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The image is so clear in our minds, seen first in elementary
school and reinforced countless times since: a few dozen
gentlemen with powdered wigs and period suits (coats,
waistcoats, and knee-length breeches) gathered in a
large meeting room, some standing and some sitting,
but all up to something important. Visually, John Trumbull’s
painting of the Declaration of Independence is not exactly
lively, but we know and cherish the story it signifies
— our Founding Fathers pledging their lives, fortunes,
and sacred honor in support of independence. It was
the nation’s founding moment.
Eleven years later there would be another grand moment,
in the exact same chamber. With no famous portrait to
consult, we conjure our own sensory images. We know
it was stifling hot within that closed-up room, the
windows and shutters sealed to keep the proceedings
secret. We imagine the perspiration flowing as our Founding
Fathers (a mostly different set this time, although
we rarely take note of that) devised a Constitution
to guide the fledgling nation.
These two interior scenes define a nation, a city, and
a time: the United States of America, as created in
Philadelphia in 1776 and 1787. We know and cherish the
city for what it has given us. But what of the city
itself, outside that forty-foot square chamber in the
East Wing of the Pennsylvania State House?
Philadelphia in those days was the commercial and cultural
hub of the British colonies. During the boom stimulated
by the French and Indian War, it had surpassed Boston
as North America’s largest city [see the interactive
map
of urban expansion in this issue of History
Now]. Streets were paved with stone and met each
other at proper right angles. (The streets in Boston
and New York, by contrast, had evolved from cow trails.)
Wagons, drays, coaches, chariots, and chaises carried
freight and passengers over the cobbles, while pedestrians
strolled on flat brick sidewalks. Since 1752, the city
had even been lit at night. Three-story houses butted
against each other, crowding out untamed nature. For
its residents, Philadelphia appeared a haven of European-styled
“civilization” at the edge of a large, and
largely unknown, continent.
Within this city, Independence Hall (as we now call
the State House) was not the only venue to host the
American Revolution. There were several others, such
as:
The Waterfront. This was the lifeblood of
the city. From Philadelphia’s docks, the produce
of interior regions was loaded onto oceangoing vessels,
in exchange for rum, molasses, and a wide assortment
of manufactured goods from Europe. To the docks came
wave after wave of indentured servants, and some African
slaves as well. Philadelphia was the “New York”
of the time, a rich melting pot of ethnicities and
nationalities that made it a truly cosmopolitan city.
Since much of colonial discontent centered on issues
of trade, the waterfront became a battleground of
sorts. In the late 1760s, when American patriots agreed
not to import British goods, artisans, who supported
local manufactures, rubbed against wealthy merchants,
who relied heavily on British trade. In 1773, when
the East India Company tried to dump its surplus tea
on the American market, patriots patrolled the shores
of the river, waiting to turn the tea ships away.
Market Square. At the junction of Second
Street and High (now called Market Street), an open
swath of cobblestone was bordered by the Court House,
the Greater Meeting House, and long rows of covered
market stalls. It was here the local militiamen mustered
and trained, ready to defend their city.
Workshops. During the third quarter of the
eighteenth century, Philadelphia’s “mechanics,”
people who worked with their hands for a living, developed
a will of their own. Rising in opposition to the “better
sort” who controlled the provincial government,
they challenged local hierarchies and British oppressions
simultaneously. One group was particularly instrumental
in fomenting unrest: printers. Through newspapers
and broadsides, patriots preached and planned a formidable
resistance movement. Early in 1776, local printers
produced an inflammatory pamphlet called Common
Sense, written be a recent immigrant from
England, a failed stay-maker named Tom Paine.
Public houses (taverns). In Philadelphia,
as elsewhere in the colonies, men who drank together
found it easier to suspend the customary patterns
of deference. Raising toast after toast, they encouraged
each other to take the next step on the path to rebellion.
The London Coffee House (drinks there were not limited
to coffee) played host to a group of radical activists
who planned numerous mass meetings. At the City Tavern,
the plushest of the lot, delegates to the Continental
Congress dined and caucused. In taverns throughout
the city, men read aloud and debated the ideas presented
in Common Sense.
Carpenters’ Hall. In the early 1770s,
the Philadelphia Carpenters’ Company, the oldest
craft guild in America, constructed its own meeting
space, a handsome structure, less ornate than the
State House, that housed several important gatherings.
As soon as the building was completed, Ben Franklin
moved his Library Company upstairs; there, people
not only read but talked about philosophy and politics.
