Samuel Adams
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In this c. 1772 portrait by John Singleton Copley, Adams points at the Massachusetts Charter, which he viewed as a constitution that protected the peoples' rights.
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4th Governor of Massachusetts | |
In office October 8, 1794 – June 2, 1797 | |
Lieutenant | Moses Gill |
Preceded by | John Hancock |
Succeeded by | Increase Sumner |
3rd Lieutenant Governor of Massachusetts | |
In office 1789 – 1794 Acting Governor October 8, 1793 – 1794 | |
Governor | John Hancock |
Preceded by | Benjamin Lincoln |
Succeeded by | Moses Gill |
President of the Massachusetts Senate | |
In office 1782–1785 1787–1788 | |
Delegate from Massachusetts to the Continental Congress | |
In office 1774–1781 | |
Clerk of the Massachusetts House of Representatives | |
In office 1766–1774 | |
Personal details | |
Born | September 27 [O.S. September 16] 1722 Boston, Massachusetts Bay |
Died | October 2, 1803 (aged 81) Cambridge, Massachusetts, U.S. |
Resting place | Granary Burying Ground, Boston |
Political party | Democratic-Republican (1790s) |
Spouse(s) |
Elizabeth Checkley
(m. 1749; died 1757)
Elizabeth Wells (m. 1764)
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Alma mater | Harvard College |
Signature |
Samuel Adams (September 27 [O.S. September 16] 1722 – October 2, 1803) was an American statesman, political philosopher, and one of the Founding Fathers of the United States. He was a politician in colonial Massachusetts, a leader of the movement that became the American Revolution, and one of the architects of the principles of American republicanism that shaped the political culture of the United States. He was a second cousin to his fellow Founding Father, President John Adams.
Adams was born in Boston, brought up in a religious and politically active family. A graduate of Harvard College, he was an unsuccessful businessman and tax collector before concentrating on politics. He was an influential official of the Massachusetts House of Representatives and the Boston Town Meeting in the 1760s, and he became a part of a movement opposed to the British Parliament's efforts to tax the British American colonies without their consent. His 1768 Massachusetts Circular Letter calling for colonial non-cooperation prompted the occupation of Boston by British soldiers, eventually resulting in the Boston Massacre of 1770. Adams and his colleagues devised a committee of correspondence system in 1772 to help coordinate resistance to what he saw as the British government's attempts to violate the British Constitution at the expense of the colonies, which linked like-minded Patriots throughout the Thirteen Colonies. Continued resistance to British policy resulted in the 1773 Boston Tea Party and the coming of the American Revolution.
Parliament passed the Coercive Acts in 1774, at which time Adams attended the Continental Congress in Philadelphia which was convened to coordinate a colonial response. He helped guide Congress towards issuing the Continental Association in 1774 and the Declaration of Independence in 1776, and he helped draft the Articles of Confederation and the Massachusetts Constitution. Adams returned to Massachusetts after the American Revolution, where he served in the state senate and was eventually elected governor.
Samuel Adams later became a controversial figure in American history. Accounts written in the 19th century praised him as someone who had been steering his fellow colonists towards independence long before the outbreak of the Revolutionary War. This view gave way to negative assessments of Adams in the first half of the 20th century, in which he was portrayed as a master of propaganda who provoked mob violence to achieve his goals. Both of these interpretations have been challenged by some modern scholars, who argue that these traditional depictions of Adams are myths contradicted by the historical record.
Early life
Samuel Adams was born in Boston in the British colony of Massachusetts on September 16, 1722, an Old Style date that is sometimes converted to the New Style date of September 27. Adams was one of twelve children born to Samuel Adams, Sr., and Mary (Fifield) Adams in an age of high infant mortality; only three of these children lived past their third birthday. Adams's parents were devout Puritans and members of the Old South Congregational Church. The family lived on Purchase Street in Boston. Adams was proud of his Puritan heritage, and emphasized Puritan values in his political career, especially virtue.Samuel Adams, Sr. (1689–1748) was a prosperous merchant and church deacon. Deacon Adams became a leading figure in Boston politics through an organization that became known as the Boston Caucus, which promoted candidates who supported popular causes. The Boston Caucus helped shape the agenda of the Boston Town Meeting. A New England town meeting is a form of local government with elected officials, and not just a gathering of citizens; according to historian William Fowler, it was "the most democratic institution in the British empire". Deacon Adams rose through the political ranks, becoming a justice of the peace, a selectman, and a member of the Massachusetts House of Representatives. He worked closely with Elisha Cooke, Jr. (1678–1737), the leader of the "popular party", a faction that resisted any encroachment by royal officials on the colonial rights embodied in the Massachusetts Charter of 1691. In the coming years, members of the "popular party" became known as Whigs or Patriots.
The younger Samuel Adams attended Boston Latin School and then entered Harvard College
in 1736. His parents hoped that his schooling would prepare him for the
ministry, but Adams gradually shifted his interest to politics. After graduating in 1740, Adams continued his studies, earning a master's degree
in 1743. In his thesis, he argued that it was "lawful to resist the
Supreme Magistrate, if the Commonwealth cannot otherwise be preserved",
which indicated that his political views, like his father's, were
oriented towards colonial rights.
Adams's life was greatly affected by his father's involvement in a
banking controversy. In 1739, Massachusetts was facing a serious
currency shortage, and Deacon Adams and the Boston Caucus created a
"land bank" which issued paper money to borrowers who mortgaged their
land as security.
The land bank was generally supported by the citizenry and the popular
party, which dominated the House of Representatives, the lower branch of
the General Court. Opposition to the land bank came from the more aristocratic "court party", who were supporters of the royal governor and controlled the Governor's Council, the upper chamber of the General Court. The court party used its influence to have the British Parliament dissolve the land bank in 1741.
