Samuel Adams was a graduate of Harvard and was one of Boston’s founding Sons of Liberty. He
“… learned about more contemporary writers and philosophers such as John Locke and James Harrington. The events of the Glorious Revolution and the rise of Parliament had spawned a tidal wave of discussion about the relationship of power, liberty, government, and the right of revolution.
Adams nodded quick agreement with Locke's assertion that the goal of good government was to ensure men rights to life, liberty, and property.
While based on more secular concerns, Locke's concept of the covenant between government and citizens was parallel to Adams's own deep-seated commitment to the covenant of his ancestors …”
– from Samuel Adams : Radical Puritan by Dr. William M. Fowler Jr. (1997)
"... the first Irish to arrive in Boston were those from the northern part of the island - UlsterPresbyterians driven off their lands in the late 18th century, they came to America by the tens of thousands. They were not welcomed in Puritan Boston where the the great eminent Divine Cotton Mather proclaimed that "the arrival of these people is simply one more way by which the devil is attempting to unsettle us". Most of these Scots Irish as we have come to call them moved West beyond the Appalachians but some did come to Boston. Of those a number left and trekked north to establish the towns of Londonderry in New Hampshire and the coastal town of Belfast in Maine – names that echoed from the land from which they had come. But others remained here often in distressed conditions. To attend to their needs in 1737 a group of gentlemen merchants and "others of the Irish Nation residing in Boston" founded the Charitable Irish Society "for the relief of their Irish Brethren poor aged and infirmed persons and such as have been reduced produced by sickness shipwreck and other accidental misfortunes".




