(J^'irt-.-C^l^^-^^'' '^"^M--^!L^ Our Debt to Cornelius Harnett. AN ADDRESS BY C. ALPHONSO SMITH. Ph.D., LL.D., Of the University of North Carolina. Reprinted from The University of North Carolina Magazine, May, 1 907. OUR DEBT TO CORNELIUS HARNETT.* C. Alphonso Smith, Ph.D., LL.D. ON THE 28th of Aprilt, 1781, there died in the town of WiJming-ton, at theag-e of fifty-eig-ht, a man whose fame as a civic leader finds a unique attestation in the very obstacles that it has had to surmount. Scholar thoug-h he was, we look in vain for a book, a pamphlet, or even an entire speech of his own inditing. If a funeral oration was pronounced over him or an obituary written about him, neither has come down to us. There is not in ex- istence a statue or even a bust or picture of any sort to indicate to the eye what manner of man he was. He left neither son nor daughter to perpetuate his name or to plead with posterity for his fame. The brief inscrip- tion which he asked to be placed upon his modest tomb makes no mention of any service, public or private, that he ever rendered. And yet, to one who studies impar- tially the annals of this State during the latter half of the eighteenth century, the conviction will become irresisti- ble that the mightiest single force in North Carolina his- tory during the whole of the Revolutionary period was Cornelius Harnett, of New Hanover County. Members of the North Carolina Society of the Colonial Dames of America, the honors of this day are yours. In behalf of the city of Wilmington, of the County of New Hanover, of the Lower Cape Fear section, of the State of (*) Au address delivered iu Wilmington, N. C, May 2, 1907, at the unveiling of the monument erected to Cornelius Harnett by the North Carolina Society of the Colonial Dames of America. (t) The inscription on Harnett's tomb, "Died April 20, 1781," is plainly incorrect. His will, written in his own handwriting, is dated April 28th. Tradition has it that he died immediately after making his will. 380 University Magazine. North Carolina, in behalf of the spirit of liberty in what- ever breast it beats, I thank you for your memorial to the dead and your incentive to the living-. This monu- ment marks a new recog-nition of Harnett's services to his State and Nation. It means that his fame enters to- day upon another stage of its triumphal progress. It proclaims also that the brave men who wrought with him in camp or council, the knighthood of the Lower Cape Fear, shall again be re-enthroned and re-acknowl- edged. "On this greeu bauk, by this soft stream, We set today a votive stone; That memory may their deed redeem, When like our sires, our sons are gone. Spirit that made those heroes dare To die, and leave their children free, Bid Time and Nature gently spare The shaft we raise to them and thee." 11. This is neither the time nor the place to enter upon a detailed biography of Cornelius Harnett. Such a biog- raphy is made possible, however, by the completed publi- cation of the Colonial and State Records of NorthCarolina^ .^ There are in these twenty-six volumes more than eight hundred references to the activities of Cornelius Harnett. A careful reading of these references will convince any one that Harnett not only deserves to rank but will yet rank as a national figure in the history of the American Revolution. So closely was he connected with the Rev- olutionary movement, so accurately did he typify its spirit and purposes, that there would seem to have been a sort of pre-established harmony between the mind of Cornelius Harnett and the popular impulses of the time. (*) "The best prmted records are those of New Hampshire, Mas- sachusetts, Connecticut, Pennsylvania. Maryland, and North Oa.ro- hna." (Hart's Amt'rictin Hislnry Told by (Jonlt'tnijnrarif's, vol. II, p. 6.) Our Debt to Cornelius Harnett. 381 If it be true, as Browning' says, that "A people is but the attempt of mauy To rise to the completer life of one," then Cornelius Harnett isdistinctively the Revolutionary hero of North Carolina. Let me correct at the outset the mistaken idea that Harnett was born in Eng-land. This view was universal until the Honorable Georg-e Davis, in an address deliv- ered at the University of North Carolina, June 8, 1855, showed that the historians had confused Harnett with his father, Cornelius Harnett, Senior, and that the son was almost certainly born in Chowan County, North Car- olina*. That he was born in North Carolina and probably in Edenton, Chowan County, is plainly estab- lished by the following- extract from a letter to Har- nett written by Governor Caswell, September 2, I777t: "We have been alarmed with the rising- of Tories and forming of conspiracies: the former among- the Hig-hlaxiders and Regulators and in the county in which you had the honor to draw your first breath, and in Bertie and Martin." He was born April 20, 1723, and was thus but a few months young-er than Samuel Adams, of Massachusetts, a name that was to be associated with his in later years by friend and foe. The only sketch that we have of Harnett's personal ap- pearance is from the pen of Archibald McLaine Hooper, who was a boy when Harnett died and who, as the nephew of William Hooper, signer of the Declaration of Independence, had many opportunities of seeing" the (*) LippiiicotCs Pronouncing Dictionary and Drab'^x Diciionary of A nii'vican Biography both say that Harnett was born in England. Appleton's Cyclopcedia of American Biography (1887) and Johnson^a Universal Cyclopaedia (1894) say "born probably in North Caroli- na". The National Cyclopaedia of American. Biography (1897) and the Biographical History of North Carolina (article by R. D. W. Oonnor, vol. II, 190l) add "probably in Chowan County". (t) Slate Records XI, p. 603? 382 Universiiv Mas^azine. man about whom he was to write in after years with affection and reverence. "His stature," says Mr. Hooper,* "was about five feet, nine inches. In his person he was rather slender than stout. His hair was of lig-ht brown, and his eyes hazel. The contour of his face was not striking nor were his features, which were small, remarkable for symmetry; but his counte- nance was pleasing-, atid his figure, though not com- manding, was neither inelegant nor ungraceful. Easy in his manners, affable, courteous, with a fine taste for letters and a genius for music, he was always an inter- esting, sometimes a fascinating companion. In conver- sation he was never voluble. The tongue, an unruly member in most men. was in him nicely regulated by a sound and discriminating judgment. He paid, never- theless, his full quota into the common stock, for what was wanting in continuity or fullness of expression, was supplied by the glance of his eye, the movement of his hand, and the impres- siveness of his pause. Occasionally, too, he imparted animation to discourse by a characteristic smile of such peculiar sweetness and benignity as enlivened every mind and cheered every bosom within the sphere of its radiance.'' We know comparatively little of the early years of Harnett's life, but from 1750 to his death in 1781 he had filled every position of honor and trust that a grateful and devoted State could bestow upon him. Justice of the peace for New Hanover, commissioner for the town of Wilmington, member of thirteen colonial assemblies under royal authority, deputy provincial grand master of North America in the Masonic order, chairman of the Wilming- ton and New Hanover committees of safety, president of the provincial council of safety and thus virtually gov- ernor of North Carolina, member of the committee that (*) See Life and Letters of Cornelius Harnett ^j Honorable David L. Swain {University Magazine, vol. X, Feb., 1861, pp. 335-3y6), Our Debt lo Cornelms Harnett. 