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The
snake illustration was reprinted throughout the colonies. Dozens of
newspapers from Massachusetts to South Carolina ran Franklin's sketch
or some variation of it. Franklin's snake slithered its way into American
culture as an early symbol of a shared national identity.
American independence
The snake symbol came in
handy ten years later, when Americans were again uniting against a common
enemy.
In 1765 the common enemy
was the Stamp Act. The British decided that they needed more control
over the colonies, and more importantly, they needed more money from
the colonies. The Crown was loaded with debt from the French and Indian
War.
Colonel Isaac Barre, who
had fought in the French and Indian War, responded that the colonies
hadn't been planted by the care of the British government, they'd been
established by people fleeing it. And the British government hadn't
nourished the colonies, they'd flourished despite what the British government
did and didn't do.
In this speech, Barre referred
to the colonists as "sons of liberty."
In the following months and
years, as we know, the Sons of Liberty became increasingly resentful
of English interference. And as the tides of American public opinion
moved closer and closer to rebellion, Franklin's snake continued to
be used as symbol of American unity, and American independence. For
example, in 1774 Paul Revere added it to the masthead of The Massachusetts
Spy and showed the snake fighting a British dragon.
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Paul Revere's modified "Join or Die" snake from the masthead
of Thomas's Boston Journal, July 7, 1774. Newspaper Serial
and Government Publications Division, Library of Congress.
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By 1775, the snake symbol
wasn't just being printed in newspapers. It was appearing all over the
colonies: on uniform buttons, on paper money, and of course, on banners
and flags.
In the fall of 1775, the
British were occupying Boston and the young Continental Army was holed
up in Cambridge, woefully short on arms and ammunition. At the Battle
of Bunker Hill, Washington's troops had been so low on gunpowder that
they were ordered "not to fire until you see the whites of their
eyes."
In October, a merchant ship
called The Black Prince returned to Philadelphia from a voyage to England.
On board were private letters to the Second Continental Congress that
informed them that the British government was sending two ships to America
loaded with arms and gunpowder for the British troops.
Congress decided that General
Washington needed those arms more than the British. A plan was hatched
to capture the cargo ships. They authorized the creation of a Continental
Navy, starting with four ships. The frigate that carried the information
from England, the Black Prince, was one of the four. It was purchased,
converted to a man-of-war, and renamed the Alfred.
To accompany the Navy on
their first mission, Congress also authorized the mustering of five
companies of Marines. The Alfred and its sailors and marines went on
to achieve some of the most notable victories of the American Revolution.
But that's not the story we're interested in here.
What's particularly interesting
for us is that some of the Marines that enlisted that month in Philadelphia
were carrying drums painted yellow, emblazoned with a fierce rattlesnake,
coiled and ready to strike, with thirteen rattles, and sporting the
motto "Don't Tread On Me."
An American Guesser
In December 1775, "An
American Guesser" anonymously wrote to the Pennsylvania Journal:
"I observed on one
of the drums belonging to the marines now raising, there was painted
a Rattle-Snake, with this modest motto under it, 'Don't Tread On Me.'
As I know it is the custom to have some device on the arms of every
country, I supposed this may have been intended for the arms of America."
This anonymous writer, having
"nothing to do with public affairs" and "in order to
divert an idle hour," speculated on why a snake might be chosen
as a symbol for America.
First, it occurred to him
that "the Rattle-Snake is found in no other quarter of the world
besides America."
The rattlesnake also has
sharp eyes, and "may therefore be esteemed an emblem of vigilance."
Furthermore,
"She never begins an
attack, nor, when once engaged, ever surrenders: She is therefore an
emblem of magnanimity and true courage. ... she never wounds 'till she
has generously given notice, even to her enemy, and cautioned him against
the danger of treading on her."
Finally,
"I confess I was wholly
at a loss what to make of the rattles, 'till I went back and counted
them and found them just thirteen, exactly the number of the Colonies
united in America; and I recollected too that this was the only part
of the Snake which increased in numbers. ...
"'Tis curious and amazing
to observe how distinct and independent of each other the rattles of
this animal are, and yet how firmly they are united together, so as
never to be separated but by breaking them to pieces. One of those rattles
singly, is incapable of producing sound, but the ringing of thirteen
together, is sufficient to alarm the boldest man living."

Benjamin Franklin, portrait by David Martin, 1767. White House Historical
Association.
Many scholars now agree that
this "American Guesser" was Benjamin Franklin.
Franklin, of course, is also
known for opposing the use of an eagle -- "a bird of bad moral
character" -- as a national symbol.
Although Benjamin Franklin
helped create the American rattlesnake symbol, his name isn't generally
attached to the rattlesnake flag. The yellow "Don't Tread On Me"
standard is usually called a Gadsden flag, for Colonel Christopher Gadsden,
or less commonly, a Hopkins flag, for Commodore Esek Hopkins.
These two individuals were
mulling about Philadelphia at the same time, making important contributions
to American history and the history of the rattlesnake flag.
Christopher Gadsden was an
American patriot if ever there was one. He led Sons of Liberty in South
Carolina starting in 1765, and was later made a colonel in the Continental
Army. In 1775 he was in Philadelphia representing his home state in
the Continental Congress. He was also one of three members of the Marine
Committee who decided to outfit and man the Alfred and its sister ships.

Commodore Hopkins, portrait by C. Corbutt, 1776. Library of Congress,
Prints and Photographs Division.
Gadsden and Congress chose
a Rhode Island man, Esek Hopkins, as the commander-in-chief of the Navy.
The flag that Hopkins used as his personal standard on the Alfred is
the one we would now recognize. It's likely that John Paul Jones, as
the first lieutenant on the Alfred, ran it up the gaff.
It's generally accepted that
Hopkins' flag was presented to him by Christopher Gadsden, who felt
it was especially important for the commodore to have a distinctive
personal standard. Gadsden also presented a copy of this flag to his
state legislature in Charleston. This is recorded in the South Carolina
congressional journals:
"Col. Gadsden presented
to the Congress an elegant standard, such as is to be used by the commander
in chief of the American navy; being a yellow field, with a lively representation
of a rattle-snake in the middle, in the attitude of going to strike,
and these words underneath, "Don't Tread On Me!"
The Gadsden flag and other
rattlesnake flags were widely used during the American Revolution. There
was no standard American flag at the time, not even Betsy Ross's stars
and stripes.
Chris Whitten
FoundingFathers.info
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