Directors of the land bank, including Deacon Adams, became personally
liable for the currency still in circulation, payable in silver and
gold. Lawsuits over the bank persisted for years, even after Deacon
Adams's death, and the younger Samuel Adams often had to defend the
family estate from seizure by the government.
For Adams, these lawsuits "served as a constant personal reminder that
Britain's power over the colonies could be exercised in arbitrary and
destructive ways".
Early career
After leaving Harvard in 1743, Adams was unsure about his future. He
considered becoming a lawyer, but instead decided to go into business.
He worked at Thomas Cushing's counting house,
but the job only lasted a few months because Cushing felt that Adams
was too preoccupied with politics to become a good merchant. Adams's father then lent him £1,000 to go into business for himself, a substantial amount for that time.
Adams's lack of business instincts were confirmed; he lent half of this
money to a friend who never repaid, and frittered away the other half.
Adams always remained, in the words of historian Pauline Maier, "a man utterly uninterested in either making or possessing money".
After Adams had lost his money, his father made him a partner in the family's malthouse, which was next to the family home on Purchase Street. Several generations of Adamses were maltsters, who produced the malt necessary for brewing beer. Years later, a poet poked fun at Adams by calling him "Sam the maltster". Adams has often been described as a brewer, but the extant evidence suggests that he worked as a maltster and not a brewer.
In January 1748, Adams and some friends were inflamed by British impressment and launched The Independent Advertiser, a weekly newspaper that printed many political essays written by Adams. His essays drew heavily upon English political theorist John Locke's Second Treatise of Government, and they emphasized many of the themes that characterized his subsequent career. He argued that the people must resist any encroachment on their constitutional rights. He cited the decline of the Roman Empire as an example of what could happen to New England if it were to abandon its Puritan values.
When Deacon Adams died in 1748, Adams was given the responsibility of managing the family's affairs. In October 1749, he married Elizabeth Checkley, his pastor's daughter.
Elizabeth gave birth to six children over the next seven years, but
only two lived to adulthood: Samuel (born 1751) and Hannah (born 1756). In July 1757, Elizabeth died soon after giving birth to a stillborn son. Adams remarried in 1764 to Elizabeth Wells, but had no other children.
Like his father, Adams embarked on a political career with the
support of the Boston Caucus. He was elected to his first political
office in 1747, serving as one of the clerks of the Boston market. In
1756, the Boston Town Meeting elected him to the post of tax collector,
which provided a small income.
He often failed to collect taxes from his fellow citizens, which
increased his popularity among those who did not pay, but left him
liable for the shortage.
By 1765, his account was more than £8,000 in arrears. The town meeting
was on the verge of bankruptcy, and Adams was compelled to file suit
against delinquent taxpayers, but many taxes went uncollected.
In 1768, his political opponents used the situation to their advantage,
obtaining a court judgment of £1,463 against him. Adams's friends paid
off some of the deficit, and the town meeting wrote off the remainder.
By then, he had emerged as a leader of the popular party, and the
embarrassing situation did not lessen his influence.
Struggle with Great Britain
Samuel Adams emerged as an important public figure in Boston soon after the British Empire's victory in the French and Indian War (1754–1763). The British Parliament found itself deep in debt and looking for new sources of revenue, and they sought to directly tax the colonies of British America for the first time. This tax dispute was part of a larger divergence between British and American interpretations of the British Constitution and the extent of Parliament's authority in the colonies.
Sugar Act
The first step in the new program was the Sugar Act
of 1764, which Adams saw as an infringement of longstanding colonial
rights. Colonists were not represented in Parliament, he argued, and
therefore they could not be taxed by that body; the colonists were
represented by the colonial assemblies, and only they could levy taxes
upon them.
Adams expressed these views in May 1764, when the Boston Town Meeting
elected its representatives to the Massachusetts House. As was
customary, the town meeting provided the representatives with a set of
written instructions, which Adams was selected to write. Adams
highlighted what he perceived to be the dangers of taxation without representation:
For if our Trade may be taxed, why not our Lands? Why not the Produce of our Lands & everything we possess or make use of? This we apprehend annihilates our Charter Right to govern & tax ourselves. It strikes at our British privileges, which as we have never forfeited them, we hold in common with our Fellow Subjects who are Natives of Britain. If Taxes are laid upon us in any shape without our having a legal Representation where they are laid, are we not reduced from the Character of free Subjects to the miserable State of tributary Slaves?
"When the Boston Town Meeting approved the Adams instructions on May
24, 1764," writes historian John K. Alexander, "it became the first
political body in America to go on record stating Parliament could not
constitutionally tax the colonists. The directives also contained the
first official recommendation that the colonies present a unified
defense of their rights." Adams's instructions were published in newspapers and pamphlets, and he soon became closely associated with James Otis, Jr., a member of the Massachusetts House famous for his defense of colonial rights.
Otis boldly challenged the constitutionality of certain acts of
Parliament, but he would not go as far as Adams, who was moving towards
the conclusion that Parliament did not have sovereignty over the
colonies.
Stamp Act
In 1765, Parliament passed the Stamp Act which required colonists to pay a new tax on most printed materials. News of the passage of the Stamp Act produced an uproar in the colonies. The colonial response echoed Adams's 1764 instructions. In June 1765, Otis called for a Stamp Act Congress to coordinate colonial resistance. The Virginia House of Burgesses passed a widely reprinted set of resolves against the Stamp Act that resembled Adams's arguments against the Sugar Act.
Adams argued that the Stamp Act was unconstitutional; he also believed
that it would hurt the economy of the British Empire. He supported calls
for a boycott of British goods to put pressure on Parliament to repeal
the tax.
