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Authors: Arthur G. Sharp

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MERCY OTIS WARREN

West Barnstable, Massachusetts
September 24,1728–October 19, 1814
Drama Queen

Since Mercy Otis Warren could not carry a sword during the Revolutionary War, she wielded a pen, which was almost as lethal in her hands. She had an acute grasp of politics, particularly as they applied to the outcome of the war, which she expressed in plays, poems, pamphlets, and letters. Even though it was a man's world in the 1700s, men certainly recognized her value to their patriotic cause. She was a rarity for the time: a woman who was not shy about voicing her opinion in public about independence.

Education by Osmosis

Mercy was raised at a time when families were either fierce Tories or patriots. There was no in between. The Otis family was decidedly in the patriot camp.

Her father, James Otis Sr., was adamantly opposed to King George III's policies, and he was outspoken against Massachusetts' governor, Thomas Hutchinson. His feelings rubbed off on his three children.

Mercy Otis's father believed fervently in the value of a solid education, especially for his sons. That turned out to be an advantage for her. James Sr. hired the Reverend Jonathan Russell to tutor her brothers to prepare them for entry into Harvard. Reverend Russell allowed Mercy to sit in on his lessons and use his library. It was not a formal education for Mercy, but it gave her a background that she used later to needle the British and support the patriots.

Quotations to Live (and Die) By!

“T
ELL YOUR WIFE THAT
G
OD
A
LMIGHTY HAS ENTRUSTED HER WITH THE
P
OWERS FOR THE GOOD OF THE
W
ORLD, WHICH, IN THE CAUSE OF HIS
P
ROVIDENCE, HE BESTOWS ON FEW OF THE HUMAN RACE
. T
HAT INSTEAD OF BEING A FAULT TO USE THEM, IT WOULD BE CRIMINAL TO NEGLECT THEM
.”

—J
OHN
A
DAMS IN A LETTER TO
J
AMES
W
ARREN

Marriage did nothing to change Mercy's political views. In fact, it strengthened her patriotic fervor. She married her second cousin, James Warren (no relation to Joseph or John Warren), in 1754. As a result, she developed strong friendships with the anti-British leaders of the rebellion in Massachusetts—and their wives. One of the women with whom Mercy Warren was closest was the considerably younger Abigail Adams. She was both mentor and friend to Abigail.

FEDERAL FACTS

James Warren served for a time as the Continental Army's paymaster. Even though he held the rank of general in the provincial militia, Warren did not participate actively in the war after the fighting ended in Massachusetts. He refused to serve under Continental Army officers of lesser rank.

The Warrens hosted many meetings of the radicals in their home. Noted leaders such as John Adams, Samuel Adams, and John Hancock sought her advice on what to do and how to do it. As a result, she became an activist, rather than just a listener, an unusual position for a woman at the time.

The Pen Is Mightier Than the Sword

Mercy wrote a series of pamphlets, poems, and plays to stir the hearts and minds of the people of Massachusetts. One of her favorite targets was Governor Hutchinson, whom her father and brothers had criticized vocally for many years.

REVOLUTIONARY REVELATIONS

Mercy Warren wrote plays even though there were no theaters in Boston at the time. They were published in newspapers instead. Two pre-war political satires in particular,
The Adulateur
(1773) and
The Group
(1775), caught the public's fancy.

Mercy was aware that she was upsetting many Tories because of her writings. That did not deter her. She also recognized the dangers the patriots faced by openly defying the British and all they could lose. The potential perils did not force her to stow her quill in the inkwell and leave it there.

Quotations to Live (and Die) By!

“B
UT OH!
T
HE DREAD OF LOSING ALL THAT THIS WORLD CAN BESTOW BY ONE COSTLY SACRIFICE KEEPS MY MIND IN CONTINUAL ALARMS
.”

