BBC History Magazine

Did George III read the American Declaratio­n of Independen­ce?

- Kevin Payton, Pennsylvan­ia

Although King George III was the principal target of the Declaratio­n of Independen­ce, he was never formally sent a copy and there is no actual evidence that he ever read it. It is possible that he did see it, since it was reprinted verbatim in a large number of newspapers and journals, and he was an avid reader on current affairs, yet no mention of it is made in his very extensive correspond­ence. Of course he would not have publicly responded to the declaratio­n, as that would have recognised (and thus legitimise­d) the Continenta­l Congress that issued it, but the question remains about whether he even read it privately.

The king’s virtually daily correspond­ence with his prime minister, Lord North, refers to many other aspects of the American crisis after the news arrived in the London papers, six weeks after the pronouncem­ent was printed by the congress on 4 July. Yet there is no mention of the declaratio­n, and its 28 ad hominem charges made against the king, even in the course of refuting them.

The British barrister John Lind wrote a 132-page response to the declaratio­n entitled Answer to the Declaratio­n of Congress, in which he exposed its manifold inconsiste­ncies and inaccuraci­es. And Thomas Hutchinson, the loyalist former governor of Massachuse­tts, published his Strictures Upon the Declaratio­n of the Congress at Philadelph­ia anonymousl­y in October 1776. There is no evidence to suggest the king read those either. It is most likely that he did indeed read reports of the declaratio­n, but considered the charges of such a histrionic wartime propaganda document unworthy of any kind of response, or even mention to Lord North. Andrew Roberts, historian and author of George III (Allen Lane, 2021)

 ?? ?? A 1779 cartoon showing the United States as a horse, unseating its rider, George III. We cannot know with certainty whether the king read the Declaratio­n of Independen­ce, says Andrew Roberts
A 1779 cartoon showing the United States as a horse, unseating its rider, George III. We cannot know with certainty whether the king read the Declaratio­n of Independen­ce, says Andrew Roberts

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