The Empire Reformed. Owen Stanwood

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The Empire Reformed - Owen Stanwood Early American Studies

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served as the cornerstone for a new empire.

      This empire ultimately could not survive the crisis that forced James himself from the throne. The Glorious Revolution in England led to a period of profound fear and chaos in the colonies, and opened the door to a new form of imperialism, as anti-Catholic firebrands attempted to construct a decentralized union of colonies brought together by their common zeal for Protestantism. While these radicals gained control in several colonies, their dreams for remaking America collapsed in a sea of paranoia and fear—which allowed advocates of centralization to reemerge during the 1690s. In the midst of an actual war with France, imperial leaders used the promise of security, couched in the language of centralization and fear of popery, to build a popular movement for empire. By the eighteenth century, as Benjamin Wadsworth’s sermon suggested, Anglo-Americans embraced their identity as subjects of a powerful English monarch.

      While this study uses England’s American empire as its canvas, I have not tried to give equal coverage to every part of it. In particular, a disproportionate amount of the action centers on the northeastern settlements from New York to Nova Scotia. I do not intend to argue that these colonies were more important than others, but at the same time the imperial transition did mean a bit more in this region for two reasons. First, imperial planners paid a lot of attention to these colonies, partly because of New England’s reputation for independence, and partly because the duke of York centered his own ambitions on the region. Second, the colonies’ proximity to New France made the fear of “popish plots” more intense and relevant than in some other parts of the empire. Nonetheless, while I pay a lot of attention to New York and New England, my purpose is to fit these peculiar places into a continental and global context. Despite their distinctive characteristics, all the various parts of the empire experienced these decades of change in broadly similar ways.

      • • •

      This book is based on extensive readings in official records, published tracts, and private correspondence. In the event that a single document has appeared in different forms, I have tried to cite the most easily accessible version. The one exception is for documents from the Colonial Office Papers housed at the National Archives in Kew. While many of these documents have appeared in the Calendar of State Papers, Colonial Series, my citations refer to the originals, since the versions in the CSPC are often incomplete. All dates are in the Old Style, with the year beginning on January 1. I have quoted the sources as they appear, but have modernized spelling and punctuation in some cases.

       PART I

      Empire Imagined

       Chapter 1

      Imperial Designs

      BEGINNING IN THE 1670s administrators in Charles II’s court sought to build a new empire. As an anonymous official noted, proper management of “forraigne Plantations” was of “great consequence … to the prosperity of [the] Nation.” The king’s empire was vast, but poorly regulated. Local officials in the various plantations worked in virtual isolation from authorities in Whitehall, and unlike other European states, England did not have a single office managing colonial affairs before the mid-1670s. The consequences of this oversight were profound; the king lost revenue and power, and colonial subjects languished on their own, as evidenced in the crisis of 1675–76, when New England nearly fell to a coalition of enemy Indians and Virginia experienced a massive civil war. If the empire was to work for the king and his subjects, it had to be brought into line.1

      The later Stuart reorganization of the empire was a bold exercise in trans-Atlantic state building. It represented one strand of a campaign to augment the crown’s power at the expense of the localities, reflected most notably in the reorganization of dozens of local corporations in England itself. Reformers hoped that England would soon have a much more streamlined state, one that reflected in some form the royal absolutist political philosophies pursued by Louis XIV in France at the same time. In order to do this, the king and his ministers had to reorganize the state on a grand scale, but in addition they had to change English political culture, which included a strong attachment to local customs, privileges, and liberties. If they were to succeed, crown officials had to convince people to view the king and the state in a new way.2

      Thus royal officials had to translate this grand imperial vision in dozens of local contexts. In England the drama played out in counties and towns across the kingdom as local interest groups battled the crown for their privileges. Across the ocean, meanwhile, the theoretical issues were similar but the context very different. Zealous civil servants made the long trip to North America and the West Indies to accomplish what they hoped would be a simple task. The colonies were farther away and there was little money to help imperial officials build an empire, but few people lived in the plantations and they did not have entrenched interest groups like those in Britain and Ireland. Even the oldest colony, after all, was just over seventy years old. The crown began modestly: in 1678 it created a new royal colony in New Hampshire, a tiny outpost in northern New England, sending a minor courtier named Edward Cranfield to lead the colony into stability. Soon afterward, an English court revoked the charter of the Bermuda Company and took that island colony under its control. These minor conquests would pave the way for the royalization of New England, the most argumentative and independent of the colonies, and eventually all of the American plantations.3

      This simple task proved very difficult for administrators to accomplish. In New Hampshire and Bermuda, the governors sent to oversee these changes met serious resistance—especially from the religious dissenters who formed majorities in both places. New Hampshire’s Governor Cranfield quickly ran afoul of prominent landowners and assemblymen, surviving an attempted rebellion in 1683. In Bermuda, meanwhile, Governor Richard Coney managed to alienate virtually everyone, at one point confronting an armed mob right in front of his house, and declaring the colony to be in “actual rebellion.” Beyond the physical perils of office, neither man was very successful at the tasks of governance, whether raising revenue or providing for defense. Put simply, colonial subjects refused to recognize their authority, meaning that both colonies were essentially without governments during much of the 1680s. The new empire did not come together as its planners envisioned; rather than uniting colonial subjects, imperial reform divided them into two hostile and irreconcilable camps.4

      These reform efforts proved difficult because they ran into the conspiratorial political culture of popish and Puritan plots that poisoned Anglo-American politics in the Restoration era. Rather than bringing England and the plantations together in a more perfect union, the program of imperial centralization polarized colonists, creating two different factions or parties that took on slightly different forms from place to place but organized themselves around two conspiracy theories. One faction, which can be called the royal party, believed that a Puritan plot threatened the plantations; that Protestant dissenters, heirs to the regicidal impulses of their forebears, intended to undermine the Restoration monarchy and strip the king of his empire. The other side, which might be called the Protestant party, began to see imperial centralization as one plank in a popish plot, a design by Stuart officials, sometimes in collusion with French or Spanish allies, to reduce the plantations to popery and tyranny. With both sides dependent on such conspiratorial visions, the actual task of governance became much more difficult.5

      • • •

      In 1685 Nathaniel Crouch, a famous London bookseller known for his condensed histories and devotional tracts, issued a new title, The English Empire in America. The book was inexpensive and small enough to fit in one’s pocket, and its 200 pages contained vivid, if somewhat remarkable stories about the history and present state of England’s overseas plantations. The book would win no points for either originality or accuracy: as in his other histories, Crouch simply reprinted much of his material from other available printed sources, and selected anecdotes aimed at an audience more interested in curiosities

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