Governor Of Massachusetts Samuel ADAMS
- Born: 27 Sep 1722, Boston, Suffolk Co., MA
- Died: 2 Oct 1803, Boston, Suffolk Co., MA at age 81
Another name
for Samuel was Revolutionary PATRIOT.
General
Notes:
Samuel Adams, the Boston patriot,
was in some respects, without doubt, the most illustrious scion of the Henry
Adams family. He was educated in the Boston Latin School and Harvard College,
and although he left College to engage in business, when his parents desired him
to enter the ministry, and the law was not so respectable as it has since
become, the college honored his scholarship, and when a candidate for the
master's degree in 1743, he showed of what material he was made, and what would
come of him, in his his discussion of the thesis, "Whether it be lawful to
resist the supreme magistrate, if the commonwealth cannot otherwise be
preserved."
"Upon his father's death, 1748, he assumed the business of
brewing, and was called "Sammy the Maltster." When elected tax-collector he was
called "Sammy the publican." He soon became prominent as an opponent of British
rule in the colonies. In May, 1764, he drafted the instructions to Boston's
representatives, which were the first public protest against the right of
parliament to tax the colonies. He was elected representative to the
legislature, 1765 to 1774, and was the writer of most of the remarkable state
papers of that remarkable time. The circular letter of Massachusetts to the
other colonies, written by him, particularly enraged the king, and the
Legislature was ordered to rescind it, but refused, 92 to 17, to do so. Mr.
Adams had the confidence and co-operation of the people in demanding the removal
of the king's two regiments from Boston after the "massacre" in March, 1770.
When in 1772, the king had ordered the judges of the courts to receive their
salaries from the crown, and not from the colony, and the people of Boston asked
the Governor to conveue the Legislature, and he refused, Mr. Adams proposed that
the towns of Massachusetts appoint "committees of correspondence," and in a
short time eighty towns had chosen their committees. This led to the
intercolonial committees, the founding of the Colonial Congress, and the
declaration of independence. The subsequent political history of Mr. Adams is
well known. "As an adroit political manager he was not surpassed by Jefferson.
He had a genuine sympathy for men with leather aprons and hands browned by toil;
he knew how to win their confidence, and never abused it, for he was in no sense
a demagogue."
"Samuel Adams and his cousin, John, were delegates to the
first continental congress, 1774. He was a signer of the Declaration of
Independence in 1776; became Lieut.-Governor of his State in 1789, and Governor
in 1794-97. His decision to support the new Federal constitution in the
Massachusetts convention of 1788 is said to have carried the ratification by the
narrow majority of 187 yeas to 168 nays, and this was really the most important
of all his great services to his country and the republic.
"His cousin,
President John Adams, declared him to have been of "incorruptible integrity,"
"the very soul of the Revolution," and that the appointment of Washington to the
command of the army was due to him. Rufus Choate pronounced him "the matchless
orator," and though none of his orations have come down to us, we know what they
were. SOURCE:
http://awt.ancestry.com/cgi-bin/igm.cgi?op=GET&db=wboth1252&id=I6575
1722
- 1803
"If ye love wealth greater than liberty, the tranquility of
servitude greater than the animating contest for freedom, go home from us in
peace. We seek not your counsel, nor your arms. Crouch down and lick the hand
that feeds you; May your chains set lightly upon you, and may posterity forget
that ye were our countrymen." Samuel Adams
Samuel Adams was born in
Boston, Massachusetts on September 27, 1722. He was a leader of the fight
against British colonial rule, and a signer of the Declaration of Independence.
Adams was a cousin of John Adams who became President of the United States.
