- Proclamation of Rebellion
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The Proclamation of Rebellion, officially titled A Proclamation for Suppressing Rebellion and Sedition, was the response of George III of the United Kingdom to the news of the Battle of Bunker Hill at the outset of the American Revolutionary War. Issued August 23, 1775, it declared elements of the American colonies in a state of "open and avowed rebellion". It ordered officials of the British Empire "to use their utmost endeavours to withstand and suppress such rebellion". The Proclamation also encouraged subjects throughout the Empire, including those in Great Britain, to report anyone carrying on "traitorous correspondence" with the rebels so that they could be punished.
The Second Continental Congress issued a response to the Proclamation on December 6, saying that while they had always been loyal to the king, the British Parliament never had any legitimate claim to authority over them, because the colonies were not democratically represented. Congress argued that it was their duty to continue resisting Parliament's violations of the British Constitution, and that they would retaliate if any supporters in Great Britain were punished for "favouring, aiding, or abetting the cause of American liberty". Congress maintained that they still hoped to avoid the "calamities" of a "civil war".
The Proclamation was written before Colonial Secretary Lord Dartmouth had been given a copy of the Olive Branch Petition from the Continental Congress. Because the king refused to receive the petition, the Proclamation effectively served as an answer to the petition.[1]
On October 26, 1775, King George expanded on the Proclamation in his Speech from the Throne at the opening of Parliament. The King insisted that rebellion was being fomented by a "desperate conspiracy" of leaders whose claims of allegiance to him were insincere; what the rebels really wanted, he said, was to create an "independent Empire". The king indicated that he intended to deal with the crisis with armed force, and was even considering "friendly offers of foreign assistance" to suppress the rebellion. A pro-American minority in Parliament warned that the government was driving the colonists towards independence, something that many colonial leaders had insisted they did not desire.[2]
The Proclamation and the Speech from the Throne undermined moderates in the Continental Congress like John Dickinson, who had been arguing that the king would find a way to resolve the dispute between the colonies and Parliament. When it became clear that the king was not inclined to act as a conciliator, colonial attachment to the Empire was weakened, and a movement towards declaring independence became a reality.
References
External links
- Text of the Proclamation
- Response from the Continental Congress
- King George's speech of October 1775
British law and the American Revolution Before 1763 Grenville ministry
(1763–1765)Royal Proclamation of 1763 • Sugar Act (1764) • Currency Act (1764) • Quartering Act (1765) • Stamp Act 1765Rockingham ministry
(1765–1766)Chatham and Grafton
ministries (1766–1770)Townshend Acts (1767)North ministry
(1770–1782)Repeal Act (1770) • Tea Act (1773) • Coercive Acts (1774) • Restraining Acts (March & April 1775) • Proclamation of Rebellion (August 1775) • Prohibitory Act (December 1775) • Taxation of Colonies Act 1778Other legal issues Categories:- 1775 in Great Britain
- 1775 in the Thirteen Colonies
- British laws relating to the American Revolution
- Georgian era
- Political repression in the United States
- George III of the United Kingdom
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