The other specific figure against
which Jefferson and Dickinson directed their ire – in the twelfth paragraph of
their 1775 Declaration – was the sitting Governor of the Province of Quebec,
one Guy Carleton (1724-1808). While, like Gage, Carleton was for all intents
and purposes a fairly typical British official in the contemporary mold – i.e.
career military, blessed with certain influential allies, and
practically-minded – his assignment as chief administrator of British Quebec
was arguably bound to make him an object of suspicion in the eyes of British
America’s more quarrelsome residents. Having been ceded by France to Great
Britain in the aftermath of the Seven Years War (1754-1763), Quebec was
something of an oddity within the contemporary British Empire. Possessing a
population of over ninety percent French-speaking Roman Catholics and subject
to minimal English Protestant immigration, its inaugural British governors –
James Murray (1721-1794) and Carleton himself – were quick to point out the
necessity of accommodation rather than assimilation – i.e. recognition of
existing conditions rather than a concerted attempt to change them. This need
became increasingly acute into the late 1760s and early 1770s amid the social
and political unrest then unfolding in neighboring British America. Fearing
that the popular discontent of the Americans would spread to the restive
Quebecois, Murray and Carleton both strongly advised Parliament to allay
whatever anxieties their constituents may have been feeling under English
Protestant rule by firmly securing their accustomed faith, legal traditions,
and territory.
The result, in 1774, was the Quebec
Act, by which the borders of the province were expanded threefold over their
previous extent, Roman Catholics were permitted to hold civil office without
renouncing their faith, the primacy of French law was affirmed in civil cases,
and the seigneurial system of land distribution and management was restored.
For reasons practical, moral, and philosophical, these measures met with
resentment and indignation among the population of British America. Frontiersmen
from colonies like Virginia, Pennsylvania, and New York had already laid claim
to lands that fell within the boundaries allotted by the Act to Quebec, the
vast extent of which appeared to them to have been designed specifically to hem
in the continued expansion of Britain’s American subjects. That this territory
was also to be governed directly by the Crown and peopled by Roman Catholics
was further cause for alarm, seeming as it did to secure an immense reserve of
land in the interior of the continent for a religion and a style of government
– i.e. one lacking in legislative oversight – fundamentally antithetical to the
culture, laws, and traditions of Britain’s various American dependencies. As
one of the authors of the Act, and the administrator of the resulting colonial
polity, Carleton naturally became a focus for these and other fears, anxieties,
and reservations as to the purpose and significance of Quebec within the
dynamics of Britain’s North American empire.
Bearing all of this in mind – as well
as Jefferson and Dickinson’s noted attribution of acts otherwise unfavorable to
American interests to certain elements within the British Parliament rather
than to Parliament itself – the nature of the claims made of Carleton within
the text of the 1775 Declaration were very likely grounded in existing feelings
of personal antipathy. Consider, to that end, the relevant passage of the
twelfth paragraph therein. “We have received certain intelligence,” it began,
“That General Carleton, the Governor of Canada, is instigating the people of
that Province, and the Indians, to fall upon us; and we have but too much
reason to apprehend, that schemes have been formed to excite domestick enemies
against us.” Note the identification of Carleton as the sole named author of
this particular conspiracy against the efforts of the united colonies. Like
Gage, his actions evidently warranted specific recognition. Perhaps this was a
consequence of the nature of his rule in Quebec and the enormity of the threat
he theoretically posed to the efforts of the Continental Congress to secure a
redress of grievances on favorable terms. Unlike the governors of the various
colonies that comprised British America –each of which possessed an elected
legislature – Carleton’s authority in British Canada was largely unchecked and
absolute. That this ran counter to the norms and traditions held dear by the
peoples of Massachusetts, Pennsylvania, New York, etc., and that it was
furthermore the result of Carleton’s own attempts to reform the government of
Quebec was doubtless cause enough for concern. That he should then have used
this authority to rally the French-speaking, Roman Catholic inhabitants of the
province as well as the native peoples thereof in an attempt to quash the
campaign of armed resistance then solidifying in British America surely represented
an almost existential affront to the efforts of the united colonies and the
ideals to which they laid claim.
