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The Trial of John Peter Zenger: An Account
By Doug Linder (2001)
No country values free expression more highly than does the United States, and
no case in American history stands as a greater landmark on the road to
protection for freedom of the press than the trial of a German immigrant printer
named John Peter Zenger. On August 5, 1735, twelve New York jurors, inspired
by the eloquence of the best lawyer of the period, Andrew Hamilton, ignored the
instructions of the Governor’s hand-picked judges and returned a verdict of “Not
Guilty” on the charge of publishing “seditious libels.” The Zenger trial is a
remarkable story of a divided Colony, the beginnings of a free press, and the
stubborn independence of American jurors.
Background
The man generally perceived to be the villain of the Zenger affair, William
Cosby, arrived in New York on August 7, 1731 to assume his post as Governor
for New York Province. Cosby quickly developed a reputation as “a rogue
governor.” It is almost impossible to find a positive adjective among the many
used by historians to describe the new governor : “spiteful,” “greedy,” “jealous,”
“quick-tempered,” “dull,” “unlettered,” and “haughty” are a sample of those that
have been applied.
Within a year after arriving on American shores, Cosby embroiled himself in a
controversy that would lead to Zenger’s trial and ultimate acquittal. The man
with whom Cosby chose to pick his first fight, Rip Van Dam, was the seventyone-year-old highly respected senior member of the New York provincial
council. Cosby demanded that Van Dam turn over half of the salary he had
earned while serving as acting governor of New York during the year between
Cosby’s appointment and his arrival in the colony. The hard-headed Van Dam
agreed–providing that Cosby would split with him half of the perquisites he
earned during the same time period. By Van Dam’s calculations, Cosby would
actually owe him money–over £4000.
Governor Cosby responded in August 1732 by filing suit for his share of Van
Dam’s salary. Knowing that he had no chance of prevailing in his case if the
decision were left to a jury, Cosby designated the provincial Supreme Court to sit
as a “Court of Exchequer” (without a jury) to hear his suit. Van Dam refused to
roll over, and had his lawyers challenge the legality of Cosby’s attempt to do an
end-run of the colony’s established jury system. The decision on the legality of
Cosby’s creation of the new court fell to the three members of the Supreme Court
itself, and in April 1733 it voted 2 to 1 to uphold Cosby’s action. Cosby wrote a
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letter to the dissenting judge, Chief Justice Lewis Morris, demanding that he
explain his vote. Morris did so, but to Cosby’s great displeasure, his explanation
appeared not in a private letter to the Governor, but in a pamphlet printed by
John Peter Zenger. Cosby “went ballistic,” removing Morris as Chief Justice and
replacing him with a staunch royalist, James Delancey.
Cosby’s action of firing Morris intensified the growing opposition to his
administration among some of the most powerful people in the colony. Rip Van
Dam, Lewis Morris, and an energetic attorney named James Alexander
organized what came to be known as the Popular Party, a political organization
that would constitute a serious challenge to Cosby’s ability to govern.
Cosby attempted to maintain his grip on power by employing Francis Harison–a
man called by historians Cosby’s “flatterer-in-chief” and “hatchetman”–to become
censor and effective editor of the only established New York newspaper, the New
York Gazette. Harison defended Cosby both in prose and strained verse, such as
this poem that appeared the Gazette’s January 7, 1734 issue:
Cosby the mild, the happy, good and great,
The strongest guard of our little state;
Let malcontents in crabbed language write,
And the D…h H….s belch, tho’ they cannot bite.
He unconcerned will let the wretches roar,
And govern just, as others did before.
James Alexander, often described as the “mastermind” of the opposition, decided
to take the unprecedented step of founding an independent political newspaper.
Alexander approached John Peter Zenger who, along with William Bradford, the
Gazette’s printer, was one of only two printers in the colony, with the idea of
publishing a weekly newspaper to be called the New York Weekly Journal. Zenger,
who had made a modest living the past six years printing mainly religious tracts,
agreed. In a letter to an old friend, Alexander revealed the Journal’s mission:
“Inclosed is also the first of a newspaper designed to be continued weekly,
chiefly to expose him [Cosby] and those ridiculous flatteries with which Mr.
Harison loads our other newspaper which our Governor claims and has the
privilege of suffering nothing to be in but what he and Mr. Harison approve of.”