In Boston, a group called the Loyal Nine, a precursor to the Sons of Liberty, organized protests of the Stamp Act. Adams was friendly with the Loyal Nine but was not a member. On August 14, stamp distributor Andrew Oliver was hanged in effigy from Boston's Liberty Tree; that night, his home was ransacked and his office demolished. On August 26, lieutenant governor Thomas Hutchinson's home was destroyed by an angry crowd.
Officials such as Governor Francis Bernard believed that common people acted only under the direction of agitators and blamed the violence on Adams. This interpretation was revived by scholars in the early 20th century, who viewed Adams as a master of propaganda who manipulated mobs into doing his bidding. For example, historian John C. Miller wrote in 1936 in what became the standard biography of Adams that Adams "controlled" Boston with his "trained mob".
Some modern scholars have argued that this interpretation is a myth,
and that there is no evidence that Adams had anything to do with the
Stamp Act riots.
After the fact, Adams did approve of the August 14 action because he
saw no other legal options to resist what he viewed as an
unconstitutional act by Parliament, but he condemned attacks on
officials' homes as "mobbish".
According to the modern scholarly interpretation of Adams, he supported
legal methods of resisting parliamentary taxation, such as petitions,
boycotts, and nonviolent demonstrations, but he opposed mob violence
which he saw as illegal, dangerous, and counter-productive.
In September 1765, Adams was once again appointed by the Boston
Town Meeting to write the instructions for Boston's delegation to the
Massachusetts House of Representatives. As it turned out, he wrote his
own instructions; on September 27, the town meeting selected him to
replace the recently deceased Oxenbridge Thacher as one of Boston's four
representatives in the assembly.
James Otis was attending the Stamp Act Congress in New York City, so
Adams was the primary author of a series of House resolutions against
the Stamp Act, which were more radical than those passed by the Stamp Act Congress. Adams was one of the first colonial leaders to argue that mankind possessed certain natural rights that governments could not violate.
The Stamp Act was scheduled to go into effect on November 1,
1765, but it was not enforced because protestors throughout the colonies
had compelled stamp distributors to resign. Eventually, British merchants were able to convince Parliament to repeal the tax.
By May 16, 1766, news of the repeal had reached Boston. There was
celebration throughout the city, and Adams made a public statement of
thanks to British merchants for helping their cause.
The Massachusetts popular party gained ground in the May 1766
elections. Adams was re-elected to the House and selected as its clerk,
in which position he was responsible for official House papers. In the
coming years, Adams used his position as clerk to great effect in
promoting his political message. Joining Adams in the House was John Hancock,
a new representative from Boston. Hancock was a wealthy
merchant—perhaps the richest man in Massachusetts—but a relative
newcomer to politics. He was initially a protégé of Adams, and he used
his wealth to promote the Whig cause.
Townshend Acts
After the repeal of the Stamp Act, Parliament took a different approach to raising revenue, passing the Townshend Acts in 1767 which established new duties
on various goods imported into the colonies. These duties were
relatively low because the British ministry wanted to establish the
precedent that Parliament had the right to impose tariffs on the
colonies before raising them.
Revenues from these duties were to be used to pay for governors and
judges who would be independent of colonial control. To enforce
compliance with the new laws, the Townshend Acts created a customs agency known as the American Board of Custom Commissioners, which was headquartered in Boston.
Resistance to the Townshend Acts grew slowly. The General Court
was not in session when news of the acts reached Boston in October 1767.
Adams therefore used the Boston Town Meeting to organize an economic
boycott, and called for other towns to do the same. By February 1768, towns in Massachusetts, Rhode Island, and Connecticut had joined the boycott. Opposition to the Townshend Acts was also encouraged by Letters from a Farmer in Pennsylvania, a series of popular essays by John Dickinson
which started appearing in December 1767. Dickinson's argument that the
new taxes were unconstitutional had been made before by Adams, but
never to such a wide audience.
In January 1768, the Massachusetts House sent a petition to King George asking for his help. Adams and Otis requested that the House send the petition to the other colonies, along with what became known as the Massachusetts Circular Letter, which became "a significant milestone on the road to revolution". The letter written by Adams called on the colonies to join with Massachusetts in resisting the Townshend Acts.
The House initially voted against sending the letter and petition to
the other colonies but, after some politicking by Adams and Otis, it was
approved on February 11.
British colonial secretary Lord Hillsborough,
hoping to prevent a repeat of the Stamp Act Congress, instructed the
colonial governors in America to dissolve the assemblies if they
responded to the Massachusetts Circular Letter. He also directed
Massachusetts Governor Francis Bernard to have the Massachusetts House rescind the letter. On June 30, the House refused to rescind the letter by a vote of 92 to 17, with Adams citing their right to petition as justification.
Far from complying with the governor's order, Adams instead presented a
new petition to the king asking that Governor Bernard be removed from
office. Bernard responded by dissolving the legislature.
The commissioners of the Customs Board found that they were
unable to enforce trade regulations in Boston, so they requested
military assistance. Help came in the form of HMS Romney, a fifty-gun warship which arrived in Boston Harbor in May 1768. Tensions escalated after the captain of Romney began to impress local sailors. The situation exploded on June 10, when customs officials seized Liberty, a sloop
owned by John Hancock—a leading critic of the Customs Board—for alleged
customs violations. Sailors and marines came ashore from Romney to tow away Liberty,
and a riot broke out. Things calmed down in the following days, but
fearful customs officials packed up their families and fled for
protection to Romney and eventually to Castle William, an island fort in the harbor.
Governor Bernard wrote to London in response to the Liberty incident and the struggle over the Circular Letter, informing his superiors that troops were needed in Boston to restore order. Lord Hillsborough ordered four regiments of the British Army to Boston.
