The New Student's Reference Work/Otis, James
Otis, James, an American statesman and
orator, was born at West Barnstable, Mass.,
Feb. 5, 1725. He studied at Harvard and
at Boston, was admitted to the bar at
Plymouth in 1748, and moved to Boston
in 1750. In 1760, when advocate-general,
the revenue officers asked his aid in obtaining
search warrants from the superior
courts by which they could enter any man's
house in search of smuggled goods. Otis
considered this illegal and refused, resigning
his position and appearing on hbehalf of
the people. His speech on the subject
lasted five hours, and made a great impression,
John Adams saying of it afterwards:
“The child Independence was then and
there born.” He was elected to the assembly,
and was a delegate to the Stamp Act
congress, which met in New York the
same year; and a member of a committee of
that body to prepare an address to the
English house of commons. While in the
Massachusetts legislature, the governor
requested that a letter on relief from
taxation, sent to the other colonies, be taken
back by the legislature. Otis opposed the
governor's requisition in a speech called
by his opponents “the most treasonable
declaration ever uttered,” and carried the
house 92 to 17. He was severely beaten
by some revenue officers in Boston in 1769,
and lost his reason as a consequence of a
sword cut on his head. He published
several political pamphlets, The Rights of the
Colonies Asserted being the best known.
He was killed by lightning on May 23,
1783, while standing at the door of his
home at Andover, Mass. See Life by Tudor.