John
Hancock who resigned as President of the Continental Congress in 1778 (see
Chapter four) went
home to Boston and recuperated over a two-year period. In 1780 he re-entered
public office due to the redrafting of the Massachusetts Constitution. He was
a member of that State's constitutional convention of 1780, and was governor
of the state from 1780 until 1785. On January 29, 1785 John Hancock resigned
as Governor of Massachusetts. As in 1778, Hancock assigned ill health as the
cause for retirement. On June 16th, 1785 he was elected as delegate to the
United States in Congress Assembled. Young John Quincy Adams wrote his father
on August 3rd "It is generally supposed here that Mr. Hancock will next
year be seated in the Chair of Congress." John Hancock wrote his sister on
July 17th:
Mr. Hancock, being too infirm to act as Governor of Massachusetts, is chosen a
member of Congress … and will probably take his rest in the President's seat
next November. This is escaping Scylla to fall into Charybdis.
On
June 16th, 1785 Hancock was elected to the United States in Congress
Assembled, but could not attend the session of Congress in November 1785 due
to his illness. Despite this he was elected President of the United States in
Congress Assembled on the 23rd of November 1785. His presidential duties were
performed by the two chairmen - David Ramsay (23 November, 1785 12 May, 1786)
and Nathaniel Gorham (15 May - 5 June, 1786).
Address leaf panel free franked "John
Hancock" by him at lower left and addressed in his hand "To The Honorable
General Ward & General Thomas at Cambridge & Roxbury." The panel measures
approximately 4 ¾ by 3 ¼ inches oblong. Undated, but certainly 1775 or 1776
because Ward and Thomas were both commissioned in the spring of 1775; General
Thomas left Roxbury on March 22, 1776 and died that June in Canada. This is an
unusual John Hancock signature as it lacks the flourish of other letters and
documents signed at this crucial time in his presidency of the Congress.
-- Courtesy of the Author
This
peculiar turn of events, a President of the United States not reporting for
duty for over six months, gives testament to the power of the executive
departments and congressional committees that now controlled many of the presiding
presidential office former duties. This turn of executive events dashed the hopes of many
delegates who had hoped John Hancock would report to New York and re-establish
the presidency as an position of national leadership and substantial federal
influence. This following letter of Delegate John Bayard to James Hutchinson
provides an account of the election of John Hancock and the work that followed
immediately thereafter with a spotlight on the States' inability to fill
their respective seats in the federal government to form the necessary nine
States quorum to conduct “business of the utmost consequence.”.
President Hancock's failure to report for duty had a rippling effect on the
United States in Congress Assembled whose ability to form a governing quorum
sank to all time national lows in1786.
Col. Pettit and myself arrived here on Monday evening; and on Wednesday we
made a Congress, by Seven States appearing on the Floor. We proceeded to the
choice of a President, when after seven times balloting we made choice of Mr.
Hancock, but He not being present, Dr. Ramsay was chosen as chairman.
This day has been taken up in reading Dispatches from various parts of the
United States, chiefly those that relate to Indian Affairs; tomorrow We expect
thro the Secretary of Foreign Affairs, to have the communications from our
Ministers in Europe laid before us. Little Business can be done in Congress
till more States are represented. At present we have but Seven which you know
barely constitutes a Congress; and a Single person can negative whatever is
proposed. We are told there is Business of the utmost Consequence to be laid
before us that requires immediate attention, but cannot safely be taken up
unless We have Nine or Eleven States.
I
find the Members of Congress from the different States exceedingly attentive
to the Debates of our Assembly as contained in Careys Paper. The Expressions &
Arguments made use of by some Gentlemen in the debate respecting the Theatre,
Vizt, that it would be an inducement to the Young Fellows in Congress &c
whilst it excited a Laugh, evidently gave offence to a Number, the Answers
made by Smiley, Whitehill, Finley, &c were much approved. If Gentlemen wish
Congress to return to Philada., they at least ought to be guarded in their
Expressions respecting them. The Puff in Mr. Careys Paper on the Election of
Dr. Franklin as President 'that it would induce Congress to remove to Philada.
to avail themselves of His superior Wisdom,' was very injudicious & offensive.
I Just hint those things to you as I have frequently had them cast up to me by
Members of Congress and others.
It
fell on fellow Massachusetts Delegate, Rufus King, to persuade John Hancock to
take his chair in Congress. Recalling that Hancock's York quarters as
President in the old Continental Congress were quite humble King wrote the new
President on December 7th 1785:
It was with very sincere pleasure I this day received yours of the 30th ult.
which declares your acceptance of the chair of congress and I entreat you to
be assured, that this pleasure was not a little encreased, by the expectation
you have given me leave to entertain, that Mrs Hancock will be with you during
your residence here.
