A Rebuke from Lord Dartmouth

    1102. From Lord Dartmouth, 10 April 1773

    Thomas Hutchinson never enjoyed as comfortable a relationship with Lord Dartmouth as he had with Lord Hillsborough, the previous secretary of state for the colonies. Hillsborough, Hutchinson believed, had encouraged him to engage with the constitutional arguments put forward by the Massachusetts House of Representatives, and early letters from Lord Dartmouth, Hutchinson thought, echoed this sentiment. Thus, Hutchinson entered into his “Great Controversy” with the General Court during the previous winter, thinking he was doing so with ministerial approval. Dartmouth had some misgivings about Hutchinson’s opening speech (see No. 1084, above), but when he read the next two rounds of the debate, he became truly alarmed at the ideological rift the messages revealed and ordered Hutchinson to “avoid any further Discussion upon those Questions, the Agitating of which has already produced such disagreeable Consequences.” When Hutchinson received this letter in mid-June, he knew he had gone too far and was chagrinned to have displeased his superiors.

    1102. From Lord Dartmouth

    Whitehall 10th: April 1773.

    No. 8

    Sir, I have received & laid before the King your Letters numbered 11, 12 & 13, the latter of which covers attested Copies of your Speech to the Council & House of Representatives, at the Meeting of the General Court on the 6th. of January, their Addresses to you in Answer to that Speech & your Speech to both Houses in reply.1

    After having in my former Letters so fully explained to you my Sentiments of those false Notions of Independence with which a desperate Faction has inflamed the Minds & influenced the Conduct of so considerable a Number of His Majesty’s Subjects in the Province of Massachuset’s Bay, you will readily conceive what I must have felt upon reading the Addresses of the Council & House of Representatives in Answer to your Speech, both of which are replete with Doctrines of the most dangerous Nature, and the latter of which does in direct terms question the Authority of Parliament to make Laws binding upon the Subjects of that province in any Case whatsoever.

    After so public an Avowal, in the representative Body of the People, of Doctrines subversive of every Principle of the Constitutional Dependence of the Colonies upon this Kingdom, it is in vain to hope that they will be induced by Argument and Persuasion to yield due Obedience to the Laws of Parliament, and to acquiesce in those Arrangements which the King, consulting the Welfare & the Happiness of His Subjects, has thought fit to adopt.

    The State therefore of the Colony in the several Matters to which your last Dispatches refer, does now require, and will have, immediate and serious Consideration; but as it will be impossible for me to bring that Consideration to a State of Maturity before the Sailing of the Packet, all that I have at present in command from the King is, to recommend to you to avoid any further Discussion whatever upon those Questions, the Agitating of which has already produced such disagreeable Consequences; by which means, it is hoped, that in the next General Court, that will probably meet very soon after you receive this Dispatch, the ordinary Business of the Province will be proceeded upon without Interruption; but if it should so happen that the new Council & House of Representatives, or either of them should tread in the Steps of their Predecessors and either in Addresses, Messages, or by Resolves draw into question the Authority of the Supreme Legislature, it is His Majesty’s Pleasure that, in that Case, you do not suffer the General Court to sit & proceed upon any Business until His Majesty’s further Pleasure be known, but either prorogue or dissolve it, as you shall think most expedient. I am &ca.,

    Dartmouth.

    SC (National Archives UK, CO 5/762, ff. 108–10); docketed, “Govr. Hutchinson.” SC (National Archives UK, CO 5/765, ff. 256–58); docketed, “Govr. Hutchinson (No. 8.).” SC (Staffordshire Record Office, Dartmouth Collection, D(W)1778/II/596); at head of letter, “Copy.”; at foot of letter, “Governor Hutchinson.”; docketed, “Copy of Letter from Lord Dartmouth to Governor Hutchinson dated Whitehall 10th April 1773.” SC (Houghton Library, Sparks 10, 4:29).