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Petition to the King

The Petition to the King was a petition sent to King George III by the First Continental Congress in 1774, calling for the repeal of the Intolerable Acts. The King's rejection of the Petition, was one of the causes of the later United States Declaration of Independence and American Revolutionary War. The Continental Congress had hoped to resolve conflict without a war.

1774 Petition to the King
CreatedOctober 1774
RatifiedOctober 25, 1774
LocationEngrossed copy:
Library of Congress
Author(s)John Dickinson et al.[1]
Signatories51 delegates to the Continental Congress
PurposeAvoiding war between Great Britain and the Thirteen Colonies

Political background edit

Following the end of the French and Indian War (the North American theater of the Seven Years' War) in 1763, relations between the Thirteen Colonies and Britain had been deteriorating. Because the war had plunged the British government deep into debt, Parliament enacted a series of measures to increase tax revenue from the colonies. These acts, such as the Stamp Act of 1765 and the Townshend Acts of 1767, were seen as legitimate means of collecting revenues to pay off the nearly two-fold increase in British debt stemming from the war.[2]

Many colonists in the Americas, however, developed a different conception of their role within the British Empire. In particular, because the colonies were not directly represented in Parliament, colonists argued that Parliament had no right to levy taxes upon them.[3] After colonists destroyed thousands of pounds of British-taxed tea during the Boston Tea Party, Parliament passed the Coercive Acts in 1774, punishing the colonies for their actions. These punitive Acts were vehemently opposed by the colonists, leading the newly formed Continental Congress to seek redress with King George III, in an attempt to reach a common understanding.

Development of the document edit

Conception edit

Resolved unanimously, That a loyal address to his Majesty be prepared, dutifully requesting the royal attention to the grievances that alarm and distress his Majesty's faithful subjects in North-America, and entreating his Majesty's gracious interposition for the removal of such grievances, thereby to restore between Great-Britain and the colonies that harmony so necessary to the happiness of the British empire, and so ardently desired by all America.

— First Continental Congress, October 1, 1774[4]

On October 1, 1774, in response to the deteriorating relationship between the American Colonies and Britain, the First Continental Congress decided to prepare a statement to King George III of Great Britain. The goal of the address was to persuade the King to revoke unpopular policies such as the Coercive Acts, which were imposed on the Colonies by the British Parliament. The committee appointed to prepare the Address consisted of Richard Henry Lee, John Adams, Thomas Johnson, Patrick Henry, and John Rutledge, with Lee designated as the committee chairman.[5]

Resolved, That the Committiee appointed to prepare an Address to his Majesty, be instructed to assure his Majesty, that in case the colonies shall be restored to the state they were in, at the close of the late war, by abolishing the system of laws and regulations-for raising a revenue in America-for extending the powers of Courts of Admiralty-for the trial of persons beyond sea for crimes committed in America-for affecting the colony of the Massachusetts-Bay and for altering the government and extending the limits of Canada, the jealousies which have been occasioned by such acts and regulations of Parliament, will be removed and commerce again restored.

— First Continental Congress, October 5, 1774[6]

On October 5, 1774, Congress once more returned to the subject of the Address, stressing to the committee that the document should assure the King that following the successful repeal of the Coercive Acts, the Colonies would restore favorable relations with Britain.

Approval by Congress edit

The Congress resumed the consideration of the address to his Majesty, and the same being debated by paragraphs, was, after some amendments, approved and order to be engrossed.

Resolved, That the address to the King be enclosed in a letter to the several colony Agents, in order that the same may be by them presented to his Majesty; and that the Agents be requested to call in the aid of such Noblemen and gentlemen as are esteemed firm friends to American liberty.

— First Continental Congress, October 19, 1774[7]

On October 25, 1774, the petition came before Congress in its draft form. After the document was debated over and formally amended, it was then approved to be engrossed and sent to England to be presented to the King.

Annotated text of the petition edit

The petition, when written, was not divided into formal parts. However, the structure of the document allows it to be classified into sections, including an introduction, the list of grievances, reasons for attention, and a conclusion.

Introduction

States the represented Colonies, as well as the nature of the document.

To the King's Most Excellent Majesty:

Most Gracious Sovereign: We, your Majesty's faithful subjects of the Colonies of New-Hampshire, Massachusetts Bay, Rhode-Island and Providence Plantations, Connecticut, New-York, New-Jersey, Pennsylvania, the Counties of New-Castle, Kent, and Sussex, on Delaware, Maryland, Virginia, North Carolina, and South Carolina, in behalf of ourselves and the inhabitants of those Colonies who have deputed us to represent them in General Congress, by this our humble Petition, beg leave to lay our Grievances before the Throne.

List of Grievances

Lists the grievances that the Colonies wish for King George III to redress.

A Standing Army has been kept in these Colonies ever since the conclusion of the late war, without the consent of our Assemblies; and this Army, with a considerable Naval armament, has been employed to enforce the collection of Taxes.

The authority of the Commander-in-Chief, and under him of the Brigadiers General has, in time of peace, been rendered supreme in all the Civil Governments in America.

The Commander-in-chief of all your Majesty's Forces in North America, has, in time of peace, been appointed Governour of a Colony.

The charges of usual offices have been greatly increased; and new, expensive, and oppressive offices have been multiplied.

