View this image " THERE IS A TIME FOR ALL THINGS - A TIME TO PREACH AND A TIME TO FIGHT, AND NOW IS THE TIME TO FIGHT," JOHN PETER GABRIEL MUHLENBERG, CLASS OF 1763, AS HE CALLED HIS PARISH TO ARMS, 1775. BAS-RELIEF ON STATUE ERECTED ON THE PLAZA OF PHILADELPHIA CITY HALL. 6 Pennsylvania Album main page THE COLLEGE OF PHILADELPHIA AND THE POLITICS OF REVOLUTION, MICHAEL G. DUBROW Should your country call, or should you perceive the restless tools of faction at work in their dark cabals, and plotting against the sacred interests of liberty; should you see the corrupters or corrupted imposing upon the public with specious names, undermining the civil and religious principles of their country, and gradually paving the way to certain slavery, by spreading destructive notions of government— then, Oh! then, be nobly rouzed! Be all eye, and ear, and heart, and voice, and hand, in a cause so glorious! `Cry aloud, and spare not,' fearless of danger, undaunted by opposition, and little regardful of the frowns of power, or the machinations of villainy. Let the world know that liberty is your unconquerable delight, and that you are sworn foes to every species of bondage, either of body or of mind!1 hese were the words preached by Dr. William Smith, the first provost of the College of Philadelphia, at the first commencement in 1757. While the widely professed intention of Smith and the founders of the College was to indoctrinate the students with a sense of civic duty and social responsibility, Smith never imagined that such service would conflict with the interests of King George of England and the Proprietor of the colony of Pennsylvania, Thomas Penn. Smith's support of the King and the Proprietor was the result of a natural desire to keep the College financially healthy: fund-raising campaigns for the College's MICHAEL G. DUBROW, CLASS OF 1 9 9 2 , HAWS FROM THE PHILADELPHIA SUBURB OF MEADOWBROOK, PENNSYLVANIA. HE HAS ENTERED A DUAL DEGREE PROGRAM, MAJORING IN HISTORY IN THE COLLEGE AND BUSINESS ADMINISTRATION IN THE WHARTON SCHOOL. endowment carried Smith across the Atlantic to Penn and George III. In 1762 Smith's extended travels throughout England and Scotland, soliciting, at Penn's behest, the Archbishop of Canterbury, the Duke of Newcastle, members of the Privy Council, and others, brought the College £6921 sterling, or some £12,000 in the colonial scrip. In one swift stroke, Smith tied the fortunes of the College to the future of the British Empire.2 With so much money coming to the College either from Penn directly or through his connections in influential circles in England, Smith had a vested interest in maintaining the Proprietor's power and wealth in Pennsylvania. To this end, Smith directed his most pugnacious political essays toward the Proprietor's nemesis: the Pennsylvania Provincial Assembly. Smith's attacks began during the early phases of the FrenchIndian War with the publication of two pamphlets, A Brief State of the Province of Pennsylvania and A Brief View of the Conduct of Pennsylvania for the year 1755, each charging the Assembly with incompetence in defending the colony from invasion by FrenchIndian forces. One of Smith's diatribes, written in complicity with Judge William Moore and appearing in the American Magazine and Monthly Chronicle for the British Colonies in 1757, prompted the Assembly to jail Smith without formal charges being brought against him, so that the members of the Assembly might enjoy a moment's peace. After Smith secured a pardon from the King, he continued his attacks against the Assembly, criticizing the latter's plan to change the status of Pennsylvania from a proprietary to a royal colony. As tensions between the colonies and England mounted, Smith condemned what he perceived to allegiance to the Crown and the Proprietor which the Trustees and the faculty had to take were replaced by oaths of allegiance to the state of Pennsylvania.8 Thus the machinations of Smith and his Trustees rendered the College politically impotent at a time of momentous change in American society. Undoubtedly Smith was acting with the knowledge and acceptance of the Trustees of the College; otherwise, the Trustees might not have been so understanding when Smith was jailed in 1757 for his political beliefs. Furthermore, there were complaints that Smith was exceeding his role as professor of logic, rhetoric, and natural philosophy by politicizing his lectures. The allegations were dismissed, according to Edward Potts Cheyney, "since the Trustees themselves had it [Smith's behavior] constantly under observation" and because Smith's lectures were, in the words of the Trustees, "becoming and satisfactory to us."9 Perhaps this meant that Smith was not endorsing political positions in class; more likely, it meant that Smith was not engaged in teaching anything in class which the Trustees considered to be offensive. The attempts by the College to indoctrinate the students with conservative principles10 failed miserably. When the great test of ideology, the American Revolution, exploded across the colonies, only a fraction of the graduates perpetuated the College's teachings. Indeed, though a majority of graduates remained neutral, a large number were active