Fear of Another Congress

    1164. To John Pownall, 18 October 1773

    1165. To Lord Dartmouth, 19 October 1773

    Hutchinson had reported rumors that a new congress was being planned in mid-September. He feared a congress would follow the lead of the Massachusetts House by asserting that the colonies could be taxed only by their own legislatures, which would come perilously close to claiming independence from Parliament and bring on a crisis. The first evidence he could procure of such a plan was a letter written by Benjamin Franklin to the Massachusetts House dated 7 July 1773. The governor somehow obtained a copy of the letter and forwarded it to Lord Dartmouth.

    1164. To John Pownall

    Boston 18 October 1773

    Private

    not sent

    Dear Sir, The reception which the Resolves of the Council & House met with at first in all parts of the Province and the general desponding of the friends of Government had a great effect upon my spirits & caused me almost to despair of being able to do any further service. I had however some hopes that time would recover the people from their frenzy. It has done it sooner than I expected. My friends in different parts of the Province assure me the tide is turned that the people are convinced they have been imposed upon and that such as were before attached to me are now moreso than ever. Whether the leaders of the Party have any Private intelligence from England which they do not like or are only dissatisfied at finding no greater effect from these late measures or what other cause there may be I can not determine but it is certain that by some means or other they appear more dejected than they have done for many months past. I expect however no good from the present Assembly & have already prorogued it to the 12th of Jan. and if nothing unforeseen shall induce me to the contrary shall make another short prorogation. They give out openly that they must have another Convention of all the Colonies & the Speaker has made it known to several of the Members that the Agent in England recommends it as a measure necessary to be engaged in without delay & proposes, in order to bring the dispute to a Crisis that the Rights of the Colonies should be there solemnly & fully asserted & declared, that there should be a firm engagement to each other that they will never grant any aide to the Crown even in case of a War unless the King & the two Houses of Parliament first recognize their Rights & that the Resolutions should be immediately communicated to the Crown and assures them that in this way they will finally obtain their end.1 The Letter no doubt will be laid before the House & a copy of it may be procured. It will have great influence with the Members who until I was informed of this Letter I thought would not generally come into the measure until they had pretty good assurance that the Colonies would all join or at least as many as had been of the last Convention.

    I am not fond of conveying this sort of intelligence but as I have the fullest evidence of the fact I dont see now I can be faithful to my trust & neglect it therefore tho I consider this as a private Letter yet I leave it to you to communicate this part of it so far as His Majestys Service may require and as I have nothing but that in view I wish it may go no farther. The measure appears to me, of all other, the most likely to rekindle a general flame in the Colonies.

    I received this intelligence since I closed my Letters to My Lord Dartmouth. I am Dear Sir Your most obliged humble Servant,

    AC (Massachusetts Archives, SC1/series 45X, 27:557–58); at end of letter, “Mr Pownall.” Contemporary printings: Boston Gazette, 3 July 1775; Newport Mercury, 10 July 1775; Massachusetts Spy, 12 July 1775; Norwich Packet, 24 July 1775; Remembrancer for the Year 1776, part 2, p. 61. The contemporary printings include a partial excerpt of the first and second paragraphs only, starting with “They give out openly. . . .” After “They,” the printers inserted the following in parentheses or brackets: “the leaders of the party as Mr. H——k stiles them.”

    1165. To Lord Dartmouth

    Boston 19. October 1773

    Private

    My Lord, After I had sealed my Letters which I intended by this Ship a Gentleman furnished me with the Copy of a Letter to the Speaker of the House from their Agent in England.1 It has been shewn to several Members of the House and to other persons & therefore is no secret, and it must, of course, be laid before the House when they meet and, regularly, I have a right to a copy of it. I felt some reluctance at communicating it in a private way but upon consideration it appears to me to be of such importance that your Lordship should be acquainted with it that I doubted whether I should be faithful to my trust if I did not lay it before you. I mentioned my design to no person but the Lieutenant Governor who agreed in sentiment with me. If it should be known to have come from me or, perhaps, to have been sent to England, it may be the means of preventing any further useful intelligence which I may otherwise obtain from the same person. I have no doubt of its being an exact copy and it is marked just as I received it.