The Judges of Admiralty and Vice Admiralty Courts are empowered to receive their salaries and fees from the effects condemned by themselves.

The Officers of the Customs are empowered to break open and enter houses, without the authority of any Civil Magistrate, founded on legal information.

The Judges of Courts of Common Law have been made entirely dependent on one part of the Legislature for their salaries, as well as for the duration of their commissions.

Counsellors, holding their commissions during pleasure, exercise Legislative authority.

Humble and reasonable Petitions from the Representatives of the People, have been fruitless.

The Agents of the People have been discountenanced, and Governours have been instructed to prevent the payment of their salaries.

Assemblies have been repeatedly and injuriously dissolved.

Commerce has been burthened with many useless and oppressive restrictions.

By several Acts of Parliament made in the fourth, fifth, sixth, seventh, and eighth years of your Majesty's Reign, Duties are imposed on us for the purpose of raising a Revenue; and the powers of Admiralty and Vice Admiralty Courts are extended beyond their ancient limits, whereby our property is taken from us without our consent; the trial by jury, in many civil cases, is abolished; enormous forfeitures are incurred for slight offences; vexatious informers are exempted from paying damages, to which they are justly liable, and oppressive security is required from owners before they are allowed to defend their right.

Both Houses of Parliament have resolved, that Colonists may be tried in England for offences alleged to have been committed in America, by virtue of a Statute passed in the thirty-fifth year of Henry the Eighth, and, in consequence thereof, attempts have been made to enforce that Statute.

A Statute was passed in the twelfth year of your Majesty's Reign, directing that persons charged with committing any offence therein described, in any place out of the Realm, may be indicted and tried for the same in any Shire or County within the Realm, whereby the inhabitants of these Colonies may, in sundry cases, by that Statute made capital, be deprived of a trial by their peers of the vicinage.

In the last sessions of Parliament an Act was passed for blocking up the Harbour of Boston; another empowering the Governour of the Massachusetts Bay to send persons indicted for murder in that Province, to another Colony, or even to Great Britain, for trial, whereby such offenders may escape legal punishment; a third for altering the chartered Constitution of Government in that Province; and a fourth for extending the limits of Quebec, abolishing the English and restoring the French laws, whereby great numbers of British Freemen are subjected to the latter, and establishing an absolute Government and the Roman Catholick Religion throughout those vast regions that border on the Westerly and Northerly boundaries of the free Protestant English settlements; and a fifth, for the better providing suitable Quarters for Officers and Soldiers in his Majesty's service in North America.

Reasons for Attention

State why the aforementioned grievances are important enough to warrant an address to the monarchy.

To a Sovereign, who glories in the name of Briton, the bare recital of these Acts must, we presume, justify the loyal subjects, who fly to the foot of his Throne, and implore his clemency for protection against them.

From this destructive system of Colony Administration, adopted since the conclusion of the last war, have flowed those distresses, dangers, fears, and jealousies, that overwhelm your Majesty's dutiful Colonists with affliction; and we defy our most subtle and inveterate enemies to trace the unhappy differences between Great Britain and these Colonies, from an earlier period, or from other causes than we have assigned. Had they proceeded on our part from a restless levity of temper, unjust impulses of ambition, or artful suggestions of seditious persons, we should merit the opprobrious terms frequently bestowed upon us by those we revere. But so far from promoting innovations, we have only opposed them; and can be charged with no offence, unless it be one to receive injuries and be sensible of them.

Had our Creator been pleased to give us existence in a land of slavery, the sense of our condition might have been mitigated by ignorance and habit. But, thanks be to his adorable goodness, we were born the heirs of freedom, and ever enjoyed our right under the auspices of your Royal ancestors, whose family was seated on the British Throne to rescue and secure a pious and gallant Nation from the Popery and despotism of a superstitious and inexorable tyrant. Your Majesty, we are confident, justly rejoices that your title to the Crown is thus founded on the title of your people to liberty; and, therefore, we doubt not but your royal wisdom must approve the sensibility that teaches your subjects anxiously to guard the blessing they received from Divine Providence, and thereby to prove the performance of that compact which elevated the illustrious House of Brunswick to the imperial dignity it now possesses.

The apprehension of being degraded into a state of servitude, from the pre-eminent rank of English freemen, while our minds retain the strongest love of liberty, and clearly foresee the miseries preparing for us and our posterity, excites emotions in our breasts which, though we cannot describe, we should not wish to conceal. Feeling as men, and thinking as subjects, in the manner we do, silence would be disloyalty. By giving this faithful information, we do all in our power to promote the great objects of your Royal cares, the tranquillity of your Government, and the welfare of your people.

Duty to your Majesty, and regard for the preservation of ourselves and our posterity, the primary obligations of nature and of society, command us to entreat your Royal attention; and, as your Majesty enjoys the signal distinction of reigning over freemen, we apprehend the language of freemen cannot be displeasing. Your Royal indignation, we hope, will rather fall on those designing and dangerous men, who, daringly interposing themselves between your Royal person and your faithful subjects, and for several years past incessantly employed to dissolve the bonds of society, by abusing your Majesty's authority, misrepresenting your American subjects, and prosecuting the most desperate and irritating projects of oppression, have at length compelled us, by the force of accumulated injuries, too severe to be any longer tolerable, to disturb your Majesty's repose by our complaints.

