Appendix VI

BRIEF BIOGRAPHIES OF LAWYERS ACTIVE IN BOSTON AT THE TIME OF QUINCY’S REPORTS

(With many thanks to my invaluable research assistants, Brandon Bigelow, James Dimas, Michael Hayden, Michael Morales, Thomas J. Murphy, and Brian Sheppard)

Based on the Memorandum of 1762 (Rec. 1762 Fol. 400), August Term, 2 Geo. 3, included by Samuel Quincy at Reports, 35, although not part of Quincy’s manuscript. The list was clearly arranged in order of “rank” or seniority at the bar.

With special reliance on and acknowledgment to J. L. Sibley and C. K. Shipton, Biographical Sketches of Graduates of Harvard University (Cambridge, Mass., 1951) (hereafter “Sibley”), vol. 8; and to Charles R. McKirdy’s excellent Appendix IV to “Massachusetts Lawyers on the Eve of the American Revolution: The State of the Profession,” Law in Colonial Massachusetts, supra, 339–358.

For a more extensive series of biographies, see the excellent “The Massachusetts Bench and Bar: A Biographical Register of John Adams’ Contemporaries,” a classic account prepared by L. Kinvin Wroth and Hiller B. Zobel at the beginning of Legal Papers of John Adams (L. Kinvin Wroth, Hiller B. Zobel, eds., Cambridge, Mass., 1965), vol. 1, xcv–cxiv.

THE “LIST”: “Having Been Called to Court to be Barristers at Law”

August Term 2 Geo. 3. [Reports, 35]

  1. 1. James Otis
  2. 2. Edmund Trowbridge*
  3. 3. Jeremy Gridley*
  4. 4. Richard Dana
  5. 5. Benjamin Kent*
  6. 6. Daniel Farnham
  7. 7. John Worthington
  8. 8. James Otis, Junr.*
  9. 9. James Putnam
  10. 10. Joseph Hawley
  11. 11. John Chipman
  12. 12. Oxenbridge Thacher*
  13. 13. Robert Auchmuty*
  14. 14. Sam’l White
  15. 15. James Hovey
  16. 16. Samuel Fitch*
  17. 17. Jonathan Sewall*
  18. 18. William Cushing
  19. 19. Robert Treat Paine*
  20. 20. William Pynchon
  21. 21. William Read
  22. 22. Samuel Swift*
  23. 23. Joseph Dudley
  24. 24. Benja: Gridley
  25. 25. Samuel Quincy*
  26. 26. John Adams*

“*” indicates: “[T]he following Gentlemen. . . . Appeared accordingly this Term in Barristers’ Habits,” i.e., actually appeared in court.

  1. 1. James Otis (1702–1778)

    (Biography included in the publications of the Colonial Society, Vol. 62, 348, Appendix IV). Self-taught lawyer; admitted to Superior Court in 1731, as a barrister in 1762. Practiced in Barnstable and Plymouth Counties. Appointed Justice of the Peace (1734) and Quorum (1748), Attorney General (1748), and Chief Justice of the Barnstable Inferior Court of Common Please and Judge of Probate Court (1764). Represented Barnstable in the General Court (1745–1756), Speaker (1760–1761), Councilor (1762–1774); negatived, 1767–1769. First Revolutionary Council (1775–1776).

  2. 2. Edmund Trowbridge* (1709–1793)

    (Biography included in the publications of the Colonial Society, Vol. 62, 355, Appendix IV). Raised by his uncle and guardian, Col. Edmund Goffe of Cambridge. Harvard: 1728. Admitted as an attorney to the Superior Court in 1732, as a barrister in 1762. Practiced in Cambridge where he was a Selectman. Represented Cambridge in the General Court (1750–1752, 1755, 1763) and member of the Council (1764–1766). Appointed Justice of the Peace and of the Quorum (1739), Attorney General (1749–1767), and Judge of the Superior Court (1767–1775).

