732 | Declaration of Richard Silvester

    Copy

    Province of Massachusetts Bay

    The Information of Richard Silvester of Boston in the Province aforesaid Innholder1 taken before me Thomas Hutchinson Esqr. Chief Justice of the said Province this 23d. day of January in the ninth year of his Majesty’s Reign.

    This Informant saith, that the day after the Boat belonging to Mr Harrison was burnt the last Summer,2 the Informant observed several Parties of Men gathered in the Street at the South end of the Town of Boston, in the Forenoon of the day. The Informant went up to one of the Parties, and Mr. Samuel Adams then one of the Representatives of Boston hapned to join the same party near about the same instant of time, trembling and in great agitation. The Party consisted of about seven in number, who were unknown to the Informant, he having but little acquaintance with the Inhabitants; or if any of them were known, he cannot now recollect them. The Informant heard the said Samuel Adams then say to the said Party— If you are Men, behave like men, let Us take up Arms immediately, and be free and sieze all the Kings Officers; We shall have thirty thousand men to join Us from the Country. The Informant then walkd off, believing his Company was disagreeable.

    The Informant further saith, that after the burning the Boat aforesaid, and before the Arrival of the Troops, the said Samuel Adams has been divers times at the House of the Informant, and at one of those times particularly, the Informant began a discourse concerning the Times; and the said Samuel Adams said, We will not submit to any Tax nor become Slaves. We will take up Arms and spend our last drop of blood before the King and Parliament shall impose on Us or settle Crown Officers in this Country to dragoon Us. The Country was first settled by our Ancestors, therefore We are free and want no King. The times were never better in Rome than when they had no King, and were a free State, and as this is a great Empire, we shall soon have it in our power to give Laws to England. The Informant further saith, That at divers times between the burning the Boat aforesaid and the arrival of the Troops aforesaid, he has heard the said Adams express himself in words to very much the same purpose, and that the Informants Wife has Sometimes been present, and at one or more of such times, George Mason of Boston, Painter was present.

    This Informant further saith that about a fortnight before the Troops arrived, the aforesaid Samuel Adams being at the House of the Informant, the Informant asked him what he thought of the times. The said Adams answered with great alertness, that on lighting the Beacon, we should be joined with thirty thousand men from the Country with their Knapsacks and Bayonets fixed: and added, We will destroy every Soldier that dare put his foot on shore: his Majesty has no right to send Troops here to invade the Country, and I look upon them as foreign Enemies.

    This Informant further saith, that two or three days before the Troops arrived, the said Samuel Adams said to the Informant that Governor Bernard, Mr Hutchinson and the Commissioners of the Customs had sent for Troops, and the said Adams made bitter exclamations against them for so doing, and also repeated most of the language about opposing the Kings Troops, where he had used as abovementioned about a fortnight before. The Informant contradicted the said Adams, and attributed the sending Troops to the Resolves of the General Court, and the proceedings of the Town meeting.

    The Informant further saith that several times between the months of May & December last, Doctr. Benjamin Church of Boston3 aforesaid has been at the House of the Informant, and the Informant has heard him frequently say — The King and Parliament have no right to tax Us, nor will We suffer the Kings Officers to be here to dragoon Us. We will take up Arms and maintain our Freedom. The Informant said to the said Church, that such Proceedings were Treason.

    The Informant further saith, that upon its being reported that the Troops were coming, he heard the said Doctor Church say — The King has no right to send Troops to invade Us. I look upon them as foreign Enemies. Not one of them shall set his foot onshore; for on lighting the Beacon, thirty thousand men under Arms from the Country will join Us. This is a great Empire; We soon shall be able to give Laws to England. She is arrived at the height of her Glory and must soon fall, as there are divisions at home as well as here. The Informant further saith that at one of the times between the months of May & December aforesaid, he heard the said Doctor Church say, I am sure the Rascals, the Governor and Lieutenant Governor have wrote home against the People, it will be necessary to sieze them and their Papers to come at the truth, and send them home in Irons.

    The Informant further saith, that after the Soldiers were landed, the said Doctor Church said to the Informant, that he the said Church had certain intelligence, that some particular persons here would be sent home prisoners. The said Church seemed to be much terrified, and said nothing could be proved against him without Edes and Gill should impeach,4 as they knew the Authors of the different pieces in the News Papers; that he the said Church was the Author of that Letter in the News Paper which Mr. Grenville carried into the House of Commons the last Session of Parliament and represented treasonable;5 that he had been at the printing Office for his manuscript, but had not got it, and further said, that Doctor Warren6 had burnt his own papers.

    This Informant further saith, that a short time before the Stamp Act, so called, was repealed, he was at the Crown Coffee House in Boston where one Thomas Chase of Boston, Distiller,7 was present in the same Room with the Informant, and several other persons, of whom the ^afore^said George Mason was one, and the Informant heard the said Thomas Chase then and there say —The King is a Fool and a Rascal, and ought to have his head cut off, and the Lord and Commons are Rogues and Scoundrels and a short time before the Troops arrived, the Informant heard the said Chase say that he would take up Arms, and oppose the Soldiers in landing: that the King had no right to send them here to invade the Country, and that he looked upon them as foreign Enemies.

    Sworn to T Hutchinson

    Richd. Silvester

    Endorsed: In Govr Bernards (No 2) of 25 Janry 1769

    Ms, Copy     CO 5/758, ff 54-55.

    Enclosed in No. 731. Another copy at CO 5/893, ff 104-106.