These sentiments are extorted from hearts that much more willingly would bleed in your Majesty's service. Yet, so greatly have we been misrepresented, that a necessity has been alleged of taking our property from us without our consent, "to defray the charge of the administration of justice, the support of Civil Government, and the defence, protection, and security of the Colonies." But we beg leave to assure your Majesty that such provision has been and will be made for defraying the two first artiticles [sic], as has been and shall be judged by the Legislatures of the several Colonies just and suitable to their respective circumstances; and, for the defence, protection, and security of the Colonies, their Militias, if properly regulated, as they earnestly desire may immediately be done, would be fully sufficient, at least in times of peace; and, in case of war, your faithful Colonists will be ready and willing, as they ever have been, when constitutionally required, to demonstrate their loyalty to your Majesty, by exerting their most strenuous efforts in granting supplies and raising forces.[8]

Yielding to no British subjects in affectionate attachment to your Majesty's person, family, and Government, we too dearly prize the privilege of expressing that attachment by those proofs that are honourable to the Prince who receives them, and to the People who give them, ever to resign it to any body of men upon earth.

Had we been permitted to enjoy, in quiet, the inheritance left us by our forefathers, we should, at this time, have been peaceably, cheerfully, and usefully employed in recommending ourselves, by every testimony of devotion, to your Majesty, and of veneration to the state, from which we derive our origin. But though now exposed to unexpected and unnatural scenes of distress by a contention with that Nation in whose parental guidance on all important affairs, we have hitherto, with filial reverence, constantly trusted, and therefore can derive no instruction in our present unhappy and perplexing circumstances from any former experience; yet, we doubt not, the purity of our intention, and the integrity of our conduct, will justify us at that grand tribunal before which all mankind must submit to judgment.

We ask but for Peace, Liberty, and Safety. We wish not a diminution of the prerogative, nor do we solicit the grant of any new right in our favour. Your Royal authority over us, and our connection with Great Britain, we shall always carefully and zealously endeavour to support and maintain.

Conclusion

Restates the ultimate goal of the petition, while reaffirming the Colonies' loyalty to the British monarchy.

Filled with sentiments of duty to your Majesty, and of affection to our parent state, deeply impressed by our education, and strongly confirmed by our reason, and anxious to evince the sincerity of these dispositions, we present this Petition only to obtain redress of Grievances, and relief from fears and jealousies, occasioned by the system of Statutes and Regulations adopted since the close of the late war, for raising a Revenue in America—extending the powers of Courts of Admiralty and Vice Admiralty—trying persons in Great Britain for offences alleged to be committed in America—affecting the Province of Massachusetts Bay—and altering the Government and extending the limits of Quebec; by the abolition of which system the harmony between Great Britain and these Colonies, so necessary to the happiness of both, and so ardently desired by the latter, and the usual intercourses will be immediately restored. In the magnanimity and justice of your Majesty and Parliament we confide for a redress of our other grievances, trusting, that, when the causes of our apprehensions are removed, our future conduct will prove us not unworthy of the regard we have been accustomed in our happier days to enjoy. For, appealing to that Being, who searches thoroughly the hearts of his creatures, we solemnly profess, that our Councils have been influenced by no other motive than a dread of impending destruction.

Permit us then, most gracious Sovereign, in the name of all your faithful People in America, with the utmost humility, to implore you, for the honour of Almighty God, whose pure Religion our enemies are undermining; for your glory, which can be advanced only by rendering your subjects happy, and keeping them united; for the interests of your family depending on an adherence to the principles that enthroned it; for the safety and welfare of your Kingdoms and Dominions, threatened with almost unavoidable dangers and distresses, that your Majesty, as the loving Father of your whole People, connected by the same bands of Law, Loyalty, Faith, and Blood, though dwelling in various countries, will not suffer the transcendent relation formed by these ties to be farther violated, in uncertain expectation of effects, that, if attained, never can compensate for the calamities through which they must be gained.

We therefore most earnestly beseech your Majesty, that your Royal authority and interposition may be used for our relief, and that a gracious Answer may be given to this Petition.

That your Majesty may enjoy every felicity through a long and glorious Reign, over loyal and happy subjects, and that your descendants may inherit your prosperity and Dominions till time shall be no more, is, and always will be, our sincere and fervent prayer.

Signatures

The first signature on the engrossed copy is that of Henry Middleton, the then appointed President of the Continental Congress. The fifty-one signatories who represented the Colonies (Georgia did not participate) are given, in order.

Delivery of the document edit

On November 2, the petition departed Philadelphia on board the ship Britannia, captained by W. Morwick. However, a storm forced the ship to return to port, delaying the delivery of the petition. It was later discovered that the paper was unfit to be presented. The second copy left port on November 6 on board the ship Mary and Elizabeth, captained by N. Falconer. It was confirmed on December 14 that the document successfully arrived in London.[9]

In Britain, a number of London merchants expressed interest in joining the Americans when the petition was presented, although Benjamin Franklin advised against the proposition.[10] On December 21, Benjamin Franklin, Lee, and Bollan were notified by Lord Dartmouth that the petition was "decent and respectful" and that it would be presented as soon as possible to the Houses of Parliament. However, Franklin wrote two days later that the petition could not be presented to Parliament until after the Christmas recess.[11]

Response edit

On January 19, 1775, the petition was presented to the House of Commons by Lord North, and was also presented to the House of Lords the following day.[11]

It came down among a great Heap of letters of Intelligence from Governors and officers in America, Newspapers, Pamphlets, Handbills, etc., from that Country, the last in the List, and was laid upon the Table with them, undistinguished by any particular Recommendation of it to the Notice of either House; and I do not find, that it has had any further notice taken of it as yet, than that it has been read as well as the other Papers.