  3. 3. Jeremy Gridley

    Jeremiah Gridley, the greatest New England lawyer of his generation, was born at Boston on March 10, 1701/2, a son of Captain Richard Gridley by his third wife, Rebecca. In 1746 he was appointed Justice of the Peace and Quorum for Suffolk County. Between 1748 and 1768 Brookline troubled to send a representative to the General Court only four times, and in these years (1755, 56, 57, and 67) it was Gridley who went. Gridley’s chief fame has rested upon an issue which involved the prosecution of the war. Successfully defended writs of assistance (general search warrants) against his old pupils, Otis and Thacher. Even Gridley’s support of the Crown in this matter did not make him unpopular. On March 25, 1767, he was appointed Attorney General of the province. Failing health stopped Gridley’s career just as his greatest opportunity opened. In June 1767, the Brookline town meeting was twice adjourned because he was too sick to act as moderator, and on the 24th the Masons dined without him. Three weeks later he was able to act as town moderator but “at Eleven of Clock” on the night of September 10 he died of “a rising of the lights,” as the church records put it. His funeral was described as the greatest show which Boston had ever seen. (Sibley, Harvard class of 1725 at 518–30).

  4. 4. Richard Dana

    Richard Dana, of Stamp Act riot fame, was born on June 26, 1700, son of Daniel and Naomi (Croswell) Dana, who lived in the part of old Cambridge which is now Brighton. For several years after graduation, Dana taught school at Malden and Roxbury. Settled in Marblehead. The General Court appointed him notary public for the ports of Marblehead and Salem for the years 1733–35, and in 1738 Marblehead sent him to the House. Appointed a Justice of the Peace and Quorum for Middlesex in 1745. Three years later removed to Boston and for the rest of his life lived in a rented house in the South End. In 1756 he was appointed a Justice of the Peace for Suffolk. His private practice was considerable. For many years served the town of Boston as a dispenser of gratis legal advice, overseer of the poor, and moderator of town meetings. Served on almost all of the important town committees. On December 17, 1765, Richard Dana, Justice of the King’s Peace, stood under a liberty tree, cooperating with a mob in coercing the province secretary, Andrew Oliver (A.B. 1724), into an agreement not to handle the stamps. In February 1772, he was practicing before the Superior Court, and in March he took a leading part in the town meeting, but on May 17 he died. Appeared to have nine children. (Sibley, Harvard class of 1718 at 236–39.)

  5. 5. Benjamin Kent* (1708–1788)

    (Biography included in the publications of the Colonial Society, Vol. 62, 345, Appendix IV.) Born in Charlestown, son of Joseph Kent. Harvard: 1727. Admitted as an attorney to the Superior Court circa 1739, as a barrister in 1762. Appointed Attorney General (1776) and served as Suffolk County Attorney General from 1777–1785.

  6. 6. Daniel Farnham (1719–1776)

    (Biography included in the publications of the Colonial Society, Vol. 62, 343, Appendix IV.) Born in York, Maine. Harvard: 1739. Studied law with Edmund Trowbridge. Admitted as an attorney of the Superior Court in 1745, as a barrister in 1762. Practiced in Newburyport, a town he helped to found. Appointed Attorney General of York County (1744) and a Justice of the Peace and Quorum in Essex County (1752).

  7. 7. John Worthington (1719–1800)

    (Biography included in the publications of the Colonial Society, Vol. 62, 357, Appendix IV.) Born in Springfield, the son of Lt. John Worthington. Yale: 1740. Studied law with Phinease Lyman of Suffield. Admitted to Hampshire Bar in 1744, as attorney to the Superior Court in 1749, as a barrister in 1762. Practiced in Springfield. Member of Council (1767–1768). King’s Attorney, colonel in the militia (1754), Justice of the Peace (1748) and Quorum. Declined to serve as Attorney General and Justice of the Superior Court.

