Born: January 29 1737 in Thetford, England Died: 1809 in New Rochelle, New York Father: John Henry (1773 - ??) Mother: Sarah Winston (1709 - 1781) Married: Mary Lambert (? - 1760) in 1759
Elizabeth Ollive (?-?) on 3/26/1771
Children:
None
"These are the times that try men's souls."
This simple quotation from Thomas Paine's The Crisis
not only describes the beginnings of the American
Revolution, but also the life of Paine himself. Throughout
most of his life, he was a failure, living off the gratitude
and generosity of others, but his writings helped inspire a
nation. He communicated the ideas of the Revolution to
common farmers as easily as to intellectuals, creating prose
that stirred the hearts of the fledgling United States. He
had a grand vision for society: he was staunchly
anti-slavery, and he was one of the first to advocate a
world peace organization and social security for the poor
and elderly. But his radical views on religion would destroy
his success, and by the end of his life, only a handful of
people attended his funeral.
Thomas Paine 1737 - 1809
The radical propagandist and voice of the common man,
Thomas Paine, was born in Thetford in Norfolk on January 29, 1737. His
father, Joseph, was a poor Quaker corset maker who tried to provide his son
with an education at the local grammar school but eventually was forced to
apprentice him to his trade. Paine was unable to accept this occupation.
After a short time at sea, Paine returned to his trade in Kent, but then
served as an excise man in Lincolnshire, followed by a stint as a school
teacher in London, before he again settled down in 1768 as an excise officer
in Lewes in East Sussex. For the next six years he combined his duties as
excise officer with managing a small shop. His first wife had died in 1760,
within a year of their marriage. In 1771 he married again. Both marriages
were childless and neither brought Paine much in the way of happiness. He
was legally separated from his second wife in 1774, just as he was about to
embark for the American colonies.
At Lewes, Paine was active in local affairs, serving on the town
council and establishing a debating club at a local tavern. As a shopkeeper,
however, he was a failure. In April 1774, Paine was discharged from his
duties for having absented himself from his post without leave. He published
the pamphlet The Case of the Officers of Excise (London, 1772), and
had devoted too much time campaigning in London on behalf of the excise
officers. In London he met Benjamin Franklin who helped him to emigrate to
America in October 1774.
Paine settled in Philadelphia where he soon began a new career as a
journalist. He contributed articles to the Pennsylvania Magazine on
a wide range of topics. Thus on January 10, 1776, he published a short
pamphlet, Common Sense, which immediately established his
reputation as a revolutionary propagandist. Although he had only been in
America less than a year, Paine committed himself to the cause of American
independence. He attacked monarchical government and the alleged virtues of
the British constitution, opposing any reconciliation with Great Britain. He
also urged an immediate declaration of independence and the establishment of
a republican constitution.
Paine was convinced that the American Revolution was a crusade
for a superior political system and that America was ultimately
unconquerable. He did as much as any writer could to encourage resistance
and to inspire faith in the Continental Army. I essays published in the Pennsylvania
Journal under the heading "Crisis," Paine attacked the
faint-hearted, campaigned for a more efficient federal and state tax system
to meet the costs of war, and encouraged the belief that Britain would
eventually recognize American independence.
Often tactless, Paine provoked considerable controversy. He was
invariable hard-pressed for money and had to depend upon the generosity of
his American friends and the occasional reward from the French envoy in
America. When the War came to an end, his financial position was so
precarious that he had to campaign to obtain recompense from the government.
Congress eventually rewarded him $3000. Pennsylvania granted him £500 in
cash, while New York proved more generous and gave him a confiscated
Loyalist farm at New Rochelle.
After American independence had been won, Paine played no part in the
establishment of the new republic. Instead, he busied himself trying to
invent a smokeless candle and devising an iron bridge.
Restless because he was no longer at the center of affairs, Paine
left for Europe in 1787. For the next four years he divided his time between
Britain and France. Although he spent much of his time trying to find
financial support for his iron bridge, he eventually resumed work as a
revolutionary propagandist in the 1790s. Burke's resistance to the French
Revolution inspired Paine to write his most influential work, the Rights
of Man (Part I in 1791, Part II in 1792). In Part I, Paine urged
political rights for all men because of their natural equality in the sight
of God. All forms of hereditary government, including the British
constitution, were condemned because they were based on farce or force. Only
a democratic republic could be trusted to protect the equal political rights
of all men. Part II was even more radical for Paine argued for a whole
program of social legislation to deal with the shocking condition of the
poor. His popularity sounded the alarm and he was forced to leave Britain in
September 1792. He was condemned in his absence and declared an outlaw.