On November 5, 1733, Zenger published the first issue of the Weekly Journal. The
issue included a detailed account of the victory the previous week of Lewis
Morris as Popular Party candidate for assemblyman from Westchester. Morris
won the election despite the best efforts of Cosby to rig the election against him
by having the sheriff disqualify Quaker voters (expected to be heavily proMorris) on the ground that the Quakers only “affirmed” rather than swore the
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oath required at the time of all voters. The election story, almost certainly
written by Alexander, included this description of the sheriff’s intervention:
[T]he sheriff was deaf to all that could be alleged on that [the Quaker] side; and
notwithstanding that he was told by both the late Chief Justice and James
Alexander, one of His Majesty’s Council and counsellor-at-law, and by one
William Smith, counsellor-at-law, that such a procedure [disqualifying the
Quakers for affirming rather than swearing] was contrary to law and a violent
attempt upon the liberties of the people, he still persisted in refusing the said
Quakers to vote….
No doubt to the surprise and disappointment of Cosby, Morris won the election
even without the Quakers’ votes. The Journal story told of Morris’s election
being celebrated with “a general fire of guns” from a merchant vessel and “loud
acclamations of the people as he walked the streets, conducted to the Black Horse
Tavern, where a handsome entertainment was prepared for him.”
Subsequent issues of the Journal, in addition to editorializing about other dubious
actions of the Governor, contained ringing defenses of the right to publish,
authored by Alexander, such as this offered in the second issue:
The loss of liberty in general would soon follow the suppression of the liberty of
the press; for it is an essential branch of liberty, so perhaps it is the best
preservative of the whole. Even a restraint of the press would have a fatal
influence. No nation ancient or modern has ever lost the liberty of freely
speaking, writing or publishing their sentiments, but forthwith lost their liberty
in general and became slaves.
Cosby put up with the Journal’s attacks for two months before deciding that it
must be shut down. The first effort to silence the Journal occurred in January
1734 when Chief Justice Delancey asked a Grand Jury to return indictments
based on the law of seditious libel. The Grand Jury, however, refused. Delancey
tried again when the next Grand Jury met in October. He presented the grand
jurors with broadsides and “scandalous” verse from Zenger’s Journal, but the
jurors, claiming that the authorship of the allegedly libelous material could not
be determined, again refused to return indictment.
Cosby responded to these frustrations by proclaiming a reward of fifty pounds
for the discovery of the authors of the libels and by issuing an order that Zenger’s
newspapers be publicly burned by “the common hangman.”
Then, in an effort to get around the Grand Jury’s refusal to indict, Cosby ordered
his attorney general, Richard Bradley, to file “an information” before Justices
Delancey and Philipse. Based on the information, the Justices issued a bench
warrant for the arrest of John Peter Zenger. On November 17, 1734, the sheriff
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arrested Zenger and took him to New York’s Old City Jail, where Zenger would
stay for the next eight months.
The Weekly Journal was not published the next day, November 18. It would be
the only issue missed in its publishing history. The next week, with the help of
Zenger’s wife, Anna, the Journal resumed publication with an issue that included
this “apology”:
As you last week were disappointed of my Journal, I think it incumbent on me to
publish my apology, which is this. On the Lord’s Day, the seventeenth, I was
arrested, taken and imprisoned in the common jail of this City by virtue of a
warrant from the Governor, the honorable Francis Harison, and others in the
Council (of which, God willing, you will have a copy); whereupon I was put
under such restraint that I had not the liberty of pen, ink or paper, or to see or
speak with people, until my complaint to the honorable Chief Justice at my
appearing before him upon my habeas corpus on the Wednesday following. He
discountenanced that proceeding, and therefore I have had since that time the
liberty of speaking thro’ the hole of the door to my wife and servants. By which I
doubt not you will think me sufficiently excused for not sending my last week’s
Journal, and hope for the future, by the liberty of speaking to my servants thro’
the hole of the door of my prison, to entertain you with my weekly Journal as
formerly.
The enormous bail of £800 set for Zenger turned into an important tactical
advantage for the imprisoned printer. As a result of his stream of “letters” from
prison, an outpouring of public sympathy for his cause developed.
The Trial
Zenger’s defense would fall to sixty-year-old Andrew Hamilton of Philadelphia,
perhaps the ablest and most eloquent attorney in the colonies–though that was
not the initial plan. James Alexander and William Smith initially undertook
Zenger’s defense, but both were disbarred in April 1735 by Chief Justice
Delancey when they audaciously objected to the two-man court (consisting of
Justice Delancey and Philipse) Cosby had hand-picked to try Zenger’s case.
