A Heated Exchange with John Fenton

    1090. From John Fenton, 11 March 1773

    1091. To John Fenton, 11 March 1773

    1092. From John Fenton, 12 March 1773

    1093. From John Fenton, 14 March 1773

    John Fenton was the brother-in-law of John Temple and an Irish-born, half-pay British army officer living in Charlestown, Massachusetts. Hutchinson and other government party figures previously suspected him as the author of a satirical publication in the Boston press (TH Correspondence, 2: No. 390, and TH Correspondence, 3: No. 499). On 8 February 1773, an article written by “A Friend to the Community” mocked Hutchinson’s decision to open a controversy with the General Court on the role of Massachusetts within the empire. Meanwhile, a second letter from “E. Ludlow” appeared in the Boston Gazette on 1 March 1773. It reasserted that since Hutchinson chose not to receive the salary granted by the legislature, he was a governor “the Charter knows not of” and ought “to be forthwith, renounced and discarded by this people, as an illegal, unconstitutional, and dangerous person to bear rule over them.” Fenton, who thought he was being accused of authorship of the “E. Ludlow” article, wrote Hutchinson a letter on 11 March denying any role in it. Hutchinson in a letter to an unknown correspondent on 23 March claimed that because of the press of business, he had been confused as to which article in the Gazette Fenton meant and told Fenton in his reply, also dated 11 March, that he made the statements he did in response to “To the Community” diatribe of 8 February. Fenton, clearly dissatisfied with the governor’s response, wrote another angry letter on 12 March, threatening to publish the entire correspondence between them. Hutchinson apparently wrote Fenton a more complete explanation of his confusion about the two newspaper pieces on 13 March but that letter has not been found. Fenton refused to accept Hutchinson’s explanation, wrote Hutchinson another angry letter on 14 March, and published their earlier correspondence in the Boston Gazette for 15 March. He also appended to the printed letters a sworn denial that he had written the E. Ludlow article. Since TH’s letter to Fenton of 11 March is clearly a response to Fenton’s letter of the same date, the two letters appear below out of the editors’ usual sequence, in which letters from Hutchinson appear before those written to him. All four letters from this exchange appear immediately below, but the role of the 8 February piece by “To the Community” and Hutchinson’s subsequent confusion does not become completely clear until one reads No. 1098, below.

    1090. From John Fenton

    May Place, near Charlestown, 11th March, 1773.

    May it please your Excellency, Having heard from undoubted authority that your Excellency has fix’d upon, and mentioned me, as the Author of a Piece in Edes and Gill’s Paper of the 1st of March 1773, signed E. Ludlow, I am bound in Honor to myself, to assure you, I never directly, or indirectly knew any Thing of such a Piece ’till I saw it in the public Papers: I must therefore beg Leave to urge your Excellency’s favouring me with your Authority, that I may not be laid under the disagreeable Necessity of publickly disowning the having known any Thing of this heavy Charge.

    Your Excellency must be fully sensible the Times are such, as to lay me under an absolute Necessity of calling on you in this Manner for your Authority, in Order to vindicate myself, and ward off any more private Stabs, that may be given me, from my Enemies, to the Prejudice of my present, or future Rank in the Army, &c.

    I thought I gave your Excellency a very fair Opportunity upon an Interview had, a little after last Commencement,1 to be at all Times ascertain’d of meer Facts respecting me, before you adopted any Sentiments to my Prejudice: but I am sorry to say that instead of your Excellency’s availing yourself of that opening (as could be wish’d) you have continued to adopt the same uncertain Mode of Hearsay and Conjecture, practised previous to our coming to an Ecclaircissement upon several Heads, each of which you then found to be erroneous in every Point.2

    Whether this is using me with the Candor, &c. I deserve at your Excellency’s Hands, from the Openness then shew’d, I will submit to your better Judgment, and am with due Respect, Your Excellency’s most obedient, and most humble Servant,

    JOHN FENTON.

    MS not found. Contemporary printing: Boston Gazette, 15 March 1773.

    1091. To John Fenton

    Boston, 11th March, 1773.

    Sir, I have been so much used to Abuses in News-Papers, that when I saw the Piece to which you refer, I gave myself no Concern about the Author of it.1 Some Days after a Gentleman let me know that he had such Reasons to suppose it to be wrote by you as amounted to a full Assurance, but did not pretend he was capable of proving it. This was done in Confidence.—I have never published this Intelligence as a certain Fact, and have only mentioned it in a private Manner to three or four Friends just as I received it, and have chose to do it to such Gentlemen as I thought were your Friends, on Purpose that you might hear of it. Your Charge therefore of adopting meer Hearsay is injurious to me. Your Declaration that you know nothing of it, removes all Credit from the Intimations which were given me; but I cannot bring myself to injure a Person by exposing him to your Resentment who gave me the Intimation out of our meer Friendship and in Confidence that I would not discover him. Whenever I have spoke of it I have always done it in all its Circumstances and never pretended I had any other Authority than this alone. And when Gentlemen who are acquainted with you have expressed their Opinion that it was not like your Style and Language I have acquiesced. The last Time I remember to have spoke or thought of it was several Weeks ago,2 to Mr. Sewall who gave me such Satisfaction that there was no Room for the Suggestion,3 that, if I had not received your Letter, I should probably never have thought any more about it. I am, Sir, your most humble Servant,

    MS not found. Contemporary printing: Boston Gazette, 15 March 1773.

