Beyond Boston: Rural New England

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Section Chronology

The Coercive Acts fired up all of New England to open insubordination. With a British general occupying the Massachusetts governorship and some three thousand troops controlling Boston, the revolutionary momentum shifted from urban radicals to rural farmers who protested in dozens of spontaneous, dramatic showdowns. Some towns found creative ways to get around the prohibition on new town meetings, and others just ignored the law. Governor Gage's call for elections for a new provincial assembly under his control sparked the formation of a competing unauthorized assembly that met in defiance of his orders. In all Massachusetts counties outside Boston, crowds of thousands of armed men converged to prevent the opening of county courts run by crown-appointed jurists. By August 1774, farmers and artisans all over Massachusetts had effectively taken full control of their local institutions.

CHAPTER LOCATOR

How did the Seven Years' War lay the groundwork for colonial crisis?

Why did the Sugar Act and the Stamp Act draw fierce opposition from colonists?

Why did British authorities send troops to occupy Boston in the fall of 1768?

Why did Parliament pass the Coercive Acts in 1774?

How did enslaved people in the colonies react to the stirrings of revolution?

Conclusion: What changes did the American colonists want in 1775?

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Gage was especially distressed by the military preparations of citizen militias, drilling on village greens to gain proficiency with muskets. The governor wrote London begging for troop reinforcements, and he beefed up fortifications around Boston. But without more soldiers, his options were limited. Seizing stockpiles of gunpowder was his best move.

The Powder Alarm of September 1 showed just how ready the defiant Americans were to take up arms against Britain. Gage sent troops to a town just outside Boston reported to have a hidden powder storehouse, and in the surprise and scramble of the attack, false news spread that the troops had fired on men defending the powder, killing six. Within twenty-four hours, several thousand armed men from Massachusetts, New Hampshire, and Connecticut streamed on foot to Boston to avenge the first blood spilled. At this moment, ordinary men became insurgents, willing to kill or be killed in the face of the British clampdown. Once the error was corrected and the crisis defused, the men returned home peaceably. But Gage could no longer doubt the speed and determination of the rebellious subjects.

All this had occurred without orchestration by Boston radicals, Gage reported. But British leaders found it hard to believe, as one put it, that “a tumultuous Rabble, without any Appearance of general Concert, or without any Head to advise, or Leader to conduct” could pull off such effective resistance. Repeatedly in the years to come, the British would seriously underestimate their opponents.