- On September 5, 1774, in the large meeting room
downstairs, the First Continental Congress held
its opening session. Members of the conservative
Pennsylvania Assembly had offered to host Congress
at the State House, but most delegates felt more
comfortable talking about resistance in a venue
not formally tied to the British Crown. While seated
in personalized chairs made by local craftsman,
delegates decided to support and coordinate the
resistance.
- In June of 1776, a different sort of revolution
was fomented in Carpenters’ Hall. By that
time, most Pennsylvanians and most Americans had
come to favor independence, but the Pennsylvania
Assembly instructed its delegates in the Continental
Congress to oppose it. The best way to counter the
Assembly, radical patriots reasoned, was to supplant
it with a new governmental body, authorized by a
new Constitution. And so it was that in Carpenters’
Hall, a Provincial Congress organized a separate
Constitutional Convention for Pennsylvania. That
summer, meeting in the West Wing of the State House,
across the hall from the Continental Congress, the
Convention passed the most democratic of all state
constitutions. All power was vested in a single
legislature, directly responsible to the people.
Meetings were open to the public. All proposed bills
had to be printed and disseminated, and none could
be passed until the following session, after the
people themselves had had a chance to debate the
issue.
State House Yard. Outside the State House,
in an area originally defined by the Pennsylvania
Assembly as “a public open green and walk for
ever,” common citizens during Revolutionary
days gathered in extra-legal “town meetings”
to debate the issues of the day and take decisive
actions. For instance:
- On October 5, 1765, several thousand citizens
pressured the Stamp Act Collector to forsake his
duties.
- On July 30, 1768, another large crowd voiced its
support for the Massachusetts Assembly, which had
just been disbanded because it defied royal authority.
- On December 27, 1773, an estimated 8,000 people
voiced their support for the Boston Tea Party. A
ship bearing tea had just anchored downriver in
the Delaware, and the people warned its captain,
who had been ushered into town, that the “Committee
of Tarring and Feathering” had prepared for
him some “Pitch and Feathers,” should
he attempt to land the tea. (He chose instead to
return to Britain, his cargo unloaded.)
- On June 18, 1774, several thousand people met
once again at the State House Yard to endorse the
idea of a Continental Congress, call for a Provincial
Conference to choose delegates, and set up a Committee
of Correspondence for the city of Philadelphia.
- On April 25, 1775, as soon as the news of Lexington
and Concord arrived in town, nearly 8,000 men gathered
and “unanimously agreed to associate [take
up arms], for the purpose of defending their Property,
Liberty and Lives.”
- On May 20, 1776, despite a driving rain, 4,000
people decided to replace the conservative Assembly
and set up a new government. (This meeting led to
the gathering of delegates from across Pennsylvania
in Carpenters’ Hall the following month, the
Constitutional Convention in July, and finally the
ultra-democratic Pennsylvania Constitution, as described
above.)
- On July 8, 1776, “a great concourse of people”
gathered in the State House Yard to hear the first
public reading of the Declaration of Independence.
After three rounds of spirited “huzzahs,”
some of the crowd entered the State House and tore
down the King’s Arms. Come evening, under
a clear, starry sky, people lit bonfires and rang
bells and generally caroused about town.
- On June 21, 1783, several hundred soldiers from
the Pennsylvania Line met in the yard and surrounded
the State House, demanding their pay from the Continental
Congress, which was meeting inside. Although British
rule was over, the practice of public demonstrations
for redress of grievances continued.
All this is not to diminish the importance of what
happened in the East Wing of the State House in 1776
and 1787, but only to provide a wider context for those
grand events.
On June 7, 1776, Richard Henry Lee of Virginia introduced
a motion in Congress: “Resolved, That these United
Colonies are, and of right ought to be, free and independent
States, that they are absolved from all allegiance to
the British Crown, and that all political connection
between them and the State of Great Britain is, and
ought to be, totally dissolved.” Three weeks earlier,
the Virginia Convention had called upon its congressional
delegates to introduce just such a resolution, yet delegates
from several other colonies still opposed independence,
and some were under specific instructions from their
provincial assemblies to vote against it. Rather than
force the issue immediately, Congress tabled the matter
till July 1.
Back home in the colonies, the people went to work.
Pennsylvania’s new Provincial Convention issued
instructions to vote for independence. So did several
county conventions in Maryland, the colony that had
been most fervently in opposition. On June 28, the Maryland
Convention voted unanimously for independence. Immediately,
Samuel Chase wrote triumphantly to John Adams: “See
the glorious Effects of County Instructions. Our people
have fire if not smothered.”