383 drafted the first constitution of the State, delegate to the Continental Con«Tess at Philadelphia— these positions he not only filled but made illustrious by a courage, ability, and integrity that constitute a priceless asset in the history of our State. It is not as an of&ce-holder, however, but rather as a leader of men that Harnett has made his most lasting im- press upon our Revolutionary history. In crises that de- manded coolness of judgment, quickness of action, and fear- lessness of consequences the people of the Lower Cape Fear and later of the whole State turned instinctively to Harnett. There was about this man a certain master- fulness both in thought and action that made him natu- rally and inevitably a leader. As Morley says of Glad- stone, ''He had none of that detachment, often found among superior minds, which we honor for its disinter- estedness even while we lament its impotence in result." •Let us glance now at some of the crises in North Caro- lina history and Harnett's relation to them. The year 1766 was a critical one in American history. The Stamp Act had been passed the year before by the British Parliament, and the royal governors in the va- rious colonies were finding great difficulty in maintain- ing their authority. Representatives of nine of the col- onial assemblies .had met in New York to protest against the oppressions of the Stamp Act and to urge its repeal. North Carolina was not represented at this meeting be- cause Governor Tryon, foreseeing the possibility of united action, had refused to call a meeting of the North Carolina Assembly. Had the other governors been shrewd enough to take this action there would have been no meeting in New York, for the delegates to the meet- ing were in every case elected by their assemblies. Let us concede at once that Tryon was one of the ablest Eng- lishmen ever sent to the colonies. He could accom- plish more by the forcefulness of his personality and the awe inspired by his mere presence than other rulers could do by edicts and armies. 384 University Magazine. On the morning of February 21, 1766, Tryon had every reason to congratulate himself on the result of his Stamp Act diplomacy and to believe that his next letter to his home government would be a victorious recital of difliculties overcome and insubordination curbed. But he reckoned without his host. He was now to learn that the House of Hanover with all its prestige was no match for the patriot citizens of New Hanover. The letter which he wrote four days later contained the most hu- miliating acknowledgment of baffled pride and irredeem- able failure that Tryon was ever called upon to pen. The letter follows*: "It was about 10 o'clock [February 21, 1766] when I observed a body of men in arms from four to five hun- dred move toward the house ["Castle Tryon" in Bruns- wick.] A detachment of sixty men came down the ave- nue, and the main body drew up in front in sight and within three hundred yards of the house. Mr. Harnett, a representative in the Assembly for Wilmington, came at the head of the detachment and sent a message to speak with Mr. Pennington [his Majesty's Comptroller]. When he came to the house he told Mr. Pennington the gentlemen wanted him. I answered: *Mr. Pennington, came into ray house for refuge, he was a Crown Ofi&cer, and as such I would give him all the protection ray roof and the dignity of the character I held in this Province could afford hira.' "Mr. Harnett hoped I would let him go, as the peo- ple were determined to take him out of the house if he should be longer detained, an insult, he said, they wish- ed to avoid offering to me. An insult, I replied, that would not tend to any great consequence after they had already offered every insult they could offer, by invest- ing my house and raaking me in effect a prisoner before any grievance or oppression had been first represented to (*) From Tryon's Lelier Book, letter to Secretary Oonway, Febru- ary 35, 1766. See Colonial Records VII, pp. 172-174. Our Debt In Cornelius Flarnctt. 385 me. Mr. Penning-ton jrrew very uneasy, said he would choose to g-o to the g-entlemen. I ag-ain repeated my offers of protection, if he chose to stay. He declared, and desired I would remember, that whatever oaths might be imposed upon him, he should consider them acts of compulsion and not of free will; and further ad- ded that he would rather resig-n his office than do any act contrary to his duty. If that was his determination, I told him he had better resig-n before he left me. "Mr. Harnett interposed, with saying- he hoped he would not do that. I enforced the recommendation for resig-nation. He consented, paper was broug-ht and his resig-nation executed and received. I then said: 'Mr. Penning-ton, now, sir, you may g-o.' Mr. Harnett went out with him; the detachment retired to the town. Mr. Fenning-ton afterwards informed me they g-ot him in the midst of them when Mr. Ward, master of the Patience asked him to enter his sloop. Mr. Pennington assured him he could not as he had resigned his office. He was afterwards obliged to take an oath that he would never issue any stamped paper in this province. The above oath the Collector informed me he was obliged to take, as were all the clerks of the County Courts and other public officers. "By the last accounts I have received, the number of this insurrection amounted to 580 men in arms and up- wards of 100 unarmed. The Mayor and Corporation of Wilmington and most of all the gentlemen and planters of the county of Brunswick, New Hanover, Duplin, and Bladen, with some masters of vessels, composed this corps." Before this incident Harnett had been best known as a skillful financier. As far back as December 5, 1759, both houses of the Assembly had made him chairman, of a committee to "examine, state, and settle the public accounts of this province." This tangled business he had unraveled with such dispatch and accuracy that to 386 University Magazine. the day of his death his primacy in matters of finance was never questioned. But after his defiance ot Tryon in 1766 — an act performed ten years before the Decla- ration of Independence and seven years before the Boston Tea Party — Harnett became in an especial sense the leader of his people and the targfet of British malevo- lence and denunciation. Every State boasts its he- roes of the Stamp Act, but in all the examples of resist- ance to this oppressive act, I find no deed