Date
5-1-2025
Department
College of Arts and Sciences
Degree
Doctor of Philosophy in History (PhD)
Chair
Carey M. Roberts
Keywords
James Otis, American Revolution
Disciplines
History
Recommended Citation
Holland, Gerald D., "Lightning Bolt of Liberty: The Legacy of James Otis and His Role as a Pre-Revolutionist" (2025). Doctoral Dissertations and Projects. 6851.
https://digitalcommons.liberty.edu/doctoral/6851
Abstract
The research conducted for this project has examined the life of James Otis and his role in the development of revolutionary thinking and as a revolutionary leader in Boston from 1761 to 1769. Due to Otis burning all his personal and professional papers on several different occasions, this project relies heavily on primary source material authored by Otis’s political supporters and political rivals, such as John Adams, Thomas Hutchinson, and Francis Bernard, and the multitude of essays found in the Boston Gazette and Boston-Evening Post. Through these primary sources and many others, the researcher and his audience can travel back to 1760s Boston and live vicariously within the revolutionary period that led to the Revolutionary War. To understand the role James Otis played in the revolutionary movement in Boston, this dissertation examines the importance of his formal and personal educational pursuits of ancient history and the writings of the Enlightenment. Both avenues of study were influential in the development of Otis’s arguments against the Writs of Assistance in 1761 and his continued advocacy for the American colonists right to the same inherent natural born rights as Englishmen as if they had been born in England itself. A vital component towards understanding, or misunderstanding Otis revolves around the instability of his mental state towards the latter part of the 1760s until his death in 1783. The instability of Otis’s mental faculties often led to discrepancies in his ability to differentiate between his loyalties to the king and Parliament. Early witness accounts recognized that despite his genius, Otis’s mental deficiencies afflicted the man whom John Adams would later credit with sparking the flame towards what became the American Revolution from maintaining control of his behaviors, emotions, political allegiances, and oratory. By the second half of the 1760s, the shifting of loyalties led to Otis slowly losing his leadership role within the Sons of Liberty and the Massachusetts House of Representatives where he was leader of the Popular Party. The end of the decade found Otis’s role as a revolutionary leader in Boston come to an untimely end when in September 1769 a head injury received during a coffee-house brawl exacerbated the decline of his mental state and relegated him to a mere figurehead of the revolutionary period. Cast away to recover and recuperate on the Massachusetts coast and in the countryside, Otis would live the remainder of his days nearly forgotten for his role in the early revolutionary period. Seeking to recover and defend their friend and brother, John Adams and Mercy Otis Warren led the effort to ensure Otis was remembered as one of many in the cast of characters who contributed to the American Revolution. As the revolutionary period generation faded from history, so did Otis as the only major single-scope biography detailing his influence in the revolutionary period was published in 1823. Several dual and triple biographies have since been published, placing Otis on the same stage as his constituents, however the need for a modern biography on this forgotten revolutionary is necessary.