New York Provincial Congress
Type
Type
History
FoundedMay 22, 1775
DisbandedApril 20, 1777
Preceded byNew York General Assembly
Committee of Sixty
Succeeded byNew York State Legislature
Leadership
President
Chairmen of the Committee of Safety
President of the Council of Safety
Meeting place
1st and 2nd Congress: New York City
3rd Congress: White Plains
4th Congress: Fishkill

The New York Provincial Congress (1775–1777) was a revolutionary provisional government formed by colonists in 1775, during the American Revolution, as a pro-American alternative to the more conservative New York General Assembly, and as a replacement for the Committee of One Hundred. The Fourth Provincial Congress, resolving itself as the Convention of Representatives of the State of New York, adopted the first Constitution of the State of New York on April 20, 1777.

Background

Committees of correspondence

Fraunces Tavern in Lower Manhattan, meeting place of the Committee of Fifty-one, which resolved on July 4, 1774 to send delegates to the First Continental Congress.

The Committee of Fifty-one was a committee of correspondence in the City and County of New York that first met on May 16, 1774.[1] On May 30, the Committee formed a subcommittee to write a letter to the supervisors of the counties of New York to exhort them to also form similar committees of correspondence, which letter was adopted on a meeting of the Committee on May 31.[2] In response to the letters from Boston, on July 4, 1774 resolutions were approved to appoint five delegates, Isaac Low, John Alsop, James Duane, Philip Livingston, and John Jay, to the "Congress of Deputies from the Colonies" (the First Continental Congress), and request that the other counties also send delegates.[3] Three counties (Westchester, Duchess, and Albany) acquiesced to the five delegates, while three counties (Kings, Suffolk, and Orange) sent delegates of their own.[4] The First Continental Congress met from September 5 to October 26, 1774.

New York General Assembly

George Rex Flag, a protest flag flown in New York at the time of the revolution

[5]

In January and February 1775, the New York General Assembly voted down successive resolutions approving the proceedings of the First Continental Congress and refused to send delegates to the Second Continental Congress.[6] New York was the only colonial assembly which did not approve the proceeds of the First Continental Congress. Opposition to the Congress revolved around the opinion that the provincial houses of assembly were the proper agencies to solicit redress for grievances. In March, the Assembly broke with the rest of the colonies and wrote a petition to London, but London rejected the petition because it contained claims about a lack of authority of the "parent state" to tax colonists, "which made it impossible" to accept. The Assembly last met on April 3, 1775.[7]

Provincial Convention (Second Continental Congress)

A Provincial Convention assembled in New York City on April 20, 1775 where delegates were elected to the Second Continental Congress. On March 15, 1775 the Committee of Sixty had issued a call to the counties of New York to send delegates to a Provincial Convention.[8]

Philip Livingston was its chairman. It included the delegates to the first congress and also five new members. All counties other than Tryon, Gloucester, and Cumberland were represented. The scope of the Provincial Convention did not extend beyond electing delegates, and they dispersed on April 22.[9] On April 23, news of the Battles of Lexington and Concord arrived.

First Provincial Congress

The First Provincial Congress was convened in New York City on May 22, 1775 with Peter Van Brugh Livingston as president. The first resolution adopted was obedience to recommendations made by the Continental Congress.

The congress adapted a "plan of Accommodation between Great Britain and America", which it sent to its delegates to the Continental Congress urging extreme caution in the quarrel with England. The plan demanded the English authorities repeal of all unconstitutional laws affecting the colonies and an acknowledgement of the right of the colonies to self-taxation. In return New York promised to contribute to the costs of defence, the maintenance of civil government, and to recognize England's right to regulate imperial trade.[10]

In May, they ordered the militia to stockpile arms, undertake the removal of cannon from Fort Crown Point and Fort Ticonderoga, and the erection of fortifications and defences on Manhattan Island. All loyalists in the province were disarmed. In May, the raising of 3,000 militia to serve until December 31 was authorized, and in early June they authorized the payment of five pounds sterling for each hundredweight of gunpowder delivered to county military stockpiles.

