IN CONGRESS, JULY 4, 1776
Last month, more than five million Americans took to the streets in 2,100 cities and towns as part of “No Kings” protests of current Administration policies. Today’s patriots want to preserve what the patriots of 1776 envisioned: government of, by, and for the people. No kings.
Philadelphia, 249 years ago. While other members of the Second Continental Congress debated whether to issue his Declaration of Independence from Great Britain, Thomas Jefferson sat quietly taking temperatures from the new thermometer he had bought for three pounds, fifteen shillings the day before. He recorded a cool summer day in Philadelphia: “6 A.M., 68 degrees; 1 P.M., 76 degrees.”
Jefferson was no speaker, so his friend John Adams debated on his behalf. Jefferson had other abilities. He could “calculate an eclipse, survey an estate, try a cause, break a horse, tie an artery, dance a minuet, and play the violin.” He was 6’3” with flaming red hair, possibly the most learned and certainly the most respected writer in the Colonies. He was 33 years old.
Congress had asked Jefferson, advised by Adams and Ben Franklin (pictured), to write a declaration. He and his pen spent 17 days together, finishing on June 28. The Congress cut 460 words, including a condemnation of slavery that Southern delegates refused to approve, changes that Jefferson resented. The Declaration was approved July 2 and 200 printed copies were issued to the Colonies July 4 (26 are known to exist). Fifty-six delegates began signing a calligraphic version on August 2. Jefferson’s original draft survives at the Library of Congress; the August 2 copy is on public view at the National Archives.
While the Declaration of Independence announced a revolution, most of its ideas were not revolutionary. Educated people in Europe and the Colonies believed in a social contract between ruler and ruled, allowing disobedience if the ruler failed to keep his or her part of the bargain. What was revolutionary was Jefferson’s second sentence, especially the last three words:
We hold these Truths to be self-evident, that all Men are created equal, that they are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable Rights, that among these are Life, Liberty, and the pursuit of Happiness.
The “pursuit of happiness” was a new concept expanding government’s traditional role of protecting life and property. It was Jefferson’s contribution to the unique character of the United States, and, by focusing on the individual, it implied a social contract among all citizens placing equal responsibility for good government on each one. Jefferson knew that would require every citizen to become well educated, and he devoted much of his life to promoting public elementary and high schools and to founding the University of Virginia as an example for other states to follow.
On March 28, 1776, three months to the day before Jefferson finished his Declaration, 14 Spaniards led by Juan Batista de Anza, who had traveled up the Pacific coast of colonial New Spain, arrived at the shores of a magnificent bay. He named the place San Francisco, after St. Francis, and chose sites for a presidio (fort) and a mission. Eventually, the Spanish and British colonies would be united.
On July 4, 1826, the nation celebrated its fiftieth birthday. That afternoon, Jefferson and Adams died peacefully in their homes in Virginia and Massachusetts, having laid the foundation for, as Adams had written, “an Empire of Laws, and not of Men.” The goal of the Revolution was to create a nation where the power to make laws belonged to the people, not to a single ruler. No kings.