The New York Liberty Boys not only promoted radical, at times violent, opposition to the Stamp Act of 1765 in New York but also sent delegations to other cities to promote their ideas and methods. Radical and violent protests in many cities were a key factor in the repeal of the Stamp Act. The New York Liberty Boys sent a delegation to Connecticut in December 1765. The delegation encouraged Connecticut patriots to join the Stamp Act resistance, and if needed, to use violence. On December 25, 1765, the New York Liberty Boys made an alliance with Connecticut patriots to resist the Stamp Act. The New York and Connecticut Liberty Boys made military association in December 1765, and by which they pledged themselves to use armed force to prevent the execution of the Stamp Act. In October 1765, the New York Liberty Boys made an alliance with Baltimore, for colonial unity against the Stamp Act. The New York Liberty Boys made an alliance with New Haven Sons of Liberty, with
Joseph Allicocke leading the alliance.
Liberty Boys in other cities Other Liberty Boys groups formed at the same time in other cities in response to the Stamp Act of 1765, including: •
Annapolis, Maryland Liberty Boys with a Liberty Tree at
St. John's College as its meeting spot. Key leaders:
Samuel Chase and
William Paca. British stamp distributor, Zachariah Hood, had an effigy of him hanged in Annapolis. Due to the Liberty Boys' threats and the destruction of his business, Hood then escaped to New York. The New York Liberty Boys found him, and he resigned as stamp distributor on November 28, 1765. •
Charleston, South Carolina Liberty Boys key leader was
Christopher Gadsden.
Charleston Liberty Boys, boycott British goods, attacked tax collectors, and also tarred and feathered a few loyalists. The key meeting spot was at the
Charleston Liberty Tree. •
North Carolina Liberty Boys forced Stamp tax collector, William Houston Sr., to resign on November 16, 1765. Liberty Boys had hung an effigy of him and threatened him. William Dry was forced to give an oath that he would not enforce the Stamp Act. •
Newport, Rhode Island Liberty Boys attacked Stamp Distributor, Martin Howard. On August 27th an effigy of Howard was burned, later he was attacked and fled to a British warship. Howard's house was attacked. Howard resigned as Stamp Distributor on August 29. Newport stamp distributor Augustus Johnson was also threatened and resigned. •
Albany, New York Liberty Boys held a meeting on January 4, 1766. At the meeting, they sought to identify residents seeking positions as Stamp tax collectors. Albany Liberty Boys and a mob of 400 went to Van Schaack, a potential stamp collector, and destroyed his house. •
New Haven, Connecticut Liberty Boys, burned an effigy of Stamp tax collector Jared Ingersoll. Ingersoll was threatened by the Liberty Boys and a mob, and he resigned. Ingersoll became a patriot in the 1780s he served in the Continental Congress, and in 1787 as a delegate to the
Constitutional Convention. Stamp collector, Duncan Stewart, was forced to step down by the Liberty Boys. •
Williamsburg, Virginia,
George Mercer resigned as tax collector in October 1765, after Liberty Boys and an angry mob protested his appointment as royal Stamp Collector. Mercer returned to the safety of England. •
Boston Liberty Boys leaders were known as the "
Loyal Nine". They had decided that physical violence should be used to stop the use of the stamps. The Loyal Nine/Liberty Boys of Boston are best known and most quoted because of the
Boston Stamp Act riots,
Boston Massacre,
Powder Alarm,
Boston Tea Party,
Paul Revere's Ride, and the
Siege of Boston. The Loyal Nine protested the Stamp Act. A key meeting spot was the
Boston Liberty Tree. The Loyal Nine/Liberty Boys of Boston later emerged into the Sons of Liberty. The
Pillar of Liberty marker celabates the repeal of the Stamp Act. Stamp administer,
Andrew Oliver, had a effigy of him hanged Boston's Liberty Tree On August 14, 1765. Then the Loyal Nine and a crowd had his house and offices ransacked. He resigned his stamp commission on August 17. • By 1766, Liberty Boys in each of their cities were successfully forced almost all stamp collectors in the colonies to resign, leading to the repeal of the Stamp Act on March 18, 1766. ==New York King George III statue==