slowest.” For the foreseeable future, he lamented, “Progress
must be slow.”
But Adams was confident that those who favored
reconciliation would be driven inexorably toward independence. In
time, he believed, they would discover that London would never give
in to America’s demands. Furthermore, he expected that war would
transform the colonists’ deep-seated love for Britain into enmity,
necessitating a final break.
Reconciliationists were strongest in the Middle
Atlantic colonies (New York, New Jersey, Pennsylvania, Maryland and
Delaware) and in South Carolina, all of which had long since been
drawn into the economic web of the Atlantic world. Before the war,
the products of the backcountry—furs, hides and lumber—as well as
grain, had moved through New York and Philadelphia to markets in the
Caribbean and England. Charleston exported indigo and rice. In
return, English-manufactured goods entered the colonies through
these ports. Business had flourished during most of the 18th
century; in recent years Philadelphia’s merchants had routinely
enjoyed annual profits of more than 10 percent.
The great merchants in Philadelphia and New York,
who constituted a powerful political force, had other compelling
reasons for remaining within the empire. Many relied upon credit
supplied by English bankers. The protection afforded to
transatlantic trade by the Royal Navy minimized insurance and other
overhead costs. Independence, Philadelphia merchant Thomas Clifford
asserted in 1775, would “assuredly prove unprofitable.” The
“advantages of security and stability,” said another, “lie with . .
. remaining in the empire.”
And there was fear of the
unknown. Some in Congress spoke of a break with Britain as a “leap
in the dark,” while others likened it to being cast adrift on “an
UnknownOcean.” To be sure, many things could
miscarry should America try to go it alone. After all, its army was
composed of untried soldiers led, for the most part, by
inexperienced officers. It possessed neither a navy nor allies and
lacked the funds to wage a lengthy conflict. The most immediate
danger was that the fledgling nation might lose a war for
independence. Such a defeat could unleash a series of dire
consequences that, the reconciliationists believed, might be avoided
only if the colonies, even in the midst of war, were to negotiate a
settlement before
breaking absolutely with Britain. The reconciliationists held that
it was still possible to reach a middle ground; this view seemed, to
men such as John Adams, a naive delusion. Finally, the
anti-independence faction argued, losing the war might well result
in retaliation, including the loss of liberties the colonists had
long enjoyed.
Even victory could have drawbacks. Many felt
independence could be won only with foreign assistance, which raised
the specter of American dependence on a European superpower, most
likely autocratic and Roman Catholic France. But Adams believed that
fear of anarchy accounted for most conservative opposition to
independence. More than anything, said Adams, it rendered
“Independency . . . an Hobgoblin, of so frightfull Mein” to the
reconciliationists.
Pennsylvania’s John Dickinson soon emerged as the
leader of those who sought rapprochement with Britain. Dickinson,
who was 43 in 1775, had been raised on plantations in Maryland and
Delaware. One of the few supporters of the war to have actually
lived in England, where he had gone to study law, in London, he had
not been impressed by what he found there. The English, he
concluded, were intemperate and immoral; their political system was
hopelessly corrupt and run by diabolical mediocrities. Returning to
Philadelphia to practice law in 1757, he was soon drawn to politics.
Tall and thin, Dickinson was urbane, articulate
and somewhat prickly. A patrician accustomed to having his way, he
could be quick-tempered with those who opposed him. He had once
brawled with a political adversary and challenged him to a duel.
Early in the Second Continental Congress, following an incendiary
speech by Adams, Dickinson pursued him into the State House yard
and, in a venomous outburst, as recounted by Adams, demanded: “What
is the reason, Mr. Adams, that you New Englandmen oppose our
Measures of Reconciliation. . . . Look Ye,” he threatened, “If you
don't concur with Us, in our pacific System, I, and a Number of Us,
will break off from you . . . and We will carry on the Opposition by
ourselves in our own Way.” Adams was infuriated by Dickinson’s
invective: the two never spoke again.
