Thursday, June 18, 2015

Pennsylvania’s Revolution

Pennsylvania had been created in 1681 by a charter given to William Penn by King Charles II. This gave Penn and his descendants ‘Proprietorship’ or ownership of the government and all of the land of the colony, which they sold to the arriving settlers.  There was an elected Assembly but as the colony grew in numbers and westward expansion, and diversity of nationalities and religion, the membership never accomplished what we would call ‘reapportionment’.

This resulted in an Assembly dominated by Quakers and Philadelphia interests which, while it had sent delegates to the Second Continental Congress, had instructed those delegates not to support rebellion.

When the Proprietary Assembly meeting in the Pennsylvania State House concluded its business on June 14, 1776, it intended to return on August 26.  It never did.

An assortment of groups throughout the colonies, known as ‘committees of correspondence’, ‘committees of safety’, or the Sons of Liberty maintained organized opposition to oppressive British measures.

Our John Smilie was elected by Drumore Township to the Lancaster County Committee of Correspondence in 1775.

Carpenters Hall, Philadelphia, about 1 ½ block east of the Pennsylvania State House (Independence Hall), was the meeting place of the Pennsylvania Provincial Conference, June 18 – 25, 1776

The committees of Pennsylvania assembled at Carpenters Hall, Philadelphia, June 18, 1776 and remained in session until the 25th.  John was one of the delegates from Lancaster County.

Some of the results of the meeting:
·       Declared the Proprietary government ended
·       Instructed Pennsylvania’s delegates to the Second Continental Congress to support independence
·       Set about forming a new state constitution
·       Began raising 6,000 men for the Continental Army 

The following links give detail to the event:

PA Museum Commission

Independence Hall Association/USHistory.org

Pennsylvania Magazine of History and Biography, vol.58, issue 4, October, 1934

Edgar Williams/Philadelphia Inquirer

disclosure:  Edgar Williams (1919 – 1999), the senior writer at the Philadelphia Inquirer when he retired in January 1989, continued to write a weekly column and special interest pieces until his death.  He was Edward Black's father-in-law.

Header: left, Carpenters Hall, Philadelphia, photo by Davidt8, via Wikimedia Commons
center, Congress Hall, Philadelphia, House of Representatives Chamber, National Park Service photo
right, Grave of John Smilie, Congressional Cemetery, Washington, DC, photo by Robert C. Keller

No comments:

Post a Comment