that equals Harnett's in its blend of courag^e, dig-nity, and orderli- ness. He and Tryon had looked each other in the eyes, and the eyes of the Eng-lishraanhad quailed. The year 1771 witnessed another crisis in North Caro- lina history, the uprising- of the Reg-ulators, culminating on the 16th of May in the Battle of Alamance. To one who stndies carefully the character of Harnett it occa- sions no surprise that he did not sympathize with the Regulators. He had neither the mind of a visionary nor the temper of an insurrectionist. He knew that the time was not ripe for measuring- swords with the armies of King- Georg-e. He saw clearly also that the Regula- tors were held tog-ether not by the cohesion of principle but merely by a common hatred of governmental ofi&cials and a determination to wreak veng-eance upon them. No man felt more keenly than Harnett the difference between libert}' and license. To his mind the Reg-ulators were playing- with fire; they were adopting- measures that were neither remedial nor palliative; they were jeop-. ardizing- the very existence of free institutions and con- stituted authority. Willing always to back his opinions by a generous ex- penditure of his means, Harnett contributed more money to the anti-Reg-ulator movement than any other citizen in the colony. At its first meeting after the Battle of Alamance the Assembly voted unanimously to reimburse Harnett, but refused to reimburse the Honorable Our Debt to Cornelius Harnett. 387 Samuel Cornell. The resolution reads as follows*: "This house cannot agree to the allowance proposed to be made to Honorable Samuel Cornell, Esq., thoug-h thoroug-hly convinced of his merit and activity in the late expedition. The allowance to Mr. Harnett was made not only because his services entitled him to the notice of this house, but in consideration of his not hav- ing- been in any of&ce or employment from which he could possibly derive any compensation for the great ex- pense he was at in that expedition." Harnett's attitude toward the Reg-ulators was not only approved by the Assembly, but was vindicated by the course of events. When the g-reat Revolution came, it proved to be in no sense an outg-rowth of the movement started by the Regulators. Most of the Reg-ulators were Tories during the whole of the Revolutionary War.f That there were good and patriotic men among- the Reg-ulators in 1771 no student of our history can doubt; that the Battle of Alamance served to turn the minds of thoug-htfulmen to the imminence of a final break with Eng-land is equally probable. Our debt, how- ever, to Harnett and the other far-sighted leaders of the time who rallied around him is none the less real. They proved to the world that the Revolution in North Caro- lina was to be led by men who knew as by instinct the difference between lawlessness and self-government, who had weig-hed the questions at issue in the scales of pure (*) Colonhil Rf cords IX, p. 205. (t) The Battle of Alamance aad the character of those who took part in it will doubtless be discnssed for centuries to come. See Professor John S. Bassett's article on The Regulators of North Caro- Jina in the Annual Report of the American Historical Association for 1894, p 211. Seealso Joseph M. Morehead's .Aa77tesi/u?'t<<;r( 1897), Haywood's Goverrtor Williaiu Tryon and his AdminiMration in the Province of North Carolina (1903), Waddell's A Colonial Officer and his Times (1890), and Mrs. McOorkle'sTFa.s Alamance the First Bat- tle of the Revolution f (in The North Carolina Booklet, November, 1903). 388 University Magazine. principle, and who ceased to be loyal to England only that tliey^ mig-lit pledg-e undying loyalty to the spirit of liberty. Men were still discussing the Battle of Alamance when in May, 1775, tlie news came to North Carolina of the Battle of Lexington. The times were ripe now and the whole province was read}^ for the impending conflict. Harnett heard the news on May 8. "For God's sake," he cried, "send the man on without the least delay and write to Mr. Marion to forw^ard it by day and night." During the same month Mecklenburg County draws up the first Declaration of Independence and inscribes the first date on the flag of North Carolina. On the 16th of July, Governor Josiah Martin begs his home gov- ernment to proscribe at least four North Carolinians*: "Hearing of a proclamation of the king, proscrib- ing John ?Iancock and Samuel Adams, of Massa- chusetts, I hold it my indispensable duty to mention to your lordship Cornelius Harnett, John Ashe, Rob- ert Howe, and Abner Nash as persons who have marked themselves out as proper persons for such dis- tinction in this colony by their unremitting labours to promote sedition and rebellion here from the beginnings of the discontents in America to this time; that they stand foremost among the patrons of revolt and anarchy." On the 18th of October, 1775, the first meeting of the new provincial council was held at Johnston court house. The council represented every district of the province, and no abler body of men had ever met in North Caro- lina. Bancrof tf, with apt phraseology, characterizes three of the leaders in the council, but adds: "On none of these three did the choice of president fall; that of&ce of peril and power was bestowed unanimously on Cornelius Har- nett, whose disinterested zeal had made him honored as the Samuel Adams of North Carolina." This council (*) Colonml Records X, p. 98. (t) History of the United States vol. VIII, p. 98. Our Debt to Cornelius Harnett. 389 was soon required to sit continuously. It was called the council of safety, and Harnett remained president and thus the chief executive of the province until a few months of the time when he was sent as a delegate to the Continental Cong-ress at Philadelphia. The year 1776 opened ominously for North Carolina. The Scotch Hig-h landers in the Lower Cape Fear section constituted an element of dang-er. They had raised the royalist standard and under General Donald McDonald, a \K^ hero of Cplloden, were eager to vindicate the confidence reposed in them by King- Georg-e. Should the Highland- ers win their first battle, North Carolina would not only be overrun by English troops but would be used as a ra- diating center from which devastating armies would march into the other Southern colonies. Harnett and his council were unremitting in their labors and seem to have had the situation well in hand from the start. With • such men as James Moore, Richard Caswell, Alexander Ivillington, John Ashe, and James Kenan as leaders of the colonial troops, Harnett waited impatiently but con- fidently for news of the first victory to be won by Amer- ican arms in a pitched battle of the Revolution. The official report of the battle was sent by Caswell to "Cor- nelius Harnett, President." It is hardly probable that Harnett or any of the council had anticipated so deci- sive and glorious a victory as was actually achieved. At Moore's Creek Bridge*, eighteen miles northwest of Wilmington, February 27, 1776, in a battle lasting but a few minutes, sixteen hundred Tories had been defeated by one thousand patriots, the power of the Highlanders had been forever broken, and the first stanza in the battle hymn of American free- dom had been written on North Carolina soil by the he- roes of the Lower Cape Fear. (*) See the interesting paper on The Bailie of Moore's C^reek Bridge by Professor M. 0. S. Noble in The North Carolina Booklet, March, 1904. 