Committee of correspondence
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- :This article is about the historical committee of correspondence. For the modern organization see Committees of Correspondence for Democracy and Socialism. For the Committee of Correspondence Newsletter of the 1960s produced by David Riesman, Erich Fromm and other intellectuals concerned with nuclear disarmament, see The Committee of Correspondence Newsletter.
As news during this period was typically spread in hand-written letters to be carried by couriers on horseback or aboard ships, the committees were responsible for ensuring that this news accurately reflected the views of their parent governmental body on a particular issue and was dispatched to the proper groups. Many correspondents were also members of the colonial legislative assemblies, and were active in the secret Sons of Liberty organizations.
The earliest committees of correspondence were temporary, being formed to address a particular problem and then disbanding once a resolution was achieved. The first formal committee was established in Boston in 1764, to rally opposition to the Currency Act and unpopular reforms imposed on the customs service.
During the Stamp Act Crisis the following year, New York formed a committee to urge common resistance among its neighbors to the new taxes. The Massachusetts Bay Colony correspondents responded by urging other colonies to send delegates to the Stamp Act Congress that fall.
In Massachusetts in 1772, Samuel Adams and Joseph Warren formed a committee to protest the recent British decision to have the salaries of the royal governor and judges be paid by the Crown rather than the colonial assembly, which removed the colony of its means of controlling public officials. In the following months, more than 100 other committees were formed in the towns and villages of Massachusetts. Soon the committees were being used in every other colony.
Prompted in part by Rhode Island's Gaspee Affair, in March of 1773 Dabney Carr proposed the formation of a permanent Committe of Correspondence before the Virginia House of Burgesses. Virginia's own committee was formed on March 12, 1773 and consisted of Peyton Randolph, Robert Carter Nicholas, Richard Bland, Richard Henry Lee, Benjamin Harrison, Edmund Pendleton, Patrick Henry, Dudley Digges, Dabney Carr, Archibald Carey, and Thomas Jefferson.
These permanent committees performed the important planning necessary for the First Continental Congress, which convened in September of 1774. The Second Congress created its own committee of correspondence to communicate the American interpretation of events to foreign nations.
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