The Appointment of General Gage

    1254. From Lord Dartmouth, 9 April 1774

    1255. From Lord Dartmouth, 9 April 1774

    A month after Lord Dartmouth wrote outlining the ministry’s likely response to the Boston Tea Party, he informed Hutchinson that he would be relieved as governor by General Thomas Gage, who would soon be departing England for Boston. Gage’s appointment was assumed to be temporary, and Hutchinson would be free to resume the governorship if he chose. In a private letter, which accompanied the public one informing him of the change, Dartmouth praised Hutchinson’s conduct in such generous terms that there could be no possibility Hutchinson should regard his replacement as a rebuke.

    Thomas Gage, c. 1768. By John Singleton Copley. Hutchinson cooperated closely with General Gage in the latter’s capacity as commander in chief of British forces in North America. When Hutchinson was granted leave to go to England, Gage was appointed governor of Massachusetts as a temporary replacement. He arrived in Boston in May 1774 together with the news of the Coercive Acts. Courtesy of the Yale Center for British Art, Paul Mellon Collection, New Haven, Connecticut

    1254. From Lord Dartmouth

    Whitehall 9th. April 1774

    Sir, The King having thought fit, in consequence of your having obtained His Majesty’s Leave to come to England, to appoint Lieut General Gage to be Governor of His Province of Massachuset’s Bay, it is hoped he will embark in a few Days on board the Lively, in order to proceed to Boston, and as it is possible that you may not have left the Province before the Arrival of Captain Hall, to whom this Letter is intrusted, I am commanded by His Majesty to take this Opportunity to express to you His Majesty’s entire Approbation of your Conduct during the time of your Government, which has not only been without Reproach in every part of it, but in all respects such as eminently distinguishes you both as a faithful & able Servant of the Crown, and a true Friend to the Colony.

    Genl. Gage’s Continuance in the Government will most probably not be of long duration, and it is the King’s Intention that you should be reinstated in the Government of Massachuset’s Bay (in case it shall be agreeable to you) whenever his Services as Commander in-Chief shall be required in any other Station, in the mean time provision will be made that you shall not be a Loser by the Discontinuance of your Commission. I am &c,

    Dartmouth

    SC (National Archives UK, CO 5/765, f. 297); docketed, “Govr. Hutchinson.” SC (National Archives UK, CO 5/763, ff. 75–76); docketed, “Governor Hutchinson.” SC (Houghton Library, Sparks 43, 1:179); docketed, “Lord Dartmouth to Govr: Hutchinson.”

    1255. From Lord Dartmouth

    London, April 9, 1774.

    Sir, I have this day received, from the hands of Mr. Clarke, your private letter of the 17th of February.1 After what has been said in the public letter that accompanies this, and in a private letter which you will receive at the same time from Mr. Pownall,2 it is impossible you can have any doubt of the light in which your conduct on the late trying occasions is seen by the king and his servants. I cannot, however, content myself without repeating to you what cannot fail to give you the strongest consolation and satisfaction, that it is His Majesty’s royal intention to testify his gracious approbation of your services to all mankind by an early mark of his favor. This expectation will contribute much to alleviate the anxiety of your mind, and to support you under any difficulties you may have yet to encounter; but you will allow me to say that, to a mind like yours, there are secret sources of tranquillity that are superior to such great and encouraging considerations. The conscious sense which you possess of an upright and uniform regard to the duty of your situation, joined to a dispassionate and real concern for the welfare of the people over whom you preside, which equally appear throughout the correspondence that I have had with you, do, at this moment, if I am not deceived in my opinion of you, supply you with that steadiness and fortitude which discover themselves in your firm and temperate conduct, and which, under such support, it is not in the power of the most unreasonable prejudice, or even of the most inveterate malice, to shake or intimidate. I perceive with the utmost concern, from the state of the province which you have set before me, that there is no room to hope for the restoration of order and regular government till the sentiments of those who see the necessity of a due acknowledgment of the authority of the supreme power of the whole empire, and the absurdity of a contrary doctrine, shall become the prevailing and ruling principle of the province. If those wise and temperate men shall have the good fortune to be able to undeceive the deluded multitude, and to bring them to a more just and sober way of thinking, I have no doubt that steps might immediately be taken that would gradually lead, not only to the re-establishment of the public tranquillity of the province, but also to the entire satisfaction of the minds of all reasonable men within it; and I, for my own private part, so entirely agree with you in the propriety of gratifying them in those points which you have marked out, and in others where it might be done without prejudice to the authority of this country, that I cannot but persuade myself that, after proper evidence of such return to a just sense of their duty, Parliament would be as ready to show them the indulgence of a reconciled and tender parent, as it is now determined to require the obedience it has a right to expect from an obstinate and refractory child. I am, sir, your most obedient, humble servant,

    Dartmouth.

    MS not found. Printed: MHS Procs., 13 (1873–1875): 175–76.

    1256. To Israel Williams

    Boston 12th April 1774

    Dear Sir, If the Lieutenant Governor had lived I should undoubtedly have left the Province before this time. I dare not leave it until a Successor be appointed. Whether one will come from England, or be pitched upon here is uncertain. I rather think the former. I am as much at a loss what expedient they will find to reduce us to order. You think they may easily do it. Until that power which first caused the light to shine out of darkness shall change the hearts of the Council & House of Representatives, it will be a very difficult thing. But it must be done. I have received no letter since they had an account of our proceedings about the Tea.

    The affair of the Letters is still problematical That Fr—— was concerned in sending them over is certain, and the Sp——r has owned to me that they were sent to B——n, the Sp——r the two A——ms’s, & the two Doctors Ch—n—y & C—p—r, that they had leave to shew them to such friends as they could trust, & were then to return them without giving any copies,1 but whether Mr Whately lent them in his life time, or they were taken from his Executor is disputed notwithstanding F——’s declaration,2 who all agree has acted an infamous part let it be one or the other. Lord Dartmouth writes me the 8th January that the Affair would come before the Privy Council in a few days Mr Whately the Executor has a most amiable character & his usage from F is cried out against by all that hear of it.

    The Mr Frone you mention was in an Office in the Queens houshold and died an old man last fall. If you desire it I can inform my self what the inclination of his heir may be with respect to the Land, but I should know whereabouts it would be valued.3

    I leave the Chief Justice to do as he thinks fit. I know what I would have done when I was in his Station.

    You will judge better, I think, after we have news from England what to do about petitioning the King than you can at present. I am Sir your faithful humble Servant,

    RC (Massachusetts Historical Society, Israel Williams Papers); at foot of letter, “Colo Williams.”

    1257. To George Rome

    Milton 18th. April 1774

    Sir, I dined in Town the day before the post went out which carried my last letter which I sealed at the Secretary’s house with the same Seal which I shall use for this letter and immediately after delivered the letter to the Secretary to be put into the post office1 but he delayed doing it until the bags were closed the next day & then gave my letter with two or three of his own to the post rider who promised to take care of them. The Secretary was surprized at the cover which I sent him says he is sure it had been opened & new wax & a new seal put to it, and went immediately to the post Rider who acknowledged that the other Letters he put into the Office himself at Newport but this Letter he carried to his house & sent it by his boy, but could give no reason why he distinguished this from the others nor could the Secretary obtain any sort of satisfaction about it. Thus the matter stands. Probably from the boy some discovery may be made. I have received no intelligence of any sort from England since my last. I am &ca,

    AC (British Library, Eg. 2661, f. 21); at foot of letter, “Mr. Rome”; in TH Jr.’s hand.