The Final Confrontation on the Judges’ Salaries and the Death of Andrew Oliver

    1231. To Lord Dartmouth, 14 February 1774

    1232. To Lord Dartmouth, 17 February, 1774

    1233. To Jonathan Clarke, 19 February 1774

    1234. To Israel Williams, 23 February 1774

    1235. To Lord Dartmouth, 3 March 1774

    The news that the judges of the Superior Court would receive salaries paid by the crown had been a major irritant in Massachusetts politics since its first arrival in the fall of 1772. It had prompted the establishment of committees of correspondence by various Massachusetts towns, and fears that such a network would spread at the intercolonial level led to Hutchinson’s great debate with the General Court during the winter of 1773 over the supremacy of Parliament. Considerable uncertainty surrounded how the transition from provincial to crown salaries would actually be handled, but the issue lapsed temporarily during the furor over the Tea Act. Samuel Adams brought it forward once again soon after the General Court reconvened. The House demanded specific promises from each judge that he would refuse a royal salary. Edmund Trowbridge, always the most timid of the justices, was the first to give in, making it difficult for the others to hold out. Hutchinson’s brother-in-law Peter Oliver had always been loudest in his complaints about the insufficiency of compensation provided by the General Court, and as chief justice, his royal salary was nearly twice that of his associate justices. When Oliver’s bold statement that he would indeed accept the new salary was read in the House on 8 February, it almost seemed to invite a confrontation. As the General Court began to focus increasingly on removing Peter Oliver from the bench, his brother Andrew Oliver, the lieutenant governor, entered his final illness and died on 3 March. If Hutchinson went to England with no lieutenant governor in place, the Council acting as a commission would assume the governorship during his absence, which, for Hutchinson, was an unthinkable prospect.

    Peter Oliver, c. 1758. By John Singleton Copley. Hutchinson’s close relation, political ally, and friend, the chief justice of the Superior Court became the focus of patriot ire in the spring of 1774 when he refused to accept a lesser salary paid by the legislature instead of a greater one paid by the crown. Hutchinson moved to block an effort of the House of Representatives to impeach Oliver, but crowd action effectively prevented him from presiding at any further sessions of the court. Courtesy of the Oliver Family

    1231. To Lord Dartmouth

    Boston 14th February 1774

    No 41

    My Lord, I will cover, with this Letter, the Speech which I made to the two Houses and their respective answers. I shall make no reply. Reason, I am sure, will not be attended to. I therefore give them as little room for controversy as possible. In each of the answers they seem to court it.1

    The House of Representatives have, in a very extraordinary manner, demanded an explicit answer from the Judges of the Superior Court whether they would take such Salaries as should be granted by the General Assembly without receiving any Salary from the King for the same services, concluding with a menace if they did not comply. The Chief Justice gave his answer, that he not only had taken his Salary from the King for the last year & an half but thought it his duty to do the like for the time to come, and set forth at large his reasons for so doing. The other four have promised that so long as Grants shall be made to them by the Assembly they will receive them without taking the salaries, for the same time, from the Crown. One of them, who has been subject to nervous disorders for several years, acquainted the Speaker before the House met that he would comply.2 This laid the others under a great disadvantage, and they were afraid to make themselves the objects of popular resentment. The answers of the four Judges were voted satisfactory. That of the Chief Justice was committed, and upon a Report, which was accepted, the House directed the Secretary of the Province to deliver to me a paper addressed to the Governor and Council in which they remonstrate against the Chief Justice and demand or pray that he be removed from his place. I will inclose the copy of it.3 What proceedings His Majesty may think proper to be had in England I must submit. It will be to no purpose to take any further exception to it here than to decline a compliance with it, and this will be improved to inflame the minds of the people against the Governor, for if I lay it before the Council & they shall advise to a Removal & I refuse to consent they will call it a grievance; and if I do not lay it before the Council they will pretend I have deprived the Council of a constitutional right of judging in all cases of complaint against the Officers of the Government.

    As this proceeding against the Judges is a most explicit declaration against the just authority, as I conceive, of the King as well as the Parliament I thought it my duty to acquaint your Lordship with it by the first opportunity, and not to delay it to accompany the other business of the Session after it is ended.

