The following is an excerpt from the book, Promises of the Constitution: Yesterday,
Today, Tomorrow, by author Pamela Romney Openshaw, #3.1, page 40.
A central
force exists in every movement, without which it would not survive. That force
in revolutionary America was Samuel Adams. Without him, there might have been
no American independence. He lit the flame and fanned it until it burst into
the powerful fires of freedom.
Samuel Adams of Massachusetts was a kind, deeply religious
man whose life was governed by unfailing integrity. His heart was in politics. With
his instinctive understanding of the process, he was the political conscience
of the patriot cause. He was unyielding and fully confident in the cause of
liberty. He was quick to understand and calm in the clashes of the political
world. Though he was of the upper middle class and Harvard-educated, he knew
most of the fifteen thousand citizens of Boston by name, trade, and political
preference. He accepted them as equals. His political positions were not
tainted by personal ambition or self-interest.
English rule in the 1700s left the colonists largely in
control of their own governments under Crown-appointed officials. In
Massachusetts, there were two governing councils, the equivalent of our modern-day
House of Representatives and Senate. They made and passed laws for the colony.
Tariffs and import duties were paid to England, but only if the colonists could
not evade them and the authorities enforced them (smuggling by American
merchants was a respectable form of colonial enterprise).
In 1764, the British Parliament disregarded the provisions
of the Massachusetts Bay Charter and imposed the Stamp Tax. Samuel Adams
demanded that Parliament abide by the charter laws, which required colonial
consent for taxation. Once Parliament started taxing, he reasoned, where would
it stop? His message: “We have a charter. You will abide by it.”
The American revolution thus began in May 1764 in Boston’s
Faneuil Hall, with Samuel Adams standing at the rostrum as its director. Through
the next twelve years, he challenged every infringement of the Massachusetts
charter, never letting the issue rest. He wearied each of the three successive
governors with his unyielding tenacity. He railed at every injustice. He urged
the colonists on when they grew tired and would haveslid into apathy. Constantly
recruiting those who could aid in the cause,he was the genius uniting the
colonies into concerted action.
Initially, neither he nor his contemporaries had
independence in mind. By 1774, he, along with his cousin John Adams, realized
that there was no other option.
His powerful writing became the voice of the revolution, as
well as its flame. He wrote voluminous essays, often under assumed names, as
was common at the time. His articles appeared frequently in the weekly
four-page periodicals of the day, especially the patriotic Boston Gazette.
These colonial newspapers made the five-week voyage to England and informed the
American sympathizers in influential British circles of progressive American
resistance.
Samuel Adams did not keep a journal. He destroyed most of
his correspondence to protect those mentioned within from the proofs of
treason, in case their cause failed. Hence, there is little written about him
compared to his contemporaries.
He was the vortex of rebellion against tyranny. From him
came the passion for freedom, igniting others who joined the cause.
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