In observance of
Boston Tea Party time, the
New Yorker has published an article titled
“Tea and Antipathy,” by Caleb Crain of
Steamboats Are Ruining Everything.
It discusses the tea crisis, the rest of Boston’s Revolutionary turmoil, and how those events appear in Ben Carp’s
Defiance of the Patriots, T. H. Breen’s
American Insurgents, American Patriots, and Richard Archer’s
As If an Enemy’s Country. Also vital to the discussion, as it should be, is John W. Tyler’s
Smugglers and Patriots, from 1986.
Today at 3:00 P.M., Eastern time, Crain will participate in the magazine’s
online “Ask the Author” session, so read fast to prepare.
Crain does something remarkable when his articles run in popular magazines: he uses his blog to discuss sources and further reading at length, turning out terrific historiographical essays. Indeed, for folks wondering what Revolutionary writings to read next and how historians swim in schools,
his notes for the article may even be better than the original. (I say that not just because
Boston 1775 gets a nice mention.*)
The article starts with a classic fictional picture of colonial unrest, Nathaniel Hawthorne’s short story
“My Kinsman, Major Molineaux.” Hawthorne distrusted fervent public reform, whether it was Puritanism or Abolitionism, and even the Revolution disturbed him—though he had to express that discomfort obliquely. Hawthorne thus set his story in the 1740s or so, but it clearly comments on the Revolution, and unfavorably.
Similarly, “Tea and Antipathy” shines a raking light on the pre-Revolutionary American Whigs:
in much the way that journalists have begun to ask whether shadowy corporate interests may be sponsoring today’s Tea Party, historians have long speculated that merchants may have instigated early unrest to protect smuggling profits from British regulators—that the start of the Revolution may have been Astroturfed.
Crain’s blog essay adds:
I found myself worrying that the corruptions of profit-seeking may have deformed America’s political process at the nation’s inception. . . . It was the Progressive historians of the early twentieth century who first gave a scholarly formulation to the idea that merchants, eager to protect their smuggling profits and to dodge tax burdens, manipulated popular discontent in the colonies and then lost control of the fire they had set.
In his essay, Crain traces the response to this idea. I think there’s a lot to it, but in the end I side with those who find the thesis too “reductive”—which is the same word I’d apply to those historical approaches that focus exclusively on ideological arguments.
One big problem with the self-interested picture of the Revolution is that historians always seem to focus their critiques and exposés on only one side. Crain rightly questions whether we should always take the self-proclaimed Patriots’ proclamations at face value, but cites stories from
Loyalists like
Peter Oliver and
Samuel Peters less critically.
The essay has a long paragraph on sources by and about Gov.
Thomas Hutchinson, fascinating and indeed in some ways tragic. Not mentioned is that Hutchinson had strong personal incentives to see the
East India Company’s
tea landed and sold. His sons were designated agents for the company, he had apparently invested thousands of pounds with them, and his gubernatorial salary came from the tax on that tea. Hutchinson was sincerely interested in Massachusetts’s welfare within the British Empire, but his economic motives were just as strong as his political foes’.
And as for those foes, in the “merchants did it” argument they always seem to be faceless puppeteers, and the people mindless puppets:
Boston’s big businessmen felt threatened. Not only might smuggling cease to be profitable but, if the experiment of direct importation were to succeed, it might cut them out of the supply chains for other commodities as well. Clearly, it was time for Sam Adams and William Molineux to rile up the public again.
Molineux came from the merchant class, and had been a smuggler, but by the 1770s he appears to have been living dangerously off the proceeds of property he managed for
Charles Ward Apthorp, a
New York Loyalist. Molineux was deeply involved in a public-works project rather than maintaining his own mercantile business.
As for Adams, in 1773 he’d been trying to “rile up the public” for months over the issue of judicial salaries without much success. He finally got traction with
Benjamin Franklin’s leak of letters by Hutchinson and other royal officials criticizing New England self-government, which appeared to confirm what Adams had been warning about all along. That keyed people up to focus their anger on
Parliament’s monopolistic grant to the East India Company.
But why did tea become such a galvanizing issue outside Boston as well, spawning a continent-wide mass movement? “Tea and Antipathy” acknowledges the answer: that “The tea tax had become a symbol, and it infuriated the populace. . . . Indeed, for consumers, anger over the tea tax had never made much economic sense.” In other words, for Americans there
was a political issue at stake, even if some rich men had money at stake as well.
Boston’s merchants certainly drove the opposition to Parliament’s new laws back in the early 1760s, when
James Otis, Jr., as their lawyer first
came up with the “no taxation without representation” argument. But that wasn’t a mass movement. In fact, I’ve read that no newspaper in any other colonial port covered the case. It took what Crain calls “the universally unpopular
Stamp Act” to start sensitizing the populace to imperial taxation policy. With
more new taxes in 1767 and then
soldiers in the streets, the political movement grew beyond the merchants’ direction and issues.
Of course, the debate on what was most important when has been going on a long time, has produced lots of important work, and will continue. Crain’s review of the argument is solid and helpful, and his remarks on sources sound. I
reviewed Archer’s book on the
Boston Massacre for the
New England Quarterly; I suspect Crain might have found more fuel for his suspicions in Hiller B. Zobel’s
The Boston Massacre. The Breen book goes over some of the same ground that Ray Raphael’s
The First American Revolution did a few years back.
TOMORROW:
One more author to read, or, Why Parliament kept the tea tax.
[The image at top shows John Fitch’s steamboat, tested at Philadelphia in 1787.]
[*
Me: Hey, Mom, today I got mentioned in this historiographical blog entry connected to a
New Yorker article.
Mom: Historiography? Just what I like! What’s the link?
Me: Um, the blog’s called “Steamboats Are Ruining Everything.” And about me it says—
Mom: Ha! What a wonderful blog name! Who writes it?
Me: A man named Caleb Crain. With an I. He says—
Mom: “Crain,” with an I. “Steamboats.” Hang on, I need to get my laptop…]