    Before I have closed my Letter the Secretary brings me a Vote of the two Houses for adjourning the Superior Court which by Law is to be held at Boston to morrow, copy whereof will also be inclosed.4 To this vote I shall not assent. The friends of the Chief Justice who are anxious for his safety are endeavouring to prevent his attendance fearing a tumult which they think this declaration of the two Houses will tend to endanger, though the Governor refuses to consent to it. I purpose to send an answer to their Remonstrance to morrow copy whereof shall accompany this letter.5 I now consider my self as acting altogether a defensive part and avoiding my consent where I cannot justify it, destitute of any aid from any part of the legislative or executive powers of Government in maintaining order where the breach of it is caused or pretended by such Acts of Parliament or such exercise of His Majestys Authority as the People are taught by their leaders to call Grievances. I have the honour to be My Lord Your Lordship’s most humble & most obedient Servant,

    RC (National Archives UK, CO 5/763, ff. 57–58); at foot of letter, “Rt Honble. the Earl of Dartmouth”; docketed, “Boston 14th. February 1774 Governor Hutchinson (No. 41) Rx 5th. April.” AC (British Library, Eg. 2661, f. 9); at head of letter, “Brown”; at end of letter, “Ld Dartmouth”; primarily in TH Jr.’s hand. SC (National Archives UK, CO 5/769, ff. 53–56); docketed, “Boston 14th. February 1774. Governor Hutchinson. (No. 41) Rx 5th. April.”; at end of letter, “Inclosures. 1 Govr. Hutchinson’s Speech to the Council & House of Representatives, & their Answers. 2 Copy of a Requisition from the House of Representatives of Massachuset’s Bay to the Judges of the Superior Court. 3 Copy of a Remonstrance of the House of Representatives of Massachuset’s Bay against the Chief Justice. 4 Vote of the Council & House of Representatives of Massachuset’s Bay for adjourning the Superior Court, not consented to by the Gov. 5 Govr. Hutchinson’s Answer to the [Remonstrance] of the House of Representatives against the Chief Justice.” SC (Houghton Library, Sparks 10, 4:64); docketed, “Govr. Hutchinson to Lord D. [Secr. of Mass 1774] 5 apr. 1774 Recd.” (brackets in original) and “Govr. Hutchinson To Lord D. 5 apr. 1774 About the impeachment of the Ch. Justice.” Enclosures to RC: TH’s speech to the Massachusetts General Court, 26 January 1774 (National Archives UK, CO 5/763, ff. 59–61); Massachusetts Council to TH, 1 February 1774 (ff. 61–64); Massachusetts House of Representatives to TH, 5 February 1774 (ff. 65–66); Act passed by the General Court, 1 February 1774 (ff. 68–69); House to TH and Council, 11 February 1774 (ff. 70–71); Act passed by the General Court, 14 February 1774 (f. 72); TH to the House, 15 February 1774 (ff. 73–74).

    1232. To Lord Dartmouth

    Boston 17th. February 1774

    Private

    My Lord, The Letter, copy whereof I inclosed to your Lordship in a private letter of the 19th. of October, has been publickly read in the House of Representatives, together with several other Letters from the same person, the first or second day of the Session.1 The Speaker, having read one of them to the Secretary, in which the writer says that the terms of conciliation proposed in the Letter from the Council & House are so reasonable and moderate that he is encouraged to expect they will be complied with, I directed the Secretary to apply to the Speaker for a Copy, which he promised to give him but, after renewing the application, the Speaker informed him they were private Letters, though they were publickly read in the House and are now in the Possession of a Committee of the House appointed to take under consideration the State of the Province.2 By this Artifice a Correspondence is carried on, of a very bad tendency, secure against detection.