Samuel Adams graduated from Harvard College with a Master of Arts degree in
1743. After college he entered private business, and throughout this period was
an outspoken participant in Boston town meetings. When his business failed in
1764 Adams entered politics full-time, and was elected to the Massachusetts
legislature. He lead the effort to establish a committee of correspondence that
published a Declaration of Colonial Rights that Adams had written. He was a
vocal opponent of several laws passed by the British Parliament to raise revenue
in the American Colonies, including the Tea Act which gave a British trading
company a monopoly on the import of tea into the colonies. This opposition
reached its peak on December 16, 1773 when a group of Bostonians dumped a
British cargo of tea into Boston Harbor. This act of resistance is referred to
as the Boston Tea Party.
The British Parliament responded to the "Boston
Tea Party" by passing a set of laws referred to as the "Intolerable Acts." These
laws included the closing of Boston Harbor and the restriction town meetings.
Adams then urged a general boycott of British trade by the American Colonies.
In 1774 the Massachusetts legislature send Adams and four others as its
representatives to the First Continental Congress. Adams served Massachusetts
again at the Second Continental Congress where he was an advocate for
independence and confederation for the American Colonies.
Adams served
Continental Congress until his return to Boston in 1781. He initially opposed
the new Constitution of the United States, but finally supported its
ratification in Massachusetts. Adams served as Governor of Massachusetts from
1793 to 1797. SOURCE: http://www.lucidcafe.com/library/95sep/adams.html
Among those who signed the Declaration of Independence, and were conspicuous in
the revolution, there existed, of course, a great diversity of intellectual
endowments; nor did all render to their country, in those perilous days, the
same important services. Like the luminaries of heavens each contributed his
portion of influence; but, like them, they differed, as star differeth from star
in glory. But in the constellation of great men, which adorned that era, few
shone with more brilliancy, or exercised a more powerful influence than Samuel
Adams.
This gentleman was born at Quincy, in Massachusetts, September
22d, 1722, in the neighbourhood afterwards rendered memorable as the birth place
of Hancock, and as the residence of the distinguished family which has given two
presidents to the United States. His descent was from a respectable family,
which emigrated to America with the first settlers of the land.
In the
year 1736, he became a member of Harvard University, where he was distinguished
for an uncommon attention to all his collegiate exercises, and for his classical
and scientific attainments. On taking the degree of master, in 1743, he proposed
the following question, "Whether it be lawful to resist the supreme magistrate,
if the commonwealth cannot be otherwise preserved?" He maintained the
affirmative; and in this collegiate exercise furnished no dubious evidence of
his attachment to the liberties of the people.
On leaving the university,
he began the study of law, for which profession his father designed him; but at
the solicitation of his mother, this pursuit was relinquished, and he became a
clerk in the counting house of Thomas Cushing, at that time a distinguished
merchant. But his genius was not adapted to mercantile pursuits; and in a short
time after commencing business for himself, partly owing to the failure in
business of a friend, and partly to injudicious management, he lost the entire
capital which had been given him by his father.
The genius of Adams was
naturally bent on politics. It was with him an all engrossing subject. From his
earliest youth, he had felt its inspiration. It occupied his thoughts, enlivened
his conversation, and employed his pen. In respect to his private business, this
was an unfortunate trait of character; but most fortunate for his country, since
he thus acquired an extensive knowledge of those principles of national liberty,
which he afterwards asserted with so much energy, in opposition to the arbitrary
conduct of the British government.
In 1763 it was announced, that the
British ministry had it in view to " tax the colonies, for the purpose of
raising a revenue, which was to be placed at the disposal of the crown.' This
news filled the colonies with alarm. In Massachusetts, a committee was appointed
by the people of Boston to express the public sentiment in relation to this
contemplated measure, for the guidance of the representatives to the general
court. The instructions of this committee were drawn by Mr. Adams. They formed,
in truth, a powerful remonstrance against the injustice of the contemplated
system of taxation; and they merit the more particular notice, as they were the
first recorded public document, which denied the right of taxation to the
British parliament. They also contained the first suggestion of the propriety of
that mutual understanding and correspondence among the colonies, which laid the
foundation of their future confederacy. Ill these instructions, after alluding
to the evils which had resulted from the acts of the British parliament,
relating to trade, Mr. Adams observes: -- "If our trade may be taxed, why not
our lands? Why not the produce of our lands, and every thing we possess, or use?
