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Royal Governor Francis Bernard and the Stamp Act

These are a series of posts that provide local insight into Ken Burns’ American Revolution series and ties to local history that the Mr. Local History Project has been covering.



Episode 1, titled “How Land, Taxes and Rebellion Sparked the American Revolution,” explores how British attempts to raise revenue after the French and Indian War sparked a chain of colonial resistance that set the stage for open rebellion. At the 33rd minute, Ken Burns shows how the Stamp Act became the spark that transformed quiet colonial frustration into open resistance. It was the very crisis that engulfed Royal Governor Francis Bernard, whose strict enforcement in Massachusetts made him the lightning rod of British authority in the years just before his flight back to England.

Royal Governor Francis Bernard and the Stamp Act

Sir Francis Bernard. From the original painting by Copley in the hall of Christ Church, Oxford
Sir Francis Bernard. From the original painting by Copley in the hall of Christ Church, Oxford

Long before he became a lightning rod in Boston, Royal Governor Francis Bernard had already shaped the map of northern Somerset County. When he arrived in New Jersey in 1758, he served as a steady, orderly administrator. In 1760, residents in the northern part of old Bernardston Township asked to form their own community. Bernard approved the separation, and in keeping with colonial custom, the new township honored him by adopting his name. That is how Bernards Township came to be, years before the colonies began their long march toward independence.

Later that same year, Bernard was reassigned to Massachusetts, stepping directly into one of the most contentious political climates in America. He arrived just as tensions over customs enforcement were rising. When the Stamp Act came along, Bernard supported it as a matter of imperial duty. He backed the appointment of stamp officers, prepared to enforce the law, and wrote regular reports to London describing the growing unrest in Boston. He believed he was doing his job. Bostonians believed he was feeding London the rope it would use to tighten control over them.

The protests of 1765 became riots. Bernard requested troops. As the political temperature rose, he became a symbol of everything the colonists feared about imperial power. When copies of his letters eventually reached Boston, they confirmed what patriots already suspected. Bernard was not neutral. He was on the side of Parliament.

Bernard Flees Back to England

By 1769, London had heard enough. Bernard was recalled to England, officially for consultation, but everyone understood the real purpose. His presence in Boston had become a spark rather than a solution. When Bernard returned to England, he discovered that the political world had cooled toward him. He expected praise for his loyalty, yet he found only skepticism and impatience. Parliament was weary of colonial turmoil and ready to move on without the embarrassment of a governor whose tenure had stirred more trouble than calm. Bernard received a pension but no new command. His days of holding power were over.

In London, he defended his actions through long written explanations and pamphlets, insisting he had only enforced the law as expected. But the influence he once enjoyed was gone. He would spend the rest of his life larngely in retirement, dividing his time between London and the countryside. He died in 1779, the same year the Pluckemin Artillery Park reached its peak, and long before the Revolution drew to a close.

When Bernard finally stepped aboard His Majesty’s Ship Rippon on the morning of August 1, 1769, he left Boston as one of the most disliked men in New England. The Rippon slipped out of King Road and headed east across the Atlantic. A little more than a month later, in early September, the vessel reached Portsmouth, and Bernard made his way into London soon after. But in Britain, the view of him was entirely different. The Crown saw him not as the lightning rod he had become in Boston but as a loyal servant who had endured years of unrest on behalf of the King. Within months of his return King George III rewarded him with a baronetcy, making him Sir Francis Bernard, First Baronet of Nettleham.

It is one of those twists history likes to serve up. The very same man who helped inflame colonial anger during the Stamp Act crisis returned home to applause and promotion. And yet his story circles back to us in a quiet way. It would be Sir Francis Bernard whose name eventually traveled to the open farmland of northern Somerset County, giving rise to what we now know as Bernards Township. A royal governor on one side of the ocean, a township namesake on the other. All of it woven into the larger thread that ties our local story to the imperial drama unfolding in the tense years before the Revolution.

What Happened to Bernard’s Family Back in the Colonies

Bernard’s family story took a far different path in America. Several of his children remained in Massachusetts even as anger toward their father grew. His sons, John, Thomas, William, and Scrope, lived through the entire revolutionary period in Boston. Despite their father’s Loyalist reputation, none of his children were arrested or exiled. In fact, most of them managed to remain socially connected, and some even prospered after the Revolution.

His son, Sir Thomas Bernard, eventually became a respected English reformer and philanthropist. Another son, Scrope Bernard, served in Parliament. The family never returned to New Jersey, but the Bernard name lived on both in England and here in the Somerset Hills, secured by the simple act of approving a township petition in 1760.

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