Johnson graduated from Yale College in 1743 (he would later serve as a member of the Yale Corporation) and became minister of the First Congregational Church of Lyme, CT (now Old Lyme) in 1746, succeeding Jonathan Parsons.[3][4] He subscribed to New Divinity theology.[4]
Johnson wrote his pamphlet, one of the first against the Stamp Act,[2] in 1765, during his 20th year as minister of Lyme's First Congregational Church.[9] Titled Some Important Observations, Occasioned by and Adapted to the Publick Fast, Ordered by Authority, it was delivered as a sermon on December 18, 1765.[10] In an oft-quoted passage, George Bancroft describes it as "a paper from the incomparable Stephen Johnson, of Lyme".[11]
Johnson's work is a "fiery article, designed to rouse the community to a sense of the public danger" from the Stamp Act.[12] Its substantive content was printed in two versions: once serially in a New London newspaper, and then in pamphlet form by a printer in Newport, Rhode Island.[9] Although the two versions make similar arguments, the newspaper version is cast in secular terms, whereas the pamphlet is styled as a sermon.[13] The newspaper version was published pseudonymously, like many 18th-century polemics, under the name of "Addison".[14]
Johnson's neighbor John McCurdy financed the dissemination of Johnson's works. The two were close, and often discussed their various grievances with the administration of Governor Thomas Fitch.[15]
His two other known other works include an election day sermon preached on May 10, 1770,[16][a] and a massive anti-Unitarian treatise.[4]
Sill, Edward Everett (1901). A Forgotten Connecticut Patriot. New Haven, Connecticut: Connecticut Society of the Order of the Founders and Patriots of America. This article incorporates text from this source, which is in the public domain.