History Daily - The First Continental Congress
Episode Date: September 5, 2025September 5, 1774. Amid growing tensions over taxation, delegates from the American colonies unite in Philadelphia to coordinate resistance to the British Crown. This episode originally aired in 2022.... Support the show! Join Into History for ad-free listening and more.History Daily is a co-production of Airship and Noiser.Go to HistoryDaily.com for more history, daily.
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tapam me again.
Viser number,
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Kautta, A listener note,
I have COVID.
I might sound a little different.
It's August.
14th, 1765 in Boston, Massachusetts. The colony's lieutenant governor Thomas Hutchinson rushes
through a park determined to quell a growing riot. Earlier today, Thomas heard that residents were
gathered to protest a recent tax imposed on the colonies by Britain, known as the Stamp Act.
Now Thomas has come to stop the demonstration before it grows too unwieldy, but he fears he
might be too late. As Thomas turns a corner, he sees thousands of residents already amassed around a tree
with a strange figure dangling from its branches. As Thomas edges closer, his heart lifts in relief
as he realizes the object is an effigy. But Thomas stops in his tracks as he notices the name
of the town's tax agent and his brother-in-law, Andrew Oliver, scrawled across the stuffed figure.
He watches in horror as one man rips down the effigies and stomps on it before lifting it up to
roaring cheers. Then the man leads the crowd out of the park and into the streets, realizing their
to Andrew's home, Thomas runs to warn his brother-in-law of the approaching mob.
Soon Thomas arrives at Andrew's house. Relief fills him once again as the tax agent opens the door unscathed.
Quickly, Thomas rushes inside and urges Andrew to flee. But even as he speaks, angry shouting
pulls his attention to the scene unfolding outside. Thomas peers out a window and sees the mob
has flooded the street outside. Thomas watches as one man brandishes a knife and decapitates the
effigy of Andrew, tossing the head into a hastily made bonfire. Then Thomas hears a group of
rioters begin to kick down the front door. Fearing for their lives, Thomas and Andrew run out the back.
Together, they flee into the street and out of sight. In the spring of 1765, the British Parliament
passed its first direct tax on the American colonies. The Stamp Act required all colonists to pay a tax
on various types of paper documents to raise revenue for Britain. The act had angered many colonists who don't
want to pay taxes without representation in Parliament. Months after its passage, outrage boiled over
in Boston, resulting in rioters ransacking and destroying the home of tax agent Andrew Oliver. After the
attack on his home, Andrew will resign as the city's stamp distributor, but the colonists' fury
over the Stamp Act will persist. Over the next decade, anger over taxation without representation
will only grow, sowing the seeds of revolution. Bonded by their shared frustration, soon the colonies
will organize into a united front against the British crown, convening for the First Continental Congress
on September 5, 1774.
From Noisor and Airship, I'm Lindsay Graham, and this is History Daily.
History is made every day. On this podcast, every day, we tell the true stories of the people
and events that shaped our world. Today is September 5th, 1774, the First Continental Congress.
It's the night of August 26, 1765.
in Boston, Massachusetts, 12 days after rioters destroyed Andrew Oliver's home. Inside his three-story
mansion, Massachusetts Lieutenant Governor Thomas Hutchinson sits down at his dining table alongside his
family. As his children laugh and talk with one another, Thomas and his wife eat in silence.
Ever since the attack on Andrew's home, Thomas has lived in fear. After protesters ransacked his
brother-in-law's house, they took their protest to his home. For an hour, Thomas and his family hid in
side, as protesters pounded on his door, demanding to hear from his own mouth that he opposed
the Stamp Act. And in truth, Thomas does oppose the Stamp Act. But as Lieutenant Governor,
Thomas believes it's still his obligation to enforce it, and he doesn't want to fan the flames
of rebellion. So that night, Thomas decided to stay silent and out of sight. Eventually, convinced
the Lieutenant Governor wasn't home, the rioters left. But ever since the incident, Thomas
has heard rumors that Boston's residents are planning another visit to his home.
leaving him on high alert. But tonight he tries to suppress his nerves. As his family eats,
Thomas does his best to join in conversation with his children and enjoy his time with his family.
Gradually Thomas begins to relax, but a sudden knock at the door rattles him. As he slowly
sets down his silverware, Thomas gestures for his wife to hide in another room with the children.