Dickinson had a
distinguished record. In 1765 he had served in the Stamp Act
Congress convened to protest that measure. Two years later, he
published his cogent and illuminating Letters from a Farmer in Pennsylvania,
America’s most popular political tract before 1776, which assumed
that Parliament, though possessed of the right to regulate trade,
lacked authority to tax the colonists. That was the very stand taken
by 1774’s First Continental Congress, and a constitutional
settlement along those lines—not independence—was what the
reconciliationists hoped to achieve through war. Dickinson charged
that London had launched an “inexpressibly cruel War.” Its “Sword is
opening our Veins,” he said, compelling Americans to fight for their
freedom.
But he also warned that a war for independence
would be interminable. British prime minister Lord Frederick North
had pledged an implacable fight to maintain “every Advantage” that
Britain derived from its control of the colonies. Before any war for
independence ended, Dickinson prophesied, Americans would have
“tasted deeply of that bitter Cup called the Fortunes of War.” Not
only would they have to “wade throSeas of Blood,” but in due course,
hostilities would bring on massive unemployment within the maritime
trades, heinous cruelties along the frontier, slave insurrections in
the South and the relentless spread of disease from armies to
civilians. And even in the unlikely event independence was achieved,
Dickinson argued, yet another catastrophe might well lie in store:
France and Spain would destroy the infant United States. In
contrast, a war for reconciliation would be short-lived. Confronted
with “a bloody & tedious Contest attended with Injury to their
Trade,” Lord North’s government would collapse. Its successor would
be compelled to accept Congress’ terms: American “Dependence &
Subordination” on the Crown, but with it a recognition from London
that Parliament’s only power over the colonies was the regulation of
American trade.
Given Dickinson’s position as a longtime foe of
Parliamentary taxation, it was only to be expected that he would
emerge as a leader in Congress. Adams’ rise, however, was a
different story. When he became leader of the independence
forces—what one contemporary observer, Dr. Benjamin Rush, described
as the “first man in the House”—many were caught by surprise. Before
his election to Congress in 1774, Adams was largely inexperienced in
public life. He had served only one term in the Massachusetts
assembly and had not even headed the Massachusetts delegation at the
First Congress—cousin Sam had assumed that responsibility.
Forty years old in 1775, John Adams had grown up
on a small farm just south of Boston, where his father moonlighted
as a shoemaker to earn the money to send his oldest son to Harvard.
Like Dickinson, Adams had practiced law, and also like him, had
advanced rapidly. Within a dozen years of opening his law office,
Adams maintained the heaviest caseload of any attorney in Boston.
Unlike Dickinson, Adams was initially wary of the American protest
against British policies, believing that the ministry had simply
erred in its actions and might be expected to mend its ways. He had
been converted to open support of the popular cause only in 1773.
Adams came to keenly desire a leadership role,
but feared that his physical limitations—he was portly and
balding—and irascible manner would frustrate his ambitions.
Furthermore, he was no jovial backslapper. Gruff and argumentative,
he was maladroit when it came to talking about what he regarded as
the favorite topics of men: dogs, horses and women. Nevertheless,
those who penetrated his churlish exterior discovered a
good-natured, self-effacing and exceptionally bright individual. And
he possessed the skills needed to be an effective legislator. He was
tireless, a skilled debater, an incisive, if not flamboyant, orator
and a trenchant thinker. He quickly won a reputation as the
Congressional authority on diplomacy and political theory. His
colleagues found him to be unfailingly well prepared, prudent,
honest and trustworthy—in short, just the man to follow in this
high-stakes endeavor.
The first issue to truly
divide the Second Continental Congress arose early on. In May 1775,
as it considered the creation of the Continental Army, Dickinson
insisted on petitioning the king with what he characterized as a
“Measure of Peace.” Adams privately branded it a “Measure of
Imbecility” and raged that some delegates, at least those from the
mercantile colonies of New York and Pennsylvania, were “selfish and
avaricious.” For those congressman, he charged, “a ship [was] dearer
than” the lives of Continental soldiers. In October 1774, the First
Continental Congress had petitioned the monarch; Adams feared that
to do so again was to risk appearing weak. Franklin concurred. “It
is a true old saying,” he remarked, “that make yourselves sheep and the wolves will eat
you.”
