August 3: Delegates To a Congress of Future Revolutionaries.

 

Today, Americans are so familiar with the imagery and  legends surrounding the Declaration of Independence that they often forget just how radical that event was. The very notion that representatives from all 13 American colonies would meet in secret in an extralegal “Continental Congress” to discuss coordinated resistance to British rule was an incredibly risky endeavor.  Though the colonies had convened a “Stamp Act Congress”  nearly  a decade before to oppose  a new form of imperial taxation, the idea of convening another Congress arose under dramatically different circumstances. It followed  both the Boston Tea Party and the Crown’s imposition of a series of harshly punitive measures against the Bostonians that Britain called the Coercive Acts, which  the colonists aptly renamed  the Intolerable Acts. These imperial edicts, among other things, closed Boston harbor, shut down the colonial government, took over the justice system, and effectively imposed martial law on Massachusetts until the colonists had paid for the tea destroyed by the protesters.

Colonials throughout America were furious at Britain’s fiercely repressive measures against Massachusetts. Patriot leaders  called for a special extralegal meeting of all the colonies to coordinate a unified response to this grave royal threat. To be sure, the notion of declaring independence from Great Britain was still the furthest thing from most people’s minds. (In fact, for most Americans, even as late as 1774, the idea of Independence was simply unthinkable. ) But the idea that the colonists had to join together to forge a Continental resistance to a mother country that had overstepped its bounds was – especially in the heated atmosphere of the moment – extremely radical.

On August 3, 1774, Connecticut formally selected the three men it would send to Philadelphia to attend this first Continental Congress: Roger Sherman, a lawyer from New Milford; Eliphalet Dyer, a lawyer from Windham; and Silas Deane, a merchant from Wethersfield. The initial meeting of that Congress occurred in Carpenters’ Hall in Philadelphia on September 5, with representatives from every colony except Georgia present. At the Congress, delegates mutually agreed to double down on the economic resistance now symbolized by Boston’s destroyed tea. Every colony agreed to boycott a wide range of imported British goods, and sent a formal list of grievances to Parliament demanding redress. Before they disbanded on October 26, the delegates also agreed to meet again the following year if tensions between the colonies and Great Britain remained unresolved.

Little did they know that in less than a year, their successors in the Second Continental Congress would be making preparations for war — and discussing American independence.

Further Reading

The Continental Congress,” PBS’ American Experience

On This Day: The First Continental Congress Concludes,” National Constitution Center