Then Thomas walks to a window and peeks out. He relaxes as he recognizes a lone friendly neighbor on their
doorstep and opens the door. But as Thomas smiles and greets his neighbor, he's met with the news that
an angry mob of protesters is on its way to his home. Thomas quickly thanks his neighbor for the
warning and then leaps into action. Back inside, he orders his children and wife to stay out of sight
in an interior room. Then Thomas tries to board up his windows. But just as Thomas picks up his hammer,
he realizes he is already too late. Thomas looks out the window and sees an angry crowd approaching the
house. And as the mob draws closer, Thomas' stomach drops. In several of the protest's hands are axes,
immediately Thomas runs to gather his family. Together, they flee out a side door,
and run toward the safety of a neighbor's home. There Thomas stares out a window and angrily watches
as the mob breaks in and tears his home apart. The rioters flood all three levels of his house,
and soon a flurry of feathers begins to drift to the ground as they rip open pillows from every room
and dump their contents out the windows.
In his yard, one group of protesters hacked down his trees,
while another knocks down his fence.
Others stream out of the house,
leaving the scene with stolen artwork and jewelry in their hands.
At dawn, the ransacking finally ends.
And as Thomas steps back inside his house,
his knees buckle at the emptiness before him.
All his belongings are gone or destroyed.
A bitterness bubbles inside him.
Once sympathetic to the colonist's cause,
The destruction of his home soes a new distrust within Thomas Hutchinson.
After the attack on his home, the governor grows more supportive of oppressing Boston's rebellious residents,
convinced that the key to peace is an even stronger British authority.
But the colonists continue to protest this notion,
and soon they make their voices heard in a way other than rioting.
All across the colonies, underground resistance groups, coined the Sons of Liberty,
developed to protest the Stamp Act.
Soon they organize boycotts on British goods.
And six weeks after the attack on Thomas Hutchinson's home,
delegates from some of the colonies assemble in New York
for what they call the Stamp Act Congress.
There they write and issue a declaration of rights and grievances.
In it, they claim that the British Parliament has no right to tax the colonists
because it does not include representation from the colonies.
Across the Atlantic, news of the colonists' unsanctioned congressional meeting
will alarm the British government.
But the economic repercussions of the Stamp Act will concern Parliament even more.
Amid loud protests from British merchants impacted by the colonists' boycotts,
the Parliament will repeal the Stamp Act a year after passing it.
But the same day, they will pass the Declaratory Act.
In it, Parliament will loudly reassert their absolute legislative authority over the colonies
in all cases whatsoever, a sentiment that will outrage the colonists
and soon set them on a path to revolution.
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It's November 29th, 1773,
at Boston's Old South Meeting House, seven years after Parliament repealed the Stamp Act.
Inside the Pact Meeting Hall, the leader of Boston's Sons of Liberty, Samuel Adams,
holds a town meeting for thousands of Bostonians to discuss the town's current taxation crisis.
In the three years since the Stamp Act, tensions between the colonists and the British government
have mounted. Britain has continued to tax the American colonists on various goods
without giving them representation in Parliament, so the colonists have continued to fight back
through boycotts on British imports. So far, this tactic has proved effective, leading to the
repeals of many taxes. And now only a tax on tea has remained stubbornly in place for the past six
years. But colonial merchants have found a silver lining to the tea tax. Many, including Sam Adams,
have built lucrative businesses selling colonists smuggled Dutch tea for far cheaper than the
British can sell their tea. This has allowed the colonists to boycott the taxed British tea
while also spending less.
But recently, Parliament passed a measure that threatens to put many smuggled tea sellers out of business.
Earlier this year, they gave a tax break to the financially troubled British East India Company through the Tea Act.
This new legislation allows the company to sell their tea at even cheaper prices than the colonial merchants can sell smuggled tea,
granting it a virtual monopoly in the American colonies.
This has upset many colonists.
Though they will now be able to buy even cheaper tea, some interpret the measure as yet a
another insistence of taxation without representation. Many worried that if they silently accept
the Tea Act, they will be confirming the authority of the British Parliament to tax the colonies
and open the door to future tax abuses. Yesterday, the first ship filled with chests of the
East India Company's tea arrived in Boston Harbor, forcing the T-Ax opponents to develop a plan
of action. Many worry that a mere boycott will not work this time, that colonists will be
unable to resist the temptation of buying tea at lower prices. So Sam Adams has developed a
new solution to the crisis, making sure the tea never makes it to shelves in the first place.
So today, in front of the crowded meeting hall, Sam prepares to put his plan into action.
He clears his throat, before calling on all Bostonians to come together to stop the East
India Company from unloading their ships. Sam's words prompt immediate cheers from the townspeople,
who overwhelmingly endorsed the proposal, and soon 25 volunteers are sent to stand watch on the dock
and prevent the British captains from offloading their cargo. Elsewhere across the
colonies, the arrival of the East India Company's ships prompted similar reaction, and the
standoffs often successfully result in the ships returning the tea to England. But in Massachusetts,
Thomas Hutchinson, now the colony's governor, refuses to let the colonists force him into submission.
