
![]()
Green Mountain Boys
.
Some of the settlers who had received grants of land
from Governor Wentworth, of New Hampshire, had crossed the Green Mountains and
occupied lands on the shores of Lake Champlain. Emigration flowed over the
mountains rapidly after the close of the FRENCH AND INDIAN WAR, and the present
State of Vermont was largely covered by Wentworth's grants. The authorities of
New York now proceeded to assert their claims to this territory under the
charter given to the Duke of York. Acting-Governor Colden issued a proclamation
to that effect, December 28, 1763, to which Wentworth replied by a
counter-proclamation. Then the matter, on Colden's application, was laid before
the King in council. A royal order was issued, March 13, 1764, which declared
the Connecticut River to be the eastern boundary of New York. The settlers did
not suppose this decision would affect the titles to their lands, and they had
no care about political jurisdiction. Land speculators caused the New York
authorities to assert further claims that were unjust and impolitic. On the
decision of able legal authority, they asserted the right of property in the
soil, and orders were issued for the survey and sale of farms on the "Grants" in
the possession of actual settlers, who had bought, paid for, and improved them.
The settlers, disposed to be quiet, loyal subjects of New York, were converted
into rebellious foes, determined and defiant.
A new and powerful opposition to the claims of New York was
created, composed of the sinews and muskets and determined wills of the people
of the "Grants," backed by New Hampshire, and, indeed, by all New England. New
York had left them no alternative but the degrading one of leaving or
repurchasing their possessions. The governor and council of New York summoned
the people of the "Grants" to appear before them at Albany, with their deeds and
other evidences of possession, within three months, failing in which it was
declared that the claims of all delinquents would be rejected. No attention was
paid to the summons. Meanwhile speculators had been purchasing from New York
large tracts of these estates, and were preparing to take possession. The
settlers sent an agent to England to lay their case before the King. He came
back in 1767 with an order for the governor of New York to abstain from issuing
any more patents for lands eastward of Lake Champlain. The order was not ex post
facto, and the New York patentees proceeded take possession of their purchased
lands. The settlers aroused for resistance, led by a brave and determined
commander from Connecticut,
ETHAN ALLEN. The men under
his command called themselves the "Green Mountain Boys"; and for some years the
New Hampshire Grants formed a theatre where all the elements of civil war,
excepting actual carnage, were in active exercise. In 1774 Governor Tryon, of
New York, issued a proclamation, ordering Ethan Allen, Seth Warner, and other
leaders of the Green Mountain Boys, to surrender themselves within thirty days,
or be subjected to the penalty of death. These leaders retorted by offering a
reward for the arrest of the attorney-general of New York. The war for
independence soon broke out and suspended the controversy. In that war the Green
Mountain Boys took a conspicuous part.