On the morning of July 1, just as Congress resumed debate
on Lee’s motion, Chase’s letter was delivered
to Adams within the East Wing chamber. Maryland was
in tow, but Pennsylvania’s delegates were still
divided, some answering to the instructions of the Assembly
and others to the Provincial Convention. By the next
day, however, the Pennsylvania delegation had made its
decision: by a vote of three-to-two, with two delegates
abstaining, Pennsylvania supported independence, as
did 12 of the 13 colonies. (The delegates from New York
abstained, for they had been instructed not to vote
either way.)
And so it was, on July 2, 1776, a new nation was born.
Two days later, Congress approved its formal Declaration
of Independence. Today, we celebrate the document; back
then, the fact of independence counted for more than
its representation. On July 3, before the Declaration
had been finalized, John Adams wrote to his wife Abigail:
The second day of July, 1776, will be the most memorable
epocha in the history of America. I am apt to believe
that it will be celebrated by succeeding generations
as the great anniversary festival. It ought to be
commemorated as the day of deliverance, by solemn
acts of devotion to God Almighty. It ought to be solemnized
with pomp and parade, with shows, games, sports, guns,
bells, bonfires, and illumination, from one end of
this continent to the other, from this time forward
forevermore.
Many teachers and students of American history have
read or heard Adams’s prediction, which has proved
correct in everything but the date. Less known, but
more significant, is his description in the same letter
of the political process that culminated in independence:
Time has been given for the whole people maturely
to consider the great question of independence, and
to ripen their judgment, dissipate their fears, and
allure their hopes, by discussing it in newspapers
and pamphlets, by debating it in assemblies, conventions,
committees of safety and inspection, in town and county
meetings, as well as in private conversation, so that
the whole people, in every colony of the thirteen,
have now adopted it as their own act.
Adams knew, and we should too, that what transpired within
the Pennsylvania State House had been made possible by
the revolution that was happening in many other locales
and venues.
The context for the Constitutional Convention in 1787
was altogether different. The meeting then was not influenced
by mass rallies at the State House Yard, thousands of
conversations in taverns, or resolutions passed in meeting
houses across the land. Instead, it was an inside job,
the result of politicking by smart and influential men
who desired a stronger government — politically,
financially, diplomatically, and militarily — than
the existing Articles of Confederation could deliver.
The tone was more conservative this time: there was a
notable absence of grandstanding, no pledge of lives,
fortunes, and sacred honor. The substance was more conservative
as well: no insistence on popular control, as was evidenced
in the Pennsylvania Constitution of 1776. Instead, government
was placed at arms distance from the people, with only
one-half of one of the three branches under their direct
control. The “framers,” as we call them, faced
an abundance of troublesome issues, several of which we
study at length: the power of large states versus small
states, for instance, and what to do about slavery. Despite
their differences, however, all delegates shared an overarching
goal: to create a powerful and efficient central government,
but not so powerful as to invite or enable tyranny.
On September 17, when all was said and done, the framers
opened the chamber doors. One large hurdle remained: the
Constitution they created had to be sold to the people.
At this late point in the game, when no additional input
would be accepted, the nation embarked on its second grand
debate. The issue was simply whether to accept or reject
the plan, a take-it or leave-it proposition. “We,
the people” were asked to approve the new form of
government, but the “people” did not drive
the process forward, as they had done eleven years earlier.
Taking an overview of the two acts of nation-creating
that transpired in Independence Hall, and calling forth
as well the events in lesser known venues, we see history
at work in very different ways. Then, as now, power traveled
both up and down social and political hierarchies. It
flowed from inside chambers to the population at large
and from the people outside to the men within. Sometimes
the so-called leaders led, as we commonly assume, but
at other times they received their directives from the
people and had little choice but to follow. Our two most
sacred documents demonstrate these opposite trajectories
in the political process. The Declaration of Independence
resulted from an immense outpouring of popular sentiment,
with commoners driving their representatives forward.
The Constitution, on the other hand, was conceived in
secret behind closed doors, and then marketed to those
outside.
To this day, we are trying to work out the ambiguous implications
of these dissimilar events, which have come to signify
both the city and the nation.
| For links
to some of the documents discussed in this
article, as well as more information about
Philadelphia in the Founding Era, visit our
Additional
Resources Page. |
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