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Collection Reference Number GLC01018
From Archive Folder Documents Relating to 1765-1774 
Title Manuscript journal and letter book with documents on Stamp Act Congress and other correspondence on the Revolutionary War
Date 1765-1781
Author Thomson, Charles (1729-1824)  
Document Type Diary; Government document; Correspondence
Content Description Bulk, 1765-1769 on Stamp Act Congress; some pages cut out. In four sections: 1) Correspondence of CT and Philadelphia Merchant's Committee, re: Stamp Act, 1765-1766; 2) Resolves of colonies re: Stamp Act Congress, with minutes of the Congress from Oct. 1765; 3) Records of the Philadelphia Merchants' Committee for 1769 with CT's transcripts of letters sent to Benjamin Franklin and others; 4) Retained drafts of correspondence, 1780-1781, with two long letters to John Jay (10/12/1780 and 7/11/1781) on the Revolutionary War. Written in a reverse calf copybook with engraved label of bookbinder Samuel Taylor.
Subjects Revolutionary War  Stamp Act  Government and Civics  Merchants and Trade  Finance  Taxes or Taxation  Economics  Global History and Civics  Revolutionary War  
People Thomson, Charles (1729-1824)  Jay, John (1745-1829)  Franklin, Benjamin (1706-1790)  
Place written Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
Theme Government & Politics; The American Revolution; The Presidency; Banking & Economics
Sub-collection The Gilder Lehrman Collection, 1493-1859
Additional Information Born in Ulster, Charles Thomson (1729-1824) came to Philadelphia as a young schoolmaster. During the 1765 Stamp Act Crisis, Thomson became a significant figure in local politics, orchestrating resistance to the measure in Philadelphia. Over the next decade, Thomson continued to be a central figure in the organization of Philadelphia opposition to British trade policies. With the coming of the Revolution, Thomson became Secretary of the Continental Congress, a post he retained until the creation of the federal government in 1789. Ignored by the Washington administration, he spent the last 35 years of his life out of public office. Here, Thomson, writing as a member of the Philadelphia Merchants' Committee, which strongly supported the non-importation efforts, argues that British actions--the imposition of illegal taxes, the bloated customs bureaucracy, the stationing of an army among the people--all were part of a plot to deprive Americans of their liberties.
Copyright The Gilder Lehrman Institute of American History
Module Settlement, Commerce, Revolution and Reform: 1493-1859
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