Tents, soap, shoes and blankets are also greatly wanting. The army recently took shipment of 50 crates of rifles, all without the flints required to shoot them!
Right after that, President John Hancock bangs his gavel and gravely intones the words condemning all present as rebels whose punishment will be death by hanging. Very dramatic. Presumably this is on November 13, 1775, although the record just dryly notes:
On motion made, Resolved, That a Committee be appointed to prepare a declaration, in answer to sundry illegal ministerial proclamations that have lately appeared in America.
No mention of flints (or soap, etc), but we'll come back to that. First, Congress crafted a reply on December 6, which includes this rhetorical question:
Can proclamations, according to the principles of reason and justice, and the constitution, go farther than the law?
250 years later, SCOTUS says, "no." So we've got that going for us, I guess. Anyway, back to the flints. Same day:
A return being laid before Congress of the number of flints in this city, amounting to upwards of 200,000,
On motion made, Resolved, That the committee of inspection of this city ∥and liberties of Philadelphia∥ be desired to purchase said flints for the use of the Continent, and that in making the purchase, attention be paid to the resolution of Congress against raising the price of goods.
It was a real issue that came up quite a bit, which brings us to July 4, 1776:
Resolved, That an application be made to the committee of safety of Pensylvania for a supply of flints for the troops at New York...
A Letter from General Washington, dated New York, July 3d, was laid before Congress, and read...
That letter?
I must entreat your attention to an application I made some time ago for flints. We are extremely deficient in this necessary article, and shall be greatly distressed if we cannot obtain a supply. Of lead we have a sufficient quantity for the whole campaign, taken off the houses here.
July 4 continues:
Resolved...That the Secret Committee be instructed to order the flints belonging to the continent, and now at Rhode Island, to be sent to the general at New York...
Resolved, That Mr. [Henry] Wisner be empowered to send a man, at the public expence, to Orange county, for a sample of flint stone...
Resolved, That the Board of War be empowered to employ such a number of persons, as they shall find necessary, to manufacture flints for the continent; and, for this purpose, to apply to the respective assemblies, conventions and councils, or committees of safety of the United American States, or committees of Inspection of the counties and towns thereunto belonging, for the names and places of abode of persons skilled in the manufactory aforesaid, and of the places, in their respective states, where the best flint stones are to be obtained, with samples of the same.
I focus on this to make a ponderous point: the Declaration wasn't the end of things (hell, it wasn't even the beginning). The unsexy details of securing our independence like procuring flints and soap and tents continued. In addition to those sundries, other larger matters also needed to be addressed. Jefferson recalled in the lead up to July 4:
[T]t was thought most prudent...to postpone the final decision to July 1. but that this might occasion as little delay as possible a committee was appointed to prepare a declaration of independence...Committees were also appointed at the same time to prepare a plan of confederation for the colonies, and to state the terms proper to be proposed for foreign alliance.
250 years ago, we didn't have a frame of government (Articles of Confederation, 1781) or necessary foreign alliances (France, 1778). There was still a lot of work to do. Which fact remains true today.
Selah.