This we conceive annihilates our charter rights to govern and tax ourselves. It
strikes at our British privileges, which, as we have never forfeited, we hold in
common with our fellow subjects, who are natives of Britain. If tastes are laid
upon us in any shape, without our having a legal representation, where they are
laid, we are reduced from the character of free subjects, to the state of
tributary slaves. We, therefore, earnestly recommend it to you, to use your
utmost endeavours to obtain from the general court, all necessary advice and
instruction to our agent, at this most critical Juncture." "We also desire you
to use your endeavours, that the other colonies, having the same interests and
rights with us, may add their weight to that of this province; that by united
application of all who areagreed, all may obain redress !"
The deep
interest which Mr. Adams felt and manifested for the rights of the colonies,
soon brought him into favour with the patriotic party. He became a leader in
their popular assemblies, and was bold in denouncing the unjust acts of the
British ministry.
In 1765 he was elected a representative to the general
court of Massachusetts, from the town of Boston. From this period, during the
whole revolutionary struggle, he was the bold, persevering, and efficient
supporter of the rights of his oppressed country. As a member of the court, he
soon became conspicuous, and was honoured with the office of clerk to that body.
In the legislature, he was characterized for the same activity and boldness
which he had manifested in the town. He was appointed upon almost every
committee, assisted in drawing nearly every report, and exercised a large share
of influence, in almost every meeting, which had for its object the
counteraction of the unjust plans of the administration.
But it was not
in his legislative capacity alone, that Mr. Adams exhibited his hostility to the
British government, and his regard for rational freedom. Several able essays on
these subjects were published by him; and he was the author of several plans for
opposing, more successfully, the unjust de-signs of the mother country. He has
the honour of having suggested the first congress at New-York, which prepared
the way for a Continental Congress, ten years after; and at length for the union
and confederacy of the colonies.
The injudicious management of his
private affairs, already alluded to, rendered Mr. Adams poor. When this was
known in England, the partisans of the ministry proposed to bribe him, by the
gift of some lucrative office. A suggestion of this kind was accordingly made to
Governor Hutchinson, to which he replied in a manner highly complimentary to the
integrity of Mr. Adams." Such is the obstinacy and inflexible disposition of the
man, that he never can be conciliated by any office or gift whatever." The
offer, however, it is reported, was actually made to Mr. Adams, but neither the
allurements of fortune or power could for a moment tempt Him to abandon the
cause of truth, or to hazard the liberties of the people.
He was indeed
poor; but he could be tempted neither by British gold, nor by the honours or
profits of any office within the gift of the royal governor. Such patriotism has
not been common in the world; but in America it was to be found in many a bosom,
during the revolutionary struggle. The knowledge of facts like this, greatly
diminishes the wonder, which has sometimes been expressed, that America should
have successfully contended with Great Britain. Her physical strength was
comparatively weak; but the moral courage of her statesmen, and her soldiers,
was to her instead of numbers, of wealth, and fortifications.
The Boston
Massacre Allusion has been made, both in our introduction, and in our notice
of Hancock, to the Boston massacre, in 1770, an event which will long remain
memorable in the annals of the revolution, not only as it was the first instance
of bloodshed between the British and the Americans, but as it conduced to
increase the irritation, and to widen the breach between the two countries.
Our limits forbid a more particular account of this tragical affair; and it is
again alluded to only for the purpose of bringing more distinctly into view, the
intrepid and decisive conduct of Samuel Adams on that occasion.
On the
morning following this night of bloodshed, a meeting of the citizens of Boston
was called. Mingled emotions of horror and indignation pervaded the assembly.