Granted, Guy Carleton was not in
truth the autocrat or intriguer Jefferson and Dickinson described. While he
did, upon receiving word of the capture of Fort Ticonderoga and Fort Crown
Point in May, 1775 by a combined force of Massachusetts, Connecticut and
Vermont militias, attempt to raise a force from among the Quebecois to see to
the defense of Britain’s newest colonial acquisition, his efforts to this
effect were neither particularly successful nor wholly without cause. Not only
were the French-speaking inhabitants of Quebec unenthusiastic about the notion
of undergoing militia duty in service of the British Crown, but they had
already been subject to concerted efforts by the First and Second Continental
Congresses to seek their cooperation in the ongoing Anglo-American crisis. First
on October 26th, 1774 and then again on May 29th, 1775,
the delegates assembled in Philadelphia approved the distribution of letters
drafted by certain of their colleagues – among them Pennsylvania’s John
Dickinson, New York’s John Jay, and Massachusetts radical Samuel Adams – and
addressed to the inhabitants of the Province of Quebec. Both of these documents
characterized Carleton’s administration as tantamount to tyranny, attempted to
alert the Quebecois to the rights they were entitled to as British subjects –
representative government, trial by jury, freedom of the press, etc. – and
implored them to form a provincial congress of their own and send a delegation
to Philadelphia. Though this propaganda campaign ultimately failed to sway the
general population of Quebec to a violent rejection of British authority –
thanks in part to the privileges extended by the Quebec Act and the efforts of
Carleton to suppress the distribution of the offending letters – it
nevertheless represented a undisguised attempt on the part of American radicals
to foment insurrection in a neighboring British province. Carleton’s subsequent
efforts to see to the defence of Quebec – including his admitted but notably
cautious authorization of Iroquois forces under British Superintendent Guy
Johnson (1740-1788) – therefore very much took the form of a reaction to
attempted invasions by the Continental Congress upon his authority as governor.
As with Gage, of course, such
mitigating circumstances as described above had little bearing on the manner in
which Jefferson, Dickinson, and their colleagues in Congress understood
Carleton’s actions or intentions. Their own efforts to incite an insurrection
among his subjects notwithstanding, Governor Carleton doubtless appeared to
them as the embodiment of all those violations of English rights and English
liberties against which Americans had been railing since 1765. Through
patronage and persistence he had secured for himself a position in Britain’s
North American empire that was nearly without peer in the degree of authority
it enjoyed. The passage of the Quebec Act in 1774 – another product of his
efforts – effectively sealed this outcome by ensuring the continued loyalty of
a people wholly lacking in elected representation and possessed of legal and
cultural norms which had little use for the constitutional guarantees whose observation
– or abrogation, as the case may be – so often made attempting to govern
British America an exercise in frustration. In essence, therefore, Guy Carleton
was like a king who ruled without a Commons, without a Bill of Rights, and
without a Magna Carta. Or so he doubtless appeared to the authors of the 1775
Declaration, determined as they were to explain and to justify the need they
felt to take up arms in defence of their accustomed liberties. Within that
specific intellectual and philosophical context, though Thomas Gage certainly
represented the greater practical threat to the ability of the colonists to
enjoy the rights to which they believed they were entitled, Guy Carleton
symbolized the more fundamental danger.
Having attained a position of
significant authority in British Quebec via a personal connection – the
Secretary of State for the Northern Department at the time of his appointment
as Lieutenant Governor in 1766 was a former superior in the military, the aforementioned
Duke of Richmond – Carleton then proceeded to aid in and directly benefit from
the creation of a government therein that almost wholly disregarded every tenet
of the British Constitution intended to guarantee the rights and liberties of
all subjects of the Crown. Surely, Jefferson and Dickinson’s 1775 Declaration
seemed to posit, this is not what the king or Parliament intended. Surely the
English rights and English liberties within which every inhabitant of British
America located their freedom and security would never allow themselves to be
so blatantly corrupted. Unwilling yet to answer otherwise, the conclusion of
the united colonies – as of July 6th, 1775 – was evidently to reject
any such possibility. Britain had not failed them, their chosen scribes
asserted, nor any principle or institution thereof. Rather – as argued at
length – America had become the victim of ministerial corruption and
favoritism, military expediency, and personal ambition. Whether in the form of ministers
like Bute, Grenville, or Townshend, officers like Gage, or magistrates like
Carleton, the ranks of power in the contemporary British Empire evidently
abounded in men who were all too willing to sacrifice the principles upon which
their nation was grounded in service of their own petty desires. The united
colonies would not stand for this kind of behavior – this rampant perversion of
the legal and philosophical principles upon which the British Empire was based
– to the point of taking up arms in defence of what they knew to be the proper
and accustomed relationship between the Crown, Parliament, the government, and
British America.
Jefferson and Dickinson’s 1775
Declaration made this case at length, though perhaps not always with the finest
attention to detail. To that end, while the manner in which the two scribes
differentiated between Great Britain and the British Empire as concepts and
certain specific policies or agents of the same exhibits an intriguing quality
of finesse not often associated with the frequently bombastic rhetoric of the
American Revolution, details not favorable to their position were often elided
or omitted. Doubtless this penchant for selective recollection embodies the
propaganda purpose of the document itself, aimed as it surely was at both wavering
Americans and potentially sympathetic Britons.
