On this day 250 years ago in Philadelphia, the Continental Congress voted that Royal Governor William Franklin of New Jersey
be sent under guard to Governor Trumbull [of Connecticut], who is desired to take his parole; and, if Mr. Franklin refuses to give his parole, that Governor Trumbull be desired to treat him
as he would other prisoners. The Journal of the Continental Congress did not record how Pennsylvania Delegate Benjamin Franklin, Governor Franklin’s father, voted on this resolution.
Sources: https://www.revolutionary-war-and-beyond.com/congress-imprison-governor-william-franklin.html; Journals of the Continental Congress at p. 473 accessed at https://archive.org/details/us_congress_continental/lljc005/page/473/mode/2up
On this day 250 years ago in Burlington, the Provincial Congress of New Jersey
Ordered, That Mr. Green, Mr. Cooper, Mr. Sergeant, Mr. Ogden, Mr. Elmer, Mr. Hughes, Mr. Covenhoven, Mr. Symmes, Mr. Condict and Mr. Dick, be a Committee to prepare the draught of a constitution.
Source: Minutes of the Provincial Congress and the Council of Safety of the State of New Jersey, Trenton: Naar, Day & Naar (1879) at p. 474, accessed at https://archive.org/details/minutesofprovinc00newj/page/474/mode/2up
On this day 250 years ago in Philadelphia, someone writing as “a Watchman” published an Address to the People of Pennsylvania on Independence:
The Tories . . . now acknowledge that Independence is inevitable, but endeavour to persuade us that a formal declaration of it is unnecessary, and that we are already as independent as we can be of the Crown of Britain. . . . Be not terrified, ye poor creatures, with a word, nor put off the day any longer that is to exalt you to the rank of men.
Your posterity will look upon it as the birth-day of permanent liberty to this country.
Should an immediate declaration of independence take place, we shall then only have crossed the Red Sea of our difficulties. A wilderness will still be before us. We have been enslaved with European ideas, manners, and laws. Hereditary right to power, titles, excise laws, &c, must all be laid in the dust before we can expect to establish or reap the fruits of good Government in the Colonies.
. . .
I would by no means exclude men of property from the confidence of the people, provided they possess understanding, integrity, and publick spirit. But always remember that they derive no right to power from their wealth; and that a freeman worth only fifty pounds is entitled, by the laws of our Province, to all the privileges of the first nabob in the country. Remember the influence of wealth upon the morals and principles of mankind. . . . Honour, liberty, and life, (and these are the common portions of every freeman in Pennsylvania,) are worth all the wealth in the world.
Source: https://declarationproject.org/?p=1192
On this day 250 years ago in the village of Annandale in Hunterdon County, New Jersey, a group of about 25 Loyalists armed with clubs raided the tavern house of Captain Thomas Jones, a prominent Patriot in the village. The Loyalists, who were neighbors and had previously been friends of Jones, beat him, threatened his family and stole money from his tavern bar. The Revolution was becoming a civil war.
Source: http://annandalevillage.com/gallery/jones_tavern.html