390 University Magazine. Moore's Creek was the Rubicon over which North Car- olina passed to independence and to constitutional self- g-overnment. As far back as April 26, 1774, William Hooper, of New Hanover County, in a strain of prophecy antedating- by a year the like anticipations of Wash- ing-ton and Jefferson, had written to James Iredell* that the colonies "are striding fast to independ- ence, and ere long will build an empire upon the ruins of Great Britain; will adopt its constitution purg-ed of its impurities, and from its defects will g-uard ag-ainst those evils which have wasted its vig-or." Fortunately the colonies were not destined to build an empire "upon the ruins of Great Britain"; but before the close of the year 1776 North Carolina, under the lead of her council, was to fulfill accuratel}^ all the other terms of Hooper's remarkable forecast. The date of the Battle of Moore's Creek Bridge is not inscribed upon the flag of North Carolina but it is re- lated to the second date on our flag, April 12, 1776, as cause to effect. Had there been no Battle of Moore's Creek Bridg-e or had the battle resulted in a defeat for the colonial troops. North Carolina could not so soon have proclaimed her independence. This initial victory of the Revolution, won by Caswell and Lilling-ton, kin- dled the fires of patriotism, broug-ht ten thousand eager soldiers into the field, sent Cornwallis and Clinton scur- rying- out of our borders, gave confidence to our leaders, nullified the threat of Hig-hlander and Reg-ulator, fused the state into a unit for independence, and thus made possible and inevitable the proudest date in North Caro- lina history. "North Carolina," says Bancroft!, "was the first colony to vote explicit sanction to independence." Frotliing-hamJ (*) See p. 38 of Dr. E. A. Alderman's eloquent Address on Wil- liam Hooper, delivered July 4, 1894, at the Guilford Battle Ground. (t) Hiatoiy of the United States, vol. VIII, p. 352. (i) Rise of the Republic of tne United Stales, p. 502. Our Debt io Cornelius Harnett. 391 phrases it more accuratel}-: "North CaroUna was the first colony to act as a unit in favor of independence." But the clearest account is g-iven by Henry William El- son.* "Up to April, 1776," says he, "all the talk of independence had been private talk. This showed the drift of popular feeling-, but something- more must be done to achieve it. North Carolina won the honor of being first to make- an official move. On the 12th of April that colony instructed its delegates in congress 'to concur with the delegates of the other colonies in de- claring independendence and forming foreig-n alliances.' This was a move of the g-reatest importance, and it was but a short time until Rhode Island and then Massachu- setts followed the example of their Southern sister. The fourth colony to pronounce for independence was Vir- g-inia, which went farther than the others by instructing its deleg-ates to propose independence to the Continen- tal Congress." In spite of these patent and admitted facts, Lecky says, in a workf still lauded and quoted as an authority on both sides of the Atlantic: "The Central and Southern Col- onies long hesitated to follow New England. Massa- chusetts had thrown herself with fierce energ-y into the conflict, and soon drew the other colonies in her wake." The monument that we unveil today is a monument not only to Harnett and the other heroes of the Lower Cape Fear, but to the truth of history and the duty of pre- serving and defending it. Harnett's share in the achievement of April 12 has been ignored even by the historians who concede most freely the significance of the date in American history. The convention met at Halifax on the 4th of April. On the 8th of April it was resolved]:, "That Mr. Harnett, Mr, Allen Jones, Mr. Burke, Mr. Nash, Mr. (•*) History of the United States of America, 1904, p. 853. (t) History of the Eighteenth Century, yoI. Ill, p. 386. (t) Colonial Records X, p. 504. 392 University Magazine. Kinchen, Mr. Thomas Person, and Mr. Thomas Jones be a select committee to take into consideration the usurpations and violences attempted and com- mitted by the King- and Parliament of Britain agaiust America, and the further measures to be taken for frustra- ting- the same, and for the better defence of this Province. " As chairman of this select committee Harnett -wrote the famous report, and on the 12th of April read it to the convention. It was immediately and unanimously adopted. In ringing sentences, not un-worthy of Burke or Pitt, the report set forth in a short preamble the usurpations of the British Ministry and "the moderation hitherto manifested by the United Colonies.'" Then came the declaration which to those who made it meant long years of desolating war, smoking homesteads, wndowed moth- ers, and fatherless children, but to us and our descend- ants a heritag-e of imperishable glory: "Resolved*, That the delegates for this Colony in the Continen- tal Congress be empowered to concur with the del- egates of the other Colonies in declaring Independ- ency, and forming foreign alliances, reserving- to this Colony the sole and exclusive right of forming a Constitution and laws for this Colony, and of appoint ing delegates from time to time (under the direction of a g-eneral representation thereof,) to meet the delegates of the other Colonies for such purposes as shall be here- after pointed out." Had Harnett done nothing else than write these words, the most memorable and far-reaching ever uttered in a state convention, he would have amply deserved the granite shaft which today we uncover to his memory. A few months later the little town of Halifax was to witness another historic scene, Harnett again being- the central figure. Late in Jul}^ the news had come that the example of North Carolina had been followed (*) Colonial Records X, p, 518. Our Debt to Cornelius Harnatt. 