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Chapter 2
Political Aspect of the Revolution  Next > The Acts of the Imperial
Parliament by which direct taxes were imposed on the American colonies are to
be regarded as the culmination of the series of causes which brought on the
revolution.

In this series of events the most important is, no doubt, the renewal of the
restrictions on colonial trade, enforced soon after the third George began
his reign.  Under the old "navigation laws" and "laws of trade" the colonial
produce had to be exported directly to Britain, and thence by British vessels
only, carried to tis destination.  Similarly, goods for the colonies had to
be brought to Britain and thence to the colonies in British ships.  The
American colonies were not allowed to trade even with other colonies
directly.  For nearly a century these odious Acts had been evaded by an
organized and well arranged system of smuggling.  The revenue officers of the
Crown were lax in their enforcement of the letter of the law; consequently
the merchants of various states, and chiefly those of Massachusetts, had
grown rich by the illicit traffic, and were exasperated beyong measure by the
attempts of the revenue officers, under fresh orders, to enforce the laws.
Fourteen of the signers of the Declaration of Independence were engaged in
trade which was affected grievously by these restrictions.*  At the time of
the Declaration of Independence John hancock was a respondent in suits of the
Crown to recover £100,000, or over, for alleged infractions of the trade
laws.  Thus the questions relative to trade and commerce are to be regarded
as a primary cause of the revolution.

Another primary cause was the fact that colonial industry and manufacture
were restricted.  The colonists were denied the use of natural advantages,
such as waterfalls; they were forbidden the erection of sundry kinds of
machinery, particularly spinning and weaving machines; the king�s arrow was
placed on trees in the forest, which were two feet or over in diameter, at a
height of twelve inches from the ground; the manufacture of sawn lumber,
except for home consumption was interdicted; the market for dried fish was
cut off; the commerce in sugar and molasses was rudely interrupted; the most
important and profitable avenues of trade were closed to them.  Hence one of
the aims of the revolution was to take off the shackles which bore heavily on
the rising colonies.

The explanation, or excuse it may be called, for these impositions lies of
course in the opinion held by all Imperial governments at that time, that
colonies existed for the benefit of the Mother Country only.  The world has
at last outgrown that doctrine, and we are to-day reaping the benefit of the
removal of restrictions which was accelerated by the shock of the loss of
half a continent.  But all nations and governments are to be judged according
to the general standard of enlightenment at the time of the events under
consideration.  It is easy to criticise a public policy when the result of a
chain of events has demonstrated it to be wrong.  Before the issue, its
wisdom or foolishness is for the most part a matter of opinion.  Had we been
a member of Lord North�s Government we would have, no doubt, thought the
existing colonial policy a natural and necessary one; had we made a fortune
smuggling tea, wine, or molasses, we would have, no doubt, thought that same
colonial policy vile and inhuman.  Living as we do with a century and a
quarter of added experience, we neither commend its wisdom nor criticise too
harshly its application.  Let us be merciful.  If we cannot be merciful let
us be fair, and give the devil, on both sides, his due.

We now come to that question which, as an apple of discord, was rolled around
the parliamentary table for ten long years, and at last plunged the nation
into warfare and led to the dismemberment of the empire: "Has the British
Parliament power to tax the colonies without giving them representation in
the Imperial Parliament?"

This question may be considered: Firstly, from a purely legal aspect;
secondly, from the standpoint of expediency; and thirdly, from the moral and
ethical side.

As a matter of abstract right, the Mother Country has never parted with the
claim to ultimate supreme authority of legislation on any matter whatever.
This has always been acknowledged by constitutional lawyers.  If the Imperial
Parliament were to resign this ultimate right, the tie that binds the empire
would be dissolved, and the colonies would forthwith become independent
states.  It is that right which, along with the acknowledgement of the common
head, makes us a part of the British Empire of which we are so proud.  The
question of the abstract right of taxation was never disputed; simply that of
taxation without representation.  Yet we must remember that the theory of "no
taxation without representation" was not settled at the time of the
Revolutionary War.  Many of the important cities of the United Kingdom, and
the large manufacturing districts were not represented for fifty years after
this time; for example, Bristol, Leeds, Birmingham, Manchester and Glasgow.
Yet they did not resort to arms.  Their burdens were heavy, but with the
patient loyalty of true Britons they bore them until the good sense of the
present century gave them a share in the government.  Not so the colonies.
They enforced their demands by an appeal to arms.

