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Patriot leaders faced many dilemmas as they dealt with loyalists. In the following
resolutions of the Continental Congress, what issues are being addressed? What dilemmas
might these issues pose to the Congress and other patriot leaders?
View the original documents by clicking on the links below. Both documents are from the Journals of the Continental Congress, which can be found in A Century of Lawmaking for a New Nation. Use your browser's Back Button to return to this point.
Resolved, That it be recommended to the several assemblies, conventions, and councils or committees of safety of the United Colonies, immediately to cause all persons to be disarmed within their respective colonies, who are notoriously disaffected to the cause of America, or who have not associated, and shall refuse to associate, to defend, by arms, these United Colonies, against the hostile attempts of the British fleets and armies; and to apply the arms taken from such persons in each respective colony, in the first place to the arming the continental troops raised in said colony; in the next, to the arming such troops as are raised by the colony for its own defence, and the residue to be applied to the arming the associators; that the arms when taken be appraised by indifferent persons, and such as are applied to the arming the continental troops, be paid for by Congress, and the residue by the respective assemblies, conventions, or councils, or committees of safety: Resolved, That no man in these colonies, charged with being a tory, or unfriendly to
the cause of American liberty, be injured in his person or property, or in any manner
whatever disturbed, unless the proceeding against him be founded on an order of this
Congress, or the Assembly, convention, council or committee of safety of the colony, or
committee of inspection and observation, of the district wherein he resides; provided,
that this resolution shall not prevent the apprehending any person found in the commission
of some act destructive of American liberty, or justly suspected of a design to commit
such act, and intending to escape, and bringing such person before proper authority for
examination and trial.
View the original documents by clicking on the links above. Both documents are from the Journals of the Continental Congress, which can be found in A Century of Lawmaking for a New Nation. Use your browser's Back Button to return to this point. |
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