— Benjamin Franklin, February 5, 1775[12]

Because the petition was intermingled with many other documents, and given the increasing turmoil of the times, little attention was given to the petition by Parliament.[11] Likewise, the King never gave the Colonies a formal reply to their petition.

Publication edit

When the official papers of Congress were published in October and November 1774, the Petition to the King was omitted, because it was preferred that the address be read by the King before being made public. It was not until January 17 or 18, 1775 that the papers were officially released by the secretary of the Continental Congress, Founding Father Charles Thomson, for publication.[13]

Surviving drafts edit

Three drafts of the Petition to the King still survive: one written by Patrick Henry, one written by Richard Henry Lee, and one by John Dickinson.[14]

Patrick Henry edit

The Henry draft is written with very few corrections on its four portfolio pages. Compared to the final version of the Address, the draft contains more rhetorical descriptions of the contested Acts, and focuses less on the Colonies' past loyalty to Britain.[14]

Richard Henry Lee edit

The Lee draft is neatly written, with minor changes, on three portfolio pages. Compared to the Henry draft, the descriptions of the grievances were brief.[14] It does contain, however, a harsh attack on the King's ministers, most notably Bute, Mansfield, and North. Because of the inflammatory language in this draft, it is argued that this is the version that was rejected by Congress on October 21, 1774.[15]

John Dickinson edit

The Dickinson draft is a rough composition, rite with many changes, including entire paragraphs designated to be transposed. The document is nine and a half portfolio pages, numbered 1-9 and 12, with pages 10 and 11 left blank. The text found in this draft is virtually identical to the document adopted by Congress, with the main difference lying in the list of grievances in the adopted version, which resembled those found in the other two drafts.[15]

Historical significance edit

The Petition to the King reflected the Colonies' desire to maintain relations with Britain, given that certain demands were met. In particular, it showed that the Colonies viewed themselves as loyal to the British monarchy rather than to Parliament.[16][17]

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ Wolf, Edwin, The Authorship of the 1774 Address to the King Restudied, 199.
  2. ^ Christie and Labaree, Empire or Independence, 31.
  3. ^ Bailyn, Ideological Origins, 162
  4. ^ Journal of the proceedings of the Congress, 47.
  5. ^ Wolf, Edwin, The Authorship of the 1774 Address to the King Restudied, 190.
  6. ^ Journal of the proceedings of the Congress, 48–49.
  7. ^ Journal of the proceedings of the Congress, 116.
  8. ^ An Estimate of the number of Souls in the following Provinces, made in Congress, September, 1774: In Massachusetts 400,000; New-Hampshire 150,000; Rhode-Island 59,678; Connecticut 192,000; New-York 250,000; New-Jersey 130,000; Pennsylvania, including the Lower Counties, 350,000; Maryland 320,000; Virginia 650,000; North Carolina 300,000; South Carolina 225,000. Total 3,026,678.
  9. ^ Wolf, Edwin, The Authorship of the 1774 Address to the King Restudied, 192.
  10. ^ Smyth, Writings of Franklin, 344.
  11. ^ a b c Wolf, Edwin, The Authorship of the 1774 Address to the King Restudied, 193.
  12. ^ Smyth, Writings of Franklin, 304.
  13. ^ Wolf, Edwin, The Authorship of the 1774 Address to the King Restudied, 201.
  14. ^ a b c Wolf, Edwin, The Authorship of the 1774 Address to the King Restudied, 197.
  15. ^ a b Wolf, Edwin, The Authorship of the 1774 Address to the King Restudied, 198.
  16. ^ Wood, Gordon S. (21 February 2020). "'1774' Review: The Year That Changed the World". Wall Street Journal. ISSN 0099-9660. Retrieved 13 January 2021.
  17. ^ Norton, Mary Beth (2020). 1774: The Long Year of Revolution. ISBN 978-0-385-35336-6. OCLC 1164603850.