Boston under occupation
Learning that British troops were on the way, the Boston Town Meeting
met on September 12, 1768 and requested that Governor Bernard convene
the General Court. Bernard refused, so the town meeting called on the other Massachusetts towns to send representatives to meet at Faneuil Hall beginning on September 22. About 100 towns sent delegates to the convention,
which was effectively an unofficial session of the Massachusetts House.
The convention issued a letter which insisted that Boston was not a
lawless town, using language more moderate than what Adams desired, and
that the impending military occupation violated Bostonians' natural,
constitutional, and charter rights. By the time that the convention adjourned, British troop transports had arrived in Boston Harbor. Two regiments disembarked in October 1768, followed by two more in November.
According to some accounts, the occupation of Boston was a
turning point for Adams, after which he gave up hope of reconciliation
and secretly began to work towards American independence. However, historian Carl Becker wrote in 1928 that "there is no clear evidence in his contemporary writings that such was the case."
Nevertheless, the traditional, standard view of Adams is that he
desired independence before most of his contemporaries and steadily
worked towards this goal for years.
Historian Pauline Maier challenged that idea in 1980, arguing instead
that Adams, like most of his peers, did not embrace independence until
after the American Revolutionary War had begun in 1775.
According to Maier, Adams at this time was a reformer rather than a
revolutionary; he sought to have the British ministry change its
policies, and warned Britain that independence would be the inevitable
result of a failure to do so.
Adams wrote numerous letters and essays in opposition to the occupation, which he considered a violation of the 1689 Bill of Rights. The occupation was publicized throughout the colonies in the Journal of Occurrences, an unsigned series of newspaper articles that may have been written by Adams in collaboration with others. The Journal
presented what it claimed to be a factual daily account of events in
Boston during the military occupation, an innovative approach in an era
without professional newspaper reporters. It depicted a Boston besieged
by unruly British soldiers who assaulted men and raped women with
regularity and impunity, drawing upon the traditional Anglo-American
distrust of standing armies garrisoned among civilians. The Journal
ceased publication on August 1, 1769, which was a day of celebration in
Boston: Governor Bernard had left Massachusetts, never to return.
Adams continued to work on getting the troops withdrawn and
keeping the boycott going until the Townshend duties were repealed. Two
regiments were removed from Boston in 1769, but the other two remained. Tensions between soldiers and civilians eventually resulted in the killing of five civilians in the Boston Massacre of March 1770. According to the "propagandist interpretation"
of Adams popularized by historian John Miller, Adams deliberately
provoked the incident to promote his secret agenda of American
independence. According to Pauline Maier, however, "There is no evidence that he prompted the Boston Massacre riot".
After the Boston Massacre, Adams and other town leaders met with Bernard's successor Governor Thomas Hutchinson and with Colonel William Dalrymple, the army commander, to demand the withdrawal of the troops. The situation remained explosive, and so Dalrymple agreed to remove both regiments to Castle William.
Adams wanted the soldiers to have a fair trial, because this would show
that Boston was not controlled by a lawless mob, but was instead the
victim of an unjust occupation. He convinced his cousins John Adams and Josiah Quincy to defend the soldiers, knowing that those Whigs would not slander Boston to gain an acquittal.
However, Adams wrote essays condemning the outcome of the trials; he
thought that the soldiers should have been convicted of murder.
"Quiet period"
After the Boston Massacre, politics in Massachusetts entered what is sometimes known as the "quiet period".
In April 1770, Parliament repealed the Townshend duties, except for the
tax on tea. Adams urged colonists to keep up the boycott of British
goods, arguing that paying even one small tax allowed Parliament to
establish the precedent of taxing the colonies, but the boycott
faltered. As economic conditions improved, support waned for Adams's causes.
In 1770, first New York City then Philadelphia abandoned the
non-importation boycott of British goods. Faced with the risk of being
economically ruined, Boston merchants agreed to generally end the
non-importation and effectively defeated Samuel Adams' cause in
Massachusetts. John Adams withdrew from politics, while John Hancock and James Otis appeared to become more moderate. Samuel Adams was re-elected to the Massachusetts House in April 1772, but he received far fewer votes than ever before.
A struggle over the power of the purse
brought Adams back into the political limelight. Traditionally, the
Massachusetts House of Representatives paid the salaries of the
governor, lieutenant governor, and superior court judges. From the Whig
perspective, this arrangement was an important check on executive power, keeping royally appointed officials accountable to democratically elected representatives.
In 1772, Massachusetts learned that those officials would henceforth be
paid by the British government rather than by the province. To protest this development, Adams and his colleagues devised a system of committees of correspondence
in November 1772; the towns of Massachusetts would consult with each
other concerning political matters via messages sent through a network
of committees that recorded British activities and protested imperial
policies. Committees of correspondence soon formed in other colonies, as well.
Governor Hutchinson became concerned that the committees of
correspondence were growing into an independence movement, so he
convened the General Court in January 1773.
Addressing the legislature, Hutchinson argued that denying the
supremacy of Parliament, as some committees had done, came dangerously
close to rebellion. "I know of no line that can be drawn", he said,
"between the supreme authority of Parliament and the total independence
of the colonies."
Adams and the House responded that the Massachusetts Charter did not
establish Parliament's supremacy over the province, and so Parliament
could not claim that authority now.
Hutchinson soon realized that he had made a major blunder by initiating
a public debate about independence and the extent of Parliament's
authority in the colonies.
The Boston Committee of Correspondence published its statement of
colonial rights, along with Hutchinson's exchange with the Massachusetts
House, in the widely distributed "Boston Pamphlet".