    The Congress proposed in this Letter appears to me to be an effectual bar to conciliatory measures and to an establishment of that peace & quiet which your Lordship is endeavouring & which I sincerely wish to promote. I flattered my self that a motion for it would meet with strong opposition in the House, though I feared it might prevail but the plausibility, with which it is recommended by their Agent, will I think make many Converts, and my chief hopes now are that many of the other Colonies will not join if the proposal should be made by this. I have the honour to be My Lord Your Lordship’s faithful humble servant,

    RC (Staffordshire Record Office, Dartmouth Collection, D(W)1778/I/ii/897); at foot of letter, “Rt. Honble. the Earl of Dartmouth”; endorsed, “Govr. Hutchinson 19 Octr. 1773. Private.” AC (Massachusetts Archives, SC1/series 45X, 27:558); at head of letter, “Lively sailed the same day”; at foot of letter, “Rt Honb Ld Dartmouth.” Contemporary printings: New England Chronicle, 29 June 1775; Boston Gazette, 3 July 1775; Newport Mercury, 10 July 1775; Massachusetts Spy, 12 July 1775; Norwich Packet, 24 July 1775; Remembrancer for the Year 1776, part 2, p. 61 (all partial excerpt of first paragraph only). Enclosure to RC: Benjamin Franklin to Thomas Cushing, n.d. (Staffordshire Record Office, Dartmouth Collection, D(W)1778/I/ii/897).

    1166. To Lord Dartmouth

    Boston 26th October 1773

    Separate

    My Lord, I could not obtain the Report of the Attorney & Sollicitor General in 1731 until I had finished my Letter of the 16th. to your Lordship.1 I have since met with it & perceive that it makes a distinction between a Country possessed merely by Conquest & a Country yielded by Treaty & supposed the Country between Kennebeck & Nova Scotia to fall under the first part of the distinction. I observed to your Lordship that I had no right from my knowledge of the Civil Law, which has never been my profession, to be positive upon any point. I had always received it that whenever Lands which had been lost by conquest though ceded upon a Treaty were recovered by the Crown or State which had lost them the Subject also recovered his private property. I have heard that the French many years after the Cession of St. Christophers & the Spaniards also after the Cession of Jamaica made it their practise to devise the Estates they had formerly possessed in those Islands respectively. This must have been upon the principle of Jus postliminii after the Country had been given up by Treaty. I recollect, on the other hand, that the Duke of York had a Grant of what is now N. York in 1664 & kept possession until 1673 when it was recovered by the Dutch. It was soon after restored or ceded to England by Treaty. The Duke thereupon took a new Grant which looks as if there was then some doubt of this doctrine of Postliminii in general, for in that case there was no more than a suspension of property only & not what the Report of the Attorney & Sollicitor General calls an extinguishment the Country having never been ceded to the Dutch by Treaty. I have supposed the Duke might take this new Grant ex abundanti and to remove all exception or cavils.2

    If I have been mistaken in my notions of Postliminy and the yielding up a Country by Treaty extinguishes the right which the Subject had in it the Massachusets can have no just claim to the Country East of Penobscot, for though the Charter is of a later date than the Treaty of Breda yet it is of an earlier date than the Treaty of Ryswick when all that had been before ceded by the Treaty of Breda was again ceded or restored. This, however, will not affect the Country West of Penobscot because it never was ceded by Treaty nor has ever been in possession of any Europeans except the English. I am very respectfully My Lord Your Lordship’s most humble & most obedient Servant,

    RC (National Archives UK, CO 5/762, ff. 414–15); at foot of letter, “Rt Honble. the Earl of Dartmouth”; docketed, “Boston 26th. October. 1773. Governor Hutchinson (Separate) Rx 29th. Novr.” DupRC (National Archives UK, CO 5/895, ff. 132–33); at head of letter, “Seperate Duplicate”; at foot of letter, “Rt Honble. the Earl of Dartmouth”; docketed, “Massachusets. Duplicate of a Letter from Govr. Hutchinson, to the Earl of Dartmouth, dated October 26. 1773, relative to the opinion of the Attorney and Solicitor General in 1731 with regard to the right to the Country between the River Kennebeck & Nova Scotia. P.p. 56. Read Octr: 25th. 1774”; in EH’s hand. AC (Massachusetts Archives, SC1/series 45X, 27:561, 562); at head of letter, “Seperate” and “Syms”; partially in EH’s hand. SC (National Archives UK, CO 5/769, ff. 18–19); docketed, “Boston 26th. October 1773 Governor Hutchinson Separate Rx 29th. Novr.”