participants in the radical cause. While most of the College graduates who participated in the Revolution were patriots, Isaac Hunt was not among them. A member of the Class of 1763, Hunt enjoyed one of the more colorful political careers of College graduates, beginning in 1764 with the publication of a pamphlet entitled A Letter from a Gentleman in Transilvania to his Friend in America under the pseudonym of Isaac Bickerstaff. In his letter, Hunt ridicules the proprietary system of government in Pennsylvania, choosing instead the royal colony side of a debate which had divided Pennsylvanians since the out-break of the FrenchIndian War in 1754. At the time of the outbreak of hostilities between the English colonists and the Indians in western Pennsylvania, the Assembly, being dominated by Quakers, was somewhat reluctant to appropriate funds for the colony's defense. The theory was that Pennsylvania would receive military assistance from other colonies or even from England, and the Quakers would be free from having to participate in the atrocities of war. In 1755 two expedi- be an undermining of colonial rights by the Parliament, rather than blaming King George, the preferred scapegoat of most colonists.3 Adamantly opposed to the Stamp Act, Smith rejoiced upon its repeal in 1766, proclaiming that "the cause of Liberty, Civil and Religious, is the Cause of Britain herself " and that the outcry in the colonies over the hated act would convince the English "that to check the spirit of Freedom ... here in America would, on the part of Great Britain, be to wound her own members."4 Smith further condemned the loss of colonial rights at the hands of the Parliament in a sermon delivered June 23, 1775: Enough has surely been attempted by way of experiment, to be convinced that the people of America know their rights and will not consent to a passive surrender of them — It is, now at least, time to pursue another mode, and to listen to some plan for averting the dreadful calamities which must attend a hostile prosecution of this unnatural contest.5 However much he denounced the usurpation of colonial rights, regardless of the governing body effecting that usurpation, Smith was adamantly opposed to colonial independence, alleging that "independency ... if effected, would inevitably plunge our once preeminently envied country into ruin, horror, and desolation."6 The republicans of Pennsylvania would seek revenge for the anti-Assembly and anti-independence ideologies Smith espoused — and it would be the College that would suffer it. When the new Pennsylvania State Legislature convened in 1779, it had Provost Smith in mind when it decreed: WHEREAS the education of youth has ever been found to be of the most essential consequence, as well to the good government of states, and the peace and welfare of society, as to the profit and ornament of individuals, insomuch that from the experience of all ages, it appears that seminaries of learning, when properly conducted, have been publick blessings to mankind, and that on the contrary, when in the hands of dangerous and disaffected men, they have troubled the peace of society, shaken the government, and often caused tumult, sedition, and bloodshed.7 Remembering all of the epithets Smith had levied against the Assembly over the previous two decades, the Legislature proceeded to draw up a new charter for the College, changing the name to the University of the State of Pennsylvania and forcing Smith into retirement. Other tory members 8 degree for expressing political thoughts which ran counter to those embraced by the Trustees.13 Hunt's zeal for politics went undiminished in spite of the affair over his degree from the College. Swinging to the far right of the political spectrum, Hunt rallied to the Loyalist cause in 1775 with a pamphlet entitled The Political Family , which enumerated the reciprocal advantages of a perpetual union with Great Britain. Hunt had actually written the pamphlet in 1766; the fact that he waited until the outbreak of hostilities between the colonies and England before publishing the essay hardly endeared him to his fellow colonists: the publishing of the pamphlet prompted a mob to attack Hunt and cart him off to jail. Hunt managed to escape to Jamaica, from which he sailed to England, but it was at the expense of the property and possessions he held in North America. Had Hunt printed his essay on the reciprocal advantages of a perpetual union nine years earlier, the colonists probably would not have thought the worse of him, for in 1766 that was the subject about which College graduates were encouraged to write. The perpetual union concept was conceived by John Sargent, a wealthy London merchant and member of Parliament. When Franklin was in London in 1762, Sargent approached him and offered to donate two gold medals to the College, one for a classical essay and the other for tions, one under Colonel George Washington and the other under General Edward Braddock, ended in such thorough disaster that all of western Pennsylvania was open to invasion by the combined French-Indian armies. In light of the quality of aid Pennsylvania was receiving from England and her sister colonies, the conclusion to sit and