References edit

  • Wolf, Edwin (1965). "The Authorship of the 1774 Address to the King Restudied". The William and Mary Quarterly. Omohundro Institute of Early American History and Culture. 22 (2): 189–224. doi:10.2307/1920696. JSTOR 1920696.
  • Chorlton, Thomas (2011). The First American Republic 1774-1789: The First Fourteen American Presidents Before Washington. Bloomington, IN: AuthorHouse. pp. 1–708. ISBN 978-1456753887.
  • Ammerman, David (1974). In the common cause: American response to the Coercive acts of 1774. Charlottesville, VA: University Press of Virginia. pp. 1–170. ISBN 0813905257.
  • Journal of the proceedings of the Congress, held at Philadelphia, September 5, 1774. Philadelphia, PA: William and Thomas Bradford, at the London Coffee House. 1774. pp. 1–132.

petition, king, confused, with, 1775, olive, branch, petition, petition, sent, king, george, first, continental, congress, 1774, calling, repeal, intolerable, acts, king, rejection, petition, causes, later, united, states, declaration, independence, american, . Not to be confused with the 1775 Olive Branch Petition The Petition to the King was a petition sent to King George III by the First Continental Congress in 1774 calling for the repeal of the Intolerable Acts The King s rejection of the Petition was one of the causes of the later United States Declaration of Independence and American Revolutionary War The Continental Congress had hoped to resolve conflict without a war 1774 Petition to the KingCreatedOctober 1774RatifiedOctober 25 1774LocationEngrossed copy Library of CongressAuthor s John Dickinson et al 1 Signatories51 delegates to the Continental CongressPurposeAvoiding war between Great Britain and the Thirteen Colonies Contents 1 Political background 2 Development of the document 2 1 Conception 2 2 Approval by Congress 3 Annotated text of the petition 4 Delivery of the document 4 1 Response 5 Publication 6 Surviving drafts 6 1 Patrick Henry 6 2 Richard Henry Lee 6 3 John Dickinson 7 Historical significance 8 See also 9 Notes 10 ReferencesPolitical background editFollowing the end of the French and Indian War the North American theater of the Seven Years War in 1763 relations between the Thirteen Colonies and Britain had been deteriorating Because the war had plunged the British government deep into debt Parliament enacted a series of measures to increase tax revenue from the colonies These acts such as the Stamp Act of 1765 and the Townshend Acts of 1767 were seen as legitimate means of collecting revenues to pay off the nearly two fold increase in British debt stemming from the war 2 Many colonists in the Americas however developed a different conception of their role within the British Empire In particular because the colonies were not directly represented in Parliament colonists argued that Parliament had no right to levy taxes upon them 3 After colonists destroyed thousands of pounds of British taxed tea during the Boston Tea Party Parliament passed the Coercive Acts in 1774 punishing the colonies for their actions These punitive Acts were vehemently opposed by the colonists leading the newly formed Continental Congress to seek redress with King George III in an attempt to reach a common understanding Development of the document editConception edit Resolved unanimously That a loyal address to his Majesty be prepared dutifully requesting the royal attention to the grievances that alarm and distress his Majesty s faithful subjects in North America and entreating his Majesty s gracious interposition for the removal of such grievances thereby to restore between Great Britain and the colonies that harmony so necessary to the happiness of the British empire and so ardently desired by all America First Continental Congress October 1 1774 4 On October 1 1774 in response to the deteriorating relationship between the American Colonies and Britain the First Continental Congress decided to prepare a statement to King George III of Great Britain The goal of the address was to persuade the King to revoke unpopular policies such as the Coercive Acts which were imposed on the Colonies by the British Parliament The committee appointed to prepare the Address consisted of Richard Henry Lee John Adams Thomas Johnson Patrick Henry and John Rutledge with Lee designated as the committee chairman 5 Resolved That the Committiee appointed to prepare an Address to his Majesty be instructed to assure his Majesty that in case the colonies shall be restored to the state they were in at the close of the late war by abolishing the system of laws and regulations for raising a revenue in America for extending the powers of Courts of Admiralty for the trial of persons beyond sea for crimes committed in America for affecting the colony of the Massachusetts Bay and for altering the government and extending the limits of Canada the jealousies which have been occasioned by such acts and regulations of Parliament will be removed and commerce again restored First Continental Congress October 5 1774 6 On October 5 1774 Congress once more returned to the subject of the Address stressing to the committee that the document should assure the King that following the successful repeal of the Coercive Acts the Colonies would restore favorable relations with Britain Approval by Congress edit The Congress resumed the consideration of the address to his Majesty and the same being debated by paragraphs was after some amendments approved and order to be engrossed Resolved That the address to the King be enclosed in a letter to the several colony Agents in order that the same may be by them presented to his Majesty and that the Agents be requested to call in the aid of such Noblemen and gentlemen as are esteemed firm friends to American liberty First Continental Congress October 19 1774 7 On October 25 1774 the petition came before Congress in its draft form After the document was debated over and formally amended it was then approved to be engrossed and sent to England to be presented to the King Annotated text of the petition editThe petition when written was not divided into formal parts However the structure of the document allows it to be classified into sections including an introduction the list of grievances reasons for attention and a conclusion IntroductionStates the represented Colonies as well as the nature of the document To the King s Most Excellent Majesty Most Gracious Sovereign We your Majesty s faithful subjects of the Colonies of New Hampshire Massachusetts Bay Rhode Island and Providence Plantations Connecticut New York New Jersey Pennsylvania the Counties of New Castle Kent and Sussex on Delaware Maryland Virginia North Carolina and South