  8. 8. James Otis, junr.* (1725–1783)

    (Biography included in the publications of the Colonial Society, Vol. 62, 348, Appendix IV.) Born in Barnstable, son of James Otis, Senior. Harvard: 1743. Studied law with Jeremiah Gridley. Admitted as Superior Court attorney in 1750, as a barrister in 1762. After 1749, practiced in Boston. Elected Speaker in 1766, but Governor disallowed. Appointed Justice of the Peace (1756) and Advocate General in Admiralty (c. 1756). Resigned as Advocate General (1761). Concluding years of his life clouded by mental illness. Killed by a bolt of lightning as he stood in his doorway watching a storm.

  9. 9. James Putnam (1726–1789)

    (Biography included in the publications of the Colonial Society, Vol. 62, 350, Appendix IV.) Born in Danvers, son of James Putnam. Harvard: 1746. Studied law with Edmund Trowbridge. Admitted to Worcester Bar (c. 1748), as an attorney to the Superior Court (1749), and as a barrister (1762). Practiced in Worcester. Appointed Lt. Col. In militia (1756) and a Justice of the Peace (1758) and Quorum (1762). Declined office of Attorney General (1768). Appointed Attorney General by Gage (1775). Proscribed in 1778. Appointed Senior Judge and Member of Council of New Brunswick (1784).

  10. 10. Joseph Hawley (1723–1788)

    (Biography included in the publications of the Colonial Society, Vol. 62, 344, Appendix IV.) Born in Northampton, son of Lt. Joseph Hawley. Yale: 1742. Studied law with Phineas Lyman of Suffield. Admitted as an attorney to the Superior Court in 1751, as a barrister in 1762. Practiced in Northampton. Appointed Justice of the Peace (1749) and of the Quorum (1762). A Major in the militia. Elected to Council in 1769. Declined to serve in Continental Congress in 1774. Elected to General Court (1775–1777). Refused to serve in State Senate because of religious test imposed.

  11. 11. John Chipman

    Lawyer of Marblehead, born October 23, 1722, eldest son of Reverend John (A.B. 1711) and Rebecca (Hale) Chipman of Beverly. His practice of law was extensive, although not very profitable, and his reputation was of the best. At the time of the Stamp Act he was chosen to the committee to instruct the Marblehead Representative. Chipman’s health had been poor for some time before he set out to attend the 1768 summer session of the Superior Court at Falmouth, now Portland, Maine. On July 1 the court was in session and he was standing before Chief Justice Lynde (A.B. 1718), when he was struck with an “Appoplectic Fit.” He died a few hours later. Apparently he had two sons. (Sibley, Harvard class of 1738 at 176–77.)

  12. 12. Oxenbridge Thacher*

    Boston lawyer, born December 29, 1719, in Boston, son of Oxenbridge (A.B. 1698) and Elizabeth, sister of Sir Charles Hobby and widow of Thomas Lillie. Tradition says that he did not serve the usual apprenticeship in the practice of law, but it is also said that he read with Jeremy Gridley (A.B. 1725). At first Thacher took divorce cases. John Adams (comparing him with James Otis) observed, “Thacher has not the same strength and elasticity; he is sensible but slow of conception and communication; he is queer and affected-he is not easy.” In 1745 elected constable. Elected Representative in 1763 (last of four), 1764 (first), 1765 (third). Died on July 9, 1765, his seat in the House passing to Sam Adams. (Harvard class of 1738 at 322–28). Thacher, described as “one of the eminent lawyers of the period,” was Josiah Quincy’s law tutor from 1763 to his death in July 1765. See Josiah Quincy, Memoirs of the Life of Josiah Quincy Junior (2d ed., Boston, 1874), 6–7.

  13. 13. Robert Auchmuty* (1723–1788)

    (Biography included in the publications of the Colonial Society, Vol. 62, 339, Appendix IV.) Born in Boston, son of Robert Auchmuty, Judge of the Admiralty. Admitted to Harvard (1746), but never matriculated. Probably studied law with his father. Admitted as an attorney to the Superior Court (1752), as a barrister (1762). Practiced in Boston. Advocate General in Admiralty (1762–1767), Judge of the Massachusetts Vice Admiralty Court (1767–1776), and a Justice of the Peace and Quorum (1769–1776). Proscribed in 1778.