The quiet period in Massachusetts was over. Adams was easily
re-elected to the Massachusetts House in May 1773, and was also elected
as moderator of the Boston Town Meeting. In June 1773, Adams introduced a set of private letters
to the Massachusetts House, written by Hutchinson several years
earlier. In one letter, Hutchinson recommended to London that there
should be "an abridgement of what are called English liberties" in
Massachusetts. Hutchinson denied that this is what he meant, but his
career in Massachusetts was effectively over. The House sent a petition
to the king asking for his recall.
Tea Party
Adams took a leading role in the events that led up to the famous Boston Tea Party of December 16, 1773, although the precise nature of his involvement has been disputed.
In May 1773, the British Parliament passed the Tea Act, a tax law to help the struggling East India Company,
one of Great Britain's most important commercial institutions. Britons
could buy smuggled Dutch tea more cheaply than the East India Company's
tea because of the heavy taxes imposed on tea imported into Great
Britain, and so the company amassed a huge surplus of tea that it could
not sell.
The British government's solution to the problem was to sell the
surplus in the colonies. The Tea Act permitted the East India Company to
export tea directly to the colonies for the first time, bypassing most
of the merchants who had previously acted as middlemen.
This measure was a threat to the American colonial economy because it
granted the Tea Company a significant cost advantage over local tea
merchants and even local tea smugglers, driving them out of business.
The act also reduced the taxes on tea paid by the company in Britain,
but kept the controversial Townshend duty on tea imported in the
colonies. A few merchants in New York, Philadelphia, Boston, and Charlestown were selected to receive the company's tea for resale. In late 1773, seven ships were sent to the colonies carrying East India Company tea, including four bound for Boston.
News of the Tea Act set off a firestorm of protest in the colonies.
This was not a dispute about high taxes; the price of legally imported
tea was actually reduced by the Tea Act. Protesters were instead
concerned with a variety of other issues. The familiar "no taxation without representation" argument remained prominent, along with the question of the extent of Parliament's authority in the colonies. Some colonists worried that, by buying the cheaper tea, they would be conceding that Parliament had the right to tax them.
The "power of the purse" conflict was still at issue. The tea tax
revenues were to be used to pay the salaries of certain royal officials,
making them independent of the people.
Colonial smugglers played a significant role in the protests, since the
Tea Act made legally imported tea cheaper, which threatened to put
smugglers of Dutch tea out of business.
Legitimate tea importers who had not been named as consignees by the
East India Company were also threatened with financial ruin by the Tea
Act, and other merchants worried about the precedent of a government-created monopoly.
Adams and the correspondence committees promoted opposition to the Tea Act.
In every colony except Massachusetts, protesters were able to force the
tea consignees to resign or to return the tea to England.
In Boston, however, Governor Hutchinson was determined to hold his
ground. He convinced the tea consignees, two of whom were his sons, not
to back down. The Boston Caucus and then the Town Meeting attempted to compel the consignees to resign, but they refused.
With the tea ships about to arrive, Adams and the Boston Committee of
Correspondence contacted nearby committees to rally support.
The tea ship Dartmouth arrived in the Boston Harbor in
late November, and Adams wrote a circular letter calling for a mass
meeting to be held at Faneuil Hall on November 29. Thousands of people
arrived, so many that the meeting was moved to the larger Old South Meeting House. British law required the Dartmouth to unload and pay the duties within twenty days or customs officials could confiscate the cargo. The mass meeting passed a resolution introduced by Adams urging the captain of the Dartmouth to send the ship back without paying the import duty. Meanwhile, the meeting assigned twenty-five men to watch the ship and prevent the tea from being unloaded.
Governor Hutchinson refused to grant permission for the Dartmouth to leave without paying the duty. Two more tea ships arrived in Boston Harbor, the Eleanor and the Beaver. The fourth ship, the William, was stranded near Cape Cod and never arrived to Boston. December 16 was the last day of the Dartmouth's deadline, and about 7,000 people gathered around the Old South Meeting House.
Adams received a report that Governor Hutchinson had again refused to
let the ships leave, and he announced, "This meeting can do nothing
further to save the country."
According to a popular story, Adams's statement was a prearranged
signal for the "tea party" to begin. However, this claim did not appear
in print until nearly a century after the event, in a biography of Adams
written by his great-grandson, who apparently misinterpreted the
evidence.
According to eyewitness accounts, people did not leave the meeting
until ten or fifteen minutes after Adams's alleged "signal", and Adams
in fact tried to stop people from leaving because the meeting was not
yet over.
While Adams tried to reassert control of the meeting, people
poured out of the Old South Meeting House and headed to Boston Harbor.
That evening, a group of 30 to 130 men boarded the three vessels, some
of them thinly disguised as Mohawk Indians, and dumped all 342 chests of tea into the water over the course of three hours. Adams never revealed whether he went to the wharf to witness the destruction of the tea. Whether or not he helped plan the event is unknown, but Adams immediately worked to publicize and defend it.
He argued that the Tea Party was not the act of a lawless mob, but was
instead a principled protest and the only remaining option that the
people had to defend their constitutional rights.
Revolution
Great Britain responded to the Boston Tea Party in 1774 with the Coercive Acts. The first of these acts was the Boston Port Act, which closed Boston's commerce until the East India Company had been repaid for the destroyed tea. The Massachusetts Government Act
rewrote the Massachusetts Charter, making many officials royally
appointed rather than elected, and severely restricting the activities
of town meetings. The Administration of Justice Act
allowed colonists charged with crimes to be transported to another
colony or to Great Britain for trial. A new royal governor was appointed
to enforce the acts: General Thomas Gage, who was also commander of British military forces in North America.
Adams worked to coordinate resistance to the Coercive Acts. In
May 1774, the Boston Town Meeting (with Adams serving as moderator)
organized an economic boycott of British goods.
