Coming to America, Dickinson College 1794-1815: Difference between revisions
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subject about which no questions are asked. The government is the government of the people, | subject about which no questions are asked. The government is the government of the people, | ||
and for the people." | and for the people." | ||
He became a citizen in 1795 and was admitted to the Northumberland bar. But Cooper's radical philosophical and political views did not meet with a warm reception in America, either. As a friend of Jefferson and an enthusiastic anti Federalist, he criticized the Sedition Act passed under John Adams' administration in the Northumberland Gazette, which he edited. This criticism led to Cooper being brought to trial in April 1800 under that very act. He was convicted, sentenced, and served six months in prison. On his release, the popular Cooper was elected the president judge for the district in the area of Northumberland in 1804. His radicalism, combined with his exacting and rigorous procedures, eventually alienated even his strongest supporters, and he was removed from the bench in April, 1811. After this, Cooper focused his energetic mind to the academic path he would follow for the rest of his days. | |||
Revision as of 21:40, 4 December 2007
America
Cooper first came to America in 1793 in order to find a suitable land for fellow dissentors-in-exile. He was accompanied by James Preiestly's son and together they concluded Northumberland Valley in Centeral Pennsylvania had fertile soil and an active political climate. In 1794, he returned to Northumberland with his family and Priestly's family to establish residency. They constructed a large, frame house that sat on the banks of the Susquehanna River.
-Cooper admired the American Government. He praised, "There is little fault to find with the Government of America, either in principle or in practice: we have very few taxes to pay, and these are of acknowledge neccessity, and moderate in amount: we have no animosities about religion, it is a subject about which no questions are asked. The government is the government of the people, and for the people."
He became a citizen in 1795 and was admitted to the Northumberland bar. But Cooper's radical philosophical and political views did not meet with a warm reception in America, either. As a friend of Jefferson and an enthusiastic anti Federalist, he criticized the Sedition Act passed under John Adams' administration in the Northumberland Gazette, which he edited. This criticism led to Cooper being brought to trial in April 1800 under that very act. He was convicted, sentenced, and served six months in prison. On his release, the popular Cooper was elected the president judge for the district in the area of Northumberland in 1804. His radicalism, combined with his exacting and rigorous procedures, eventually alienated even his strongest supporters, and he was removed from the bench in April, 1811. After this, Cooper focused his energetic mind to the academic path he would follow for the rest of his days.