wait for help became most unpopular within Pennsylvania itself; Benjamin Franklin led the movement favoring the organization of an intracolonial militia which could then be sent out to campaign against the Indians. The militia was organized in 1755, but further battles between the Assembly and the Proprietor over how to fund an expedition continued until 1761, when an act of Parliament supported the Assembly's cattle tax for the purpose. In describing the dispute between the Assembly and the Proprietor, Hunt wrote, The Delegates, being assembled to consult the welfare of the Country; insisted that a Tax shou'd be laid upon all the Cow-kine in the Province. The Waymode [the governor] agreed, but upon condition, that all his own shou'd be exempted, as he had large flocks all over the Country— This, the Delegates refus'd, because his Cows were as liable to be made a prey of by the Enemy, as their own. He then told them his Bulls were free from the Taxes, as they could not come under the denomination of Cow-kine, but Bull-kine; this construction however the Delegates wou'd not admit of. A long dispute then ensued. His Excellency told them that if Bulls shou'd be taxed, which he cou'd not believe was just, yet certainly Heffers and Calves of all kinds were clear. The Delegates reply'd, they saw no reason why his Excellency's Bulls, Heffers, and Calves shou'd be exempted and not their own. The Barbarians in the mean time, laid waste the Frontiers with fire and sword.11 Hunt's clear support for the republican forces in Pennsylvania at the expense of the Proprietor ran contrary to the College's dogma. When in 1766 Hunt applied for his Masters degree from the College, he was turned away for, according to the Trustees as quoted by Thomas Montgomery, complicity in several scurrilous and scandalous Pieces, unworthy of a good man or Person of Education; some of them highly reflecting on the Government of this Province, as well as on this College itself where he had received his Education and his former Benefactors in it....'12 That is, Hunt was barred from receiving his View this image 9 an essay written on a contemporary subject: "The Reciprocal Advantages of a Perpetual Union between Great Britain and her American Colonies." Sargent suggested that Franklin, a representative of the Pennsylvania Assembly; Isaac Norris, speaker of the Assembly; and a third per-son of their choosing ought to award the prizes. Obviously, Sargent's motives were political in and of themselves: he wished to tie the College of Philadelphia and perhaps the colony of Pennsylvania closer to the Mother Country at a time when England was losing its grip over the North American empire. Realizing the potentially politically explosive nature of the medals, Franklin and Norris left the issue up to the Trustees of the College to decide. In 1766, at the height of Stamp Act tensions, the Trustees offered the prize for the essay written about the "reciprocal advantages of a perpetual union"; anyone who had a degree from the College was free to compete. Nine essays were submitted, all under pseudonyms. The medal was awarded to Dr. John Morgan, Professor of Medicine and future DirectorGeneral of Military Hospitals and Physician-inChief of the Continental Army during the Revolution. Even before he mentions any "reciprocal advantages" emanating from a "perpetual union," Morgan reaffirms his beliefs and values as an Englishman: I consider myself at once to be a Briton and an American, and reflect upon the invaluable privileges, to which, in both these characters and capacities, I am so happy as to be entituled .... I am ... the son of an Institution, wherein I imbibed the true principles of Liberty, and was taught to admire the beauty and excellency of that civil Constitution, in which the governing powers mutually controul, and are controuled, by each other, in which the rights of prince and people are accurately discriminated, and liberty and property effectually secured by a government of laws, not of men; in which civil and religious rights and privileges are held sacred and inviolable, and declared to be no less the birth-right of the meanest subject, in the most distant and obscure corner of the realm, than of the highest courtier that basks in the sun-shine of royal favour.14 The reciprocal advantages which follow are primarily the result of mutual commercial interests arising between the colonies and Great Britain. The issue addressed most deliberately by the essayists was the responsibilities the Colonists owed to England and vice versa. To this end, an 10 View this image THOMAS MIFFLIN, BY CHARLES WILLSON PEALE, 1784. MIFFLIN, A MEMBER OF THE CLASS OF 1760, WAS ONE OF THE FEW PROMINENT PATRIOT TRUSTEES OF THE COLLEGE, SERVING IN THAT CAPACITY FROM 1773 THROUGH 1779. (COLLECTIONS OF INDEPENDENCE NATIONAL HISTORICAL PARK) anonymously written essay proclaims: The Rights we claim are the full and free enjoyment of CONSTITUTIONAL LIBERTY, PROTECTION from foreign invasions, and encouragement in every commercial interest, which does not directly interfere with that of the mother country. The Duties we owe, are OBEDIENCE under Constitutional and legal restrictions, and an exclusive preference to the mother country