Samuel Adams first arose to address the listening multitude. Few men could
harangue a popular assembly with greater energy or exercise a more absolute
control over their passions and affections. On that occasion, a Demosthenes, or
a Chatham, could scarcely have addressed the assembled multitude with a more
impressive eloquence, or have represented in a more just and emphatic manner,
the fearful crisis to which the affairs of the colonies were fast tending. A
committee was unanimously chosen to wait upon Governor Hutchinson, with a
request that the troops might be immediately removed from the town. To the
request of this committees the governor, with his usual prevarication, replied,
that the troops were not subject to his order. Mr. Adams, who was one of this
committee, strongly represented to the governor the danger of retaining the
troops longer in the capital. His indignation was aroused, and in a tone of
lofty independence, he declared, that the removal of the troops would alone
satisfy his insulted and indignant townsmen; it was, therefore, at the
governor's peril, that they were continued in the town, and that he alone must
be answerable for the fatal consequences, which it required no gift of prophecy
to predict must ensue.
It was now dark. The meeting of the citizens was
still undissolved. The greatest anxiety pervaded the assembly find scarcely were
they restrained from going in a body to the governor, to learn his
determination. Aware of the critical posture of affairs, aware of the personal
hazard which he encountered by refusing a compliance, the governor at length
gave his consent to the removal of the troops, and stipulated that the necessary
preparations should commence on the following morning. Thus, through the
decisive and spirited conduct of Samuel Adams, and a few other kindred spirits,
the obstinacy of a royal governor was subdued, and further hostilities were for
a still longer time suspended.
The popularity and influence of Mr. Adams
were rapidly increasing, and the importance of his being detached from the
popular party became every day more manifest. We have already noticed the
suggestion to Governor Hutchinson to effect this, by the gift of some lucrative
office. Other offers of a similar kind, it is reported, were made to him, at
different times, by the royal authorities, but with the same ill success. About
the year 1773, Governor Gage renewed the experiment. At that time Colonel Fenton
was requested to wait upon Mr. Adams, with the assurance of Governor Gage, that
any benefits would be conferred upon him which he should demand, on the
condition of his ceasing to oppose the measures of the royal government. At the
same time, it was not obscurely hinted, that such a measure was necessary, on
personal considerations. He had incurred the royal displeasure, and already,
such had been his conduct, that it was in the power of the governor to send him
to England for trial, on a charge of treason. It was suggested that a change in
his political conduct, might save him from this disgrace, and even from a
severer fate; and might elevate him, moreover, from his circumstances of
indigence, to the enjoyment of affluence.
To this proposal, Mr. Adams
listened with attention; but as Col. Fenton concluded his communication, with
all the spirit of a man of honour, with all the integrity of the most
incorrupted and incorruptible patriotism, he replied; "Go tell Governor Gage,
that my peace has long since been made with the King of kings, and that it is
the advice of Samuel Adams to him, no longer to insult the feelings of an
already exasperated people."
The independence and sterling integrity of
Mr. Adams might well have secured to him the respect, and even confidence of
Governor Gage; but with far different feelings did he regard the noble conduct
of this high minded patriot. Under the irritation excited by the failure of a
favourite plan, Governor Gage issued a proclamation, which comprehended the
following language: "I do hereby," he said, " in his majesty's name, offer and
promise his most gracious pardon to all persons, who shall forthwith lay down
their arms, and return to the duties of peaceable subjects: excepting only from
the benefits of such pardon, Samuel Adams, and John Hancock, whose offenses are
of too flagitious a nature to admit of any other consideration but that of
condign punishment."
Thus these independent men were singled out as the
objects of peculiar vengeance, and even their lives endangered, for honourably
resisting a temptation, to which, had they yielded, they would have merited the
reproach of their countrymen, and the scorn of the world.
Mr. Adams was a
member of the first Continental Congress which assembled in Philadelphia on the
5th of September, 1774; and continued a member of that body until the year 1781.
