Chapter 4: Frontiers of Empire: Eighteenth Century America, 1680-1763 (#4)

Clash of Political Cultures

-desire to replicate British political institutions

  • Parliament – they claimed, provided a model for the American assemblies
  • also revered the English constitution

-the more they attempted to become British – the more aware they became of major differences

  • unwittingly discovered something about being American

-The English Constitution

  • the British constitution was not a formal written document
  • in theory, the English constitution contained three distinct parts
  • monarch was at the top – advised by handpicked court favorites
  • House of Lords – body of 180 aristocrats who served with 26 Anglican bishops as the upper house of Parliament
  • House of Commons – composed of 558 members elected by various constituencies scattered throughout the realm
  • each of the three parts represented a separate socioeconomic interest: king, nobility, and common people
  • all parts forma mutual check upon each other (checks and balances)

-The Reality of British Politics

  • House of Commons and House of Lords – both represented the interests of Britain’s landed elite - no attempt to maintain strict constitutional separation
  • parliamentary associations – also existed that were organized by the king and supported his policies in exchange for patronage or pension
  • 1715 – no more than 20% of Britain’s adult males had the right to vote
  • Commonwealthmen – writers who decried the corruption of political life, nothing that a nation that compromised civic virtue, that failed to stand against courtiers and would-be despots, deserved to lose its liberty and property
  • if England’s rulers were corrupt, they warned, then the people could not expect the balanced constitution to save them from tyranny
  • most 18th century Englishmen admitted there was truth in the commonwealth beliefs, but they were not willing to tamper with a system of government that had so recently survived a civil war and a Glorious Revolution

-Governing the Colonies: The American Experience

  • colonists assumed – perhaps naively – that their own governments were modeled on the balanced constitution of Great Britain
  • governor – corresponded to the king and the governors council – the House of Lords
  • colonial assemblies – perceived as American reproductions of the House of Commons – were expected to preserve the interests of the people against those of the monarch and aristocracy
  • royal governors appointed by the crown
  • most governors decided simply not to “consider any Thing further than how to sit easy”
  • a means to get out of England more than a sign of respect (George Clinton / New York)
  • royal governors in America possessed enormous power – could do things in America that a king could not do in 18th century Britain
  • right to veto legislation and dismiss judges
  • also served as military commanders in each province
  • were advised by a council, usually a body of about 12 wealthy colonists selected by the Board of Trade in London upon the recommendation of the governor
  • adult white males who owned a small amount of land could vote in colony wide elections
  • excluded women and nonwhites from voting
  • “middle-class democracies” – societies run by moderately prosperous yeomen farmers who exercised independent judgment
  • too many of them to bribe, no “rotten” boroughs, and when they moved west, colonial assemblies usually created new electoral districts
  • possessing the right to vote was one thing, using it another
  • most of the time they were content to let members of the rural and urban gentry represent them in assemblies
  • the power to expel legislative rascals was always present in America
  • kept autocratic gentlemen from straying too far from the will of the people

-Colonial Assemblies

  • elected members of the colonial assemblies believed that they had a special obligation to preserve colonial liberties
  • colonists – really believed in the purity of the balanced constitution
  • insisted on complete separation of executive and legislative authority
  • when Americans suspected a governor (or some of their own representatives) of employing patronage to influence government decisions, their protests seem to have been lifted directly from the pages of Cato’s Letters
  • weekly journal – became after 1765, America’s normal form of political discourse
  • colonial legal system by 1750 “was substantially that of the mother country”
  • commitment to the preservation of English common law
  • as 18th century political developments drew the colonists closer to the mother country, they also brought Americans a greater awareness of each other
  • colonial legislators laid the foundation for a larger cultural identity

Century of Imperial War

-intense local conflicts with the Indians – King Philip’s War (New England)

-colonists were increasingly involved in hostilities that originated on the other side of the Atlantic, in rivalries between Great Britain and France over political and cultural ambitions

  • colonists devised unprecedented measures of military and political cooperation

-Louis XIV – left the defense of Canada & the Mississippi Valley to the companies in the fur trade

-British settlements – possessed a larger and more prosperous population, they were divided into separate governments that sometimes seemed more suspicious of each other than of the French

  • small French population - could easily mass the forces needed to defend Montreal and Quebec

-King William’s and Queen Anne’s Wars

  • William III – declared war on Louis XIV, Europeans call this struggle the War of the League of Augsburg, or simply King William’s War
  • war ended with the Treaty of Ryswick (1697) – the colonists were drawn almost immediately into a new conflict
  • Queen Anne’s War – known in Europe as the War of the Spanish Succession
  • ended in 1713 when Great Britain and France signed the Treaty of Utrecht
  • European negotiators major concern was preserving a balance of power among the European states
  • on the American frontier – the hostilities continued with raids and reprisals
  • were fighting for control over the entire West – including the Mississippi Valley
  • colonists believed the French planned to “encircle” the English settlements – to confine the English to a narrow strip of land along the Atlantic coast
  • 1682 La Salle – claimed Louisiana and all the people and resources located on “streams and Rivers” flowing into the Mississippi River
  • French constructed forts on the Chicago and Illinois rivers
  • “it is impossible that we and the French can both inhabit this Continent in peace, but that one nation must at last give way to the other”
  • the Native Americans were swept up in this undeclared war
  • Iroquois favored the British
  • Algonquin peoples generally supported the French

-King George’s War and its Aftermath

  • King George’s War – known in Europe as the War of the Austrian Succession
  • an army of New England troops under the command of William Pepperrell captured Louisbourg in June 1745
  • war ended with the signing of the Treaty of Aix-la-Chapelle (1748) – British government handed Louisbourg back to the French in exchange for concessions elsewhere
  • deep and continuing ambivalence the colonists felt about participation in imperial wars
  • the Americans seldom fully understood why the wars were being fought, why certain tactics had been adopted, and why the British accepted treaty terms that so blatantly ignored colonial interests
  • French – decided in the early 1750s, to seize the Ohio Valley before the Virginians could do so
  • established forts throughout the region – most formidable being Fort Duquesne
  • militia companies under the command of a promising young officer – George Washington
  • sent to construct Fort Necessity, not far from Fort Duquesne
  • French and Indian troops – overran the badly exposed outpost
  • a single colony could not defeat the French

-Albany Congress and Braddock’s Defeat

  • bold blueprint for colonial union – the so-called Albany Plan – formation of a Grand Council, made up of elected delegates from the various colonies, to oversee matters of common defense, western expansion, and Indian affairs
  • included a President General – appointed by the king who would preside
  • insisted the council be authorized to collect taxes to cover military expenditures
  • required the support of the separate colonial assemblies as well as Parliament
  • it received neither
  • British – resolved to destroy Fort Duquesne and dispatched units of the regular army to America
  • Major General Edward Braddock – suffered a humiliating defeat
  • nearly 70% of Braddock’s troops were killed or wounded in western Pennsylvania
  • the general himself died in battle
  • British thought their allies the Iroquois might desert them after the embarrassing defeat
  • the Indians, however, took the news in stride