Jury selection began on July 29, 1735, and once again Cosby attempted to
influence events by having his henchman, Francis Harison, produce a roll of
potential jurors that included forty-eight nonfreeholders, men presumed to be
sympathetic to the Governor, including former magistrates and persons in
Cosby’s employ. This departure from normal procedures was too much even for
Cosby’s handpicked judges who, sitting behind an ornate bench in their scarlet
robes and huge white wigs, rejected the ruse. Twelve jurors were quickly
selected.
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The trial opened on August 4 on the main floor of New York’s City Hall with
Attorney General Bradley’s reading of the information filed against Zenger.
Bradley told jurors that Zenger, “being a seditious person and a frequent printer
and publisher of false news and seditious libels” had “wickedly and maliciously”
devised to “traduce, scandalize, and vilify” Governor Cosby and his ministers.
Bradley said that “Libeling has always been discouraged as a thing that tends to
create differences among men, ill blood among the people, and oftentimes great
bloodshed between the party libeling and the party libeled.”
After a brief statement from John Chambers, Zenger’s court-appointed attorney,
Andrew Hamilton rose to announce that his client–sitting in an enclosed box in
the courtroom–would not contest having printed and published the allegedly
libelous materials contained in the Weekly Journal and that “therefore I shall
save Mr. Attorney the trouble of examining his witnesses to that point.”
Following Hamilton’s surprise announcement, the prosecution’s three witnesses
(Zenger’s journeyman associate and two of his sons) were sent home, and there
was a long silence. Finally, Bradley spoke: “As Mr. Hamilton has confessed the
printing and publishing of these libels, I think the Jury must find a verdict for the
king. For supposing they were true, the law says that are not the less libelous for
that. Nay, indeed the law says their being true is an aggravation of the crime.”
Bradley proceeded to offer a detailed and generally accurate account of the state
of law on seditious libel of the time, supporting his conclusion that the truth of a
libel is no defense.
Andrew Hamilton rose to argue that the law ought not to be interpreted to
prohibit “the just complaints of a number of men who suffer under a bad
administration.” He suggested that the Zenger case was of transcendent
importance:
From what Mr. Attorney has just now said, to wit, that this prosecution was
directed by the Governor and the Council, and from the extraordinary
appearance of people of all conditions, which I observe in Court upon this
occasion, I have reason to think that those in the administration have by this
prosecution something more in view, and that the people believe they have a
good deal more at stake, than I apprehended. Therefore, as it is become my duty
to be both plain and particular in this cause, I beg leave to bespeak the patience
of the Court.
Hamilton argued that the libel law of England ought not to be the libel law of
New York:
In England so great a regard and reverence is had to the judges that if any man
strikes another in Westminster Hall while the judges are sitting, he shall lose his
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right hand and forfeit his land and goods for so doing. Although the judges here
claim all the powers and authorities within this government that a Court of
King’s Bench has in England, yet I believe Mr. Attorney will scarcely say that
such a punishment could be legally inflicted on a man for committing such an
offense in the presence of the judges sitting in any court within the Province of
New York. The reason is obvious. A quarrel or riot in New York can not
possibly be attended with those dangerous consequences that it might in
Westminster Hall; nor, I hope, will it be alleged that any misbehavior to a
governor in The Plantations will, or ought to be, judged of or punished as a like
undutifulness would be to our sovereign. From all of which, I hope Mr. Attorney
will not think it proper to apply his law cases, to support the cause of his
governor, which have only been judged where the king’s safety or honor was
concerned….Numberless are the instances of this kind that might be given to
show that what is good law at one time and in one place is not so at another time
and in another place.
His arguments might have been well-received by jurors, but Hamilton had
almost no law to support his position that the truth should be a defense to the
charge of libel. Not surprisingly, Chief Justice Delancey ruled that Hamilton
could not present evidence of the truth of the statements contained in Zenger’s
Journal. “The law is clear that you cannot justify a libel,” Delancey announced.
“The jury may find that Zenger printed and published those papers, and leave to
the Court to judge whether they are libelous.”
In response to Delancey’s ruling, Hamilton revealed the true nature of the
defense strategy–jury nullification:
I know, may it please Your Honor, the jury may do so. But I do likewise know
that they may do otherwise. I know that they have the right beyond all dispute
to determine both the law and the fact; and where they do not doubt of the law,
they ought to do so. Leaving it to judgment of the court whether the words are
libelous or not in effect renders juries useless (to say no worse) in many cases.
But this I shall have occasion to speak to by and by.