Carolina in behalf of ourselves and the inhabitants of those Colonies who have deputed us to represent them in General Congress by this our humble Petition beg leave to lay our Grievances before the Throne List of GrievancesLists the grievances that the Colonies wish for King George III to redress A Standing Army has been kept in these Colonies ever since the conclusion of the late war without the consent of our Assemblies and this Army with a considerable Naval armament has been employed to enforce the collection of Taxes The authority of the Commander in Chief and under him of the Brigadiers General has in time of peace been rendered supreme in all the Civil Governments in America The Commander in chief of all your Majesty s Forces in North America has in time of peace been appointed Governour of a Colony The charges of usual offices have been greatly increased and new expensive and oppressive offices have been multiplied The Judges of Admiralty and Vice Admiralty Courts are empowered to receive their salaries and fees from the effects condemned by themselves The Officers of the Customs are empowered to break open and enter houses without the authority of any Civil Magistrate founded on legal information The Judges of Courts of Common Law have been made entirely dependent on one part of the Legislature for their salaries as well as for the duration of their commissions Counsellors holding their commissions during pleasure exercise Legislative authority Humble and reasonable Petitions from the Representatives of the People have been fruitless The Agents of the People have been discountenanced and Governours have been instructed to prevent the payment of their salaries Assemblies have been repeatedly and injuriously dissolved Commerce has been burthened with many useless and oppressive restrictions By several Acts of Parliament made in the fourth fifth sixth seventh and eighth years of your Majesty s Reign Duties are imposed on us for the purpose of raising a Revenue and the powers of Admiralty and Vice Admiralty Courts are extended beyond their ancient limits whereby our property is taken from us without our consent the trial by jury in many civil cases is abolished enormous forfeitures are incurred for slight offences vexatious informers are exempted from paying damages to which they are justly liable and oppressive security is required from owners before they are allowed to defend their right Both Houses of Parliament have resolved that Colonists may be tried in England for offences alleged to have been committed in America by virtue of a Statute passed in the thirty fifth year of Henry the Eighth and in consequence thereof attempts have been made to enforce that Statute A Statute was passed in the twelfth year of your Majesty s Reign directing that persons charged with committing any offence therein described in any place out of the Realm may be indicted and tried for the same in any Shire or County within the Realm whereby the inhabitants of these Colonies may in sundry cases by that Statute made capital be deprived of a trial by their peers of the vicinage In the last sessions of Parliament an Act was passed for blocking up the Harbour of Boston another empowering the Governour of the Massachusetts Bay to send persons indicted for murder in that Province to another Colony or even to Great Britain for trial whereby such offenders may escape legal punishment a third for altering the chartered Constitution of Government in that Province and a fourth for extending the limits of Quebec abolishing the English and restoring the French laws whereby great numbers of British Freemen are subjected to the latter and establishing an absolute Government and the Roman Catholick Religion throughout those vast regions that border on the Westerly and Northerly boundaries of the free Protestant English settlements and a fifth for the better providing suitable Quarters for Officers and Soldiers in his Majesty s service in North America Reasons for AttentionState why the aforementioned grievances are important enough to warrant an address to the monarchy To a Sovereign who glories in the name of Briton the bare recital of these Acts must we presume justify the loyal subjects who fly to the foot of his Throne and implore his clemency for protection against them From this destructive system of Colony Administration adopted since the conclusion of the last war have flowed those distresses dangers fears and jealousies that overwhelm your Majesty s dutiful Colonists with affliction and we defy our most subtle and inveterate enemies to trace the unhappy differences between Great Britain and these Colonies from an earlier period or from other causes than we have assigned Had they proceeded on our part from a restless levity of temper unjust impulses of ambition or artful suggestions of seditious persons we should merit the opprobrious terms frequently bestowed upon us by those we revere But so far from promoting innovations we have only opposed them and can be charged with no offence unless it be one to receive injuries and be sensible of them Had our Creator been pleased to give us existence in a land of slavery the sense of our condition might have been mitigated by ignorance and habit But thanks be to his adorable goodness we were born the heirs of freedom and ever enjoyed our right under the auspices of your Royal ancestors whose family was seated on the British Throne to rescue and secure a pious and gallant Nation from the Popery and despotism of a superstitious and inexorable tyrant Your Majesty we are confident justly rejoices that your title to the Crown is thus founded on the title of your people to liberty and therefore we doubt not but your royal wisdom must approve the sensibility that teaches your subjects anxiously to guard the blessing they received from Divine Providence and thereby to prove the performance of that compact which elevated the illustrious House of Brunswick to the imperial dignity it now possesses The apprehension of being degraded into a state of servitude from the pre eminent rank of English freemen while our minds retain the strongest love of liberty and clearly foresee the miseries preparing for us and our posterity excites emotions in our breasts which though we cannot describe we should not wish to conceal Feeling as men and thinking as subjects in the manner we do silence would be disloyalty By giving this faithful information we do all in our power to promote the great objects of your Royal cares the tranquillity of your Government and the welfare of your people Duty to your Majesty and regard for the preservation of ourselves and our posterity the primary obligations of nature and of