Two hundred and fifty years ago, on November 2, 1772, a Boston town meeting took a momentous step toward inciting a revolution: it appointed a committee to write a letter. As English scholar William B. Warner writes, the apparently modest Boston Committee of Correspondence helped mold a sufficient number of American colonists into a political “we” to begin parting ways with the mother country.
Warner writes that the town appointed twenty-one prominent Whigs—supporters of independence—to the committee. Most prominent among them was Samuel Adams.
Within three weeks, they drafted a forty-three-page letter: The Votes and Proceedings of the Freeholders and other Inhabitants of the Town of Boston. Not exactly a snappy name, but Warner notes that it reflected something important: the fact that it legitimately represented the perspective of the town’s voters. At a town meeting on November 20, it was read aloud twice, modified based on suggestions by attendees, and formally adopted by unanimous vote. Boston then sent copies of the pamphlet to each of the colony’s 260 towns and districts, as well as to Whigs in other colonies.
The letter represented a new kind of political writing: the popular declaration. Like petitions dating as far back as the English Civil War, it included a statement of rights and a list of grievances. But unlike such petitions, the declaration addressed itself not to the king, but to the public. At the same time, it lacked the clever language and allusions common in revolutionary pamphlets published by individuals at the time. Warner writes that it could be seen as an early example of “committee speak”—straightforward and earnest, with the goal of speaking for the largest number of people possible.