Hamilton’s lengthy summation to the jury still stands as an eloquent defense not
just of a German-born printer, but of a free press:
It is natural, it is a privilege, I will go farther, it is a right, which all free men
claim, that they are entitled to complain when they are hurt. They have a right
publicly to remonstrate against the abuses of power in the strongest terms, to put
their neighbors upon their guard against the craft or open violence of men in
authority, and to assert with courage the sense they have of the blessings of
liberty, the value they put upon it, and their resolution at all hazards to preserve
it as one of the greatest blessings heaven can bestow….
The loss of liberty, to a generous mind, is worse than death. And yet we know
that there have been those in all ages who for the sake of preferment, or some
imaginary honor, have freely lent a helping hand to oppress, nay to destroy, their
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country…. This is what every man who values freedom ought to consider. He
should act by judgment and not by affection or self-interest; for where those
prevail, no ties of either country or kindred are regarded; as upon the other
hand, the man who loves his country prefers its liberty to all other
considerations, well knowing that without liberty life is a misery….
Power may justly be compared to a great river. While kept within its due
bounds it is both beautiful and useful. But when it overflows its banks, it is then
too impetuous to be stemmed; it bears down all before it, and brings destruction
and desolation wherever it comes. If, then, this is the nature of power, let us at
least do our duty, and like wise men who value freedom use our utmost care to
support liberty, the only bulwark against lawless power, which in all ages has
sacrificed to its wild lust and boundless ambition the blood of the best men that
ever lived….
I hope to be pardoned, Sir, for my zeal upon this occasion….While we pay all due
obedience to men in authority we ought at the same time to be upon our guard
against power wherever we apprehend that it may affect ourselves or our fellow
subjects….
You see that I labor under the weight of many years, and am bowed down with
great infirmities of body. Yet, old and weak as I am, I should think it my duty, if
required, to go to the utmost part of the land where my services could be of any
use in assisting to quench the flame of prosecutions upon informations, set on
foot by the government to deprive a people of the right of remonstrating and
complaining, too, of the arbitrary attempts of men in power….
But to conclude: The question before the Court and you, Gentlemen of the jury, is
not of small or private concern. It is not the cause of one poor printer, nor of
New York alone, which you are now trying. No! It may in its consequence affect
every free man that lives under a British government on the main of America. It
is the best cause. It is the cause of liberty. And I make no doubt but your upright
conduct this day will not only entitle you to the love and esteem of your fellow
citizens, but every man who prefers freedom to a life of slavery will bless and
honor you as men who have baffled the attempt of tyranny, and by an impartial
and uncorrupt verdict have laid a noble foundation for securing to ourselves, our
posterity, and our neighbors, that to which nature and the laws of our country
have given us a right to liberty of both exposing and opposing arbitrary power
(in these parts of the world at least) by speaking and writing truth.
Chief Justice Delancey seemed unsure how to react to Hamilton’s eloquence. He
instructed the jury that its duty under the law was clear. There were no facts for
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it to decide, and it was not to judge the law. Delancey all but ordered the jury to
return a verdict of “Guilty”:
The great pains Mr. Hamilton has taken to show how little regard juries are to
pay to the opinion of judges, and his insisting so much upon the conduct of some
judges in trials of this kind, is done no doubt with a design that you should take
but very little notice of what I might say upon this occasion. I shall therefore
only observe to you that as the facts or words in the information are confessed,
the only thing that can come in question before you is whether the words as set
forth in the information make a libel. And that is a matter of law, no doubt, and
which you may leave to the Court.
The jury withdrew to deliberate. A short time later, it returned. The clerk of the
court asked the jury foreman, Thomas Hunt, to state the verdict of the jury. “Not
guilty,” Hunt answered. There followed “three huzzas” and “shouts of joy” from
the crowd of spectators in the courtroom. Chief Justice Delancey demanded
order, even threatening spectators with arrest and imprisonment, but the
celebration continued unabated. Defeated, Delancey “left the courtroom to the
jubilant crowd.”
Trial Aftermath
Anti-administration supporters hosted a congratulatory dinner for Andrew
Hamilton at the Black Horse Tavern. The next day, on the start of his return trip
to Philadelphia, a “grand salute of cannon was fired in his honor.”
The Zenger trial established no new law with respect to seditious libel, but in
unmistakable terms it signaled the public’s opposition to such prosecutions.
Concern about likely jury nullification discouraged prosecutions, and press
freedom in America began to blossom. A half-century after the Zenger trial, as
members of the First Congress debated the proposed Bill of Rights, one of the
Constitution’s principal drafters and great-grandson of Lewis Morris, Gouvernor
Morris, would write of the Zenger case: “The trial of Zenger in 1735 was the germ
of American freedom, the morning star of that liberty which subsequently
revolutionized America.”
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