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First Continental Congress

From Encyclopedia Jr, free information reference for Kids

The First Continental Congress was a body of representatives appointed by the legislatures of twelve North American colonies of Great Britain in 1774.

Contents

[edit] Background

Like the Stamp Act Congress, which was formed by colonials to respond to the unpopular Stamp Act, the First Continental Congress was formed largely in response to the Intolerable Acts. The Congress was planned through the permanent committees of correspondence. They chose the meeting place to be Philadelphia, Pennsylvania in Carpenters' Hall, which was both centrally located and one of the leading cities in the colonies.

[edit] Convention

The Congress met from September 5, 1774, to October 26, 1774. From September 5 through October 21, Peyton Randolph presided over the proceedings; Henry Middleton took over as President of the Congress for the last few days, from October 22 to October 26.

The Congress had two primary accomplishments. First, the Congress drafted the Articles of Association on October 20, 1774. The Articles formed a compact among the colonies to boycott British goods, and to cease exports to Britain as well if the “Intolerable Acts” were not repealed. The boycott was successfully implemented, but its potential at altering British colonial policy was cut off by the outbreak of open fighting in 1775.

Its second accomplishment was to provide for a Second Continental Congress to meet on May 10, 1775. In addition to the colonies which had sent delegates to the First Continental Congress, letters of invitation were sent to Quebec, Saint John's Island, Nova Scotia, Georgia, East Florida, and West Florida. Georgia did not send delegates.

[edit] Colonies and delegates

Province of New Hampshire
  • Nathaniel Folsom
  • John Sullivan
Province of Massachusetts Bay
  • John Adams
  • Samuel Adams
  • Thomas Cushing
  • Robert Treat Paine
Colony of Rhode Island and Providence Plantations
  • Stephen Hopkins
  • Samuel Ward
Connecticut Colony
  • Silas Deane
  • Eliphalet Dyer
  • Roger Sherman
Province of New York
  • City and County of Albany, City and County of New York, County of Duchess, and County of West Chester
    • John Alsop
    • James Duane
    • John Jay
    • Philip Livingston
    • Isaac Low
  • County of Kings
    • Simon Boerum
  • County of Orange
    • John Haring
    • Henry Wisner
  • County of Suffolk
    • William Floyd
Province of New Jersey
  • Stephen Crane
  • John De Hart
  • James Kinsey
  • William Livingston
  • Richard Smith
Province of Pennsylvania
  • Edward Biddle
  • John Dickinson
  • Joseph Galloway
  • Charles Humphreys
  • Thomas Mifflin
  • John Morton
  • Samuel Rhoads
  • George Ross
New Castle, Kent, and Sussex, on Delaware
  • Thomas McKean
  • George Read
  • Caesar Rodney
Maryland
  • Samuel Chase
  • Robert Goldsborough
  • Thomas Johnson
  • William Paca
  • Matthew Tilghman
Colony and Dominion of Virginia
  • Richard Bland
  • Benjamin Harrison V
  • Patrick Henry
  • Richard Henry Lee
  • Edmund Pendleton
  • Peyton Randolph
  • George Washington
Province of North Carolina
  • Richard Caswell
  • Joseph Hewes
  • William Hooper
Province of South Carolina
  • Christopher Gadsden
  • Thomas Lynch, Jr.
  • Henry Middleton
  • Edward Rutledge
  • John Rutledge

[edit] See also

[edit] Further reading

  • Burnet, Edmund C. [1941] (1975). The Continental Congress. Greenwood Publishing. ISBN 0-8371-8386-3.
  • Henderson, H. James [1974] (2002). Party Politics in the Continental Congress. Rowman & Littlefield. ISBN 0-8191-6525-5.
  • Montross, Lynn [1950] (1970). The Reluctant Rebels; the Story of the Continental Congress, 1774–1789. Barnes & Noble. ISBN 0-389-03973-X.

[edit] External links





Citation Help

APA Style: Reference List

Encyclopedia Jr (2007). First continental congress. Retrieved May 26, 2012, from http://www.encyclopediajr.com/wikiarticle/f/i/r/first_continental_congress.

MLA Style: Works Cited Page

"First continental congress." Encyclopedia Jr. 2007. 26 May 2012 <http://www.encyclopediajr.com/wikiarticle/f/i/r/first_continental_congress>.


This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article first_continental_congress.


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