Nevertheless, the independence faction wanted no
confrontation with Dickinson’s at this crucial juncture of the war,
and the Olive Branch Petition, as the peace measure was known, was
approved, though only after a contentious debate over its wording.
Richard Penn, a former governor of Pennsylvania, carried it to
England. Franklin advised a London friend, a director of the Bank of
England, that this was Britain’s last hope for preventing “a total
Separation” by the colonies. To another friend in England he wrote:
“If you flatter yourselves with beating us into submission, you know
neither the [American] people nor the country.”
At about the same time, Congress created a
committee to draft a “Declaration of the Causes and Necessity of
Taking Up Arms.” Among others, it appointed Jefferson, who had only
recently joined the Virginia delegation, and Dickinson to the
committee. Jefferson, who enjoyed a reputation as a facile writer,
was asked to draft the document. With views similar to Adams’, he
produced a paper that reiterated the charges of British tyranny and
harshly cataloged the ministry’s “avowed course of murder and
devastation.” Dickinson was appalled. He feared that such a
provocative statement would make a measured response to the Olive
Branch Petition impossible. He demanded, and obtained, an
opportunity to tone down Jefferson’s draft. Dickinson’s softer
proclamation stipulated that “we mean not to dissolve that Union”
with Britain. It was adopted in July 1775.
The reconciliationists held sway through the
summer of 1775, but as hostilities unfolded and Congress was
required to prosecute the war, their hold gradually weakened. By the
end of 1775, Congress had issued a Continental currency, drawn up
regulations applying to all militia, created a Continental post
office and taken control of Indian relations. Feeling “a little of
the Seafaring Inclination,” as Adams put it, Congress also
established an American navy and two battalions of marines. It
regulated American trade, assumed responsibility for the enforcement
of the embargo of British commerce, attempted to resolve
intercolonial territorial disputes and even acted as the national
judiciary, hearing appeals from state courts in cases that involved
the seizure of British ships.
Congress additionally began to conduct foreign
policy. It created a Secret Committee to contract for arms imports
and a Committee of Secret Correspondence to establish contact with
“our friends” throughout the world. In March 1776, Congress
dispatched one of its own, Silas Deane of Connecticut, to Versailles
to pursue talks with the French government. In fact, if not in name,
the Second Continental Congress had become the government of an
autonomous union of American provinces.
Back in November 1775, word had arrived that
George III had branded the colonists rebels and traitors and had
contemptuously refused to accept the Olive Branch Petition. Two
months later, the full text of the king’s speech to Parliament
reached Philadelphia. In it the monarch unsparingly assailed those
colonists who supported hostilities, charging that they were part of
a “wicked” and “desperate conspiracy.” In addition, he revealed his
intention to obtain foreign mercenaries to help suppress the
rebellion. Hancock, by now president of Congress, wryly remarked
that the Crown’s actions “don’t look like a Reconciliation.” John
Adams gleefully noted that Dickinson “sinks . . . in the public
opinion.” Indeed, evidence was mounting that the mood of the country
was changing. Already, by the summer of 1775, when Congress began
authorizing the colonies to create their own governments,
supplanting those chartered by the Crown, it had taken its most
radical step since the creation of the army. Dickinson and his
principal ally, James Wilson of Pennsylvania, fought back. In
January 1776 they proposed that Congress adopt yet another “humble &
dutiful Petition” disclaiming independence to the king. This time
Congress refused. Some members, such as Samuel Adams, had begun to
see the reconciliationists as “Tools of a Tyrant.”
Yet Congress still remained unwilling to declare
independence. Had a vote been taken in early January 1776, the
measure would likely have failed. On the 17th of that month,
however, word reached Philadelphia of a devastating military
setback, the young army’s first. The news was instrumental in
propelling Congress on its final journey toward independence.