society command us to entreat your Royal attention and as your Majesty enjoys the signal distinction of reigning over freemen we apprehend the language of freemen cannot be displeasing Your Royal indignation we hope will rather fall on those designing and dangerous men who daringly interposing themselves between your Royal person and your faithful subjects and for several years past incessantly employed to dissolve the bonds of society by abusing your Majesty s authority misrepresenting your American subjects and prosecuting the most desperate and irritating projects of oppression have at length compelled us by the force of accumulated injuries too severe to be any longer tolerable to disturb your Majesty s repose by our complaints These sentiments are extorted from hearts that much more willingly would bleed in your Majesty s service Yet so greatly have we been misrepresented that a necessity has been alleged of taking our property from us without our consent to defray the charge of the administration of justice the support of Civil Government and the defence protection and security of the Colonies But we beg leave to assure your Majesty that such provision has been and will be made for defraying the two first artiticles sic as has been and shall be judged by the Legislatures of the several Colonies just and suitable to their respective circumstances and for the defence protection and security of the Colonies their Militias if properly regulated as they earnestly desire may immediately be done would be fully sufficient at least in times of peace and in case of war your faithful Colonists will be ready and willing as they ever have been when constitutionally required to demonstrate their loyalty to your Majesty by exerting their most strenuous efforts in granting supplies and raising forces 8 Yielding to no British subjects in affectionate attachment to your Majesty s person family and Government we too dearly prize the privilege of expressing that attachment by those proofs that are honourable to the Prince who receives them and to the People who give them ever to resign it to any body of men upon earth Had we been permitted to enjoy in quiet the inheritance left us by our forefathers we should at this time have been peaceably cheerfully and usefully employed in recommending ourselves by every testimony of devotion to your Majesty and of veneration to the state from which we derive our origin But though now exposed to unexpected and unnatural scenes of distress by a contention with that Nation in whose parental guidance on all important affairs we have hitherto with filial reverence constantly trusted and therefore can derive no instruction in our present unhappy and perplexing circumstances from any former experience yet we doubt not the purity of our intention and the integrity of our conduct will justify us at that grand tribunal before which all mankind must submit to judgment We ask but for Peace Liberty and Safety We wish not a diminution of the prerogative nor do we solicit the grant of any new right in our favour Your Royal authority over us and our connection with Great Britain we shall always carefully and zealously endeavour to support and maintain ConclusionRestates the ultimate goal of the petition while reaffirming the Colonies loyalty to the British monarchy Filled with sentiments of duty to your Majesty and of affection to our parent state deeply impressed by our education and strongly confirmed by our reason and anxious to evince the sincerity of these dispositions we present this Petition only to obtain redress of Grievances and relief from fears and jealousies occasioned by the system of Statutes and Regulations adopted since the close of the late war for raising a Revenue in America extending the powers of Courts of Admiralty and Vice Admiralty trying persons in Great Britain for offences alleged to be committed in America affecting the Province of Massachusetts Bay and altering the Government and extending the limits of Quebec by the abolition of which system the harmony between Great Britain and these Colonies so necessary to the happiness of both and so ardently desired by the latter and the usual intercourses will be immediately restored In the magnanimity and justice of your Majesty and Parliament we confide for a redress of our other grievances trusting that when the causes of our apprehensions are removed our future conduct will prove us not unworthy of the regard we have been accustomed in our happier days to enjoy For appealing to that Being who searches thoroughly the hearts of his creatures we solemnly profess that our Councils have been influenced by no other motive than a dread of impending destruction Permit us then most gracious Sovereign in the name of all your faithful People in America with the utmost humility to implore you for the honour of Almighty God whose pure Religion our enemies are undermining for your glory which can be advanced only by rendering your subjects happy and keeping them united for the interests of your family depending on an adherence to the principles that enthroned it for the safety and welfare of your Kingdoms and Dominions threatened with almost unavoidable dangers and distresses that your Majesty as the loving Father of your whole People connected by the same bands of Law Loyalty Faith and Blood though dwelling in various countries will not suffer the transcendent relation formed by these ties to be farther violated in uncertain expectation of effects that if attained never can compensate for the calamities through which they must be gained We therefore most earnestly beseech your Majesty that your Royal authority and interposition may be used for our relief and that a gracious Answer may be given to this Petition That your Majesty may enjoy every felicity through a long and glorious Reign over loyal and happy subjects and that your descendants may inherit your prosperity and Dominions till time shall be no more is and always will be our sincere and fervent prayer SignaturesThe first signature on the engrossed copy is that of Henry Middleton the then appointed President of the Continental Congress The fifty one signatories who represented the Colonies Georgia did not participate are given in order President of Congress Henry Middleton New Hampshire John Sullivan Nathaniel Folsom Massachusetts Bay Thomas Cushing Samuel Adams John Adams Robert Treat Paine Rhode Island Stephen Hopkins Samuel Ward Connecticut Eliphalet Dyer Roger Sherman Silas Deane New York Philip Livingston John Alsop Isaac Low James Duane John Jay William Floyd Henry Wisner Simon Boerum New Jersey William Livingston John De Hart Stephen Crane Richard Smith Pennsylvania