On
March 23, 1775 Patrick Henry rose
before the Virginia House of Burgesses meeting
in Richmond to speak in support of mobilizing the Militia to oppose British
military moves. The speaker had a
reputation as a firebrand. He was reported to have said:
Is
life so dear, or peace so sweet, as to be purchased at the price of chains and
slavery? Forbid it, Almighty God! I know not what course others may take; but
as for me, give
me liberty, or give me death!
The
cheering House, already ousted from meeting in Williamsburg by edict of the Royal
Governor and sitting illegally,
was moved to opt for mobilization.
Or so the story goes, as it was reconstructed by Henry’s biographer William Wirt in 1817. No official record of the meeting reported the contents of the speech. Only one contemporaneous written description survives. In it Henry was quoted as alluding to the failure of the Crown to protect the colony from Indians and slave uprisings and was quoted as using some very intemperate and probably profane descriptions of the Governor, but no mention of famous phrase.
Wirt
claimed to have reconstructed the speech from the fading memories of the few
surviving members. Whatever Henry said,
however, it must have been a hell of a speech, for he was credited for calling Virginia to arms.
Patrick Henry by Daniel Lynch
It
was not Henry’s first famous speech, nor the first one whose exact wording is
in doubt. Ten years earlier as a freshman
in House, He had introduced a resolution in opposition to the Stamp Act in terms so incendiary it
brought charges of treason. He was quoted as saying:
Caesar had his Brutus; Charles the First his Cromwell; and George the Third may profit by their example. If this be treason, make the most of it!
In fact, the only eyewitness account claims that Henry apologized to the body if they mistook his words for treason and asserted that he was a loyal subject of the King.
Whatever he said worked, largely because he chose to introduce his resolution when a bare quorum of the House was present and the most ardent Crown loyalists were absent.
Henry rose to fame for arguing the Parson's case.Henry was born to the middling level of Virginia planter society in 1736, the son of an educated Scottish emigrant. His early career was rocky. He twice failed as a planter before taking up the law. He made a name for himself by defending Louisa County, in a case about limiting the price of the tobacco paid in support of the Anglican Clergy. The British Parliament had overturned Virginia’s Two Penny Act and a local clergyman sued the county for back wages. Henry simply ignored the law in the case and attacked clergy as “enemies of the community,” accused the King of tyranny for annulling the law, and said such a tyrant, “forfeits all right of obedience from his subject.” The humiliated Padre was awarded 1 penny and Henry’s political career launched.
Although an early ally of Thomas Jefferson, their temperaments and ambitions were quite
different and they soon found themselves often bitter rivals. In 1776 Henry
was elected the first post-colonial
Governor of Virginia.
The main theaters of the Revolution were far away in his term and he spent a lot of effort
planning and executing an invasion
of Cherokee lands, where he had land speculations. In 1789 he was
succeeded by Jefferson just as the
war began to heat up.
After the Revolution, Henry was again served as Governor
in 1784-86. He refused to attend the Constitutional Convention in 1787
because he “smelt a rat in Philadelphia,
tending toward the monarchy.” Parting bitterly from his previous political
ally and personal friend James Madison,
Henry became one of the most vocal and extreme Anti-Federalists. He
voted against ratification in the
Virginia convention of 1788, but Madison carried the day.
Despite his views, George Washington, on the advice of Alexander Hamilton, first offered him
the post of Secretary of State
before turning to Jefferson.
A 1955 U.S. Post office commemorative stamp in the Patriots series.
Henry’s politics took a sharp turn in the 1790’s after the outbreak of the French Revolution. Over the years his personal fortune had grown, thanks to a couple of fortuitous and strategic marriages, and he had become a wealthy large scale planter with hundreds of slaves. With significant property to protect, he developed a fear and loathing of the same “rabble” to which he had been a popular hero. With John Marshall he rallied Virginia Federalists and was elected to the House of Delegates.
Three months before he could
take his seat he died of stomach cancer
at his plantation Red Hill on June
6, 1799. Some biographers believe that the pain was so great that he poisoned himself.
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