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Samuel Adams: Son of Liberty, Father of Revolution PDF

178 Pages·2002·1.1 MB·English
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Samuel Adams: Son of Liberty, Father of Revolution Benjamin H. Irvin OXFORD UNIVERSITY PRESS Samuel Adams Son of Liberty, Father of Revolution Image Not Available OXFORD PORTRAITS Samuel Adams Son of Liberty, Father of Revolution Benjamin H. Irvin 1 In memory of Anita Shafer Goodstein, William R. Kenan Professor of History, the University of the South, 1963–94 1 Oxford New York Auckland Bangkok Buenos Aires Cape Town Chennai Dar es Salaam Delhi Florence Hong Kong Istanbul Karachi Kolkata Kuala Lumpur Madrid Melbourne Mexico City Mumbai Nairobi São Paulo Shanghai Singapore Taipei Tokyo Toronto and an associated company in Berlin Copyright © 2002 by Benjamin H. Irvin Published by Oxford University Press, Inc. 198 Madison Avenue, New York, New York 10016 www.oup.com Oxford is a registered trademark of Oxford University Press All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted in any form by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording, or otherwise, without the prior permission of Oxford University Press. Design: Greg Wozney Layout: Alexis Siroc Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data Irvin, Benjamin. Samuel Adams / Benjamin Irvin. p. cm.–(Oxford portraits) Summary: Examines the life of Samuel Adams, a hero of the American Revolution who is credited by some with having fired the first shot at Lexington Green, the “shot heard ’round the world.” Includes bibliographical references and index. ISBN 0-19-513225-4 (alk. paper) 1. Adams, Samuel, 1722–1803—Juvenile literature. 2. Politicians—United States—Biography—Juvenile literature. 3. United States. Declaration of Independence—Signers—Biography—Juvenile literature. 4. United States— History—Revolution, 1775–1783—Biography—Juvenile literature. [1. Adams, Samuel, 1722–1803. 2. Politicians. 3. United States—History—Revolution, 1775–1783.] I. Title. II. Series. E302.6.A2 I79 2002 973.3'092—dc21 2002004283 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 Printed in the United States of America on acid-free paper On the cover: Portrait of Samuel Adams by John Singleton Copley, 1772 Frontispiece:Samuel Adams studies a map of North America, 1780. C ONTENTS PROLOGUE: THE ELUSIVE SAMUEL ADAMS 6 1 SAMUEL ADAMS’S BOSTON 12 2 RAISED FOR REBELLION 24 3 TIS NOT IN MORTALS TO COMMAND SUCCESS 36 4 SAM THE PUBLICAN AND THE STAMP ACT RIOTS 51 5 MOBS AND MASSACRE 66 Citizens and Soldiers 78 In a Gore of Blood 85 6 TO SAVE THE COUNTRY 89 The Rights of the Colonists 98 7 THE COERCIVE ACTS AND THE CONTINENTAL CONGRESS 110 8 IS NOT AMERICA ALREADY INDEPENDENT? 126 An Easy, Genteel Figure 132 9 THE STORM IS NOW OVER 139 The Marriage State 147 No Christian Sparta 151 EPILOGUE: SAMUEL ADAMS’S LEGACY 162 CHRONOLOGY 166 FURTHER READING 169 INDEX 171 ACKNOWLEDGMENTS 176 P : ROLOGUE T E HE LUSIVE S A AM DAMS “In meditating the matter of that address, I often asked myself, Is this exactly in the spirit of the patriarch Samuel Adams? Will he approve of it?” —Thomas Jefferson Midnight, April 19, 1775. Under cover of night, 850 British troops have landed their small boats in Cambridge, Massachusetts. Commanded by Lieutenant Colonel Francis Smith, the troops have rowed across the Charles River from Boston, where they are regularly stationed. Now, at Smith’s direction, they begin to assemble as silently as possible. These soldiers, who have been handpicked from among the most trustworthy in all of General Gage’s army, nervously await their command. Clearly this is not just an ordinary drill. No, these men have been selected for a mission of sin- gular importance, a mission for which General Gage him- self has handed down the orders. The soldiers, Redcoats as they are popularly known, are to march to the small town of Concord and seize the artillery and gunpowder stored there. Along the way, they are to stop near Lexington and— according to American spies—arrest the leaders of the American rebellion, Samuel Adams and John Hancock. Meanwhile, as the British soldiers stamp the river water from their boots, Boston silversmith Paul Revere, astride a horse named Brown Beauty, gallops into Lexington. Two hours earlier, Revere, too, had rowed across the Charles, but not before ordering that two lanterns be lit in the 6 PROLOGUE: THE ELUSIVE SAM ADAMS steeple of the Old North Church. By this prearranged sig- nal, Revere’s accomplices would know that the Redcoats are coming by sea. In the hours that have passed, Revere has ridden through the countryside, dodged British scouts, and warned his fellow New Englanders that the Redcoats are on the march. But he has not yet accomplished his pri- mary purpose: alerting his compatriots, Adams and Hancock, of the impending danger. Once Revere reaches Lexington, he guides his horse directly to the home of the Reverend Jonas Clarke, where the two leaders have been hiding for weeks. He bangs on the door with a fervor that might wake the whole town, and out of a bedroom window pop the sleepy heads of Adams and Hancock. The two Patriot leaders receive Revere’s warning with a great deal of excitement, and they deliberate for some time as to what action they should take. They know that the Redcoats are after the military stores in Concord. They know, too, that while they sit debating, the local militia— the Minutemen, as they will later come to be known—have been rousted from their slumber and will soon gather to defend their liberty. Perhaps most significantly, Adams and Hancock know that a battle is likely, a battle that will push the colonists one step closer to war, and one step closer to the possibility of independence from Great Britain. How they long to join in the fight! Fortunately, cooler heads prevail. As Revere and Reverend Clarke are well aware, Adams and Hancock are too impor- tant to the American cause to risk death or capture at Lexington Green. They convince the two Patriots to flee the town so as to escape the British troops; the men gather their belongings, bid farewell to their friends, and disappear into the countryside. Later that morning, as they rode on to safety, they heard behind them in the distance the shots fired at Lexington. As the Patriot minister and historian William Gordon would later write, Adams turned to Hancock and exclaimed, “O! What a glorious morning this is!” 7 SAMUEL ADAMS John Adams lived in the shadow of his more famous cousin Samuel until he attended the Continental Congress. There, his legal think- ing earned the praise of America’s leading citizens. Image Not Available Adams would not be captured that morning, thanks to the conspiratorial hospitality of Reverend Clarke, the horse- back heroics of Paul Revere and his fellow midnight riders, and the loyalty of numerous Patriots who kept his where- abouts a secret. But just as he eluded General Gage, so too has Adams eluded historians. Indeed, despite numerous biographies written about the Patriot leader, Adams remains something of a mystery. At best, his life seems full of contra- dictions. The man who was born into a family of relatively high rank lived a humble, at times almost impoverished life. The man who could barely manage his own house brilliantly managed the Massachusetts House of Representatives. The man who fomented the Revolution resisted the Constitution. The man who spearheaded resistance to the English government staunchly opposed resistance to the United States government. 8

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The story of one of the most important -- and most elusive -- figures of the American Revolution, Samuel Adams traces the life of the ''Man of the Revolution,'' as he was called by Thomas Jefferson, from his childhood as a fifth-generation New Englander to his pivotal role in the Boston Tea Party an
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