In June, Adams headed a committee in the Massachusetts House—with the
doors locked to prevent Gage from dissolving the legislature—which
proposed that an inter-colonial congress meet in Philadelphia in September. He was one of five delegates chosen to attend the First Continental Congress. Adams was never fashionably dressed and had little money, so friends
bought him new clothes and paid his expenses for the journey to
Philadelphia, his first trip outside of Massachusetts.
First Continental Congress
In Philadelphia, Adams promoted colonial unity while using his political skills to lobby other delegates. On September 16, messenger Paul Revere brought Congress the Suffolk Resolves, one of many resolutions passed in Massachusetts that promised strident resistance to the Coercive Acts. Congress endorsed the Suffolk Resolves, issued a Declaration of Rights that denied Parliament's right to legislate for the colonies, and organized a colonial boycott known as the Continental Association.
Adams returned to Massachusetts in November 1774, where he served in the Massachusetts Provincial Congress, an extralegal legislative body independent of British control. The Provincial Congress created the first minutemen companies, consisting of militiamen who were to be ready for action on a moment's notice.
Adams also served as moderator of the Boston Town Meeting, which
convened despite the Massachusetts Government Act, and was appointed to
the Committee of Inspection to enforce the Continental Association. He was also selected to attend the Second Continental Congress, scheduled to meet in Philadelphia in May 1775.
John Hancock had been added to the delegation, and he and Adams attended the Provincial Congress in Concord, Massachusetts
before Adams' journey to the second Congress. The two men decided that
it was not safe to return to Boston before leaving for Philadelphia, so
they stayed at Hancock's childhood home in Lexington. On April 14, 1775, General Gage received a letter from Lord Dartmouth
advising him "to arrest the principal actors and abettors in the
Provincial Congress whose proceedings appear in every light to be acts
of treason and rebellion". On the night of April 18, Gage sent out a detachment of soldiers on the fateful mission that sparked the American Revolutionary War.
The purpose of the British expedition was to seize and destroy military
supplies that the colonists had stored in Concord. According to many
historical accounts, Gage also instructed his men to arrest Hancock and
Adams, but the written orders issued by Gage made no mention of
arresting the Patriot leaders.
Gage had evidently decided against seizing Adams and Hancock, but
Patriots initially believed otherwise, perhaps influenced by London
newspapers that reached Boston with the news that the patriot leader
would be hanged if he were caught. From Boston, Joseph Warren dispatched Paul Revere to warn the two that British troops were on the move and might attempt to arrest them. As Hancock and Adams made their escape, the first shots of the war began at Lexington and Concord.
Soon after the battle, Gage issued a proclamation granting a general
pardon to all who would "lay down their arms, and return to the duties
of peaceable subjects"—with the exceptions of Hancock and Samuel Adams. Singling out Hancock and Adams in this manner only added to their renown among Patriots and, according to Patriot historian Mercy Otis Warren, perhaps exaggerated the importance of the two men.
Second Continental Congress
The Continental Congress worked under a secrecy rule, so Adams's
precise role in congressional deliberations is not fully documented. He
appears to have had a major influence, working behind the scenes as a
sort of "parliamentary whip"
and Thomas Jefferson credits Samuel Adams—the lesser-remembered
Adams—with steering the Congress toward independence, saying, "If there
was any Palinurus to the Revolution, Samuel Adams was the man." He served on numerous committees, often dealing with military matters. Among his more noted acts, Adams nominated George Washington to be commander in chief over the Continental Army.
Adams was a cautious advocate for a declaration of independence,
urging eager correspondents back in Massachusetts to wait for more
moderate colonists to come around to supporting separation from Great
Britain. He was pleased in 1775 when the colonies began to replace their old governments with independent republican governments. He praised Thomas Paine's popular pamphlet Common Sense, writing as "Candidus" in early 1776, and supported the call for American independence. On June 7, Adams's political ally Richard Henry Lee introduced a three-part resolution
calling for Congress to declare independence, create a colonial
confederation, and seek foreign aid. After a delay to rally support,
Congress approved the language of the United States Declaration of Independence on July 4, 1776, which Adams signed.
After the Declaration of Independence, Congress continued to
manage the war effort. Adams served on military committees, including an
appointment to the Board of War in 1777. He advocated paying bonuses to Continental Army soldiers to encourage them to reenlist for the duration of the war. He called for harsh state legislation to punish Loyalists—Americans
who continued to support the British crown—who Adams believed were as
dangerous to American liberty as British soldiers. In Massachusetts,
more than 300 Loyalists were banished and their property confiscated.
After the war, Adams opposed allowing Loyalists to return to
Massachusetts, fearing that they would work to undermine republican
government.
Adams was the Massachusetts delegate appointed to the committee to draft the Articles of Confederation,
the plan for the colonial confederation. With its emphasis on state
sovereignty, the Articles reflected Congress's wariness of a strong
central government, a concern shared by Adams. Like others at the time,
Adams considered himself a citizen of the United States while continuing
to refer to Massachusetts as his "country".
After much debate, the Articles were sent to the states for
ratification in November 1777. From Philadelphia, Adams urged
Massachusetts to ratify, which it did. Adams signed the Articles of
Confederation with the other Massachusetts delegates in 1778, but they
were not ratified by all the states until 1781.
Adams returned to Boston in 1779 to attend a state constitutional
convention. The Massachusetts General Court had proposed a new
constitution the previous year, but voters rejected it, and so a
convention was held to try again. Adams was appointed to a three-man
drafting committee with his cousin John Adams and James Bowdoin. They drafted the Massachusetts Constitution,
which was amended by the convention and approved by voters in 1780. The
new constitution established a republican form of government, with
annual elections and a separation of powers.