393 by all the other colonies, that on the 4th of July the Declaration of Independence, prepared by Thomas Jef- ferson, had been adopted and signed by all the delegates of the thirteen colonies. The council of safety for North Carolina immediately resolved* "That Tuesday, the first day of August next, be set apart for proclaiming the said Declaration at the Court House in the Town of Hal- ifax". It is needless to say that when August 1 came, no question was raised as to who should read the great document. There was one man and only one whose name in every hamlet in North Carolina stood as the supreme embodiment of independence. Hardly four months had passed since he had read his own immortal declaration, and the declaration which he was now to read was but the enactment by a Continental Congress of what he had proposed to a provincial congress. It is no wonder that when Harnett concluded the reading, "the soldiers bore him on their shoulders through the streets of the town, applauding him as their champion and swearing allegiance to the instrument he had readf". The year 1776 was to close with another memorable event which took place also at Halifax. This was the adoption on the 18th of December of the first constitu- tion for North Carolina. For more than a year, from October 18, 1775, to December 18, 1776, the colony had been governed by the council of safety with Cornelius Harnett as President. During all this time no charge was ever brought against any member of the council, no protest was made against any of their decisions, no rivalry or intrigue from within marred the force of their authority, and no faction or insurrection from without stayed the arm of their power. But the Continental Congress had urged the States to form constitutions, many of them had already complied, {*)L'olonial Records X, p. 688. (t) See Defence of the Revolutionary History of North Carolina (1834) by Joseph Sea well Jones, and Colonial Records X, p. 716. 394 University Magazine. and the council of safety for North Carolina had itself broached the question of a "temporary civil constitu- tion*" the day after the declaration of April 12. The convention at Halifax did its work so well that the con- stitution there formed continued in use without the slig-htest chang-e until 1835. Richard Caswell, a native of Maryland but one of the heroes of Moore's Creek Bridg-e, presided over the con- vention and became the first g-overnor of North Carolina under the new constitution. Harnett was vice-president of the convention and was chosen first councilor of state. What parts these two leaders took in the discus- sions of the convention it is impossible to say. Harnett's position as vice-president was doubtless designed to give him g-reater freedom of debate and thus to enable the convention to draw upon his unequaled stores of civic wisdom and political experience. Tradition maintains that Harnett caused the insertion of section XXXIVt: "That there shall be no Establish- ment of any one religious Church or Denomination in this State in Preference to any other, neither shall any person, on any pretence whatsoever, be compelled to attend any Place of worship contrary to his own faith and Judgment, or be oblig-ed to pay for the purchase of any Glebe, or the building of any House of Worship, or for the maintenance of any Minister or Ministry, con- trary to what he believes rig-ht, or has voluntarily and personally engaged to perform, but all persons shall be at Liberty to exercise their own mode of Worship." It may be remarked in this connection that the Bill of Religious Freedom, prepared by Jefferson for Virginia, did not pass until 1799, and that Jefferson justly con- sidered the authorship of this Bill worthy of commemo- ration on his tomb. The most difficult task before the constitutional con- (*) See t'olo7iial Records X, p. 516. (t) Colonial Records X, p. 1011. Our Debt to Cornelms Harnett. 395 vention was undoubtedlj^ that of defining- the powers of the g-overnor. North Carolina had suffered under her g-overnors, both proprietary and royal. She was in no mood now to make her chief executive a dictator, nor could she ig-nore the fact that the exig-encies of war demanded a strong directive power at the helm. Fortu- nately there is a bit of evidence that shows that Harnett did more than any one else to settle this complicated question. In a letter* written February 7, 1778, Gov- ernor Caswell complains that his powers are too limited, and adds incidentally that if any one is to blame for this state of things, that man is Cornelius Harnett. The new constitution was but a few months old when in April, 1777, Harnett was unanimously elected a dele- g-ate to the Continental Congress, which was then hold- ing- its session at York, twenty-two miles southeast of Pittsburg, and also at Philadelphia. The position of deleg-ate to the Continental Cong-ress was considered "the highest honor that a free state can bestow^f It had long- been a foreg-one conclusion that Harnett would be sent to the Continental Congress, and for this reason the constitutional convention at Halifax had not pre- sented his name for governor. His abilities, his servi- ces, his national renown alike demanded that he should sit in the same representative body with Samuel Adams of Massachusetts and Thomas Jefferson of Virginia, The opportunity came when William Hooper resigned his position as delegate. North Carolina's three dele- gates were then Cornelius Harnett, Thomas Burke, and John Penn.;}; Harnett's letters from the Continental Congress throw an interesting side light on his character. That he brought a truly national spirit to his new duties is shown by the sorrow and indignation with which he notes in (*) Stale. Records XIII , p. 31. (t) Stale. Records XI, p. 827. (t) State Records XI, p. 470. 396 University Magazine. one of his letters "the ridiculous jealousy between North and South*". He speaks of himself as an old man now and longs to be again in Wilmington. His mind was never more active but his body was tortured with the gout. He was inoculated on his way to Philadelphia and was thus unable to attend the first few meetings of the Congress held after his arrival. The universal dread of smallpox is indicated in a lettert that he wrote from Philadelphia, July 20, 1777, to his friend and business associate, William Wilkinson, Esq., of Wilmington : "I was inoculated at Port Tobacco and had the disorder very favorably. My arm continues very sore and in- flamed, indeed so bad that I cannot wear a coat, and has prevented my attending Congress, though I arrived here the 18th. Inclosed is a letter for Mrs. Harnett which I must beg the favor of you to have well smoked with brimstone, as she is very fearful of the smallpox. I put all my letters in the sun for an hour before I seal them, and am very certain the infection cannot be conveyed in a letter so far, but it is best to be cautious". The following letter| to Mr. Wilkinson carries its own brimstone. It is written from York, Pennsylvania, December 28, 1777: "Tell Mrs. Harnett (for I forgot to mention it to her) that two or three gallons of pickled oysters would be the greatest rarity she could send me. I have not tasted one since I left home — also a few dried fish of any kind, a dozen or two; even if they stank they would be pleasing. I am heartily tired of eating the flesh of four-footed animals. We can get very little else in this plentiful country that you have so often praised and even bragged of. Believe me it is the most inhospitable scandalous place I ever was in. If I once more can return to my f amil}^ all the devils in hell shall not separate us". (*) Hiale Records XI, p. 826. (t) State Records XI, p. 741. (t) State Records XI, p. 887. Our Debt to Cornelms Harnett. 