In consequence of some Doubts expressed in your Letter, I have this Evening
made enquiry, concerning the Situation of the House, and furniture, of the
President's family; the House is good, and although the Furniture is not such
as it should be, it will be within your direction at the public charge, to
make such dispositions and amendments as may be convenient. The Servants,
carriage, Horses &ca. of the late president are retained, and wait your
coming; the Carriage is very ordinary, but every arrangement relative to the
Household may be effected on your arrival here, and without any inconvenience.
In great haste, but with perfect consideration & respect, I have the honor to
be, Dear Sir, Your very humbl. servt., Rufus King
P.S. I believe that it was after you left Congress, that the present plan of
supporting the Household of the president was adopted. A Steward is appointed
by Congress, who conducts the whole business of the house-hold, under
direction of the President; and the President draws on the Treasury for the
necessary monies to defray the Stewards demands.
John Hancock to Rufus King November 30, 1785 in a
PS writes: "I have Scarcely yet recovered from a late very severe fit of
the Gout ... I must make the best of it and hope a January may be of some
advantage tho' I cannot say much in favor of the season for traveling"
Hancock would never arrive in New York to assume his Presidential Office due
to health concerns. -- Courtesy of the Library of
Congress
All
throughout December the United States in Congress Assembled failed to achieve
a quorum and virtually no business was conducted. On January 2nd, Dr. Ramsay
convened Congress with a British complaint on treatment of loyalists. On the
4th they took up the very important matter on the States' response to Federal
appeals to grant Congress authority to raise revenue and regulate trade. The
uneventful month concluded with Congressional appeals to six unrepresented
states to send delegates.
On
January 18th, David Ramsay wrote to John Eliot from his office in Congress
summing up his month as Chairman:
We have only seven States represented in Congress & of course we proceed very
languidly in business. We hope for two or three more in the course of a few
days. When will President Hancock come on? I long to see him & shall with
great pleasure resign to him that chair which I now occupy in his absence. I
am sincerely sorry for the many restrictions under which your trade
languishes. Though the Southern States suffer less than the Eastern yet they
all have a great interest in vesting Congress with [com]petent powers to
regulate commerce.
February and March were also uneventful months for the United States in
Congress Assembled. Quorums were impossible to maintain, the States'
responses to congressional fiscal appeals were contemptible. The United States
in Congress Assembled did attempt to gain from the States the authority to
regulate trade but measures failed in garnishing enough Delegate support. On
March 12th Congress turned their efforts to the standardization of oaths
required for Federal officeholders. The Oath of Fidelity adopted by
United States was as follows:
I.
A. B. appointed to the office of ______ do acknowledge that I do owe faith and
true allegiance to the United States of America, and I do swear (or affirm)
that I will, to the utmost of my power, support, maintain and defend the said
United States in their freedom, sovereignty and independence, against all
opposition whatsoever. And the Oath of Office shall be in the words following:
'I, A. B. appointed to the office of ______ do swear (or affirm) that I will
faithfully, truly, and impartially execute the office of _________ to which I
am so appointed, according to the best of my skill and judgment; and that I
will not disclose or reveal any thing, that shall come to my knowledge in the
execution of the said office, or from the confidence I may thereby acquire,
which, in my own judgment, or by the injunction of my superiors, ought to be
kept secret.
On
March the 24th, in an effort to streamline the federal government's finances,
Congress appointed a single commissioner to consolidate settlement of accounts
of the five great departments; clothier, commissary, hospital, marine, and
quartermaster. Delegate attendance still hampered the Congress from conducting
any sweeping reforms to the ailing federal government. Once again an appeal
was made in March to President Hancock to assume his office in New York by
fellow Massachusetts Delegate Rufus King:
New York 30 March 1786: Mr. Ramsay the chairman of congress told me a few days
since that he had written to you informing that he should soon leave congress,
& that he wished to know whether your Health would allow you to come on. This
letter was not written in consequence of any order or direction of congress,
but can be considered only as a volunteer Affair in the writer.
Not knowing the impressions that this Letter might produce in your mind, I
have thought it might be agreeable to receive this information; indeed I have
another motive in writing at this time, which is to express my hopes that your
Health is so far restored, that you will soon be able to commence your Journey
for this City; you may be assured that your Reception will be entirely
respectful & affectionate.
I
shall be happy to learn that Mrs. Hancock possesses her usual good health, and
cannot but flatter myself with the idea of soon offering both to you, & her,
my sincere respects in this City.
April passed with no appearance by President Hancock or resignation by Dr.