The Congress condemned the planned invasion of Canada, since they had a plan of reconciliation. When in June the British troops in New York City left to board British ships, Marinus Willett intervened to prevent them taking carts loaded with arms back to the ships. The congress welcomed the return of Governor William Tryon, regarded as someone who could be reasoned with, while on the same day providing a more elaborate welcome for the Continental Army Commander-in-Chief General George Washington on his way to take command at the Siege of Boston. On June 28, 1775 they authorized the raising of the four regiments of the New York Line. On July 20, 1775, members of the Sons of Liberty and others surprised a guard and captured a British storehouse at Turtle Bay. In August, the congress ordered the removal of the cannon at the Battery and while doing so the British HMS Asia opened fire on the combined civilian and militia forces. In late 1775, the provincial militia was restructured.

It adjourned on November 4, 1775 and appointed a Committee of Safety to sit during its recess. This committee was dominated by Alexander McDougall and John Morin Scott.

Members:[11][12]

Named individual Representing Details
Isaac LowCity & County of New York
Peter Van Brugh LivingstonCity & County of New YorkPresident
Alexander McDougallCity & County of New York
Leonard LispenardCity & County of New York
Joseph HallettCity & County of New York
Abraham WaltonCity & County of New York
Abraham BrasierCity & County of New York
Isaac RooseveltCity & County of New York
John De LanceyCity & County of New York
James BeekmanCity & County of New York
Samuel VerplanckCity & County of New York
Richard YatesCity & County of New York
David ClarksonCity & County of New York
Thomas SmithCity & County of New York
Benjamin KissamCity & County of New York
John Morin ScottCity & County of New York
John Van CortlandtCity & County of New York
Jacobus Van ZandtCity & County of New York
John MarstonCity & County of New York
George FolliotCity & County of New York
Walter FranklinCity & County of New York
Robert YatesCity & County of Albany
Abraham Yates Jr.City & County of Albany
Volkert P. DouwCity & County of AlbanyVice-President
Jacob CuylerCity & County of Albany
Peter SilvesterCity & County of Albany
Dirck SwartCity & County of Albany
Walter LivingstonCity & County of Albany
Robert Van RensselaerCity & County of Albany
Henry GlenCity & County of Albany
Abraham Ten BroeckCity & County of Albany
Francis NicollCity & County of Albany
Dirck BrinckerhoffDuchess CountyChairman
Anthony HoffmanDuchess County
Zephaniah PlattDuchess County
Richard MontgomeryDuchess County
Ephraim PaineDuchess County
Gilbert LivingstonDuchess County
Jonathan LandonDuchess County
Gysbert SchenckDuchess County
Melancton SmithDuchess County
Nathaniel SackettDuchess County
Johannes HardenberghUlster County
James ClintonUlster County
Christopher TappanUlster County
John NicholsonUlster County
Jacob HoornbeckUlster County
John CoeOrange County
David PyeOrange County
Michael JacksonGoshen County
Benjamin TustenGoshen County
Peter ClowesGoshen County
William AllisonGoshen County
Nathaniel WoodhullSuffolk County
John Sloss HobartSuffolk County
Thomas TredwellSuffolk County
John FosterSuffolk County
Ezra L'HommedieuSuffolk County
Thomas WickhamSuffolk County
James HavensSuffolk County
Selah StrongSuffolk County
Gouverneur MorrisWestchester County
Lewis GrahamWestchester County
James Van CortlandtWestchester County
Stephen WardWestchester County
Joseph DrakeWestchester County
Philip Van CortlandtWestchester County
James HolmesWestchester County
David DaytonWestchester County
John Thomas, Jr.Westchester County
Robert GrahamWestchester County
William PauldingWestchester County
Henry WilliamsKings County
Jeremiah RemsenKings County
Paul MicheanRichmond County
John JourneyRichmond County
Aaron CortelyouRichmond County
Richard ConnerRichmond County
Richard LawrenceRichmond County

Second Provincial Congress

The Second Provincial Congress was organized on December 6, 1775 and sat in New York City, and continued until adjournment on May 13, 1776. In January, 1776, George Washington ordered Major General Charles Lee to prepare New York City for the coming British attack. In February, the provincial congress initially refused Lee's entry, but then agreed and also decided to stop provisioning the British ships in New York harbor.