397 To Governor Caswell he writes*, March 20, 1778, that he does not desire re-appointment but adds: "I think it is my duty to serve my country to the best of my poor abilities, either with or without pay". The extent of his financial sacrifices is touched upon in a letterf from Philadelphia to Thomas Burke, October 9, 1779: "I shall return indebted to my country at least 6000 pounds, and you know very well how we lived. Do not mention this complaint to any person. I am content to sit down with this loss and much more, if my country requires it". In the following urgent letter| to Thomas Burke, written December 16, 1777, the last that I shall quote, the characteristic determination and unshaken confidence of Harnett stand clearly revealed. His ruling- desire is that North Carolina may prove worthy of the respon- sibility laid upon her: "I beg you will inform me of the temper you find our Assembly in. Are they inclined to pursue spirited measures? For God's sake fill up your battalions, lay taxes, put a stop to the sordid and avaric- ious spirit which infected all ranks and conditions of men. All our foreign intelligence indicates that Kurope will soon be in a flame. Let us not depend upon this. If we have virtue, we certainly have power to work out our own salvation, I hope without fear and trembling". In the winter of 1780, having signed the Articles of Confederation in the summer of 1778, Harnett jour- neyed for the last time back to Wilmington. The trip was a severe one and Harnett's health, never very robust, was ill able to stand the strain to which it was now sub- jected. The tide of battle had turned southward and Harnett knew his danger. Every proclamation of Brit- ish amnesty had expressly excepted him from its provis- ions, and when at last Wilmington fell into the hands of the enemy, January 29, 1781, their every effort was bent (*) State Records XIII, p. 385. (+) State Records XIV, p. 348. (t) State Records XI, p. 696. 398 University Magazine. toward his capture, Harnett had with him a larg-e sum of money* for the purchase of clothing" and munitions of war for the North Carolina troops. This sum he man- ag-ed to convey beyond the reach of dang-er and would himself have escaped had not a paroxysm of gfout ren- dered him helpless. In Onslow County, thirty-two miles from Wilmington, at the home of his friend, Colonel Spicer, he was captured and carried at once to Wilming-- ton. His suffering-s were intense, but he is said to have declined the advice of physicians though grateful for their kind attentions. The end probably came on the 28th of April. A few hours before his death he wrote his will and dictated acouplet from Pope's Essay on Man to serve as his epitaph. If it be true that "The suuset of life gives us mystical lore And coming events cast their shadows before", let us believe that though he did not live to see the con- summation of his labors, there yet passed before his dying eyes the vision of a great and g-rateful common- wealth and that through the vista of the years he saw himself acclaimed as its foremost builder and its most illustrious martyr. III.- Harnett had been dead nearly fifty years when in 1825 a book was published in Boston entitled The Memoi?- of the Life of Josiah Quincy, Jiin., by his son Josiah Quincy. Jusiah Quincy, Jun., one of the foremost orators and patriotsf of Boston during- Revolutionary times, was ad- vised by his physicians in 1773 to make a sea voyag-e to Charleston, South Carolina, for his health. On his (*) See Notes by Archibald McLaine Hooper in University Maga- zine, vol. X, p. 234 (1861). (t) His best known work is his Ohservations^ mi the Act of Farlia- vient commonly caUed the Boston I'ort Bill (1774). Our Debt to Cornelius Harnett. 399 return trip he traveled throug-h North Carolina, Vir- g-inia, Maryland, Pennsylvania, and New York, making- notes in his diary of the most interesting persons and things that he saw. On the 30th of March, 1773, he visited Wilmington and made the following entr}'^ in his diary: "Dined with about twenty at Mr. William Hooper's — find him apparently in the Whig interest, — has taken their side in the House — is caressed by the Whigs, and is now passing his election through the influence of that party. Spent the night at Mr. Har- nett's, the Samuel Adams of North Carolina (except in point of fortnne*). Robert Howe, Esq., Harnett, and myself made the social triumvirate of the evening-. The plan of continental correspondence highly relished, much wished for, and resolved upon as proper to be pursued". When this comparison was made between Harnett and Adams, the latter was at the height of his fame, and such was Quincy's admiration for the New Englander that when dying- at sea (April 26, 1775) Quincy was heard to murmurf: "I have but one desire and one prayer, that I may live long enough to have an interview with Samuel Adams or Joseph Warren; that g-ranted, I shall die content". Though Quincy talked with the leading- men in all the colonies that he visited, he nowhere else likens any one to his beau-ideal, Samuel Adams. From 1825, when this tribute to Harnett was first made public, the recognition of his work has grown steadily until the present time. If it be true that in the career of Harnett can be traced the history of North Carolina during the Revolutionary period, it is no less true that in the growing- recognition of Harnett's servi- (*) Harnett was perhaps the richest man in North OaroHiia. Adams's circumstances were such that when he was sent as a dele- gate to the first Continental Congress in Philadelphia his friends presented him with a wig, hat, coat, anl pair of shoes that he might make a creditable appearance. See Hosmer's Samuel Adams p. 308. (t) Meinuir p. 345. 400 University Magazine, ces may be traced the deepening realization of our debt not only to him but to all of his co-workers. I shall mention, therefore, in chronological order the more note- worthy tributes to Harnett's memory, tributes that cul- minate today in the permanent memorial which we have just unveiled. In 1834 the Boston press of Charles Bowen published the Defence of the Revolutionary History of North Car- olina by Joseph Seawell Jones. In this work, which was widely circulated, Quincy's reference to his Wilmington visit was cited in full, and Harnett's services as presi- dent of the council of safety received a just appraisal. In 1844, in the Wilmington Chronicle for August 21, there appeared an appreciative memoir of Harnett which was reproduced in the Raleigh Register of August 30 and which gave Lossing the only material that he had for the sketch of Harnett in his famous Pictorial Field Book of the Revolution (volume II, 1852). In 1851 Dr. Calvin H. Wiley published in London, from the press of. Willoughby and Company, a novel* called The Adventures of Old Dan Tucker and his Son Walter: A Tale of North Carolina. It is a Revo- lutionary story and went through several editions, Har- nett figuring as one of the characters. "Here at all times," says Dr. Wiley, speaking of the Lower Cape Fear, "have lived some of the brightest ornaments of the State; and in the Revolution there were men who would have been giants anywhere. Cornelius Harnett, who was one of the guests of Col. Ashe, cut a distin- guished figure in the councils of North Carolina during the war of the Revolution. He was a gentleman of for- tune and education, fitted by nature and study to shine in any society; and yet, fond of retirement, modest and unceremonious, he was not conspicuous except in troub- lous times, and then he was the master-spirit". (*) The story was begun in Sartain's Union Magazine, Philadel- phia, March, 1849. Our Debt to Cornclitis Harnett. 