—M
ERCY
O
TIS
W
ARREN TO
A
BIGAIL
A
DAMS

Warren continued to write after the war ended and the country had settled down enough to concentrate on creating the Constitution and Bill of Rights. She published two poems in 1790, known collectively as “Poems Dramatic and Miscellaneous.” They were “The Sack of Rome” and “The Ladies of Castile.”

Mercy Otis Warren's best-known work was the three-volume
History of the Rise, Progress, and Termination of the American Revolution
, which she finished in 1805.

Warren started writing a history of the Revolutionary War while it was in progress, when the events were fresh in her mind. It was not a successful commercial venture for her. She was one of the few people who paid a price for the book.

Publication cost her the friendships of John and Abigail Adams, albeit temporarily, and upset friends and readers because of the way she portrayed some of the patriots.

Quotations to Live (and Die) By!

“M
R.
A
DAMS' PASSIONS AND PREJUDICES WERE SOMETIMES TOO STRONG FOR HIS SAGACITY AND JUDGMENT
.”

—M
ERCY
O
TIS
W
ARREN IN THE
H
ISTORY OF THE
R
ISE
, P
ROGRESS, AND
T
ERMINATION OF THE
A
MERICAN
R
EVOLUTION

Mercy Has Her Doubts

Even though Mercy favored independence, she was not sold on the need for a U.S. Constitution. Neither was her husband. Warren resorted to her pen to campaign against the Constitution. She stated her objections in a 1788 document,
Observations on the new Constitution, and on the Federal and State Conventions
. Following the custom of the time, she signed it with a pen name, “A Columbian Patriot.” For a time, people believed that it had been written by Elbridge Gerry.

Once she learned that her protests were being ignored, she campaigned to have equal rights for women included in the Constitution. That fell on deaf ears, too.

Quotations to Live (and Die) By!

“D
EMOCRATIC PRINCIPLES ARE THE RESULT OF EQUALITY OF CONDITION
.”

—M
ERCY
O
TIS
W
ARREN

Mercy's Last Few Years

Mercy's history book was her last significant publication. She continued her correspondence with friends and family between then and 1814, when she died. One of her final achievements was to mend her rift with John and Abigail Adams.

Mercy Otis Warren died at eighty-six. Death, however, did not silence her voice. It is still being heard through her numerous writings two centuries later.

GEORGE WASHINGTON

Westmoreland County, Virginia
February 22, 1732–December 14, 1799
Four Bullets and Two Dead Horses

The name most often cited as the country's Founding Father is George Washington. He was a man of accomplishment, whose well-documented list of “firsts” established him as one of the preeminent Americans in the country's history. His military leadership enabled a raggedy Continental Army to defeat its professional British enemy. Then, when the United States was struggling to survive in the late 1780s, he stepped in to ensure passage of its new Constitution. Appreciative citizens elected him as their first president—then reelected him. He deserved the encomiums heaped on him, even though he might have been the first one to admit that he did not do the job alone. But he certainly played a leading role.

Early Days

It was a common practice among wealthy Virginians in the early 1700s to send their sons to England to receive an education. George Washington was an exception. He was trained as a surveyor. He spent a large part of his young adult years surveying Lord Thomas Fairfax's land in the Shenandoah Valley of Virginia and fighting Indians in the French and Indian War.

Washington honed his military leadership skills during that war, which served him in good stead in the years to come.

REVOLUTIONARY REVELATIONS

In 1755 George Washington served as an aide to General Edward Braddock in the ill-fated expedition to capture Fort Duquesne. During one skirmish, four bullets lodged in Washington's coat without injuring him, and two horses were killed as he rode them.

By 1759, Washington had had enough of surveying and fighting. He went home to Mount Vernon to tend to his lands in peace and marry Martha Dandridge Custis. His marriage was peaceful; his domestic life was not.

From Delegate to Commander in Chief

Washington could not ignore the British tax and legislative policies aimed at the colonies. As a member of the Virginia House of Burgesses, he was in a position to fight against them, which he did throughout the 1760s and early 1770s. The fight became literal in 1775.

