Monday, November 25, 2013

The Father of the American Revolution

It was April 19th, 1775 in Lexington Massachusetts when the “shot heard around the world”[1] was fired.  The sun was just dawning, both literally and figuratively as the American Revolutionary War began.  Samuel Adams stood next to John Hancock on Granny Hill and expressed an enthusiasm not often displayed by one so sober and self-contained, “What a glorious morning is this for America.”  The patriot and lover of liberty openly and jubilantly welcomed what most Americans at the time feared most, open conflict with Great Britain.  Regrettably, today most Americans know the name of Samuel Adams only after the beer marketed in his name.  Who was this great American patriot, and why is he known as the Father of the American Revolution?
Samuel Adams was born in Boston in 1722 to Samuel Adams Senior, a devout Puritan and prosperous merchant and Mary Fifield Adams.  He was one of twelve children, although only three lived past their third birthday.  The family regularly attended the Old South Church in Boston.  Samuel attended Harvard College and graduated at the age of 18.  He continued his studies at Harvard, and brilliantly argued in both his commencement speech and his master’s thesis that it was not only lawful, but imperative to resist King George. 
After failing as a businessman, brewer, newspaper publisher, and garbage collector, he found himself collecting taxes for the British government, but too often sympathized with the citizens, leaving him personally liable for their taxes.  He settled on the occupation of politics and political writing; independence for the colonies and resistance to the Crown.  He married, had six children, was widowed and married again. 
In 1748, he inflamed the British throne when he and his friends launched the Independent Advertiser, a weekly newspaper that printed arguments against encroachment on American’s constitutional rights.  He opposed the Sugar Act (1764) and the Stamp Act (1765).  He actively reasoned against The Townshend Acts (1767) with letters to Parliament and frequent visits to appointed governors of Boston.  He insisted that the soldiers responsible for the Boston Massacre (1770) receive a fair trial even though he personally felt they should be convicted of murder.  Writing under 17 different alias names, Samuel continued to advocate and organize rebellion.  After his role in the Boston Tea Party (1773) he became so sharp a thorn in the side of the British Government that British governors and generals tried first to bribe, then to kill him.  He urged the farmers of Middlesex to stand their ground at Lexington and Concord.  He had such an ability to speak to the masses that a people’s volunteer army of 20,000 workingmen[2] was raised to defend Boston. 
After the war began, Boston’s Governor Hutchingson, assured King George that Samuel Adams was the arch-rebel of the colonies, because “he was the first that publicly asserted the independency of the colonies upon the kingdom.”  In European circles, the uprising in America was often referred to as “Adams’s War”.  Respected, yet hated by British Parliament, he became the first of our Founding Fathers to have a price put on his head.
John Adams, his second cousin and associate in Congress, declared that “Sam Adams was born and tempered a wedge of steel to split the knot that tied America to England.”  Josiah Quincy, an ardent patriot, wrote: “I find many here who consider Samuel Adams the first politician in the world.  I have found more reason every day to convince me that he has been right when others supposed him wrong;” and Thomas Jefferson said, “If there was any [pilot] to the Revolution, Samuel Adams was the man.”[3]  Of his influence in the Continental Congress Jefferson added, “Samuel Adams was so rigorously logical, so clear in his views, abundant in good sense and master always of his subject, that he commanded the most profound attention whenever he rose in an assembly by which the froth of declamation was heard with the most sovereign contempt.”[4]
In the beginning, Samuel Adams stood almost alone as the champion of complete independence.  He was one of the first colonial leaders to argue that mankind possessed certain God-given, “natural” rights that governments could not violate.  Eventually, other men came to his opinion; one after another they joined him in his firm and uncompromising stand, and at last, on the fourth of July, 1776, Samuel Adams saw the fulfillment of his hopes in the passage and signing of the Declaration of Independence.  “For Samuel Adams,” one writer declared, “that was the most triumphant moment of his life.” A few short weeks later, Samuel Adams spoke to a group of delegates gathered in Philadelphia and put into spiritual perspective what had been accomplished.  “We have this day restored the Sovereign, to Whom alone men ought to be obedient.  He reigns in heaven . . . may his Kingdom come.”[5]
With the signing of the Declaration of Independence, Samuel Adam’s great life-work practically came to an end.  “Had he died then,” one of his biographers admits, “his fame would have been as great as it is now. What further he accomplished, though often of value, an ordinary man might have performed.”  Samuel Adams, “The architect of ruin” seems to have been raised up to show the people the only clear path to independence; after that, the leadership was taken by others.  For the times comes the man.  Revolution was inevitable, and God rose up Samuel Adams to be its earliest leader and organizer. 
Today in Boston’s Faneuil Hall stands a bronze statue as a reminder this resolute patriot.  Beneath the statue, a plague simply reads, “Samuel Adams 1722-1803; A statesman incorruptible and fearless” and that is strictly true.  As rugged and immovable as the great boulder that has been placed above his resting place, Samuel Adams was one of the great and noble ones; a revolutionist without peer, a courageous and incorruptible patriot; a true American. 

Learn more at www.GloriousCause.org


[1] Ralph Waldo Emerson; Concord Hymn
[2] Harry Frankel; Sam Adams and the American Revolution; The Militant, Nov 12,1951 to March 3, 1952
[3] Josiah Quincy as quoted by William Vincent Wells; The Life and Public Services of Samuel Adams; V2, p 304
[4] Thomas Jefferson; The Letters of Thomas Jefferson; May 12, 1819 to Samuel Adams Wells
[5] Charles E. Kistler, This Nation Under God; Boston: Richard G. Badger, The Gorman Press, 1924, 71

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