At the Bostonians' insistence, the captains of the East India Company's ships eventually agreed
to return to England, but Governor Hutchinson refuses to permit the captains to leave.
On December 16th, three weeks after the arrival of the first East East Union, he said, he said,
India Company ship, the colonists urge one of the captains to appeal to Governor Hutchinson one last
time. Inside the Old South Meeting House, Sam and thousands of Bostonians gather once again,
anxiously awaiting the arrival of the ship captain with the governor's reply. In the evening,
the captain finally arrives. Sam listens in frustration as he informs the colonists that Governor
Hutchinson has once again refused to permit him to leave. The crowd erupts an angry
protestation. Sam lifts a finger to silence the agitated crowd. And the
And then, as a hush falls, Sam issues a booming declaration.
This meeting can do nothing more to save the country.
Convinced that all legal avenues have been exhausted, Sam decides its time for Bostonians
to take more drastic measures.
If they can't get the ships to leave, then they will simply destroy the cargo.
Quickly, Sam rallies dozens of members of the Sonsor Liberty to leave the meeting hall and head
to the town's wharf.
Hastily dressed as Native Americans to disguise their identities, the men descend upon the East
India Company's ships armed with hatchets and axes. From shore, thousands of residents watch as the men
hack open hundreds of chests of tea and pour their contents into the harbor. In three hours,
the Sons of Liberty will dump 92,000 pounds of tea into the water. The Boston Tea Party, as it will soon
be known, will send shockwaves across the Atlantic. In response to the raid, the British government
will decide against trying to identify and prosecute the individuals involved. Instead, Parliament will
elect to punish all of Massachusetts with a set of new punitive laws designed to cut off the
town's trade and criminalize organized resistance to British rule. Formerly named the coercive
acts, the colonists will coin the legislation the intolerable acts. And soon they will become a rallying
call for the colonies, determined to stand their ground. The colonies will decide to coordinate their
resistance, closing ranks to defy British rule.
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It's September 5th,
1774,
outside Carpenter's
Hall in Philadelphia,
nine months
after the Boston Tea Party.
Sam Adams walks up the step of the two-story brick building and pushes open its double doors.
Inside, Sam joins dozens of other men from all over the colonies,
each here to discuss how best to organize colonial opposition to British taxation.
Four months ago, the British Parliament passed the intolerable acts
to punish the colonists for the Boston Tea Party.
Britain hopes these punitive laws would reverse the trend of colonial resistance, but they have not.
Instead, they have only intensified colonial opposition to British authority.
And now, united over their shared fears of tyrannical British rule, the colonies have decided
to come together to coordinate their response. Today, Sam is one of 56 delegates from 12 colonies
elected to assemble in Philadelphia to decide a course of action. Inside the meeting hall, Sam absorbs
the room's somber atmosphere as he takes a seat among the other delegates. In the crowd of men,
he spots many of the colony's leading luminaries, including his cousin and lawyer, John Adams,
as well as the respected military hero, George Washington.
As the full delegation arrives, the men open their congressional session
and begin to debate the best way to coordinate resistance to British authority.
Over the next six weeks, the delegates of the First Continental Congress slowly build a consensus.
Together they agree to boycott British goods and halt exports to Britain if the intolerable acts are not repealed.
They also pledged to support Massachusetts in case of British attack,
a promise which soon will prove faithful.
Because seven months after the first Continental Congress, the first battles of the Revolutionary War will erupt in Massachusetts,
drawing the rest of the colonies into a fight for independence from Britain.
The following month, delegates from all 13 colonies will meet for a second Continental Congress,
and will become the colony's de facto national government.
One year later, that Congress will reconvene to adopt the Declaration of Independence,
formerly severing America's ties to Britain once and for all,
A milestone in American history set into motion in part by the agreements of the First Continental Congress on September 5th, 1774.
Next on History Daily, September 8th, 1776, Captain Nathaniel Hale volunteers to spy behind British lines, becoming one of America's few double agents of the Revolutionary War.
From Noisor and Airship, this is History Daily, posted, edited, and executive produced by me, Lindsay Graham.
Audio editing by Molly Bach, sound designed by Misha Stanton, music by Lindsay Graham.
This episode is written and researched by Alexander Curry Buckner.
Executive producers are Stephen Walters for airship and Pascal Hughes for Noiser.