It would seem, moreover, as if the moving spirits of the revolution had
seized the enforcement of taxation as an excuse for the unfilial demand of
absolute separation from the Mother country.  On what other supposition can
their haste and violence be accounted for?  To what else can their action be
attributed?

Secondly, let us discuss the action of Britain from the standpoint of
expediency.  Viewed in the light of the actual result � the loss of the
southern half of this continent � it would seem as if the Stamp Act and the
tea duty were inexpedient.  Yet it may be questioned, if, as the writer is
convinced, the question of taxation was used as an excuse for the Declaration
of Independence, would not the leaders of the revolution have made some other
act of the Mother Country the basis of their agitation?  The actions of these
men at the close of the war did not show that rigorous adherence to right and
justice which they had insisted on so strenuously before the revolution.  The
following chapters will prove this point.

But even allowing that the taxation was inexpedient in the light of the
result, was it a fair demand?  For nearly two centuries the colonies had been
watched over by Britain.  They had been defended alike from the encroachments
of home enemies and of foreign foes.  For years the French and the Indian had
been repulsed and kept in check.  The constant fear of sudden attack and
merciless massacre had been removed.  The New England colonies were in a
state of safety and prosperity they had never known before.  Under the
superintendency of Sir William Johnson, the Six Nation Indians and their
affiliated tribes lived in a marvellously friendly state with the white
settlers.  They had nothing now to fear from their dusky allies.  Their
enemies, the French and the tribes of Canadian Indians, were at this time
under the same British rule.  The protecting arm which Britain now extends
around the world was furnishing to the colonies that security in which they
contentedly flourished.  Even John Otis, one of the most violent agitators of
independence, said in 1763, in the course of a public speech at Boston, "The
true interests of Great Britain and her colonies are mutual, and what God in
his providence hath joined together let no man put asunder."

Now, on the other hand, the burden on the Home Country was enormous.  For
nearly thirty years England had been fighting the combined armies of France
and Spain, and at times the allied forces of Europe.  The tale of British
conquest in India and in America, is also the tale of the wonderful endurance
and courage of her people.  The national debt had been doubled.  The people
of the United Kingdom were taxed to the utmost, and still there was deficit.
In this strait she turned to the colonies and levied a duty on imports, a tax
on law stamps, and a tax on tea � the latter being only one quarter of the
rate of revenue duty on tea at home.  The colonists refused to import the
taxed articles; they burned the stamp office, and a mob of Bostonians
forcibly boarded the tea ship Dartmouth and emptied eight hundred and forty
boxes into the sea.  Such was the response of the New England colonies to the
request for help of the hard-pressed Motherland.

Lastly, let us consider the moral aspect of the case.  It was no doubt an
assertion, by force of arms, of the "Right of Rebellion."  It seems also to
have been a triumphant assertion of the "Right of Advantage" � the right to
take the controlling power in a tight predicament; the right to enforce
consent to their demands at a time when the Mother Country could not fairly
defend itself.

The Americans were successful through a combination of circumstances
unfavorable to Britain, chief of which were: The terrible pressure of the war
in the East; the incompetent Ministry in power at the time; ignorance as to
the real state of affairs in the colonies and as to the methods of colonial
warfare; and, of course, the insufficient and imperfectly equipped forces
sent to America.

In some cases there may be a distinct "Right of Revolution," but surely it is
only, as in the case of the English revolution of 1688, after years of
patient waiting for some great fundamental right, which has been long
withheld, and whose accomplishment there seems no outlook of peacefully
gaining.