It reflected Adams's belief that "a state is never free except when
each citizen is bound by no law whatever that he has not approved of,
either directly, or through his representatives". By modern standards, the new constitution was not "democratic";
Adams, like most of his peers, believed that only free males who owned
property should be allowed to vote, and that the senate and the governor
served to balance any excesses that might result from majority rule.
In 1781, Adams retired from the Continental Congress. His health
was one reason; he was approaching his sixtieth birthday and suffered
from tremors that made writing difficult. But he also wanted to return to Massachusetts to influence politics in the Commonwealth. He returned to Boston in 1781, and never left Massachusetts again.
Return to Massachusetts
Adams remained active in politics upon his return to Massachusetts.
He frequently served as moderator of the Boston Town Meeting, and was
elected to the state senate, where he often served as that body's president.
Adams focused his political agenda on promoting virtue, which he
considered essential in a republican government. If republican leaders
lacked virtue, he believed, liberty was endangered. His major opponent
in this campaign was his former protégé John Hancock; the two men had a
falling out in the Continental Congress. Adams disapproved of what he
viewed as Hancock's vanity and extravagance, which Adams believed were
inappropriate in a republican leader. When Hancock left Congress in
1777, Adams and the other Massachusetts delegates voted against thanking
him for his service as president of Congress.
The struggle continued in Massachusetts. Adams thought that Hancock was
not acting the part of a virtuous republican leader by acting like an
aristocrat and courting popularity. Adams favored James Bowdoin for governor, and was distressed when Hancock won annual landslide victories.
Adams's promotion of public virtue took several forms. He played a
major role in getting Boston to provide a free public education for
children, even for girls, which was controversial. Adams was one of the charter members of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences in 1780. After the Revolutionary War, Adams joined others, including Thomas Jefferson, in denouncing the Society of the Cincinnati,
an organization of former army officers. Adams worried that the
Society was "a stride towards an hereditary military nobility", and thus
a threat to republicanism.
Adams also believed that public theaters undermined civic virtue, and
he joined an ultimately unsuccessful effort to keep theaters banned in
Boston. Decades after Adams's death, orator Edward Everett called him "the last of the Puritans".
I firmly believe that the benevolent Creator designed the republican Form of Government for Man. Samuel Adams, April 14, 1785
Postwar economic troubles in western Massachusetts led to an uprising known as Shays's Rebellion,
which began in 1786. Small farmers, angered by high taxes and debts,
armed themselves and shut down debtor courts in two counties. Governor
James Bowdoin sent four thousand militiamen to put down the uprising, an
action supported by Adams. His old political ally James Warren
thought that Adams had forsaken his principles, but Adams saw no
contradiction. He approved of rebellion against an unrepresentative
government, as had happened during the American Revolution, but he
opposed taking up arms against a republican government, where problems
should be remedied through elections. He thought that the leaders of
Shays's Rebellion should be hanged, reportedly saying that "the man who
dares to rebel against the laws of a republic ought to suffer death".
Shays's Rebellion contributed to the belief that the Articles of Confederation needed to be revised. In 1787, delegates to the Philadelphia Convention, instead of revising the Articles, created a new United States Constitution
with a much stronger national government. The Constitution was sent to
the states for ratification, when Adams expressed his displeasure. "I
confess," he wrote to Richard Henry Lee in 1787, "as I enter the
Building I stumble at the Threshold. I meet with a National Government,
instead of a Federal Union of States." Adams was one of those derisively labeled "Anti-Federalists" by proponents of the new Constitution, who called themselves "Federalists". Adams was elected to the Massachusetts ratifying convention
which met in January 1788. Despite his reservations, Adams rarely spoke
at the convention, and listened carefully to the arguments rather than
raising objections.
Adams and John Hancock had reconciled, and they finally agreed to give
their support for the Constitution, with the proviso that some
amendments be added later.
Even with the support of Hancock and Adams, the Massachusetts
convention narrowly ratified the Constitution by a vote of 187 to 168.
While Adams was attending the ratifying convention, his only son
Samuel Adams, Jr. died at just 37 years of age. The younger Adams had
served as surgeon in the Revolutionary War, but had fallen ill and never
fully recovered. The death was a stunning blow to the elder Adams.
The younger Adams left his father the certificates that he had earned
as a soldier, giving Adams and his wife unexpected financial security in
their final years. Investments in land made them relatively wealthy by
the mid-1790s, but this did not alter their frugal lifestyle.
Adams was concerned about the new Constitution and made an
attempt to re-enter national politics. He allowed his name to be put
forth as a candidate for the United States House of Representatives in the December 1788 election, but lost to Fisher Ames, apparently because Ames was a stronger supporter of the Constitution, a more popular position.
Despite his defeat, Adams continued to work for amendments to the
Constitution, a movement that ultimately resulted in the addition of a Bill of Rights in 1791. Adams subsequently became a firm supporter of the Constitution, with these amendments and the possibility of more.
In 1789, Adams was elected Lieutenant Governor of Massachusetts
and served in that office until Governor Hancock's death in 1793, when
he became acting governor. The next year, Adams was elected as governor
in his own right, the first of four annual terms. He was generally
regarded as the leader of his state's Jeffersonian Republicans, who were opposed to the Federalist Party. Unlike some other Republicans, Adams supported the suppression of the Whiskey Rebellion in 1794 for the same reasons that he had opposed Shays's Rebellion. Like his fellow Republicans, he spoke out against the Jay Treaty in 1796, a position that drew criticism in a state that was increasingly Federalist. In that year's U. S. presidential election, Republicans in Virginia cast 15 electoral votes for Adams in an effort to make him Jefferson's vice-president,
but Federalist John Adams won the election, with Jefferson becoming
vice-president. The Adams cousins remained friends, but Samuel was
pleased when Jefferson defeated John Adams in the 1800 presidential
election.