As Washington’s army
besieged British regulars in Boston during the summer of 1775,
Congress had authorized an invasion of lightly defended Canada in
order to defeat British forces there. It was a troubled campaign
from the start, and on December 31 disaster struck. An attack on
Quebec was repulsed; 500 men, half of America’s invading army, were
lost: 100 were killed or wounded and another 400 taken prisoner. So
much for any expectation of a short-lived war. Overnight, many in
Congress came to believe that no victory would ever be possible
without foreign assistance; all understood that no aid from any
outside power would be forthcoming so long as America fought for the
“purpose of repairing the breach [with Britain],” as Thomas Paine
had observed in his incendiary pamphlet Common Sense,
published in January 1776.
Soon after the debacle at Quebec, John Adams
observed that there now existed “no Prospect, no Probability, no
Possibility” of reconciliation. Late in February came still more
stunning news. Congress learned that Parliament had enacted the
American Prohibitory Act, shutting down all trade with the colonies
and permitting seizure of colonial vessels. John Adams called the
law “a Gift” to the pro-independence party. Virginia’s Richard Henry
Lee concurred, saying that it severed the last ties with the mother
country. It was “curious,” he stated, that Congress yet hesitated to
declare independence when London had already “put the two Countries
asunder.”
As spring foliage burst forth in Philadelphia in
1776, ever larger numbers of Americans were coming round to
independence. The “Sighing after Independence” in Massachusetts,
said James Warren, speaker of the colony’s House of Representatives,
had become nearly “Universal.” By mid- May every Southern colony had
authorized its delegates to vote for breaking off ties with Britain.
Within Congress, emotions ran high. “I cannot
conceive what good Reason can be assignd against [independence],”
Samuel Adams railed in mid-April. He exclaimed that the “Salvation
of the Country depends on its being done speedily. I am anxious to
have it done.” John Adams maintained that had independence been
declared months earlier, America’s armies would already possess
French arms. Elbridge Gerry, a Massachusetts delegate, complained
that “timid Minds are terrified at the Word Independency,” while
Franklin deplored those who clutched at the “vain Hope of
Reconciliation.” As for General Washington, he said he believed that
Congress had “long, & ardently sought for reconciliation upon
honourable terms,” only to be rebuffed at every turn. He had long
been of the opinion that “all Connexions with a State So unjust”
should be broken.
Still, the reconciliationists held out,
encouraged by a passage in the Prohibitory Act that authorized the
monarch to appoint commissioners to grant pardons and to receive the
grievances of colonists. Dickinson and his followers viewed the
appointees as peace commissioners and held out hope that they were
being sent to resolve differences. Many in Congress refused to budge
until they learned just what the envoys had to offer. John Adams
disdainfully predicted that this was “a Bubble” and a misbegotten
“Messiah that will never come.” Samuel Adams said that he was
“disgusted” both with the “King & his Junto,” who spoke of peace
while making “the most destructive Plans,” and with the
reconciliationists who were willing to be “Slaves” to “a Nation so
lost to all Sense of Liberty and Virtue.” In May, as American
newspapers published the text of Britain’s treaties with several
German principalities, authorizing the hiring of mercenaries,
outrage toward the Crown skyrocketed. Many were now convinced, as
Richard Henry Lee said, that the action proved Britain was bent
“upon the absolute conquest and subduction of N. America.” Nearly
simultaneously, word arrived of yet more calamities in Canada.
Congress had dispatched reinforcements following the failed attack
in December, but smallpox and desertions soon thinned their ranks.
With the arrival of British reinforcements in May, the American army
commenced a long, slow retreat that lasted until mid-June. Now, said
Lee, it “is not choice then but necessity that calls for
Independence, as the only means by which a foreign Alliance can be
obtained.”
One final matter helped the slowest sailors in
Congress catch up with the swiftest. Month after month had passed
with no sign of the so-called peace commissioners. Then, in the
spring, it was learned that, although some commissioners had been
named, they had been ordered not to treat with Congress. That proved
a final blow; all but the most ardent reconciliationists were
persuaded that the king’s envoys were coming for the sole purpose of
dividing American opinion and derailing the war effort.