Third Provincial Congress

The Third Provincial Congress was organized on May 22, 1776. It continued in session until June 30, 1776. It took place in Fishkill. It instructed its delegates to the 2nd Continental Congress to oppose independence. On May 31, 1776, the Continental Congress recommended that each of the provinces establish themselves as states. In June, Howe's forces appeared in New York Harbor.

Notable members (partial list):[13]

First Constitutional Convention

The Fourth Provincial Congress convened in White Plains on July 9, 1776 and became known as the First Constitutional Convention. It declared the independent state of New York on July 9, 1776. On the same day the Declaration of Independence was read by George Washington on the commons of New York City to the Continental Army and local citizens, who celebrated by tearing down the statue of George III in Bowling Green. On July 10, 1776, the Fourth Provincial Congress changed its name to the Convention of Representatives of the State of New York, and "acts as legislature without an executive." On August 1, the convention assigned the task of drafting a constitution to a committee of thirteen and ordered it to report a draft by August 27, but it did not do so until March 12, 1777.[14] While adjourned it left a Committee of Safety in charge.

The Constitution of the State of New York was adopted on April 20, 1777 in Kingston. The governor would be elected and not appointed, voting qualifications were reduced, secret ballots were introduced, and civil rights were guaranteed. On July 9, 1778 the State of New York signed the Articles of Confederation and officially became part of the government of the United States of America, though it had been a part of the nation as representative were signatories to the Declaration in 1776.

List of presidents and chairmen

1st Provincial Congress

2nd Provincial Congress

3rd Provincial Congress

4th Provincial Congress and Representative Convention

Chairmen of the Committee of Safety

President of the Council of Safety

See also

Footnotes

  1. Dawson 1886, pp. 7–10.
  2. Dawson 1886, p. 20.
  3. Dawson 1886, p. 24.
  4. Dawson 1886, p. 29.
  5. "History of the National Flag of the United States of America". Lippincott, Grambo, and Co. 1853.
  6. Dawson, Henry (1886). Westchester County, New York, During the American Revolution. H.B. Dawson. p. 61.
  7. Edward Countryman, "Consolidating Power in Revolutionary America: The Case of New York, 1775–1783." Journal of Interdisciplinary History 6.4 (1976): 645-677. in JSTOR
  8. "Find Documents: Results". Archived from the original on 2014-07-14. Retrieved 2014-12-15.
  9. Google Books The New York Civil List compiled by Franklin Benjamin Hough (page 47; Weed, Parsons and Co., 1858)
  10. Launitz-Schurer pg. 161
  11. New York (State) Dept. of State (1868). Calendar of Historical Manuscripts, Relating to the War of the Revolution, in the Office of the Secretary of State, Albany, N.Y. Weed, Parsons & Company, Printers. p. 86. Retrieved 29 September 2017.
  12. Lamb, Martha Joanna (1880). History of the City of New York: Its Origin, Rise, and Progress. A. S. Barnes. p. 31. Retrieved 29 September 2017.
  13. Albany Institute (1873). Proceedings of the Albany Institute. J. Munsell. p. 321. Retrieved 29 September 2017.
  14. Schechter, Stephen (1990). "The New York State Constitution, 1777". In Schechter, Stephen (ed.). Roots of the Republic: American Founding Documents Interpreted. p. 169. ISBN 1461642795. LCCN 90-6396.

References

  • Fernow, Berthold, New York in the Revolution, 1887
  • Launitz-Schurer, Leopold, Loyal Whigs and Revolutionaries, The making of the revolution in New York, 1765-1776, 1980, ISBN 0-8147-4994-1
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