in every article of commerce and trade.15 Four essays which were considered to be exceptional were read at the May 20, 1766 public commencement of the College. This was neither the first nor the last time political theories were conveyed by the College to the community at large, though the speakers, however shrill, generally did not attempt to stir their audience to take political action. William Moore Smith, B.A., son of the Provost and a member of the graduating class, gave a speech at the May 17, 1775 commencement entitled, "On the Fall of Empires," which began as follows: At this time of public danger, public trial, and public calamity, when even the arts and sciences can scarce claim attention, and our country's fate alone — now awfully suspended in the balance of human events — engrosses every thought ... I determined to venture a few sentiments on the Fall of Empires; judging that they might be to us as a beacon set upon a perilous place!16 Though fellow colonists were battling imperial soldiers in New England, Smith did not seek to enumerate the injustices the colonists had been suffering at the hands of the British but merely "determined to venture a few sentiments on the fall of empires." It is unlikely that the speech was intended to incite members of the community at large to take up arms against the British, and we can only assume that Smith, like so many other colonists, was studied in his neutrality in the midst of the social and political upheavals around him. Still, the ranks of non-partisan graduates of the College did dwindle as the hour of revolution drew near. Hugh Williamson, a member of the first graduating class and Professor of Mathematics at the College, came to embrace the Revolution though he originally supported the oppressive proprietary system in Pennsylvania. During the 1760s, Williamson was the author of essays that attacked savagely the Quaker-dominated Provincial Assembly. Writing in response to Franklin's Cool Thoughts on the Present Situation of our Public Affairs in 1764, the year the Assembly petitioned the King for royal colony status and made arrangements to send Franklin to England to argue against the proprietary system, Williamson asserted in a series of essays entitled The Plain Dealer: That a Quaker faction has tyrannized over the innocent inhabitants of our frontier counties, and That faction has most wickedly abused the Province by squandering away the public monies, In Bribes to a weak Government to pass iniquitous Laws, In support of Savages, who were enemies to his Majesty and this Province, In fruitless ill timed and unreasonable contentions with the Governor. In general by taking every public measure which might tend to enrich themselves, reduce the rest of this province to slavery, poverty and misery, and sacrifice the wretched lives of the frontier inhabitants, by refusing them any seasonable or effectual protection, and by aiding and encouraging their enemies.17 Franklin returned fire in a public speech, proclaiming that The Plain Dealer is "as replete with Falsehoods as it is with Sentences," falsehoods which he attempted to enumerate.18 Williamson countered in an essay entitled What is Sauce for a Goose is also Sauce for a Gander by attacking Franklin personally: By assuming the merit of other mens discoveries, he obtain'd the name of a PHILOSOPHER. By meanly beging and Times buying HONORARY some DEGREES, from several Colleges and Universities, he obtain'd the Character of a Man of LEARNING.19 Williamson managed to quell his invectives toward Franklin when the issue of independence rose to the forefront. He rallied to the patriotic cause by serving as a doctor in the American army. In 1782, Williamson left the battlefield for Philadelphia, having been elected a delegate to the Second Continental Congress. Thomas Mifflin, a member of the Class of 1760, was in the vanguard of Revolutionary activities in the 1770s. In 1772 Mifflin was elected to the Pennsylvania Provincial Assembly and from there went on to the First Continental Congress in 1774. As a member of this first, not yet radical Congress, Mifflin was instrumental in the drafting of the Continental Association, which was ratified on October 18, 1774. The Association first reinforced the idea of colonial allegiance to the Crown but continued with the following charge: Having taken under our most serious deliberation the state of the whole continent, [the members of the Continental Congress] find that the present unhappy situation of our affairs is occasioned by a ruinous system of colony administration, adopted by the British ministry about the year 1763, evidently calculated for enslaving these colonies, and with them, the British Empire.20 The Association suggested "To obtain redress of these grievances ... that a non-importation, nonconsumption, and non-exportation agreement, faithfully adhered to, will prove the most speedy, effectual, and peaceable measure."21 After the Association failed "to obtain redress of these grievances" and the shooting began in the spring of 1775, Mifflin joined the Continental Army with a major's commission; within a year he was promoted to the rank of brigadier general and served as quartermaster-general for the