Ramsay. Early in April Chairman Ramsay wrote to Nicholas Van Dyke of New York
expressing the urgency to establish a continental impost to raise revenue for
the federal government:
Congress have since their late acts of 15th of last February relative to
revenue, received Official accounts that Rhode Island has acceded to the
Impost. Newspapers and private Letters inform that Georgia and Maryland have
done the same. There are good reasons to believe that the Legislature of New
York will in their present session in like manner adopt it; Should these hopes
be realized there will be no obstruction to the immediate operation of the
Continental Impost, but the non Compliance of Several States with the
recommendations of Congress of the 18th of April 1783 to establish
supplementary funds in addition to the Imposts; or the provisos in the
Pennsylvania and Delaware grants of the five Per Cent, restraining their
operation till all the States had complied with both parts of the revenue
System of that date. From this statement of facts it follows that the impost
must be unproductive, though acceded to by all the States, till either all
have established supplementary funds; or till Pennsylvania and Delaware revise
the provisos of their grants restraining their operation till that event
takes place. It is submitted to the good sense of Delaware whether it would
not be adventives of the Common Interest of the Union to give immediate
efficiency to the general impost, as soon as it shall be agreed to by all the
States, without waiting for the establishment of the supplementary funds in
aid thereof, should New York as is expected adopt it, and the Collection
thereof be delayed till all the States pass the Supplementary funds; a large
sum of money much wanted for federal purposes will be prevented from coming
into the Treasury of the United States. As many of the Legislatures of these
States which have not fully complied with the whole Revenue System are not in
session, much time must Necessarily be consumed before the supplementary funds
can be Universally established, even though all the States were well disposed
to their adoption, it is much to be wished the supplementary funds and the
Impost had gone hand in hand; Congress in every Act of theirs have associated
them as essential parts of one System, and it is their determination to urge
the adoption of both, but as the present Necessities of the Union are great,
they conceive it to be their duty to attempt the removal of every obstruction
to the immediate productiveness of that part of the system which promises to
bring the speediest and amplest supplies into the Federal Treasury. The states
which have not adopted the supplementary funds have now under reference from
Congress a very pressing Recommendation in their favor. The States of
Pennsylvania and Delaware are also requested to revise the Provisos in their
respective grants, so as to give immediate operation to the Impost when it
shall be acceded to by all the States.
Anxious for the restoration of public Credit, Congress wish to give Instant
efficiency to every plan that favors that desirable purpose. It is with regret
that Congress requests any alteration, even in the provisoes of a Law which is
acknowledged to be conformable to their own Recommendations, but such is the
nature of our government that any efficiency it possesses must arise from a
disposition of accommodation in the States to each other, and of Congress to
all.
In obedience to the orders of Congress in the Chair of which I have the Honor
to sit in the absence of Mr. President Hancock I request the favor of you to
bring this matter under the consideration of the Legislature of your State as
soon as Circumstances will permit.
Connecticut, also in April, offered its resolution for the secession of their
claims to the Northwest Territory. Debate continued on the resolution's
acceptance with nothing finalized well into May.
The month of May marked the ½
point of John Hancock's U.S. Presidency. John Jay, the U.S. Secretary of
Foreign Affairs, wrote John Adams on the 4th:
Mr. Hancock is still at Boston, and it is not certain when he may be expected;
this is not a pleasant circumstance, for though the chair is well filled by a
chairman, yet the President of Congress should be absent as little and seldom
as possible.
On the 12th of May, the United
States in Congress Assembled declared intra-continental navigable waters in
the territories forever free to their inhabitants and to the citizens of the
United States. This was the boldest move of the Hancock Congress and no one
even knew where he stood on the edict. On May the 15th Ramsay was forced to
resigned as Chairman of Congress because his term as a South Carolina delegate
had expired. Charles Thomson, the Secretary of the United States in Congress
Assembled, wrote to John Hancock:
Sir, Office of Secretary of Congress, May 17. 1786 In Obedience to the Order
of Congress I have the honor to transmit to your Excellency herewith enclosed
an Act of the United States in Congress assembled passed the 15 instant and
their proceedings thereon.
Secretary Thomson enclosed the
proceedings related to the election of Nathaniel Gorham as chairman of
Congress, "to serve until the first Monday in June next," succeeding David
Ramsay. On May 29th, 1786 Hancock, who was reported so ill that he was unable
to write, had his letter of resignation drafted for his signature. It was
presented to the Congress on June 5th, 1786 and the resignation was accepted.
This ended the unprecedented six month tenure of John Hancock, a U.S.
President, who never took his seat in the Federal Capitol of New York City.
On June 6th Charles Thomson transmitted this letter to the thirteen States::
I
have the honor to inform your Excellency that His Excellency J. Hancock being
prevented by sickness from Attending Congress & executing the duties of
president has requested their acceptance of his resignation of that Office;
and that thereupon the United States in Congress Assembled proceeded to
another election & have this day appointed his Excellency Nathl Gorham to
preside."
The Chronology of John Hancock's
Congress is as follows:
1785 - November 23
Achieves quorum, seven states
represented; elects John Hancock president (in absentia), David Ramsay,
chairman. November 24
Elects two congressional chaplains. November 25
Receives report on British Consul
John Temple. November 28-29
Fails to achieve quorum.