Edward Biddle Joseph Galloway John Dickinson John Morton Thomas Mifflin George Ross Charles Humphreys Delaware Caesar Rodney Thomas McKean George Read Maryland Matthew Tilghman Thomas Johnson William Paca Samuel Chase Virginia Richard Henry Lee Patrick Henry George Washington Edmund Pendleton Richard Bland Benjamin Harrison North Carolina William Hooper Joseph Hewes Richard Caswell South Carolina Thomas Lynch Christopher Gadsden John Rutledge Edward RutledgeDelivery of the document editOn November 2 the petition departed Philadelphia on board the ship Britannia captained by W Morwick However a storm forced the ship to return to port delaying the delivery of the petition It was later discovered that the paper was unfit to be presented The second copy left port on November 6 on board the ship Mary and Elizabeth captained by N Falconer It was confirmed on December 14 that the document successfully arrived in London 9 In Britain a number of London merchants expressed interest in joining the Americans when the petition was presented although Benjamin Franklin advised against the proposition 10 On December 21 Benjamin Franklin Lee and Bollan were notified by Lord Dartmouth that the petition was decent and respectful and that it would be presented as soon as possible to the Houses of Parliament However Franklin wrote two days later that the petition could not be presented to Parliament until after the Christmas recess 11 Response edit On January 19 1775 the petition was presented to the House of Commons by Lord North and was also presented to the House of Lords the following day 11 It came down among a great Heap of letters of Intelligence from Governors and officers in America Newspapers Pamphlets Handbills etc from that Country the last in the List and was laid upon the Table with them undistinguished by any particular Recommendation of it to the Notice of either House and I do not find that it has had any further notice taken of it as yet than that it has been read as well as the other Papers Benjamin Franklin February 5 1775 12 Because the petition was intermingled with many other documents and given the increasing turmoil of the times little attention was given to the petition by Parliament 11 Likewise the King never gave the Colonies a formal reply to their petition Publication editWhen the official papers of Congress were published in October and November 1774 the Petition to the King was omitted because it was preferred that the address be read by the King before being made public It was not until January 17 or 18 1775 that the papers were officially released by the secretary of the Continental Congress Founding Father Charles Thomson for publication 13 Surviving drafts editThree drafts of the Petition to the King still survive one written by Patrick Henry one written by Richard Henry Lee and one by John Dickinson 14 Patrick Henry edit The Henry draft is written with very few corrections on its four portfolio pages Compared to the final version of the Address the draft contains more rhetorical descriptions of the contested Acts and focuses less on the Colonies past loyalty to Britain 14 Richard Henry Lee edit The Lee draft is neatly written with minor changes on three portfolio pages Compared to the Henry draft the descriptions of the grievances were brief 14 It does contain however a harsh attack on the King s ministers most notably Bute Mansfield and North Because of the inflammatory language in this draft it is argued that this is the version that was rejected by Congress on October 21 1774 15 John Dickinson edit The Dickinson draft is a rough composition rite with many changes including entire paragraphs designated to be transposed The document is nine and a half portfolio pages numbered 1 9 and 12 with pages 10 and 11 left blank The text found in this draft is virtually identical to the document adopted by Congress with the main difference lying in the list of grievances in the adopted version which resembled those found in the other two drafts 15 Historical significance editThe Petition to the King reflected the Colonies desire to maintain relations with Britain given that certain demands were met In particular it showed that the Colonies viewed themselves as loyal to the British monarchy rather than to Parliament 16 17 See also editFounding Fathers of the United States Journals of the Continental CongressNotes edit Wolf Edwin The Authorship of the 1774 Address to the King Restudied 199 Christie and Labaree Empire or Independence 31 Bailyn Ideological Origins 162 Journal of the proceedings of the Congress 47 Wolf Edwin The Authorship of the 1774 Address to the King Restudied 190 Journal of the proceedings of the Congress 48 49 Journal of the proceedings of the Congress 116 An Estimate of the number of Souls in the following Provinces made in Congress September 1774 In Massachusetts 400 000 New Hampshire 150 000 Rhode Island 59 678 Connecticut 192 000 New York 250 000 New Jersey 130 000 Pennsylvania including the Lower Counties 350 000 Maryland 320 000 Virginia 650 000 North Carolina 300 000 South Carolina 225 000 Total 3 026 678 Wolf Edwin The Authorship of the 1774 Address to the King Restudied 192 Smyth Writings of Franklin 344 a b c Wolf Edwin The Authorship of the 1774 Address to the King Restudied 193 Smyth Writings of Franklin 304 Wolf Edwin The Authorship of the 1774 Address to the King Restudied 201 a b c Wolf Edwin The Authorship of the 1774 Address to the King Restudied 197 a b Wolf Edwin The Authorship of the 1774 Address to the King Restudied 198 Wood Gordon S 21 February 2020 1774 Review The Year That Changed the World Wall Street Journal ISSN 0099 9660 Retrieved 13 January 2021 Norton Mary Beth 2020 1774 The Long Year of Revolution ISBN 978 0 385 35336 6 OCLC 1164603850 References editWolf Edwin 1965 The Authorship of the 1774 Address to the King Restudied The William and Mary Quarterly Omohundro Institute of Early American History and Culture 22 2 189 224 doi 10 2307 1920696 JSTOR 1920696 Chorlton Thomas 2011 The First American Republic 1774 1789 The First Fourteen American Presidents Before Washington Bloomington IN AuthorHouse pp 1 708 ISBN 978 1456753887 Ammerman David 1974 In the common cause American response to the Coercive acts of 1774 Charlottesville VA University Press of Virginia pp 1 170 ISBN 0813905257 Journal of the proceedings of the Congress held at Philadelphia September 5 1774 Philadelphia PA William and Thomas Bradford at the London Coffee House 1774 pp 1 132 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Petition to the King amp oldid 1183727714, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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