401 During the same year the first volume of Wheeler's History of North Carolina called attention to the need of a biog-raphy of Harnett. "It is a matter of deep re- gret," says the author, "that more of the history of this distinguished man, whose life was offered up to his country, is not known. It is hoped that this feeble notice [it is full of errors] will excite some friend of the State to collect and collate the full biography of this worthy citizen. Last Session of our General Assembly a proposition was made to name a county Harnett". In 1854, however, the motion which, from ignorance of North Carolina history, failed to pass in 1851 was car- ried unanimously, and Harnett County, with the appro- priate name of Lillington for its county seat, marked the first recognition by the State at large of its indebt- edness to the hero of the Lower Cape Fear. The year 1855 witnessed a greatly increased interest in Harnett. The Wilmington Historical Society determ- ined to erect suitable monuments* not only to Harnett but to Lillington, Moore, and Howe — a determination which, however, was not carried out. Mr. Griffith McRee, of Wilmington, contributed to the Wilmington Daily Herald a eulogy of Harnett, which was copied in the April number of the University Magazine. The annual address before the literary societies of the Uni- versity was delivered, June 8, by the Hon. George Davis, of Wilmington, his topic being A Sketch of the Early Times and Men of the Loxver Cafe Fear. "There was one", said the speaker, "who shone like a star in the early troubles of the State, of pure and exalted charac- ter, of unsurpassed influence with his countrymen, and the value of whose services was only equalled by the extent of his sufferings and sacrifices in the cause of liberty. And yet so little is he known that I doubt not, gentlemen, many of you have not even so much as heard his name. I speak of Cornelius Harnett, the pride of (*) See Univfrsity Magazine vol. IV, p. 136, (1855). 402 University Magazine. the Cape Fear, the Samuel Adams of North Carolina". Extracts from this eloquent address were afterwards sent to all the public schools in the State to be used in the celebration of North Carolina day, December 18, 1903. In 1861 the Hon, David L. Swain, President of the University of North Carolina, published in the Univer- sity Magazine for February a study of The Life and Let- ters of Cornelius Harnett. In this article President Swain quotes liberally from the Hon. Georg-e Davis's address but adds little of his own. The article owes its chief value, however, to the part contributed by Archibald McLaine Hooper. His manuscript entitled Notes Relative to Cornelius Harnett had come into the possession of President Swain and was now published for the first time. As Hooper in his boyhood knew Har- nett, the Notes are of g-reat value, thoug-h some of the statements, especially in reg-ard to Harnett's religious beliefs*, must be accepted with reservation. (*) Utterly unwarranted inferences have been drawn from the couplet which Harnett asked to be placed on his tomb — "Slave to no sect, he took no private road, But looked through Nature up to Nature's God". (^.s.vay/ on Man, Epistle IV, lines 331-332. The whole passage, one of the most splendid in eighteenth century literature, is as follows: "See the sole bliss Heav'u could on all bestow! Which who but feels can taste, but thinks can know: Yet poor with fortune, and with learning blind, The bad must miss; the good, untaught, will find; Slave to no sect, who takes no private road. But looks through Nature up to Nature's God; Pursues that Chain which links th' immense design, Joins Heav'n and earth, and mortal and divine; Sees that no Being any bliss can know, But touches some above, and some below; Learns, from this union of the rising Whole, The first, last purpose of the hmnan soul; And knows, where Faith, Law, Morals, all began. All end in Love of God and Love of Man." Our Debt to Cornelius Harnett. 403 In 1872 Richard Frothing-ham, the New England his- torian and journalist, published his well-known Rise of the Republic of the United States. This work was based on a study of original sources and is quoted by histori- ans as the most authoritative treatment of its subject yet published. Frothingham, as we have seen, concedes the priority of North Carolina in voting for independ- ence and adds that among the North Carolina leaders "Harnett was the foremost actor in the movement for independence". On the 3rd of February, 1890, Colonel James G. Burr, of Wilmington, a man of antiquarian tastes and schol- arly attainments, delivered in the opera house of this city an address on The Old Churchyard of St. fajnes. This address was given wide circulation by being repub- lished in the James Sprunt Historical Monograph* No. 4 (1904). As Colonel Burr was born in Wilmington, in 1818, and had the privilege in his early years of con- versing with men who had known Harnett personally, his account of Harnett's capture is practically that of an eye-witness, and his estimate of Harnett's services may be said to reflect the opinions of many of Harnett's con- temporaries : "While lying sick at the house of a friend on the New Berne road he was captured b}^ a party sent out by Major Craig, the British Commandant of the town. His merciless captors compelled him to walk until he sank to the ground from utter exhaustion. Then they threw him like a sack of meal across the back of a horse and thus brought him into Wilmington. The effect of such treatment upon a system enfeebled by dis- ease could have no other than a fatal termination. He sank under it, and the old churchyard of St. James con- tains all that was mortal of the first scholar, statesman, and patriot of the age in which he lived." In 1903 Mr. R. D. W. Connor, Secretary of the North Carolina Historical Commission, contributed a series of (*) Issued by the press of the University of North Oaxoliaa. 