Virginia elected George Washington as a delegate to the Second Continental Congress in 1775. His stay was short. He took his seat on May 10, 1775. On June 15, he walked out as the commander in chief of the Continental Army after John Adams urged Congress to appoint him to the post.

REVOLUTIONARY REVELATIONS

George Washington originally wanted to become an officer in the British army, but the British never offered him a commission. That was one of the little flukes of history that changed the direction of the world.

Even though Washington had never commanded anything larger than a regiment, he found himself in charge of an army of sorts. Leading it into battle was one thing; keeping it fed and supplied was another. That became his biggest challenge throughout the Revolutionary War, starting at the siege of Boston.

FEDERAL FACTS

On more than one occasion politicians and military leaders tried to remove Washington as commander in chief. One of the most salient attempts occurred in the 1777 Conway Cabal, when a group of civilian and army leaders tried to replace Washington with an Irishman, General Thomas Conway, who had less seniority than many other American commanders. The plot was uncovered and Washington's job was saved; so was the country.

Washington had his ups and downs after he arrived in Boston on July 3, 1775, to take command. He suffered a series of losses early in the war that made the patriots wonder if he was indeed the right man for the job. Washington had to fight political battles in addition to military skirmishes, though more than anything he longed to be home at Mount Vernon with a life free of strife and war.

Washington survived all the hardships of the war and finally vanquished his British opponent by following a simple strategy: Avoid direct combat with the enemy whenever possible.

Quotations to Live (and Die) By!

“W
E SHOULD ON ALL
O
CCASIONS AVOID A GENERAL
A
CTION, OR PUT ANYTHING TO THE
R
ISQUE, UNLESS COMPELLED BY A NECESSITY, INTO WHICH WE OUGHT NEVER TO BE DRAWN
.”

—G
EORGE
W
ASHINGTON TO
C
ONGRESS

President Washington

Washington, like so many of his peers, was disappointed with the Articles of Confederation that had been drafted in 1776–77 as the nation's first Constitution. He came out of retirement in 1787 to oversee the national convention formed to write a new Constitution. Once again he got more than he had signed up for. In 1789 he was elected to the first of his two terms as president of the United States.

Washington's second stint as commander in chief—this time of a nation rather than an army—was no easier than his first. It was similar in one respect: The position required a great deal of on-the-job training.

One of the problems Washington experienced was the formation of an opposition party. He envisioned a strong republic governed by one independent party. But Jefferson helped form the Democratic-Republican Party, and Alexander Hamilton spearheaded the creation of the Federalist Party, which Washington supported but never joined officially.

Despite the emergence of the two-party system and the challenges it posed for his policies, Washington oversaw significant domestic and foreign growth for the United States during his two terms.

He kept the United States neutral in a war in Europe that began in 1793, opened western lands, initiated the construction of a national infrastructure, supported Alexander Hamilton's plans for a national bank and a viable system of taxation, issued the first presidential Thanksgiving proclamation … and that's just for starters.

Quotations to Live (and Die) By!

“[W
ASHINGTON
]
IS TOO ILLITERATE, UNREAD, UNLEARNED FOR HIS STATION AND REPUTATION
.”

—J
OHN
A
DAMS

By the time Washington left office on March 4, 1797, he had set the United States on a course of stability and growth and created a foundation on which it could thrive. He earned his reputation as “First in war, first in peace, and first in the hearts of his countrymen”—although not everyone agreed.

Again, Washington retired. Again, his country called. His successor as president, John Adams, appointed him on July 4, 1798, as a lieutenant general and commander in chief “of the armies raised or to be raised for service in a prospective war.” He served in that capacity until December 14, 1799—the day he died.

Washington's death left a void in the United States that was hard to overcome. The country erected a monument in his honor in Washington, D.C., that stands as a testimony to all he did to support the United States. His reputation as the “Father of His Country” is monument enough.

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