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effect on all my Colleagues. This conversation and the principles, facts and motives suggested in it, have given a colour, complection and character to the whole policy of the United States, from that day to this. Without it . . . M. Jefferson [would never] have been the Author of the declaration of Independence, nor M Richard Henry Lee the mover of it. . . Although this advice dwelt deeply on my mind, I had not in my nature prudence and caution enough always to observe it . . . It soon became rumoured about the City that John Adams was for Independence; the Quakers and Proprietary gentlemen, took the alarm; represented me as the worst of men; the true-blue-sons of Liberty pitied me; all put me under a kind of Coventry. I was avoided like a man infected with the Leprosy. I walked the Streets of Philadelphia in solitude, borne down by the weight of care and unpopularity. But every ship for the ensuing year, brought us fresh proof of the truth of my prophesies, and one after another became convinced of the necessity of Independence."

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Of Virginians, very many think that Henry contributed more than any other man to light the fires of the Revolution; and Wirt goes much farther-claiming for him the credit of being the first of all the leading men of the Colonies to suggest independence. In the account of this patriot's burst of eloquence, in 1773, he tells us that one of the audience reported that "the company appeared to be startled; for they had never heard anything of the kind even suggested." Henry, in speaking of Great Britain, (his biographer continues) said: "I doubt whether we shall be able, alone, to cope with so powerful

The

Declaration of Independence: Its History

I

SEVENTEEN HUNDRED AND SEVENTY-FOUR

S

EVENTEEN hundred and seventy-four saw the

people at large for the first time recognize that the cause of Boston was a common cause.

Accordingly, it was determined to hold a meeting of Delegates from the various Colonies; and Philadelphia was chosen as the place and the 5th of September as the day of meeting.

When the time approached, "Washington says 1 Irving, "was joined at Mount Vernon by Patrick Henry and Edmund Pendleton, and they performed the journey together on horseback. It was a noble companionship. Henry was then in the youthful vigor and elasticity of his bounding genius; ardent, acute, fanciful, eloquent. Pendleton, schooled in public life, a veteran in council, with native force of intellect, and habits of deep reflection. Washington, in the meridian of his days, mature in wisdom, comprehensive in mind, sagacious in foresight."

We have even a more interesting account of the journey of the Delegates of Massachusetts.

She had selected James Bowdoin, Samuel and John Adams, Thomas Cushing and Robert Treat Paine. Bowdoin having declined the appointment, the others set out from Boston, from Cushing's house, in one coach, August 10th.

On the 15th, they were in Hartford, whither Silas Deane came to meet them; and, from him, they received an account of the New York Delegates, with whom they were unacquainted. On the 16th, about dusk, they arrived in New Haven; and "all the bells in town were set to ringing". There, the next day, at the tavern (Isaac Bears'), Roger Sherman called upon them, and expressed the opinion "that the Parliament of Great Britain had authority to make laws for America in no case whatever."

On the 20th, they "Lodged at Cock's, at Kingsbridge"; then breakfasted at Day's; and arrived in New York "at ten o'clock, at Hull's, a tavern, the sign the Bunch of Grapes ", whence they "went to private lodgings at Mr. Tobias Stoutenberg's, in King Street, very near the City Hall one way, and the French Church the other." John Adams writes in his Diary: "The streets of this town are vastly more regular and elegant than those in Boston, and the houses are more grand, as well as neat. They are almost all painted, brick buildings and all."

At 9 o'clock on the 26th, they "crossed Paulus Hook Ferry to New Jersey, then Hackinsack Ferry, then Newark Ferry, and dined at Elizabethtown"; and thence

on to Brunswick. About noon on the 27th, they came to the tavern in Princeton, " which holds out the sign of Hudibras, near Nassau Hall College. The tavern keeper's name is Hire." Here they spent Sunday also, when they heard Dr. John Witherspoon preach, and, from Jonathan D. Sergeant, learned of the Delegates from Pennsylvania and Virginia, with whom also they were unacquainted, and still more of the Delegates from New York.

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Having breakfasted, on Monday, at Trenton, they crossed the Delaware and passed through Bristol to Frankford2, five miles from Philadelphia, where a number of gentlemen came from that city to meet them among them, Thomas M:Kean, Thomas Mifflin, John Sullivan, Nathaniel Folsom and (?) Rutledge. They "then rode into town, and dirty, dusty, and fatigued as we were," writes John Adams in his Diary, "we could not resist the importunity to go to the tavern, the most genteel one in America", where they met Thomas Lynch. Adams, on taking a walk around the city the next day, was much impressed with its "regularity and elegance", in comparison with the "cowpaths" of Boston. On the last day of August, he and his associates moved their "lodgings to the house of Miss Jane Port, in Arch Street, about half way between Front Street and Second Street".

On September 1st, in the evening, the Massachusetts Delegates, together with the Delegates from the other Colonies who had arrived in Philadelphia, 25 in number, met at Smith's, the new City Tavern. The Adamses, Cushing and Paine were introduced, the next day, to Peyton Randolph, Benjamin Harrison and Richard

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