10
Jan
1776
Thomas Paine Publishes "Common Sense"
Philadelphia, PA· day date
The Story
# Thomas Paine Publishes "Common Sense"
**Philadelphia, Pennsylvania — January 10, 1776**
By the winter of 1776, the American colonies found themselves in an agonizing state of contradiction. Blood had already been spilled at Lexington, Concord, and Bunker Hill. The Continental Army, under the command of George Washington, was engaged in an active siege of British-held Boston. And yet, a remarkable number of colonists — including many delegates sitting in the Continental Congress in Philadelphia — still clung to the hope of reconciliation with the British Crown. Independence was a word spoken in whispers, considered by many to be radical, dangerous, and even treasonous. The colonies needed something to break the psychological deadlock, to make the unthinkable not only thinkable but urgent. That something arrived on January 10, 1776, in the form of a forty-seven-page pamphlet titled "Common Sense."
Its author was Thomas Paine, a recently arrived English immigrant whose life before America had been marked largely by failure and hardship. A former corset maker, tax collector, and schoolteacher, Paine had come to Philadelphia in late 1774 carrying little more than a letter of introduction from Benjamin Franklin, whom he had met in London. Franklin recognized in Paine a sharp intellect and a gift for persuasion, and he encouraged the struggling Englishman to seek opportunity in the colonies. Paine found work as a journalist and editor, and as tensions between Britain and the colonies escalated, he turned his pen toward the most consequential argument of the age.
"Common Sense" was published anonymously in Philadelphia by the printer Robert Bell and sold for two shillings, a price accessible to working people. What set the pamphlet apart from the countless political tracts of the era was not merely its argument but the way that argument was made. Paine deliberately avoided the dense, legalistic prose favored by educated elites and instead wrote in plain, forceful language that ordinary colonists — farmers, tradesmen, shopkeepers — could read, understand, and feel in their bones. He did not merely argue against specific British policies or taxes; he attacked the very institution of monarchy itself, calling hereditary rule an absurdity and King George III a "royal brute." He made a sweeping moral case for republican government, insisting that a continent should not be governed by an island and that the cause of America was nothing less than the cause of all mankind.
The impact was immediate and extraordinary. The pamphlet sold an estimated 100,000 copies in its first three months alone, and over the course of the Revolutionary War, that figure may have reached 500,000 — numbers almost incomprehensible for a colonial population of roughly two and a half million. It was read aloud in taverns, churches, and town squares. It was passed from hand to hand until copies fell apart. General Washington himself had "Common Sense" read aloud to his troops to stiffen their resolve and clarify the purpose of their fight. Virtually overnight, the public conversation shifted. Where reconciliation with Britain had once seemed reasonable, even desirable, Paine's arguments made it appear naive and cowardly. Independence was no longer a radical proposition; it was, as the title promised, simply common sense.
The political consequences were profound. Delegates in the Continental Congress who had hesitated to push for a complete break with Britain now found that public opinion was surging ahead of them. "Common Sense" gave these leaders the political cover they needed to move toward formal separation. In the months that followed its publication, colony after colony instructed its delegates to vote for independence, a process that culminated in the Continental Congress's adoption of the Declaration of Independence on July 4, 1776 — a document that echoed many of the themes Paine had articulated six months earlier.
Thomas Paine was not a general, a diplomat, or an elected official. He held no formal authority and commanded no troops. Yet his contribution to the American Revolution was as decisive as any battlefield victory. "Common Sense" did what no military engagement could: it changed minds. It transformed a scattered, uncertain resistance into a unified movement with a clear and radical goal. It remains the most influential piece of political writing produced during the Revolution, a testament to the extraordinary power of words to reshape the course of history.