During this period, no delegate acted a more conspicuous or manly part. No one
exhibited a more indefatigable zeal, or a firmer tone of character. He early saw
that the contest would probably not be decided without bloodshed.
He was
himself prepared for every extremity, and was willing that such measures should
be adopted, as should lead to an early issue of the controversy. He was
accordingly among the warmest advocates for the declaration of American
independence. In his view, the die was cast, and a further friendly connection
with the parent country was impossible. "I am perfectly satisfied," said he, in
a letter written from Philadelphia, to a friend in Massachusetts, in April,
1776, "of the necessity of a public and explicit declaration of independence. I
cannot conceive what good reason can be assigned against it. Will it widen the
breach? This would be a strange question, after we have raised armies, and
fought battles with the British troops; set up an American navy; permitted the
inhabitants of these colonies to fit out armed vessels, to capture the ships,
&c. belonging to any of the inhabitants of Great Britain; declaring them the
enemies of the United Colonies; and torn into shivers their acts of trade, by
allowing commerce, subject to regulations to be made by ourselves, with the
people of all countries, except such as are subject to the British king. It
cannot surely, after all this, be imagined that we consider ourselves, or mean
to be considered by others, in any other state, than that of independence."
The independence of America was at length declared, and gave a new political
character, and an immediate dignity to the cause of the colonies. But
notwithstanding this measure might itself bear the aspect of victory, a
formidable contest yet awaited the Americans. The year following the declaration
of independence, the situation of the colonies was extremely gloomy. The
stoutest hearts trembled within them, and even doubts were expressed, whether
the measures which had been adopted, particularly the declaration of
independence, were not precipitate. The neighbourhood of Philadelphia became the
seat of war; congress, now reduced to only twenty-eight members, had resolved to
remove their session to Lancaster. At this critical period, Mr. Adams
accidentally fell in company with several other members, by whom the subject of
the state of the country was freely and confidentially discussed. Gloomy
forebodings seemed to pervade their millds, and the greatest anxiety was
expressed as to the issue of the contest.
To this conversation, Mr. Adams
listened with silent attention. At length he expressed his surprise, that such
desponding feelings should have settled upon their hearts, and such desponding
language should be even confidentially uttered by their lips. To this it was
answered, "The chance is desperate." "Indeed, indeed, it is desperate," said Mr.
Adams, "if this be our language. If we wear long faces, others will do so too;
if we despair, let us not expect that others will hope; or that they will
persevere in a contest, from which their leaders shrink. But let not such
feelings, let not such language, be ours." Thus, while the hearts of others were
ready to faint, Samuel Adams maintained his usual firmness. His unshaken
courage, and his calm reliance upon the aid and protection of heaven,
contributed in an eminent degree to inspire his countrymen with a confidence of
their final success. A higher encomium could not have been bestowed on any
member of the Continental Congress, than is expressed in relation to Mr. Adams
by Mr. Galloway, in his historical and political reflections on the rise and
progress of the American rebellion, published in Great Britain, 1780. "He eats
little," says the author, " drinks little, sleeps little, thinks much, and is
most indefatigable in the pursuit of his object. It was this man, who by his
superior application, managed at once the factions in congress at Philadelphia,
and the factions of New-England."
In 1781, Mr. Adams retired from
congress; but it was to receive from his native state, additional proofs of her
high estimation of his services, and of the confidence which she reposed in his
talents and integrity He had already been an active member of the convention
that formed her constitution; and after it went into effect, he was placed in
the senate of the state, and for several years presided over that body. In 1789,
he was elected lieutenant governor, and held that office till 1794; when, upon
the death of Hancock, he was chosen governor, and was annually re-elected till
1797, when he retired from public life. This retirement, however, he did not
long enjoy, as his death occurred on October 2d, 1803, at the advanced age of
82.