Paine immediately immersed himself in French affairs for the next ten
years although he still hoped to see a revolution in Britain. In his Letter
Addressed to the Addressers of the Late Proclamation (London, 1792), he
rejected the policy of appealing to parliament for reform and instead urged
British radicals to call a national convention to establish a republican
form of government.
In August 1792, Paine was made a French citizen and a month later was
elected to the National Convention. Since he did not speak French, and had
to have his speeches read for him, Paine did not make much of an impact on
the Convention. His association with the moderate republicans (Girondins)
made him suspect in the Jacobin camp. In January 1793, he alienated many
extremists by opposing the execution of Louis XVI. When military defeat
fanned Jacobinism into hysteria, he fell victim to the Terror. From December
28, 1793, until November 4, 1794, he was incarcerated in Luxembourg prison
until the intercession of the new American minister, James Monroe, secured
his release.
During his imprisonment, Paine embarked on his third influential
work, The Age of Reason (London and Boston, 1794-95). A deist
manifesto to the core, Paine acknowledged his debt to Newton and declared
that nature was the only form of divine revelation, for God had clearly
established a uniform, immutable and eternal order throughout creation.
Paine rejected Christianity, denied that the Bible was the revealed word of
God, condemned many of the Old Testament stories as immoral and claimed that
the Gospels were marred by discrepancies. There was nothing really that new
in Paine's argument, but the bitterness of his attack on the Christian
churches and his attempt to preach deism to the masses made him more enemies
than before.
After wearing out his welcome in Paris, Paine finally returned to
America in October 1802 and was well-received by Thomas Jefferson.
Increasingly neglected and ostracized, Paine's last years were marked by
poverty, poor health and alcoholism. When he died in New York on June 8,
1809, he was virtually an outcast. Since he could not be buried in
consecrated ground, he was laid to rest n a corner of his small farm in New
Rochelle.
Paine never established a political society or organization and was
not responsible for a single reforming measure. His achievements were all
with his pen so it is difficult to accurately assess his influence. Although
he spent more than ten years in France, he had very little influence on the
course of the French Revolution. He did not really understand the Revolution
and therefore had little impact on its intellectual foundations. Indeed, to
the Jacobins on the far left, Paine appeared as too moderate and
faint-hearted.
Paine's political influence was greatest in England. In intellectual
terms, his Rights of Man was his greatest political work and was
certainly the best-selling radical political tract in late 18th century
England. Before Paine, British radicals sought a reform of Parliament which
would grant to all men the vote for members of the House of Commons. In his Rights
of Man, Paine abandoned this approach and, rejecting the lessons of
history, maintained that each age had the right to establish a political
system which satisfied its needs. He rested his case on the moral basis of
the natural equality of men in the sight of God. Since government is a
necessary evil that men accepted as a means of protecting their natural
rights (cf. John Locke), the only legitimate government was that established
by a contract between all members of society and one in which all men
preserved all their natural rights, except the individual right to use
force. Paine argued rationally that all men had an equal claim to political
rights and that government must rest on the ultimate sovereignty of the
people.
Recommended readings: (Click on the link to purchase)
... Thomas Paine is one of our Nation's most misunderstood
Founders. 'The Rights of Man,' contrary to public
misunderstanding (usually by those who have not read it in
it's entirety), bears out that Paine in fact *did* believe
in a Divine entity, quoted directly from the Bible
throughout the Essay, and had a near-encyclopedic
understanding of the New Testament. His criticisms were of
organized religion and how *men* had used it to corrupt the
very idea of an afterlife and the ideas of faith. The
publication of "Common Sense," most forget, was
one of the most important causes of the American Revolution.
Often derided even in his own time, Paine reminds us that
those who speak ideas that cause painful debate are at the
heart of our Nation's Ideals.
Title: Age
of Reason || Author:
Thomas Paine || ISDN: 0-80650-549-4 || Released: November
1989
Thomas Paine's The Age of Reason is a work of
matchless clarity, boldness, and courage in an area the
author obviously feels passionate about. Some will of course
completely disagree with his opinions of the Christian
philosophy. This may be the reason why he was shunned
by most of the American populous after the American
Revolution. This is a necessary reading for those who
wish to examine the religious implications during the time.