It seems as if the United States has been reaping the fruit of this doctrine
of the right to rebel against law and the settled constitution of the land.
The sins of the fathers were visited upon the children in that terrible
deluge of blood in the sixties, which swept from South to North.  In this
case the Southern States who wished to withdraw from the Confederacy were the
rebels.  In 1776 the secessionists had been the patriots.  Assuredly nothing
under the sun is constant, not even the opinions of American politicians.
Within the last two decades there have been over 23,000 separate struggles of
labor against capital, in most cases accompanied by force and violence, and
the attempted subversion of lawful authority.  "And it doth not yet appear
what there shall be."  Truly, from the seed of dragon�s teeth sown in the war
of rebellion there have sprung up armed warriors in a great and limitless
host, who continue to advocate the same principles of mutiny an insurrection
that fired the hearts of the revolutionists of the last century with the lust
of forbidden power.
_____________
* Hancock, Adams, Hewes, Langdon, Whippler, Livingstone, Clymer, Lewes,
Sherman, Morris, Gwinnet, Taylor, Hopkins and Gerry.
  From The United Empire Loyalist Settlement at Long Point, Lake Erie by L.
H. Tasker, 1900
Copyright 2000 John Cardiff
=====
Chapter 3
Motives of the Loyalists    Next > The majority of American historians have
been unfair to the Loyalists.  They have spoken of them with scorn and
ridicule; they have called them weak, because they submitted to "tyranny";
they have called them cowards, because they refused to fight the British;
they have called them unnatural, because they took up arms against their
countrymen; and they have called them the dregs of society, because they had
spirit enough to seek a new home under British rule.

American writers have further unfairly questioned the motives of the
Loyalists.  They have denied to their enemies that freedom of choice which
they reserved to themselves; they have charged the Loyalists with being "Tory
office-holders;" they have declared that the possession of offices of
emolument from the Crown was the sole reason which prevented these
"office-holders" from taking up arms in company with the "victims of
Britain�s injustice."  On the other hand, according to these writers no
eulogy is too strong, no commemoration is too extensive for the "Patriots"
who, in the face of fearful odds, swept the British army from the plains of
Yorktown, and planted the standard of liberty on the erstwhile down-trodden
and benighted land.

A more impartial age has brushed away the deception of the century.  The
honor of the Loyalists has been amply vindicated.  It is seen that those who
were called weak, were strong enough to leave all they held dear for the sake
of principle; those who were called cowards, fought to the bitter end of a
losing struggle; those who were called unnatural, were not as unnatural as
the matricidal sons who took up arms against the Motherland; and those who
were called in malicious hatred the out-casts of society, have since been
acknowledged the brightest and best of their age.

It is noticeable that the bulk of the Loyalists were men in no mean positions
in their native states; men who possessed a high moral ideal and an elevated
mind; men of education and of unsullied honor.  Even American historians are
now coming to admit that they were of the noblest descent and of the most
upright character.  Colonel Sabine says, in his well-known work, "It is
evident that a considerable proportion of the professional and editorial
intelligence and talents of the thirteen colonies was arrayed against the
popular movement." (Vol. I., p. 50.)  And we have others.  Dr. Geo. E. Ellis,
in the "Narrative and Critical History of America" (page 186), says, "Among
those most frank and fearless in the avowal of loyalty, and who suffered the
severest penalties, were men of the noblest character and highest position."
And Mr. M. C. Tyler, writing in the American Historical Review, so lately as
October, 1895, says, "To any one at all familiar with the history of colonial
New England, that list of men, denounced to exile and loss of property on
account of their opinions, will read like the bead roll of the oldest and
noblest families concerned in the founding and upbuilding of New England
civilization; and of the whole body of the Loyalists throughout the thirteen
colonies, it must be said that it contained more than a third of influential
characters, that is, a very considerable portion of the customary chiefs in
each community."  Nearly all the clergy were Loyalists.  "Fear God, Honor the
King," was their unvarying doctrine.  Lawyers, judges and physicians also, in
a great number, were ranged on the side of loyalty, men of education and
refinement and of deep religious conviction, the moral tone of whose lived
puts to shame even that of the fifty-six signers of the Declaration of
Independence.

So much for the general character of the Loyalists.  Let us consider their
motives.  To charge them with being all office-holders under the Crown is
false on the face of it, because upwards of thirty-five thousand came to
Canada after the war, and it is absurd to suppose that even one-tenth of that
number remained faithful to the king from mercenary motives.  And if the
Loyalists had been influenced by monetary considerations they would probably
have deserted the ship before the final plunge, and made overtures of
friendship and reconciliation to the victorious party.  Base and sordid men
are not the kind who are willing to leave rich and luxurious homes on the
banks of the Hudson and the Delaware, for a cabin in a northern wilderness,
and scarcity and hardship withal.

Those of the New Englanders who remained faithful to the old flag possessed
all the ardor of a lofty patriotism.  With an unswerving trust in the
fundamental justice of the British Government, they believed that the
misunderstandings were only temporary and would be removed.  They believed
that most of the disaffected were laboring under an erroneous idea of
oppression and an egregious conceit of their own importance, and t

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