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of an independent republic;
Virginia on
Chap. LXIX.} 1776. July 1. |
the fifteenth, the very day on which
John Adams in congress carried his measure for instituting governments by the sole authority of the people, gave her delegates at
Philadelphia the positive direction to propose independence, and by a circular letter communicated her decision to all her sister colonies.
The movement of
Virginia was seconded almost in her words by
Connecticut on the fourteenth of June,
New Hampshire on the fifteenth,
New Jersey on the twenty first, the conference of committees of
Pennsylvania on the twenty fourth,
Maryland on the twenty eighth.
Delaware on the twenty second of March had still hoped for conciliation; but on the fourteenth or the fifteenth of June, from the imperfect state of her records the exact date is unknown, she took off all restraint from her members, and knowing that a majority of them favored independence, encouraged them to follow their own judgment.
The vote of the eleventh of June showed the purpose of New York; but under the accumulation of dangers, her statesmen waited a few days longer, that her voice for independence might have the full authority of her people.
The business of the day began with reading various letters, among others one from Washington, who returned the whole number of his men, present and fit for duty, including the one regiment of artillery, at seven thousand seven hundred and fifty four.
The state of the arms of this small and inconsiderable body was still more inauspicious; of near fourteen hundred the firelocks were bad; more than eight hundred had none at all; three thousand eight hundred and twenty seven, more than half the whole