
Otis Marker
James Otis Jr.
A tablet at Granary Burying Ground states the following about this famous
statesman:
"Lawyer, politician, and writer, [he] graduated from
Harvard in 1743. Otis was an eloquent author and orator for the patriot
cause, who John Adams described as 'a flame of fire.' He vigorously argued
against the British Writs of Assistance, acts that allowed customs officials
to enter private property to search for contraband.
Otis was Boston's most
brilliant attorney and he served in the Massachusetts General Court until
1771. In 1769, British official John Robinson hit Otis in the head during a
tavern brawl, which led to the end of Otis' career. 'I hope when God shall
take me out of time into eternity, that it will be by a flash of
lightening,' Otis wrote his sister, historian Mercy Otis Warren. As he
wished, Otis died in Andover, Massachusetts, in 1783, after being struck by
lightening during a thunderstorm. James Otis [Jr.] is buried with his wife, Ruth
(Cunningham), an alleged Tory, in her family's tomb (Tomb 40)."
From Wikipedia
"James Otis (February 5, 1725 ? May 23, 1783) was a lawyer in colonial
Massachusetts who was an early advocate of the political views that led to
the American Revolution. The phrase "Taxation without Representation is
Tyranny" is usually attributed to him.
He was born at Barnstable to James Otis and Mary Allyne, the second of
thirteen children. His younger sister, Mercy Otis Warren, his brother Joseph
Otis, and his youngest brother, Samuel Allyne Otis also rose to prominence,
as did his nephew Harrison Gray Otis.
Writs of Assistance
?I have been old and now I am dead, and I solemnly say I have never known
a man whose love of country was more ardent or sincere, never one who
suffered so much, never one whose service for any 10 years of his life were
so important and essential to the cause of his country as those of Mr. Otis
from 1760 to 1770.? ? John Adams
Perhaps not a single person more epitomized the complexities and
contradictions of the pre-Revolutionary War period in Boston than the
prominent attorney, orator and pamphleteer James Otis, Jr. Born in West
Barnstable in 1725, Otis graduated from Harvard in 1743 and rose
meteorically to the top of the Boston legal profession.
In 1760, Otis received a prestigious appointment as Advocate General of
the Admiralty Court. He promptly resigned, however, when expected to argue
in favor of the ?writs of assistance.? These writs would enable British
authorities to enter any colonist?s home with no advance notice, no probable
cause and no reason given. In a dramatic turnabout following his
resignation, Otis instead represented pro bono the colonial merchants who
were challenging the legality of the writs before the Superior Court, the
predecessor of the Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court.
James Otis considered himself a loyal British subject. Yet in February
1761, he argued so brilliantly against the writs of assistance in a nearly
five-hour oration before a packed audience in the
Old State House that John
Adams claimed: ?Every man of a crowded audience appeared to me to go away as
I did ready to up arms against the writs of assistance. Then and there was
the first scene of the first act of the opposition to the arbitrary claims
of Great Britain. Then and there the child of Independence was born.?
According to Adams, ?Otis was a flame of fire; with a promptitude of classical allusions, a
depth of research, a rapid summary of historical events and dates, a
profusion of legal authorities.?
Originally politically based in the rural Popular Party, Otis effectively
made alliances with Boston merchants so that he instantly became a patriot
star after the writs of assistance oration. He was elected by an
overwhelming margin to the House of Representatives a month later. Otis
subsequently authored several important patriotic pamphlets, served in the
Massachusetts legislature and was a leader at the Stamp Act Congress.
Brutally injured in the head by British tax collector John Robinson's cudgel
at the British Coffee House in 1769, Otis suffered from increasingly erratic
behavior (probably not caused by the injury because early signs of his
mental illness had already been in evidence). He also was friends with
Thomas Paine who wrote Common Sense.
During the American Revolution he was a volunteer at the Battle of Bunker
Hill, June, 1775. He died at age 58 when, as he stood in the doorway of a
friend?s Andover house, a bolt of lightning struck him.
Oddly, or coincidentally, enough, he obliquely predicted his manner of
death. He is reported to have said to his sister, Mercy Otis Warren, "My
dear sister, I hope, when God Almighty in his righteous providence shall
take me out of time into eternity, that it will be by a flash of lightning."
Despite his rousing oration against the writs of assistance, Otis did not
identify himself as a revolutionary. His peers, too, generally viewed him as
more cautious than the incendiary Samuel Adams. Otis at times counseled
against the mob violence of the radicals and argued against Adams?s proposal
for a convention of all the colonies resembling that of the British Glorious
Revolution of 1688. Yet on other occasions Otis exceeded Adams in rousing
passions and exhorting people to action. According to some accounts, at a
town meeting on September 12, 1768, Otis even called his compatriots to
arms.
In many ways, Otis went beyond the traditional mentality of the
pre-Revolutionary War era. For example, Otis favored extending the basic
natural law freedoms of life, liberty and property to African-Americans, a
position with few adherents among the leaders of the Revolution. Otis died
in May, 1783, when struck by lightning, which is surprisingly the way that
he wanted it to be."
Content courtesy of
Wikipedia with
relevant CelebrateBoston internal links added. Distributed under the
GNU Free Documentation License. This page will not be indexed by search
engines. w200701
Return to
Granary Burying Ground Page
|
|