From the foregoing sketches of Mr. Adams, it will not be difficult
for the reader to form a tolerably correct opinion of his character and
disposition. In his person, he is said to have been only of the middle size, but
his countenance indicated a noble genius within, and a more than ordinary
inflexibility of character and purpose. Great sincerity and simplicity marked
his manners and deportment. In his conversation, he was at once interesting and
instructive; and those who shared his friendship had seldom any reason to doubt
his affection and constancy. His writings were voluminous, but unfortunately, as
they generally related to the temporary politics of the day, most of them are
lost. Those which remain furnish abundant proof of his superiority as a writer,
of the soundness of his political creed, and of the piety and sincerity of his
character. As an orator, he was eminently fitted for the stormy times in which
he lived. His elocution was concise and impressive, partaking more of the
logical than the figurative, and rather calculated to enlighten the
understanding, than to excite the feelings. Yet no man could address himself
more powerfully to the passions, than he did, on certain occasions. As a
statesman, his views were broad and enlightened; what his judgment had once
matured, he pursued with inflexible firmness, and patriotic ardour. While others
desponded, he was full of hope; where others hesitated, he was resolute; where
others were supine, he was eager for action. His circumstances of indigence led
him to habits of simplicity and frugality; but beyond this, he was natural1y
averse to parade and ostentation.
"Mr. Adams was a Christian. His mind
was early imbued with piety, as well as cultivated by science. He early
approached the table of the Lord Jesus, and the purity of his life witnessed the
sincerity of his profession. On the Christian Sabbath, he constantly went to the
temple, and the morning and evening devotions in his family proved, that his
seasons of retirement from the world. The last production of his pen was in
favour of Christian truth. He died in the faith of the gospel."
In his
opposition to British tyranny, no man was more conscientious; he detested
royalty, and despised the ostentation and contemptible servility of the royal
agents; his patriotism was of a pure and lofty character. For his country he
laboured both by night and by day, with a zeal which was scarcely interrupted,
and with an energy that knew no fatigue. Although enthusiastic, he was still
prudent. He would persuade, petition, and remonstrate, where these would
accomplish his object; but when these failed, he was ready to resist even unto
blood, and would sooner have sacrificed his life than yielded with dishonour.
"Had he lived in any country or epoch," says his biographer, "when abuses of
power were to be resisted, he would have been one of the reformers. He would
hare suffered excommunication, rather than have bowed to papal infallibility, or
paid tribute to St. Peter; he would have gone to the stake, rather than submit
to the prelatic ordinances of Laud; he would have mounted the scoffold, sooner
than pay a shilling of illegal shipmoney; he would have fled to a desert, rather
than endure the profligate tyranny of a Stuart; he was proscribed, and could
sooner have been condemned as a traitor, than assent to an illegal tax, if it
had been only a sixpenny stamp or an insignificant duty on tea; and there
appeared to be no species of corruption by which this inflexibility could have
been destroyed."
In the delegation of political power, he may be said to
have been too cautious, since our constitutions, as he would have modeled them,
would not have had sufficient inherent force for their own preservation. One of
his colleagues thus honourably described him: "Samuel Adams would have the state
of Massachusetts govern the union; the town of Boston govern Massachusetts; and
that he should govern the town of Boston, and then the whole would not be
intentionally ill governed."
ith some apparent austerity there was
nothing of the spirit of gloom or arrogance about hind In his demeanour, he
combined mildness with firmness, and dignity with condescension. If sometimes an
advocate for measures which might be thought too strong, it was, perhaps,
because his comprehension extended beyond ordinary minds, and he had more energy
to effect his purposes, than attaches to common men. In addition to these
qualities, he manifested an uncommon indifference to pecuniary considerations;
he was poor while he lived, and had not the death of an only son relieved his
latter day poverty, Samuel Adams, notwithstanding his virtues, his patriotism,
his unwearied zeal, and his acknowledged usefulness, while he lived, would have
had to claim a burial at the hand of charity, or at the public expense.
SOURCE: http://www.colonialhall.com/adamss/adamss.asp
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