    The answers, both of the Council & House, are very exceptionable, malicious as well as illiberal. That of the Council, especially, discovers so much rancour against the present Governour and his immediate predecessor, such indecent reflections upon His Majesty’s Ministers of State &, obliquely, upon the King himself, that they cannot escape your Lordship’s observation.3 It is, really, the performance of one man only, the Council being, by so many changes made in it for seven or eight years, so modelled that no body is left to oppose the designs of the new modellers of Government with the least degree of spirit or, in most cases to say Nay to the proposals made by them.4

    But the proceedings against the Judges of the Superior Court are more alarming. Advantage was taken of the weak state of body, by which the mind was also affected, of one of the Judges and he was induced, in consequence of the Resolves of the last Session, to send a letter to the Speaker expressing his determination to comply with the demand of the House.5 Having carried this point with one, the others were afraid of increasing the rage of the people against them if they refused to comply with the renewed demand made upon them the present Session, and one of them assured me that he was constrain’d to a compliance, meerly because his person his wife and children and his property were at the mercy of the populace, from whom there was nothing which he had not to fear.6 I used every argument in my power to fortify him, but could not prevail, and none but the Chief Justice refused to comply. I proposed dissolving or proroguing the General Court, but that, as being done upon their account, it was supposed would bring the rage of the people upon them as much as their refusal if not more.

    The Chief Justice lives forty miles from the Town, and his friends, being much concerned for his safety, dissuaded him from coming to Court. One of the Judges is confined to his house by the Smallpox, the other, who is very infirm & who first complied, can give but little attendance, so that the business of the Court must be continued to the next Term.7 Indeed there is no prospect of any notice of the late extravagances in the Town of Boston, the Grand Jurors for that Town being persons who were among the principal promoters of the meetings which occasioned the destruction of the Tea, and were undoubtedly selected to prevent any prosecutions. I see no prospect of persuading the people who disapprove of these proceedings to support me in my opposition to them, unless they could be sure of protection. They all give one and the same answer. Matters they say are now carried to such a length that either order will be restored to the Government by the interposition of the authority in England, or we shall take it for granted they intend to yield to the demands of the leaders of the people here and suffer the independency they lay claim to, and as soon as we see, as we shall do in the Spring, which is the case, so we shall govern our selves; if the latter we must join with those from whom we have hitherto kept separate and submit to them on the best terms they will grant us.

    Despairing of success in any further attempts for His Majesty’s Service, I had determin’d to avail my self of the leave given me to go to England and was preparing for my passage with a view of being there before the middle of April, but, before it would have been possible for me to embark, the Lieutenant Governor had declined so much in his health that I was obliged to put a stop to the provision which was making for my accommodation on board a large Merchant Ship at Casco bay bound to Bristol, the Physicians pronouncing his case very hazardous from a bilious disorder. He was brought very low by the same disorder some years ago and in a short time recovered his former state of health,8 but the symptoms now are more threatning, and age, with the troubles he has met with, seems to have worn out his constitution. A short time, I think, must enable me to make a more certain judgment: If he recruits & returns to his former state of health, I intend, the first opportunity after that, to reassume my preparations, but if he should die, I shall be in doubt whether, notwithstanding my leave, His Majesty would approve of my leaving the Province until a Successor be appointed. I must therefore pray that there may be no suspension of your Lordship’s correspondence at a time when your directions may be very necessary and, if your Lordship shall think any thing proper to be communicated which it may be inconvenient to come into the hands of the Council and shall condescend to communicate it in a private letter, it will, in case of my absence, come to the hands of my son, who will either deliver it to the Lieutenant Governor, if living, or forward it to me as may be thought proper.

    I see no prospect, My Lord, of the Government of this Province being restored to its former state without the interposition of the authority in England. I rather think the Anarchy will continually increase until the whole Province is in confusion. I received intelligence a few days ago of Town meetings held in the County of Berkshire, adjoining to the Province of New York, to form combinations against the Payment of Lawyers & Sheriffs fees in Actions at law, because they thought the established fees by the Law of the Province were too high.9 Success in the opposition to the Supreme Power over the whole, leads the subjects of subordinate powers to conclude they may also shake off such subjection whensoever they are dissatisfied with them. The restoration and maintenance of this Supreme Power would, I conceive restore and maintain the subordinate Powers. Some persons, who pretend to be well acquainted with the designs of the Opposers of Government, are very sanguine that they have laid a regular plan and pursue it step by step and, they say, that, after the Acts of Parliament imposing Duties are all repealed, the Commissioners and the other Officers of the Customs shall be all removed and the Trade shall be free and open. This may be conjecture only. It is certain that some of them declare, upon Change, that no seizure shall be made of Teas from Holland, and I doubt whether we have any Custom house Officers who have fortitude enough to make any inquiry after them. But I question whether they have formed any other plan than, in general, as soon as they have carried one point to attempt another, and in a few years, they say, that, from the natural increase of the Colonies, they will be strong enough to cast off all subjection of every kind.