December 2 Recognizes John
Temple as British Consul. December 5-26
Fails to achieve quorum.
December 27 Receives Secretary at
War reports.
1786 -- January 2 Receives
British complaint on treatment of loyalists. January 4
Receives reports on states' response to appeals to grant Congress authority to
raise revenue and regulate trade. January 5
Receives report on Algerian
capture of American seamen. January 12
Receives report on settlement of
Continental accounts. January 18 Refers Connecticut cession to committee.
January 19 Orders report
on 1786 fiscal estimates. January 27
Elects Samuel Shaw consul to
Canton, China. January 30
Appeals to six un-represented states to send delegates.
February 1
Removes injunction of secrecy on
correspondence concerning "the appointment of Commissioners to treat with the
Barbary powers." February 3
Debates states' response to
congressional fiscal appeals. February 8 Receives report on French loan
interest requirements. February 9
Justifies abolishing salaries of
court of appeals judges. February 16-24
Fails to achieve quorum.
February 25 Receives reports on
Franco-American postal plan and on 1786 fiscal estimates.
March 3
Repeats call to the states for
authority to regulate trade. March 7
Appoints committee to confer
with New Jersey Assembly on its refusal to comply with 1786 Continental
Requisition. March 10
Rejects New York appeal for an extension of time for receiving Continental
claims from citizens of the state. March 14
Clarifies form of oaths
required for Continental officeholders. March 17-18
Fails to achieve quorum.
March 21 Receives report on
capital punishment in military courts martial. March 22
Receives report of New Jersey's
reversal of opposition to 1786 Continental Requisition. March 24
Appoints single commissioner to
consolidate settlement of accounts of the five great departments (clothier,
commissary, hospital, marine and quartermaster). March 27
Orders arrest of Major John
Wylles for execution of army deserters. March 29
Directs secretary for foreign
affairs to report on negotiations for British evacuation of frontier posts.
April 5
Receives report on
"negotiations, and other measures to be taken with the Barbary powers."
April 10 Receives report
on Connecticut land cession. April 12
Receives board of treasury
report on coinage. April 19
Rejects Massachusetts request
for Continental ordnance April 27
Receives translations of French
decree on fisheries bounties.
May 2
Holds audience with Cornplanter
and other Seneca chiefs. May 5
Holds audience with Cornplanter
and other Seneca chiefs. May 6 Fails to achieve quorum. May 8
Appoints second commissioner
for settlement of accounts of the five great departments. May 9
Directs Continental Geographer
to proceed with survey of western territory. May 11
Debates Connecticut cession.
May 12 Declares
navigable waters in the territories forever free to their inhabitants and to
the citizens of the United States. May 15
Elects Nathaniel Gorham
chairman of Congress to succeed David Ransay. May 17
Ratifies Prussian-American
Treaty of Commerce. May 18
Postpones until September
meeting of agents for Georgia-South Carolina boundary dispute. May
22-25 Debates Connecticut
cession. May 26 Declares conditional acceptance of Connecticut cession.
May 29 Fails to achieve
quorum. May 31 Amends
Rules to War; receives John Jay request for a committee to confer with him
on negotiations with Diego de Gardoqui.
June 5
Receives resignation of President John Hancock; receives report on military
establishment.
John
Hancock recovered and was elected Governor again in 1787. He was a strong
supporter of the U.S. Constitution and its ratification process. In the
presidential election of 1789, Governor Hancock received four electoral votes
for U.S. President under the new United States Constitution against George
Washington and John Adams. He was re-elected annually as Governor of
Massachusetts and served in that capacity until his death in 1793.
John
Hancock was described by his supporters as:
"a man of strong common sense and decision of character, of polished manners,
easy address, affable, liberal, and charitable. In his public speeches he
displayed a high degree of eloquence. As a presiding officer he was dignified,
impartial, quick of apprehension, and always commanded the respect of
congress."
Hancock employed his large fortune for useful and benevolent purposes, and was
a liberal donor to Harvard College. A great patriot, John Hancock was also the
fledgling nation's most notable grandstander when acting in a public forum, no
matter how small the arena. When the best method of driving the British from
Boston was under discussion at a patriotic club he declared, "Burn
Boston, and make John
Hancock a beggar, if the public good requires it."
Hancock received the degrees from
both Yale and Princeton in 1769. He was awarded the degree of L.L.D. from
Brown in 1788 and from Harvard in 1792. John Hancock is buried in Boston and
is the only man to hold the titles of President of the Continental Congress of
the United Colonies of America, President of the Continental Congress of the
United States of America, and President of the United States of America in
Congress Assembled.
Chapter Fourteen - Nathaniel Gorham -
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