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Massachusetts Bay Colony | The spark that lit the fuse of independence

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Massachusetts Bay Colony
The Frailty of Human Nature, the Wants of Individuals, and the numerous Dangers which surround them, through the Course of Life, have ... impelled them to form Societies, and establish Governments. As the Happiness of the People is the sole end of Government , so the Consent of the People is the only Foundation of it ... therefore every Act of Government, every exercise of Sovreignty, against, or without the Consent of the People, is Injustice, Usurpation and Tyranny ... 23 January 1776. [Watertown: Benjamin Edes, 1776]

Printed broadside (438 x 356 mm). Docketed on verso; old folds, minor spotting. Matted, framed, and glazed; not examined out of frame.

The spark that lit the fuse of independence — an extraordinary 1776 broadside proclamation by John Adams, which would lay the philosophical groundwork for the preamble of the Declaration of Independence.

"The Administration of Great Britain, despising equally the Justice, Humanity, and Magnanimity of their Ancestors; and the Rights, Liberties and Courage of AMERICANS, have, for a Course of Years, laboured to establish a Sovereignty in America, not founded in the Consent of the People ... "

A significant and early proclamation issued by Massachusetts, that vanguard of rebellion against the British Crown. The document contains all the axiomatic concepts of government then circulating among the colonies by way of polemical pamphlets and books such as Rousseau's Social Contract, Paine's Common Sense, and Jefferson's Summary View of the Rights of British America. The proclamation declares that sovereign power resided with the people; that officials of government existed for the common good and security of the people; and that when any government had violated its trust, the majority of the community had the right to resist and rebel against it. Much of the language would later find its clarion voice within the Declaration of Independence, which definitively heralded in the American Revolutionary period: "As the Happiness of the People is the sole End of Government, so the Consent of the People is the only Foundation of it ... And therefore every Act of Government, every Exercise of Sovereignty, against, or without, the Consent of the People, is Injustice, Usurpation, and Tyranny. ... When Kings, Ministers, Governors, or Legislators therefore, instead of exercising the Powers intrusted with them ... prostitute those Powers ... to destroy ... the Lives, Liberties, and Properties of the People;—they are no longer to be deemed Magistrates vested with a sacred Character but become public Enemies, and ought to be resisted."

The proclamation not only lists grievances, but also sets forth a philosophical statement deeply rooted within the precepts of its colonial Charter. When Thomas Gage presided as military governor of Massachusetts between 1774 and 1775, he forced members of the colonial council to resign or take refuge with him in Boston. He cancelled the autumn elections to the General Court, and the towns claiming this to be illegal, elected representatives to a Provincial Congress, which became the revolutionary government of the colony. The January 1776 proclamation reiterates the call for an independently elected government that does not recognize the sovereignty of Parliament or officials appointed by the Crown and Parliament until the terms and spirit of its Charter are respected and restored: "That no Obedience being due to the Act of Parliament for altering the Charter of the Colony of Massachusetts-Bay, nor to a Governor or Lieutenant Governor, who will not observe the Directions of, but endeavour to subvert that Charter ... and Inconveniences arising from the Suspension of the Powers of Government, are intolerable, especially at a Time when General Gage hath actually levied War, and is carrying on Hostilities against his Majesty's peaceable and loyal Subjects ... that, in order to conform as near as may be to the Spirit and Substance of the Charter, it be recommended to the Provincial Convention, to Letters to the Inhabitants of the several Places ... intitled to Representation in Assembly, requesting them to chuse such Representatives; and that the Assembly when chosen, do elect Counsellors; and that such Assembly and Council, exercise the Powers of Government, until a Governor of his Majesty's Appointment will consent to govern the Colony, according to it's Charter." The proclamation boldly concludes with "God save the People" rather than "God Save the King."

Copies of the proclamation were circulated in January 1776 in broadside form, with the present example sent to the town clerk of Danvers. In 2005, the broadside was discovered in a trunk among the papers, autographs and historic document collection of antiquarian and librarian Fitch Poole by his descendants. In 2008, the Massachusetts Superior Court found the broadside to indeed be the property of the Poole descendants, and not subject to replevin by...

