Train of Abuses: Antecedent Documents
Draft Virginia Constitution, 1776
In May 1776, Thomas Jefferson, a Virginia delegate to the Continental Congress, wrote at least three drafts of a Virginia constitution. Jefferson’s litany of British governmental abuses in his drafts of the Virginia Constitution became his "train of abuses" in the Declaration of Independence.
Author: Thomas Jefferson
Title: Draft Virginia Constitution
Medium: Manuscript
Date: May 1776
Collection: Thomas Jefferson Papers, Manuscript Division, Library of Congress
Common Sense, 1776
In January 1776, Thomas Paine (1737–1809) penned his famous pamphlet Common Sense, in which he urged the American Colonies to declare independence and immediately sever all ties with the British monarchy. With its strong arguments against monarchy, Common Sense paved the way for the Declaration of Independence more than any other single publication. Paine suggested a form of government to replace the British colonial system:
a one-house legislature for each colony that would be subordinate to a one-house continental congress with no executive power at either level.
Author: Thomas Paine
Title: Common Sense. . . .
City: Philadelphia
Publisher: R. Bell
Date: 1776
Collection: Rare Book and Special Collections Division, Library of Congress
A Summary View of the Rights of British America, 1774
Thomas Jefferson’s A Summary View of the Rights of British America declared America’s right to rebel against an oppressive and despotic government and heralded the arrival of an independent America. Jefferson’s pamphlet was originally drafted as instruction for Virginia’s delegates to the Continental Congress in 1774.
Author: Thomas Jefferson
Title: A Summary View of the Rights of British America
City: Williamsburg:
Publisher: Clementina Rind
Date: 1774
Collection: Rare Book and Special Collections Division, Library of Congress
Fairfax County Resolves, 1774
The Fairfax County Resolves, written by George Mason (1725–1792) and George Washington (1731/32–1799) and presented on July 17, 1774, was the first clear statement of fundamental constitutional rights of the British American colonies as subjects of the British Crown. Adopted the next day by the Fairfax County Convention, which met to protest British retaliations against Massachusetts after the Boston Tea Party, the resolves call for a "firm Union" of the colonies because an injury against one colony is "aimed at all."
Author: George Mason and George Washington
Title: Fairfax County Resolves
Medium: Manuscript
Date: July 17, 1774
Collection: George Washington Papers, Manuscript Division, Library of Congress
Two Treatises of Government, 1690
The works of John Locke (1632–1704), well-known English political philosopher, provided many Americans with the philosophical arguments for inalienable natural rights, principally those of property and of rebellion against abusive governments. In the Declaration of Independence, Thomas Jefferson did not incorporate Locke’s emphasis in his "Second Treatise of Government" on the right to property but gave the right to rebel a prominent place.
Author: John Locke
Title: Two Treatises of Government
City: London
City: Awnsham Churchill
Date: 1690
Collection: Rare Book and Special Collections Division, Library of Congress
First Printed Version of the Declaration of Independence, 1776
Congress approved the Declaration of Independence on July 4, 1776, and directed that it be printed by John Dunlap. This only surviving fragment of the Declaration broadside printed by Dunlap was sent on July 6, 1776, to George Washington by John Hancock, President of the Continental Congress in Philadelphia. General Washington had this Declaration read to his assembled troops on July 9 in New York, where they awaited the combined British fleet and army.
Author: Thomas Jefferson
Title: Declaration of Independence
City: Philadelphia
Publisher: John Dunlap
Date: July 4, 1776
Collection: George Washington Papers, Manuscript Division, Library of Congress