250 Year Ago Today, June 10, 1775: Adams Calls for an Army, Congress Unites the Colonies, A Revolution Takes Shape On June 10, 1775, John Adams rose in the Second Continental Congress in Philadelphia and proposed that the New England militiamen besieging Boston be formally adopted into a Continental Army under centralized command. The decision would transform scattered colonial forces into the foundation of a unified war effort. After Lexington and Concord, militia units from multiple colonies converged on Boston but remained divided by separate commands, short enlistments, and locally controlled leadership. Adams pressed Congress to replace fragmented provincial authority with a single continental structure capable of sustaining war. Adams also understood that the conflict could not succeed if it remained a New England rebellion. To demonstrate continent-wide solidarity, he advocated appointing a commander-in-chief from outside New England. His choice was Virginia’s George Washington, a respected military veteran whose experience lent credibility to the cause. Washington had served during the French and Indian War and commanded the Virginia Regiment, giving him valuable military experience and colony-wide respect. Congress created the Continental Army on June 14, appointed Washington on June 15, and saw him accept on June 16. He declined a salary, requesting only expense reimbursement. Days later, colonial forces would face Britain at Bunker Hill. Delegate records show leaders balancing secrecy, logistics, and political unity while converting a regional uprising into coordinated resistance. The decision of June 10 did more than form an army, it unified thirteen colonies into a shared military cause and create one of the first institutions. Adams’s motion set a chain of events that placed Washington in command and built the force that would secure American independence. #History #USHistory #America #USA #RevolutionaryWar #Independence