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02 Jul 2021
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Massachusetts Bay Colony
The Frailty of Human Nature, the Wants of Individuals, and the numerous Dangers which surround them, through the Course of Life, have ... impelled them to form Societies, and establish Governments. As the Happiness of the People is the sole end of Government , so the Consent of the People is the only Foundation of it ... therefore every Act of Government, every exercise of Sovreignty, against, or without the Consent of the People, is Injustice, Usurpation and Tyranny ... 23 January 1776. [Watertown: Benjamin Edes, 1776]

Printed broadside (438 x 356 mm). Docketed on verso; old folds, minor spotting. Matted, framed, and glazed; not examined out of frame.

The spark that lit the fuse of independence — an extraordinary 1776 broadside proclamation by John Adams, which would lay the philosophical groundwork for the preamble of the Declaration of Independence.

"The Administration of Great Britain, despising equally the Justice, Humanity, and Magnanimity of their Ancestors; and the Rights, Liberties and Courage of AMERICANS, have, for a Course of Years, laboured to establish a Sovereignty in America, not founded in the Consent of the People ... "

A significant and early proclamation issued by Massachusetts, that vanguard of rebellion against the British Crown. The document contains all the axiomatic concepts of government then circulating among the colonies by way of polemical pamphlets and books such as Rousseau's Social Contract, Paine's Common Sense, and Jefferson's Summary View of the Rights of British America. The proclamation declares that sovereign power resided with the people; that officials of government existed for the common good and security of the people; and that when any government had violated its trust, the majority of the community had the right to resist and rebel against it. Much of the language would later find its clarion voice within the Declaration of Independence, which definitively heralded in the American Revolutionary period: "As the Happiness of the People is the sole End of Government, so the Consent of the People is the only Foundation of it ... And therefore every Act of Government, every Exercise of Sovereignty, against, or without, the Consent of the People, is Injustice, Usurpation, and Tyranny. ... When Kings, Ministers, Governors, or Legislators therefore, instead of exercising the Powers intrusted with them ... prostitute those Powers ... to destroy ... the Lives, Liberties, and Properties of the People;—they are no longer to be deemed Magistrates vested with a sacred Character but become public Enemies, and ought to be resisted."

The proclamation not only lists grievances, but also sets forth a philosophical statement deeply rooted within the precepts of its colonial Charter. When Thomas Gage presided as military governor of Massachusetts between 1774 and 1775, he forced members of the colonial council to resign or take refuge with him in Boston. He cancelled the autumn elections to the General Court, and the towns claiming this to be illegal, elected representatives to a Provincial Congress, which became the revolutionary government of the colony. The January 1776 proclamation reiterates the call for an independently elected government that does not recognize the sovereignty of Parliament or officials appointed by the Crown and Parliament until the terms and spirit of its Charter are respected and restored: "That no Obedience being due to the Act of Parliament for altering the Charter of the Colony of Massachusetts-Bay, nor to a Governor or Lieutenant Governor, who will not observe the Directions of, but endeavour to subvert that Charter ... and Inconveniences arising from the Suspension of the Powers of Government, are intolerable, especially at a Time when General Gage hath actually levied War, and is carrying on Hostilities against his Majesty's peaceable and loyal Subjects ... that, in order to conform as near as may be to the Spirit and Substance of the Charter, it be recommended to the Provincial Convention, to Letters to the Inhabitants of the several Places ... intitled to Representation in Assembly, requesting them to chuse such Representatives; and that the Assembly when chosen, do elect Counsellors; and that such Assembly and Council, exercise the Powers of Government, until a Governor of his Majesty's Appointment will consent to govern the Colony, according to it's Charter." The proclamation boldly concludes with "God save the People" rather than "God Save the King."

Copies of the proclamation were circulated in January 1776 in broadside form, with the present example sent to the town clerk of Danvers. In 2005, the broadside was discovered in a trunk among the papers, autographs and historic document collection of antiquarian and librarian Fitch Poole by his descendants. In 2008, the Massachusetts Superior Court found the broadside to indeed be the property of the Poole descendants, and not subject to replevin by...

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Time, Location
02 Jul 2021
USA, New York, NY
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