Thomas Gage, for instance, while
portrayed by Jefferson and Dickinson as arbitrary, brutish, and tyrannical, was
in fact a fairly typical example of the contemporary British military
administrator. He did see to the seizure of a number of powder reserves in rural
Massachusetts beginning in September, 1774, though this was arguably a
defensive measure intended to stave off an outbreak of violence between Patriot
and Loyalist factions of the colonial population in the midst of the heightened
tensions that followed the Boston Tea Party (December 16th, 1773)
and the enforcement of the Intolerable Acts (1774). He also did choose to
abrogate the agreement guaranteeing freedom of movement that was sealed in April,
1775 between his administration in Boston and the residents thereof, though
only after his Loyalist allies – on whose material support his forces depended
– demanded it of him. And it likewise cannot be denied that his June 12th
declaration did lay a number of fairly damning accusations at the feet of the
Patriot opposition and affirm the criminal status of John Hancock and Samuel
Adams, though this document also offered, “In his Majesty's name […] his most
gracious pardon in all who shall forthwith lay down their arms, and return to
the duties of peaceable subjects [.]” Though the wisdom of these decisions on
Gage’s part may be fairly debated – as might the evident contradiction between
certain of his actions and the principles which those actions were ostensibly
intended to uphold – it would seem manifestly unreasonable to attribute malice
to any one of them, or to perceive in them evidence of Gage having behaved
otherwise than in parallel with the administrative norms of the contemporary
British Empire.
Guy Carleton’s behavior in the
months and years preceding the publication of Jefferson and Dickinson’s 1775
Declaration was similarly far less sinister than that document indicated. His
successful efforts to lobby Parliament for a reform of the government of
contemporary British Quebec – the effect of which, among other things, was to
place Carleton himself in a position of greatly enhanced authority in that
province – while no doubt sincerely understood by certain residents of British
America as a threat to their continued expansion into the continental interior,
also represented perhaps the only means by which that newly-conquered territory
could be kept from eventually devolving into civil insurrection. Just so, while
the duly-empowered Governor Carleton did call for the recruitment of local
militias and authorize the use of Iroquois war parties following the capture of
Fort Ticonderoga and Fort Crown Point in May, 1775, these measures were not
nearly what Jefferson and Dickinson made them out to be. Putting aside the fact
that his efforts to recruit his Quebecois constituents to military service
largely failed, and that the native forces organized by Col. Guy Johnson were
limited by the Governor to operate only within British Quebec, all of the
efforts Carleton undertook in the name of armed opposition to the united
colonies in the spring and summer of 1775 occurred against a backdrop of
attempts by the First and Second Continental Congress to foment rebellion
within the territory then under his administration. From the perspective of the
Governor of Quebec, therefore – and doubtless that of his supporters in
Parliament, the government of Lord North, and very likely the Crown – efforts
undertaken to see to the military disposition of that realm were wholly
justified by the circumstances at hand. As the magistrate charged by the Crown
to oversee the government of British Canada, it was not only prudent of
Carleton to respond to invasions of his remit with all due energy, it was
surely his duty to do so. The aforementioned Letters to the Inhabitants of
Canada most certainly constituted such an invasion, and the governor thereof
reacted as any magistrate in the contemporary British Empire surely would have.
Acknowledging these
facts, of course – these mitigating circumstances upon the otherwise reckless
and reprehensible behavior of certain British officials in North America –
would have warped the narrative Jefferson and Dickinson were arguably attempting
to promote in their 1775 Declaration of a virtuous, aggrieved America at the
mercy of rapacious and brutish imperial functionaries. Battle had been joined
between the united colonies and British forces in Massachusetts, an invasion of
Quebec had been authorized by the Continental Congress, and militias were being
raised and dispatched across the colonies in response to the events of
Lexington and Concord and the ongoing Siege of Boston. Reconciliation remained
the ultimate goal of the American provisional governments and their
representatives in Congress – as so much of the content of their 1775
Declaration attests – but the situation remained a delicate one. While support
for organized resistance to the Stamp Act, the Townshend Duties, and Tea Act
had been common in both the colonies and in Britain proper – particularly among
the merchants whose livelihood was affected by recurrent boycotts – a resort to
military force by the aggrieved parties in America risked alienating those who
were otherwise sympathetic but dreaded the thought of an Anglo-American civil
war. The solution, as embodied by Jefferson and Dickinson’s 1775 Declaration,
was to craft a message that affirmed the loyalty of Britain’s American subjects
and justified their resort to arms by describing a campaign of oppression and
hostility perpetrated by men who claimed to represent the interests of the
Crown but whose cited behavior clearly demonstrated their corruption, their
lack of integrity, and their ultimate responsibility for the deplorable state
of affairs then unfolding in British America. Provided that this narrative
managed to convince a sufficient percentage of British America’s Loyalist
population and a critical mass of merchants and ministers in Britain proper of
the justice of the position maintained by the united colonies, the likely – if not
inevitable – outcome would surely have been a peaceful settlement of the
present crisis on favorable terms to the aggrieved colonists.
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