Continental Army. In 1782 Mifflin was elected as a delegate to the Continental Congress and served as its president from December 1783 to June 1784.22 John Peter Gabriel Muhlenberg, a member of the Class of 1763 who had actually left the College before receiving a degree, played a correspondingly active role in the era of the American Revolution. An ordained Anglican minister, Muhlenberg was the pastor of the German Lutheran congregation in Woodstock, Virginia, where he also served as town magistrate. It was in the capacity of the latter role that in June 1774 Muhlenberg presided over an ad hoc committee designed to set a course of action in response to the closing of Boston Harbor, by act of Parliament, 11 View this image HUGH WILLIAMSON, BY JOHN TRUMBULL, CA. 1795. A GRADUATE OF THE FIRST CLASS OF THE COLLEGE IN 1757, WILLIAMSON WAS AN INSTRUCTOR IN THE ACADEMY WHILE STILL IN HIS SECOND COLLEGIATE YEAR. IN 1761 HE WAS NAMED PROFESSOR OF MATHEMATICS AND MASTER OF THE MATHEMATICAL SCHOOL, POSTS HE HELD FOR NEARLY THREE YEARS. (ON LOAN FROM WILLIAM H. SWAN AND CAROLYN SWAN PARLATO TO THE NATIONAL PORTRAIT GALLERY, SMITHSONIAN INSTITUTION) as punishment for the Boston Tea Party. The committee passed the following resolution: That it is the inherent right of British subjects to be governed and taxed by representatives chosen by themselves only, and that every act of the British Parliament respecting the internal policy of America is a dangerous and unconstitutional invasion of our rights and privileges. That the enforcing the execution of the said act of Parliament [the closing of Boston Harbor] by a military power will have a necessary tendency to cause a civil war.... 23 Muhlenberg's bellicosity was translated into action in January 1776, when Muhlenberg was enlisted as the commander of the German Battalion, organized out of none other than his congregation in Woodstock, Virginia. As the story goes, Muhlenberg gave a rousing sermon to his congregation, proclaiming at its culmination, "In the language of the Holy Writ there is a time for all things, a time to preach and a time to pray, but those times have passed away. There is a time to fight, and that time has now come."24 After the service, Muhlenberg removed his robe, displaying the colonel's uniform he had been wearing underneath, and walked out of the church. Tables were set up to recruit volunteers for the army; hundreds enlisted.25 If Mifflin and Muhlenberg were battling against the British in the field, William Paca, class of 1759, was waging the political war for independence. As a member of the Maryland Provincial Legislature during the 1770's, Paca dominated an anti-proprietary movement that was reminiscent of the one Smith confronted in Pennsylvania during the 1760s. In 1770, the Tobacco Inspection Act, which provided for the clergy's salary in terms of a quantity of tobacco paid as a tax, was left to expire without renewal by the Maryland House of Burgesses; the colonial governor proceeded to enforce the expired statute regardless. As a result of what he perceived to be a circumvention of popular will, Paca threw his support behind the opposition to the Proprietary Party, his elocution helping to raise him quickly to preeminence . Paca's popularity within Maryland rose immeasurably as a result of his battles against the Proprietor, and he was elected to represent Maryland in the First and Second Continental Congresses. As a delegate to the Second Continental Congress, Paca lobbied for and eventually signed the Declaration of Independence. He returned to Maryland to help draw up the state's constitution.26 Remarkably, in spite of the College's attempts to indoctrinate its students to preserve the status quo, namely, the proprietary system in Pennsylvania and Crown control of North America, the students did not seem to have learned their lessons as well as their instructors might have hoped. Mifflin, Hunt, Paca, Williamson, and Muhlenberg were hardly lone wolves in the annals of the graduates of the College in fighting for that which they believed. Of those who graduated between 1757 and 1765, almost half participated actively in the Revolution: representatives to the Continental Congress, including signers of the Declaration of Independence; members of the rebel army, with duties ranging from generals to physicians; members of state constitutional conventions; governors, judges, and other state officials. Only a handful of those participating in the Revolution were loyalists, driven out of the colonies for refusing to compromise their affection for the Crown.27 Yet even the loyalists are worth admiring, for in the face of discomfort or even death, they refused to acquiesce to the demands of the radicals to give up what they considered to be just causes. It would appear that the graduates chose to heed Provost Smith's call to "Let the world know that liberty is your unconquerable delight, and that you are sworn foes to every species of bondage, either of body or of mind!" rather than to observe the Provost's reactionary political stances of the 1750s and 1760s, indicating that words are stronger than actions after all. 12 Pennsylvania Album main page
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