    1092. From John Fenton

    May-Place, 12 March, 1773.

    Sir, Was I to answer the Contents of your Excellency’s Letter in Reply to mine of the same Day, I should be obliged to take such Freedoms with you, as would by no Means comport with your Excellency’s Dignity as King’s Representative: And as that is a Point I shall at all Times carefully avoid, from the Respect I owe my Sovereign, and the Dignity of Government, I shall only take the Liberty to assure your Excellency that I cannot in Justice to my much injured Reputation, do less than publish the Correspondence that has arisen between us on this Head, and am with all due Deference, Your Excellency’s most humble Servant,

    JOHN FENTON.

    MS not found. Contemporary printing: Boston Gazette, 15 March 1773.

    1093. From John Fenton

    May place 14th. March 1773

    Sir, This morning at 7 o’clock, I received Your Excellencies Letter (through Mr: Sewall) dated from Cambridge 13th: instant.1

    My first Letter to your Excellency was plain, pointed, and I hope intelligible;—E. Ludlow and the date of the publication, is specify’d in it, in too plain a manner I presume; to be mistaken!

    I must beg leave to ask;—Why does not your Excellency refer to every piece, that has been published in the News papers for these seven years past? It would be full as much to the present purpose as what you now allude to!

    I am well pleased your Excellency is under no apprehension, that my publishing our Correspondence can be prejudicial to you; (as it is by no means my wish it should) but arises from an absolute Necessity of Vindicating the false Aspersions thrown on me; both here and in England, from time, to time in a most underhand unmanly manner. I am with all due Deference Your Excellencies Most humble Servant,

    John Fenton

    RC (Massachusetts Archives, SC1/series 45X, 25:555–55a); at foot of letter, “His Excellency Governor Hutchinson &ca”; endorsed, “John Fenton, Esq. 14 March 1773.”

    1094. To William Tryon

    Boston 18 March 1773

    Sir, Your letter of the 1 instant accompanied with a bill which had passed the Assembly relating to the settlement of the Partition line I receivd the 13 & last night I received that of the 8th acquainting me that you had given your Assent to the bill with no alteration except the addition of the Honble. Robert R. Livingston for one of the Comissaries.1 My Assembly was prorogued before I received the first letter otherwise I would have recommended the provision you proposed in case of the death or absence of either of our Comissaries. I hope they will all attend & that no inconvenience will be occasioned by this Comission. The time you propose for our meeting at Hartford the 12th of May will be as agreeable to me as any time. I will acquaint the Comissaries with it & if either of them should not be able to attend at that time I will let you know it as soon as I receive their Answers.

    I have also another letter of the 8 in answer to mine of the 20th of February together with the minute and Report of His Majestys Council of New York which you trust will be fully satisfactory to me.2 I have read the Report with attention. Those parts of it which relate to the claim of New York as far as to Conecticut River I will avoid any remarks upon as they may tend to impede the settlement which both of us so much desire. Abstracted from that I cannot say the Report is satisfactory to me. I have had occasion formerly to consider this point in a case of murder committed out of the bounds of any government. I could not satisfy myself that there was any authority derived either from the Royal Charter or from the Comission to take cognizance of that Offence altho of a most heinous nature. I should have thought the difficulty would have been increased if the fact had been committed within the limits of another Colony to the authority of which the cognizance of all Offences committed within such Colony had been granted by a Royal Charter or Comission nor am I satisfied that any necessity peculiar to this species of Offence is sufficient to justify the taking cognizance of it.

    I wish for the sake of bringing such Offenders to condign Punishment the case was more clear and I am of opinion that the Laws of this Government against this Offence are too mild but I cannot bring the other branches of the Legislature to think with me.3

    I will not give your Excellency any further trouble upon this subject. I should need an apology for interfering in the Affairs of another Government so far as I have done if the Prisoners had not been of the number of such of His Majestys Subjects as are committed while within the limits of the Province to my peculiar charge. I am with very great Regard & esteem Your Excellency’s most humble & most obedient Servant,

    AC (Massachusetts Archives, SC1/series 45X, 27:465–66); at foot of letter, “His Excell Gov Tryon.” SC (National Archives UK, CO 5/762, ff. 306–07); at foot of letter, “Copy His Excell Gov Tryon”; excerpt of second, third, and fourth paragraphs only.