404 University Magazine. articles on Harnett to the Charlotte Observer^. These articles bore further fruit in the sketches of Harnett which Mr. Connor published in The Biographical History of North Carolina (vol. U, 1905) and in The North Carolina Booklet for January, 1906. It was also in 1903 that Hon- orable Thomas E. Watson, of Georg-ia, published his Life and Times of Thomas Jefferson. In speaking- of the Declaration of Independence, written by Jefferson, Mr. Watson says: "Already Cornelius Harnett had led the way to Independence in North Carolina. The fact that North Carolina had given the first tap to the drum in the grand march of Independence was, indeed, long disputed; and the name of Cornelius Harnett was un- known to historians. He was serving as president of a Revolutionary government in October, 1775." Ten days ago Dr. John Lesslie Hall, of the College of William and Mary, published his Half-Hours in South- ern History\. In this book he speaks of Harnett as fol- lows: "Not all the heroes can serve on the field of battle. Among civic heroes and martyrs, Cornelius Harnett, called by Josiah Quincy 'the Samuel Adams of North Carolina', stands pre-eminent. He made his first repu- tation as an opponent of the Stamp Act; then he served on the Intercolonial Committee of Correspondence; sat in the Provincial Congress of North Carolina; was for a while acting-governor of the State; exerted great influence in inducing North Carolina to declare for inde- pendence; was branded by Sir Henry Clinton as a rebel beyond the pale of forgiveness. On July 25, 1776, after he had read the Declaration of Independence to a great throng at Halifax they bore him on their shoulders in (*) See issues of January 4 and 18, February 1 and 15, March 8, April 6, May 11, June 21 and 28, July 26, August 9 and 30, Septem- ber 13, October 25, November 22, aud December 10. (t) From the press of the B. F. Johnson Publishing Co., Rich- mond. Our Debt to Cornelius Harnett. 405 triumph throug-h the town. In the drafting- of the State Constitution in 1776, he became the father of religious liberty in North Carolina. He fearlessly dared the dun- g-eon and the scaffold. When the British captured the Cape Fear region, Harnett was thrown into prison, and died in captivity." IV. Though these tributes to Harnett show that he has not been forgotten, they show also that his name does not appear in the American Statesmen Series, the Amer- ican Men of Energ-y Series, the American Crises Biog-- raphies, or in any other series of historic lives. He is mentioned here and there by special investigators in Rev- olutionary history but his name is not to be found in the index to any recent history of the United States. That he deserves a place in United States history and in American biography is proved by the mere recital of what ke did. The omission is not due to Northern prejudice or insularity but to the fact that no North Carolinian has yet written a life of Harnett. It is not to our credit that the hope expressed by Wheeler more than a half century ago in the first volume of his History of North Carolina remains as yet unfulfilled. If the Rev- olutionary history of North Carolina is ever to be given its meed of recognition by American historians, that history must be woven about the lives of our Revolu- tionary heroes. Two weeks ago the last volume of the Colonial and State Records of North Carolina came from the press. These volumes have received the unstinted praise of every school of historians. North and South. The first duty that we now owe to Harnett is to see that his life is adequately written. He must be portrayed not merely as a North Carolinian but as an American, and documentary evidence must be cited rather than individual opinion. When this is done, Harnett will rank as one of the 406 University Magazine. national figures of the American Revolution, and the history of North Carolina will no longer seem an iso- lated fragment but an organic part of a larger whole. One other thought in conclusion: It is not the pains- taking biographer alone who contributes to history. The finer work of giving color, coherence, and vitality must come from the literary artist. Formal biographies and text-books of history can never carry as far as his- tory translated into literature. Samuel Adams is not more widel}^ known than Paul Revere. Marlborough said that he learned all of his English history from the dramas of Shakes] eare. The world knows Scottish his- tory not from Burton's learned volumes but from the pages of Walter Scott and Robert Burns. "And what for this frail world, were all That mortals do or suffer, Did no responsive harp, no pen, Memorial tribute offer?" The historian may galvanize the past, but the poet vitalizes it. Enshrine history in literature and you give it both currency and permanency. The most suggestive thought in Rostand's DAiglon is that expressed by an old soldier in speaking of his dead commander. Napoleon Bonaparte : "C'est main tenant qu'il fait ses plus belles conquetes: II n'a plus de soldats, maisil a les poetes. " In a recent address*, the Honorable Henry Sherman Boutell used the following striking words: "Poets make many of our national heroes; and Massachusetts, my native State, has furnished the nation with most of our Revolutionary heroes; not because North Carolina and the other States of the Old Thirteen had no heroes, but because Massachusetts had the poets." But Massachusetts did not always have the poets. When Rufus Choate in 1833 made his memorable appealt (*) Delivered at the University of North Oarolina, May 31, 1905. (t) See OU South Leaflets No. 110. Our Debt to Cornelius Harnett. 407 for the illustration of New Eng-land history by a series of poems and romances, the outlook was far from encour- ag-ing-. New England had then no distinctive literature; nor had a single poet or prose-writer touched with the wand of his genius any event or locality in New England history. But in less than ten years from the time of Mr. Choate's address Emerson had written his great Concord Hymn and Hawthorne his Twice-Told Tales. The movement was now on, and in rapid succession. Mosses fi'om an Old Manse, The Scarlet Letter., The House of the Seven Gables, The Courtship of Miles Standish, and Paul Revere's Ride completed a cycle that has done more to popularize the history of Massachusetts than all the historians from William Bradford to John Fiske. We hear much today of North Carolina's undeveloped resources, —of her hidden ores, her tumbling waters, and her unscarred forests. But greater than all these, more potent by far in their message to heart and brain, are the resources of a history rich in romantic appeal and resplendent in civic heroisms. These are the undevel- oped resources that are waiting to become a part of the spiritual heritage of every child born within our bor- ders. There may be listening to me today some man or woman, some boy or girl, whose heart Almighty God has dowered with "The light that never was, on sea or land, The consecration and the poet's dream", and who will yet transmute the base metal of our his- tory into the pure gold of poetry and romance. If my voice could reach into every home and schoolroom in North Carolina, I would say. There is no higher call than this, no opportunitj' for service more exalted and benefi- cent. When our history shall have been thus written, the heroes of the Lower Cape Fear will rise to a new immortality; they will have become a part of a nation's 408 University Magazine. song- and story; they will have joined the choir invisible "Of those immortal dead who live again In minds made better by their presence" ; and the monument which we unveil today will be a mon- ument not to the dead but to the ever living- and the ever loved.