  14. 14. Samuel White

    The Honorable Samuel White of Taunton was born on April 2, 1710, the youngest of eight children of Deacon Samuel and Ann (Bingley) White of Braintree. The only college man in the neighborhood . . . for twenty years he had no local rival in the practice of law. He won fame for the accuracy of his writs, and he was soon in a position to issue sharp instructions to the elder James Otis, whom he employed on occasion. He was appointed Justice of the Peace in 1744, and when the seat of Bristol County was moved to Taunton, he became King’s Attorney for the Court of General Sessions of the Peace. From 1749, went regularly to House of Representatives. Appointed to the Quorum of the Court of Common Pleas of Bristol County in 1756, and to the Superior Court, as a special justice, in 1758. With the emergence of political issues in 1764, he was returned to the House and immediately reelected Speaker. In the election of 1766 Speaker White was one of the Whigs elevated to the Council to replace Hutchinson and the other conservative leaders. He died on March 20, 1769, of a chronic “bilious Disorder.” He appears to have had six children. (Sibley, Harvard class of 1731 at 110–12).

  15. 15. James Hovey (1712–1781)

    (Biography included in the publications of the Colonial Society, Vol. 62, 345, Appendix IV.) Admitted as an attorney to the Superior Court in 1752, as a barrister in 1762. Practiced in Plymouth County. Appointed Justice of the Peace (1760) and of the Quorum (1764).

  16. 16. Samuel Fitch* (1724–1799)

    (Biography included in the publications of the Colonial Society, Vol. 62, 343, Appendix IV.) Born in Lebanon, CT, the son of Joseph Fitch, a substantial farmer. Yale: 1742. Admitted as an attorney to the Superior Court in 1754, as a barrister in 1762. Practiced in Boston. Appointed a Captain in the militia (1746), Justice of the Peace (1762), Advocate General pro tempore of the Admiralty (1768–1770), Advocate General of the Admiralty (1770–1776) and a Deputy Judge of Admiralty (1768). Proscribed in 1778.

  17. 17. Jonathan Sewall* (1729–1796)

    (Biography included in the publications of the Colonial Society, Vol. 62, 352, Appendix IV.) Born in Boston, son of Jonathan Sewall, a merchant. Harvard: 1748. Studied law with Judge Chambers Russell in Lincoln. Admitted as an attorney to the Superior Court in 1757, a barrister in 1762. Practiced in Charlestown. Appointed Justice of the Peace (1762); Solicitor General, Attorney General (1768), and Advocate General in Admiralty (1767); and Judge of the new District Vice Admiralty Court to sit at Halifax (1769). Proscribed in 1778. Practiced law in New Brunswick (1787–1796), the Halifax Admiralty Court having been abolished.

  18. 18. William Cushing (1732/3–1810)

    (Biography included in the publications of the Colonial Society, Vol. 62, 343, Appendix IV.) Born in Scituate, son of Justice John Cushing. Harvard: 1751. Studied law with Jeremiah Gridley. Admitted as an attorney to the Superior Court in 1758 and as a barrister in 1762. Practiced in Scituate (1755–1760) and in Powlnalborough (1760–1772). Appointed a Justice of the Peace and Quorum (1761), Judge of the Superior Court (1772). Appointed a Judge of the Superior Court (1772–1775; 1775–1777); Chief Justice, Supreme Judicial Court (1777–1789); Justice, Supreme Court of the United States (1789–1810).

  19. 19. Robert Treat Paine* (1731–1814)

    (Biography included in the publications of the Colonial Society, Vol. 62, 349, Appendix IV.) Born in Boston, the son of Thomas Paine. Harvard: 1749. Studied law with Benjamin Prat. Admitted to Suffolk Bar in 1757, as an attorney to the Superior Court in 1758, as a barrister in 1762. Practiced in Taunton and Boston. Appointed Justice of the Peace (1763); Speaker (1777–1778). Delegate to Continental Congress; signed the Declaration of Independence. Declined seat on Superior Court four times; State Attorney General (1777–90); Council (1775, 1780). Justice, Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court (1790–1804).

