The Revolution Is Now Begun: The Radical Committees of Philadelphia, 1765-1776

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The success of the American Revolution is less likely to be understood through an examination of its ideological origins than through a close analysis of the political processes by which principles, beliefs, and anxieties were translated into revolutionary action. This book offers the first detailed profile of the several hundred obscure committeemen and propagandists who took up the new revolutionary ideology and carried it that one last step: out of the realm of rhetoric and into the domain of concrete change. And participatory democracy as a principle of American government owes its realization largely to these second-rank politicians and ordinary citizens, who provided the basic muscle of Revolutionary politics.

In the 1760s and early 1770s Pennsylvania lacked nearly every ingredient for revolution found elsewhere in the colonies: a strong dissenting tradition, widely felt economic grievances, or a legislature intimately acquainted with royal government. Only the painstaking enlistment of a strong leadership core, the construction of new political institutions, and the rapid mobilization of the majority of the community could overcome these deficiencies. In Pennsylvania British authority succumbed to the activity of a few hundred men who were drawn into public life by a handful of veteran politicians within just two years. To these men and to their committees Pennsylvania owes its revolution.

In his book Richard Alan Ryerson focuses on the daily business of politics in the Revolutionary period—the art of motivation for radical political purposes—and its economic and social dimensions in the most prominent American city of the time. How were the colonists mobilized for resistance? What was the political process? Who were the disaffected people who became the radical leaders of the Philadelphia community?

To answer these questions, Ryerson compares campaigning styles, nomination and election procedures, and local political organizations in the colonial era with their counterparts during the Revolution. He also examines the age, economic status, religious faith, and national origins of the men who formed the radical committees of Philadelphia between 1765 and 1776.

Author(s): Richard Alan Ryerson
Publisher: University of Pennsylvania Press
Year: 2012

Language: English
Pages: 325
City: Philadelphia

Cover
Title Page, Copyright, Dedication
Contents
List of Figures
List of Tables
Abbreviations
Table of Symbols
Acknowledgments
Introduction: The Progressive Challenge
Chapter 1 Pennsylvania's Old Regime
Chapter 2 The Birth of Radical Politics
Chapter 3 Founding the Committee System
Chapter 4 The Revolution of the Elite
Chapter 5 The Legitimization of Radical Politics
Chapter 6 Philadelphians Take Up Arms
Chapter 7 The "Wordy War" for Independence
Chapter 8 The Revolution of the Middle Classes
Chapter 9 The Revolution Is Now Begun
Chapter 10 The American Revolution and the Origin of Modern American Politics
Appendixes
A Note on Sources
Bibliography
Index