    This would be easily prevented, by the King’s taking or keeping possession of the Fortreses in every Colony, and keeping only one Ship of the Line in every Principal Seaport; but this has little or no tendency to maintain interior Order and the Servants of the Crown will, notwithstanding, be continually exposed to the resentment & rage of the people unless they join in or connive at their irregularities.

    The People, My Lord, in every Colony, more or less, have been made to believe that, by firmly adhering to their demands, they may obtain a compliance with every one of them; that the Colonies are so much in debt to the Merchants in England, & that they are so necessary to the Manufacturers there as will effectually prevent any measures which may tend to destroy or lessen the debt or lessen the consumption of the manufactures. In this Colony all this is openly asserted in the House of Representatives, for the sake of the people in the Gallery, and it is added, that, from Past success, a judgment may be made of future, but, if there was any room to doubt, yet they had now gone too far to stop and the best chance they had was by persevering & going the utmost length; and frequent hints are thrown out that, if they are not able by their Votes and Resolves, there is however virtue & valour enough in the People to effect all that is desired. All the present disorder in the Colonies is undoubtedly owing to neglect in suffering that sense of the Supreme Authority of Parliament, which seven years ago, in every Colony, it was thought Treason with force & violence to oppose, gradually to go off from the minds of the people until it is intirely lost.

    A conviction of this authority or a persuasion that, at all events, the Parliament will maintain it against all opposition, will restore order, but how this conviction or persuasion are to be effected I must humbly submit to your Lordship, as I must also the expedience of leaving to the subordinate Legislatures in the Colonies the raising monies by Taxes or Duties whenever it shall be thought fit that requisitions should be made from them, only I beg leave to suggest that it would greatly tend, if it is not absolutely necessary, to conciliate the affections of the Colonies to the Parent state.

    For the more safe Passage of this Letter I shall inclose it to a Gentleman who sailed from hence about a fortnight ago & desire him to wait on your Lordship with it. Being one of the Consignees of the East India Company, all of whom, I think, behaved with great firmness and propriety and are not yet suffered to appear in Town, he will be able to give your Lordship a very full account of that most criminal proceeding and of the principal Actors in it.10

    From a sense of my duty to the King I have represented, in a private letter to your Lordship, the general state of the Province, which I expected to have been able to do in a more particular & circumstantial manner in person. Although I have said nothing which is not too notorious to be denied, yet such prejudices have seized the minds of the people in general, that a representation of the most publick proceedings, if they are unwarrantable, is pronounced unkind or unfriendly and by one step more the person representing is declared an enemy to the Country. I am most respectfully My Lord Your Lordship’s faithful and most obedient humble servant,

    RC (Staffordshire Record Office, Dartmouth Collection, D(W)1778/I/ii/950); at foot of letter, “Rt Honble. the Earl of Dartmouth”; endorsed, “Govr. Hutchinson 17 Feby. 1774 Private.” AC (British Library, Eg. 2661, ff. 10–12); at head of letter, “Inclosed to Mr Clark by Brown”; primarily in TH Jr.’s hand.

    1233. To Jonathan Clarke

    Milton Boston 19th February 1774

    Dear Sir, Your father sent me a line from the Castle, the day after you sailed, wishing me to inclose to you the Letter to Lord Dartmouth which I talked of sending by you.1 This is the first opportunity I have had. It will be best to deliver it to his Lordship with your own hands. Perhaps he may make some remarks which may be of use to me. I have mentioned you in it, not meerly as a suffering Consignee but as capable of informing him of the whole process of that unfortunate Affair.