  20. 20. William Pynchon (1723–1789)

    (Biography included in the publications of the Colonial Society, Vol. 62, 350, Appendix IV.) Born in Springfield, son of Colonel William Pynchon. Harvard: 1743. Studied law with Mitchel Sewall, Clerk of Courts for Essex County. Admitted as an attorney to the Superior Court in 1757, as a barrister in 1762. Practiced in Salem. Appointed Justice of the Peace (1761). Law partnership with William Wetmore after the war. Appointed Justice of the Peace and Quorum (1786).

  21. 21. William Read (1710–1780)

    (Biography included in the publications of the Colonial Society, Vol. 62, 351, Appendix IV.) Son of John Read, the leading lawyer in Massachusetts in the first half of the 18th century. Probably studied law with his father. Admitted as an attorney to the Superior Court in 1759, as a barrister in 1762. Appointed Deputy Judge of the Vice Admiralty Court (1766), Judge of the Suffolk Inferior Court of Common Please (1770), and to the Superior Court (1775–declined).

  22. 22. Samuel Swift* (1715–1775)

    (Biography included in the publications of the Colonial Society, Vol. 62, 355, Appendix IV.) Born in Milton, son of wealthy Colonel Samuel Swift. Harvard: 1735. Studied law with Jeremiah Gridley. Admitted as an attorney to the Superior Court in 1761, as a barrister in 1762. Practiced in Boston. Appointed Justice of the Peace in 1741, but not reappointed in 1760 when George III took the throne. Alleged a manager of the Boston Tea Party. Member of radical Possy Club and leading Son of Liberty. Died while under arrest by the British in Boston.

  23. 23. Joseph Dudley (1732–1767)

    Boston lawyer, born in Roxbury on May 29, 1732, the second son of the Honorable William (A.B. 1704) and Elizabeth (Davenport) Dudley. Served as a Selectman of Roxbury. In 1761 he was appointed a Justice of the Peace, and the next year he was admitted attorney and barrister by the Superior Court. Dudley had apparently read law with Jeremy Gridley (A.B. 1725), who in 1765 took him into the Sodalitas Club. This connection also led to his marriage to Gridley’s daughter Abigail. On September 25, 1767, Dudley was carried off by a “lingering Indisposition.” He had no children. (Sibley, Harvard class of 1751 at 39–40).

  24. 24. Benjamin Gridley (1732–before 1800)

    (Biography included in the publications of the Colonial Society, Vol. 62, 344, Appendix IV.) Harvard: 1751. Admitted as an attorney and barrister to the Superior Court in 1762. Small practice in Boston. Appointed Justice of the Peace (1774) and Judge of the Court of Common Pleas (1775).

  25. 25. Samuel Quincy* (1734–1789)

    (Biography included in the publications of the Colonial Society, Vol. 62, 350, Appendix IV.) Born in Braintree, son of Josiah Quincy, brother of Josiah Quincy, Junior. Harvard: 1754. Studied law with Benjamin Prat. Admitted to Suffolk Bar in 1758, as an attorney to the Superior Court in 1761, as a barrister in 1762. Appointed Justice of the Peace and Soliciter General in 1771. Proscribed in 1778. Customs officer and successful barrister in Antigua and elsewhere in the West Indies (1779–1789).

  26. 26. John Adams* (1735–1826)

    (Biography included in the publications of the Colonial Society, Vol. 62, 339, Appendix IV.) Born in Braintree, son of John Adams, a farmer. Harvard: 1755. Studied law in Worcester with James Putnam. Admitted to Suffolk Bar in 1758; admitted barrister at Superior Court in 1762. Representative to General Court for Boston (1770); Council (1773–1774, but Governor negatived him both times). Elected Vice-President (1788, 1792) and President of the United States (1796).