Page:Memoir, correspondence, and miscellanies, from the papers of Thomas Jefferson - Volume 1.djvu/116

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P.S. August 6th, 1822. Since the date of this letter, to wit, this day, August 6, ’22, I have received the new publication of the Secret Journals of Congress, wherein is stated a resolution of July 19th, 1776, that the Declaration passed on the 4th, be fairly en- grossed on parchment, and when engrossed, be signed by every member ; and another of August 2nd, that being engrossed and compared at the table, it was signed by the members ; that is to say, the copy engrossed on parchment (for durability) was signed by the members, after being compared at the table, with the ori- ginal one signed on paper as before stated. I add this P. S. tothe copy of my letter to Mr. Wells, to prevent confounding the signa- ture of the original with that of the copy engrossed on parchment.

[Note C.]

On the instructions gwen to the first delegation of Virginia to Congress, in August, 1774.

The Legislature of Virginia happened to be in session, in Wil- hamsburg, when news was received of the passage, by the British Parliament, of the Boston Port Bill, which was to take effect on the first day of June then ensuing. ‘The House of Burgesses, thereupon, passed a resolution, recommending to their fellow citi- zens, that that day should be set apart for fasting and prayer to the Supreme Being, imploring him to avert the calamities then threatening us, and to give us one heart and one mind to oppose every invasion of our liberties. ‘The next day, May the 20th, 1774, the Governor dissolved us. We immediately repaired to a room in the Raleigh tavern, about one hundred paces distant from the Capitol, formed ourselves into a meeting, Peyton Randolph in the chair, and came to resolutions, declaring, that an attack on one colony, to enforce arbitrary acts, ought to be considered as an at- tack on all, and to be opposed by the united wisdom of all. We, therefore, appointed a Committee of correspondence, to address letters to the Speakers of the several Houses of Representatives of the colonies, proposing the appointment of deputies from each, to meet annually in a General Congress, to deliberate on. their common interests, and on the measures to be pursued in common. The members then separated to their several homes, except those of the Committee, who met the next day, prepared letters ac- cording to instructions, and despatched them by messengers ex-