Samuel Adams took a cue from President Washington, who declined
to run for reelection in 1796: he retired from politics at the end of
his term as governor in 1797. Adams suffered from what is now believed to have been essential tremor, a movement disorder that rendered him unable to write in the final decade of his life. He died at the age of 81 on October 2, 1803, and was interred at the Granary Burying Ground in Boston. Boston's Republican newspaper the Independent Chronicle eulogized him as the "Father of the American Revolution".
Legacy
Samuel Adams is a controversial figure in American history.
Disagreement about his significance and reputation began before his
death and continues to the present.
Adams' contemporaries, both friends and foes, regarded him as one
of the foremost leaders of the American Revolution. Thomas Jefferson,
for example, characterized Adams as "truly the Man of the Revolution." Leaders in other colonies were compared to him; Cornelius Harnett was called the "Samuel Adams of North Carolina", Charles Thomson the "Samuel Adams of Philadelphia", and Christopher Gadsden the "Sam Adams of the South". When John Adams traveled to France during the Revolution, he had to explain that he was not Samuel, "the famous Adams".
Supporters of the Revolution praised Adams, but Loyalists viewed him as a sinister figure. Peter Oliver, the exiled chief justice of Massachusetts, characterized him as a devious Machiavellian with a "cloven Foot". Thomas Hutchinson, Adams' political foe, took his revenge in his History of Massachusetts Bay,
in which he denounced him as a dishonest character assassin,
emphasizing his failures as a businessman and tax collector. This
hostile "Tory interpretation" of Adams was revived in the 20th century
by historian Clifford K. Shipton in the Sibley's Harvard Graduates reference series.
Shipton wrote positive portraits of Hutchinson and Oliver and scathing
sketches of Adams and Hancock; his entry on Adams was characterized by
historian Pauline Maier as "forty-five pages of contempt".
Whig historians challenged the "Tory interpretation" of Adams. William Gordon and Mercy Otis Warren, two historians who knew Adams, wrote of him as a man selflessly dedicated to the American Revolution.
But in the early 19th century, Adams was often viewed as an
old-fashioned Puritan, and was consequently neglected by historians. Interest in Adams was revived in the mid-19th century. Historian George Bancroft portrayed him favorably in his monumental History of the United States from the Discovery of the American Continent (1852). The first full biography of Adams appeared in 1865, a three-volume work written by William Wells, his great-grandson. The Wells biography is still valuable for its wealth of information, although Whig portrayals of Adams were uncritically pro-American and had elements of hagiography, a view that influenced some later biographies written for general audiences.
In the late 19th century, many American historians were
uncomfortable with contemporary revolutions and found it problematic to
write approvingly about Adams. Relations had improved between the United
States and the United Kingdom, and Adams' role in dividing Americans from Britons was increasingly viewed with regret.
In 1885, James Hosmer wrote a biography that praised Adams, but also
found some of his actions troubling, such as the 1773 publication of
Hutchinson's private letters.
Subsequent biographers became increasingly hostile towards Adams and
the common people whom he represented. In 1923, Ralph V. Harlow used a "Freudian" approach to characterize Adams as a "neurotic crank" driven by an "inferiority complex".
Harlow argued that, because the masses were easily misled, Adams
"manufactured public opinion" to produce the Revolution, a view that
became the thesis of John C. Miller's 1936 biography Sam Adams: Pioneer in Propaganda.
Miller portrayed Adams more as an incendiary revolutionary than an
adroit political operative, attributing to this one man all the acts of
Boston's "body of the people", and consistently calling his subject
"Sam", despite the fact that Adams was almost always known as "Samuel"
in his lifetime.
Miller's influential book became, in the words of historian
Charles Akers, the "scholarly enshrinement" of "the myth of Sam Adams as
the Boston dictator who almost single-handedly led his colony into
rebellion".
According to Akers, Miller and other historians used "Sam did it" to
explain crowd actions and other developments, without citing any
evidence that Adams directed those events. In 1974, Akers called on historians to critically re-examine the sources rather than simply repeating the myth.
By then, scholars were increasingly rejecting the notion that Adams and
others used "propaganda" to incite "ignorant mobs", and were instead
portraying a revolutionary Massachusetts too complex to have been
controlled by one man.
Historian Pauline Maier argued that Adams, far from being a radical mob
leader, took a moderate position based on the English revolutionary
tradition that imposed strict constraints on resistance to authority.
That belief justified force only against threats to the constitutional
rights so grave that the "body of the people" recognized the danger, and
only after all peaceful means of redress had failed. Within that
revolutionary tradition, resistance was essentially conservative. In
2004, Ray Raphael's Founding Myths
continued Maier's line by deconstructing several of the "Sam" Adams
myths that are still repeated in many textbooks and popular histories.
In popular culture
In the 2008 miniseries John Adams, Samuel Adams was played by Danny Huston.
Adams is the main protagonist in the 2015 miniseries Sons of Liberty, portrayed by Ben Barnes.
Samuel Adams's name has been appropriated by commercial and non-profit ventures since his death. The Boston Beer Company created Samuel Adams Boston Lager in 1985, drawing upon the tradition that Adams had been a brewer; it became a popular award-winning brand. Adams's name is also used by a pair of non-profit organizations, the Sam Adams Alliance
and the Sam Adams Foundation. These groups take their names from Adams
in homage to his ability to organize citizens at the local level in
order to achieve a national goal.
Adams appears in the video game Assassin's Creed III and is portrayed by Mark Lindsay Chapman.