With the tide so turned, in mid-May, Congress
declared that “every kind of authority under the . . . Crown should
be totally suppressed” and instructed each colony to adopt a new
government suitable for providing for the “happiness and safety of
their constituents and . . . America in general.” John Adams, who
called this the “last Step,” believed this was tantamount to a
declaration of independence. Even Maryland’s Thomas Stone, a foe of
separation, disconsolately allowed that the “Dye is cast. The fatal
Stab is given to any future Connection between this Country &
Britain.” Only a formal declaration of independence remained, and
that could not now be long in coming.
On June 7, three weeks
after Congress urged changes in the provincial governments, Lee
introduced a motion for independence: “Resolved,
That these United Colonies are, and of right ought to be, free and
independent States, that they are absolved from all allegiance to
the British Crown, and that all political connection between them
and the State of Great Britain is, and ought to be, totally
dissolved.”
Congress rancorously debated Lee’s motion for two
days. Several reconciliationists from the Middle-Atlantic colonies
made their final stand, even threatening to “secede from the Union”
if Congress declared independence. But their threats and
recriminations no longer frightened the majority, including Oliver
Wolcott of Connecticut, who recognized that America was in the
“Midst of a great Revolution . . . leading to the lasting
Independancy of these Colonies.” On June 11, Congress created a
five-member committee to prepare a statement on independence. Adams,
Franklin, Jefferson, Roger Sherman of Connecticut and Robert
Livingston of New York were given until July 1 to complete their
work. Once again it was to Jefferson that a panel turned, this time
for the fateful task of drafting the declaration.
Jefferson and his colleagues beat the deadline by
two days, submitting on June 28 a document that explained and
defended independence. By July 1, the final consideration of Lee’s
motion to declare independence was taken up. That day’s session,
John Adams told a friend in a letter written early that morning,
would see “the greatest Debate of all.” With the outcome no longer
in doubt, he said that he prayed for “the new born Republic” about
to be created.
When debate began midmorning on that hot, steamy
Monday, Dickinson was first on his feet to make one last speech
against independence. Speaking emotionally for perhaps as much as
two hours in the stifling heat of the closed room (windows were kept
shut to keep spies from listening in), Dickinson reviewed the
familiar arguments: America could not win the war; at best, it could
fight Britain to a stalemate, and deadlocked wars often ended in
partition treaties in which territory is divided among the
belligerents; therefore, after all the killing, some colonies would
remain part of the British Empire, while others would pass under the
control of France or Spain.
It was John Adams—soon to be christened “the
Atlas of Independence” by New Jersey’s Richard Stockton—who rose to
answer Dickinson. Striving to conceal his contempt for his
adversary, Adams spoke extemporaneously in subdued tones. Once
again, he reviewed the benefits of independence. Although his speech
was not transcribed, he surely invoked the ideas he had expressed
and the phrases he had used on many another occasion. Breaking ties
with Britain, he argued, would ensure freedom from England’s
imperial domination; escape from the menace of British corruption;
and the opportunity to create a republic based on equality of
representation.
Others then took the floor. The speeches
stretched past the customary 4 o’clock adjournment and into the
evening. The business was “an idle Mispence of Time,” Adams remarked
sourly, as “nothing was Said, but what had been repeated and
hackneyed in that Room an hundred Times for Six Months past.” After
the Congress reconvened the next morning, July 2, the delegates cast
their momentous votes. Twelve states—the colonies would become
states with the vote—voted for independence. Not one voted against
the break with Britain. New York’s delegation, which had not yet
been authorized by the New York legislature to separate from the
mother country, did not vote. (Dickinson and Robert Morris did not
attend, and Pennsylvania cast its vote for independence by a
three-to-two margin.)
Adams predicted that July 2 would ever after “be
solemnized with Pomp and Parade, with Shews, Games, Sports, Guns,
Bells, Bonfires and Illuminations from one End of this Continent to
the other.” He was wrong, of course, for July 4, the date that
Congress approved the formal Declaration of Independence, would
become the commemorative day. But Adams had made one prediction that
would prove tellingly correct. With the Union intact after a
15-month battle for independence, and with the step finally taken
that could secure foreign assistance in America’s desperate war,
Adams declared he could “see the Rays of ravishing Light and Glory”
that would accompany military victory.