    You will see their malice, against your uncle the Chief Justice, in the paper of the 17th.2 Yesterday the House came in a Body, with a second Address to the same purpose, to which I have not yet given an Answer.3

    I am still in uncertainty. The Lieutenant Governor for three or four days has been rather better, but is very feeble. Upon Mr. Tyng’s writing to Falmouth Capt. Coulson was so polite as immediately to set about preparing and making alterations in his Ship for my reception, but I am obliged to suspend determining.4 If the Lieutenant Governor holds better & returns to his old state I embark. Whilst he continues in so hazardous a state I dare not do it, unless I should receive a positive order from the King. No packett nor any news from England since the 10th. or 15th. of November. I am &c.,

    AC (British Library, Eg. 2661, f. 12); at end of letter, “Mr. Clark”; in TH Jr.’s hand.

    1234. To Israel Williams

    Boston 23. Feb. 1774

    Dear Sir, I am unable to form any judgment my self, what will be the consequence of the proceedings of the present Rulers of the People. Its evident they do not look at consequences. I am told that one or more of them, says we must put off the boat though we know not where we shall land—anarchy is better than tyranny—and such like. There seems to be no regular plan of measures, only in general to distress the administration according to the present constitution, in every way they possibly can. Lawyers are for putting an end to the Laws—Divines to Religion and Moral Virtue—Merchants to Trade and every order of men are Felones dese.1

    I have no right to expect that extraordinary interposition, for one to chase a thousand, and I don’t know where to find another to join me to put ten thousand to flight,2 for every body gives way to every requisition except the Chief Justice, and they have forbidden him to appear at Court which I suppose will terrify him & answer their purpose for Boston & Charlestown Courts though I should hope the other parts of the province will not submit to such tyranny but will encourage his attendance.

    My voyage to England is caused by a despair of doing any service here and by a desire to be at a distance from the most malicious set of men that ever appeared at one time, in any Country though I am not conscious of any publick or personal Injury ever done to them. The Lieutenant Governors hazardous state delayes me and if he dies I dare not go until he has a Successor unless I have a positive order from the King for I am required by my present order, or rather allowed to go or stay at my discretion and I think I shall be charged with indiscretion in leaving the Government in the hands of the Council though they should be allowed to be the best men we have the favor of Government which has a head consisting of 28 parts being very unfit for such times as these.3

    A short time I think must effect an alteration in the Lieutenant Governor for better or worse. I am Sir Your most humble Servant,

    RC (Massachusetts Historical Society, Israel Williams Papers); at foot of letter, “Colo Williams”; endorsed, “[23 Feb?]y. 1774.”

    1235. To Lord Dartmouth

    Boston 3d. March 1774

    Separate

    My Lord, Hearing of a Vessel at Falmouth bound to England I hope to get this Letter on board, that by the first opportunity I may acquaint your Lordship that the Lieutenant Governor died the last night after a few weeks languishment. I dare not, without His Majestys express order, leave the Province until some person shall succeed, although it would, otherwise, as I conceive, have been for His Majesty’s Service as well as for my personal benefit. Whether it will be thought proper that a Successor shall come from England, or that any Gentleman belonging to the Province should be appointed, I am not able to judge. As soon as I can determine upon a fit person or persons within the Province I will take the liberty to acquaint your Lordship with my opinion. At present I am at a loss where to find a person, who would be willing to accept of the post, and who has sufficient knowledge of the Constitution, and sufficient firmness of mind to do the duty of his Station, if the command of the Province should devolve upon him. I have the honour to be My Lord Your Lordship’s most humble & most obedient Servant,

    RC (National Archives UK, CO 5/763, ff. 110–11); at foot of letter, “Right Honble. the Earl of Dartmouth”; docketed, “Boston 3d. March 1774 Governor Hutchinson (seperate) Rx 15th. April.” AC (British Library, Eg. 2661, f. 12); at head of letter, “Seperate” and “By S. Daviss Vessel to Lisbon & packet mercury”; at foot of letter, “Rt. Hon. Earl of Dartmouth”; in TH Jr.’s hand. SC (National Archives UK, CO 5/769, f. 57); docketed, “Boston 3d. March 1774. Governor Hutchinson. (Separate) Rx 15th. April.”