[A few years back I started January by highlighting some of the historic anniversaries we’d be commemorating in the year to come. It was a fun series, so I thought I’d do the same this year with some 2022 anniversaries. Leading up to a special post on predictions for 2022!]
On three moments
that foreshadowed three distinct layers to the oncoming Revolution.
1)
Committee
of Correspondence: One of the main things that had to happen before there
could be an American Revolution was that 13 disparate and in many ways
dissimilar colonies had to find common cause, and one of the principal means
for achieving that cohesion was through writing. In April 1772, fiery
Massachusetts legislator Samuel Adams proposed a means for such collective conversation,
a “Committee of Correspondence”
between the colonies over their relationship with England. It took a few months
to get off the ground, but on November 2nd
Adams and his colleague and friend Joseph
Warren formally formed the first such Committee, a vital moment in the development
of an overarching American pre-Revolutionary perspective and voice.
2)
The Gaspee
Affair: The build-up to the Revolution was also and equally defined by
impassioned and violent protest, however. If the 1770
Boston Massacre was one of the first prominent such events, a second took
place in June 1772, when Rhode Island merchant sailor and firebrand Abraham Whipple led a group of
fifty compatriots in trapping and burning the British customs schooner HMS Gaspee off the colony’s coast. The
attack, undertaken in opposition to the longstanding Navigation
Acts by which England heavily taxed American shipping, is sometimes defined
as the Revolution’s
first act of war, and at the very least was one of those significant steps
that fundamentally altered the relationship between the colonies and the Crown.
3)
Somerset
v. Stewart: Events in the colonies were far from the only precipitating
factors in the Revolution, of course. In recent years, thanks in large part to the
1619 Project, more and more attention has been paid to the effects of England’s
evolving anti-slavery efforts and moments on the colonies. One prominent such
anti-slavery moment was the June 1772 legal decision Somerset
v. Stewart, in which Judge Lord Mansfield ruled that slavery was (at
least in some essential ways) incompatible with English Common Law. The
question of whether and how this decision applied to the colonies, and thus
what role it played in the pre-Revolutionary
debates over slavery, was in that era and remains in our own contested—but there’s
no doubt that both cases and histories like this one played a role, and
represent one more 1772 step on the road to Revolution.
Next anniversary
tomorrow,
Ben
PS. What do you
think?
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