A delegation consisting of three members of…
May 1776 CE
The Continental Congress had assigned this delegation the tasks of assessing the situation in Quebec and attempting to sway public opinion to their cause.
This delegation, which included Benjamin Franklin, had been largely unsuccessful in its efforts, as relations were already significantly damaged.
The delegation had not brought any hard currency to alleviate debts to the population that are accumulating.
Efforts to turn the Catholic clergy to their cause fail, as the local priests point out that the Quebec Act passed by the British Parliament has given them what they had wanted.
Fleury Mesplet, the printer, while he had set up his press, did not have time to produce anything before events began to overtake the delegation.
Franklin and Carroll had left Montreal on May 11, following news that the American forces at Quebec City were in panicked retreat, to return to Philadelphia.
Samuel Chase and Charles Carroll, the other two delegates, analyze the military situation in the area south and east of Montreal, finding it a good place to set up a defense.
On May 27, they write a report to Congress on the situation, and leave for the south.