The Printing of the Letters and the Petition of the House for the Removal of the Governor

    1121. To William Tryon, 6 July 1773

    1122. To Lord Dartmouth, 10 July 1773

    1123. To Unknown, 10 July 1773

    1124. To Isaac Lyman, 16 July 1773

    1125. To Israel Williams, 20 July 1773

    1126. To Sir Francis Bernard, 31 July 1773

    1127. To James Gambier, 2 August 1773

    1128. To John Pownall, 2 August 1773

    As early as 10 June 1773, Samuel Adams announced to the House that he possessed what appeared to be copies of the original letters sent from England that he had read to the House a week and a half before. His implication clearly was that these copies could be printed without breaking the original understanding under which the originals were sent. Edes & Gill then printed a sufficient number for each member of the House, which were distributed on 16 June, with an additional copy provided for the Council. The same day, the House resolved that the letters sent by Hutchinson and Oliver were “highly injurious to the province” and “destructive of constitutional liberty.” A committee was formed to draft a petition to the king requesting the removal of the governor and lieutenant governor. The initial resolutions appeared in the Boston Gazette on 21 June, and the House formally adopted the petition four days later. The public at large did not see the text of the letters until lengthy excerpts were printed in the Boston Gazette for 28 July 1773.

    1121. To William Tryon

    Boston 6 July 1773

    Dear Sir, Your venerable Chief Justice being upon his return to NYork I embrace the opportunity of making my compliments to you1 & of giving you a brief account of the extravagance of the people here which I had no suspicion of when I had the pleasure of being with you at Hartford. Upon my return I found there was a buzz of some great discovery soon to be made of wickedness in the Governor & Lieutenant Governor which I gave my self no concern about. After the Assembly had sat some days their Clerk who is also their Leader informed the H certain Letters had been put into his hands which he was obliged to return without copies being taken & if they would hear them read upon those conditions he would read them. This they agreed to. They appeared to be originals wrote 4 or 5 years ago to Mr Whately in time of great disorder and after commenting the greatest part of the day it was resolved that they tended to subvert the Constitution. They kept them private sevral days only insinuating that they evidenced a most wicked plot to destroy the Government & to hang the best men in it. The Province to the utmost extent of it being inflamed & prepared to receive the Letters & the Resolves explaining them. Mr H told the H that somebody in the Common had given him some papers which seemd to be copies of the Letters before the H2 & he moved that they might be compared & if they agreed that the Clerk might attest them & then they might publish them as coming to them from another quarter. Everybody knew they must have been copied from the Originals whilst in the Possession of the H & yet this childish tale they supposed sufficient & finally sufferd their copies to be published. There is not one word in any of them exceptionable unless there may be some inaccuracies thro inattention to a writing which was designd for one person only and perhaps for one cursory reading only. They have however answerd their purpose for their Resolves go out separate every body reads them or hears them read not one in ten reads the letters. They give themselves no concern about the falsity of their Resolves. There is no making such an Assembly blush. Indeed there is not one of them that is true. One made by the Counc. Is that a Letter dated the 10th Aug excited Administration in Engl. To send Regiments which actually arrivd here from Halifax the latter end of Sept & from Ireland the first of October & for which it appears orders had been given sevral weeks before my Letter was dated & the Letter itself was wrote to a Gentleman as unlikely at that time as any body in Eng to communicate it to Administration. It must be some very base person or persons who furnishd them with private Letters tho they give out that they came by them in a very honorable way & some of them have the impudence to say not without the consent or approbation of Lord ———.

    It is certain they have their Agents & Correspondents there directing them to all their measures. What a situation is a Mass Governor in from a constant conspiracy on both sides the water to distress him.

    The Champions here say that altho there is an absurdity in praying for a Governor’s removal for Letters wrote before he was Governor & without a single act of male administration to charge him with they shall nevertheless carry their point for the K will never keep a Governor the people dont like. They really defeat or retard what they aim at for they render it more difficult for me to accomplish what I hinted to you I had in contemplation when at Hartford viz a resignation until I am vindicated from such a malicious injurious charge would be construed a consciousness of guilt.

    I pity the poor people who suffer themselves to be duped by a few men who seem to drive things to the utmost extremity against all connexion with the Kingdom & never to be easy till they have a Governor who will join with them. I am with the most sincere regard & esteem Sir your faithful humble Servant,

    AC (Massachusetts Archives, SC1/series 45X, 27:509–10); at end of letter, “Gov. Tryon.”

    1122. To Lord Dartmouth

    Boston 10. July 1773

    No 24

    My Lord, I acquainted your Lordship in my Letter No 23 that I had refused my assent to the Grants to the Agents of the Council and of the House of Representatives1 but I omitted to mention a Vote of the Council impowering a Committee to correspond with their Agent in the Recess of the Court. I cautioned the Council against it and declared it altogether unparliamentary as upon a prorogation the power of all Committees does and ought to cease.

    The practice formerly was for the whole Court to have an Agent who corresponded with the Secretary who communicated his Letter to the Council a duplicate whereof the Agent directed to the Speaker which was communicated to the House as soon as they met.

    Upon the same erroneous principle the Assemblies of Virginia of this Province, Rhode Island and Connecticut have appointed their respective Committees of Correspondence who act in the recess of the Courts and the like Committees are expected from the other Assemblies when they shall be convened. This in some measure counteracts and defeats the powers reserved to the Governors in what are called the Royal Governments of Proroguing or dissolving the Assemblies at pleasure. We have now subsisting in this Province Committees of Correspondence in most of the Towns of the Province, Committees of the House & Council to correspond with their respective Agents to effect the removal of the Governor & Lieutenant Governor & for other purposes, a Committee of Correspondence of the House to concert, with Committees of other Assemblies, measures & to give information &ca.

    The persons who have been most active in promoting the principles of Independency are Members of one or more of these Committees act without any controul and make themselves of great importance among the people.

    It is my duty to represent the true state of the Province, and to submit the consideration of proper measures in consequence of it. There is no interior power within this Government from which a proper remedy can be had. If there should be nothing more than a declaration from your Lordship, to be communicated, of His Majesty’s disapprobation of these irregularities it may be of service but I fear will not effect a discontinuance of them. I have the honour to be My Lord Your Lordship’s most humble & most obedient Servant,

    RC (National Archives UK, CO 5/762, ff. 380–81); at foot of letter, “Rt Honble. The Earl of Dartmouth”; docketed, “Boston 10th July 1773 Governor Hutchinson (No 24) Rx: 3d September Encl.” DupRC (National Archives UK, CO 5/895, ff. 84–85); at head of letter, “Duplicate”; at end of letter, “Right Honble. The Earl of Dartmouth”; in an unknown hand. AC (Massachusetts Archives, SC1/series 45X, 27:511–12); at head of letter, “Brown Hull”; at end of letter, “Rt. Hon. The Earl of Dartmouth”; in an unknown hand. SC (National Archives UK, CO 5/768, ff. 364–66); docketed, “Boston 10th July 1773. Governor Hutchinson (No. 24) Rx 3d. Septr:” SC (Houghton Library, Sparks 10, 4:42); at end of letter, “[Read 20 Decr. 1773. P.p. 38]” (brackets in original); docketed, “Hutchinson to Dartmouth” and “Govr. Hutchinson To Lord Dartmouth 10 July 1773.”

    1123. To Unknown

    Boston 10th. July 1773

    Private

    Brown Hull

    Dear Sir, I need not add any thing to what I have already wrote you to shew the extravagance of the late proceedings of the Assembly which as they took their rise from a villainous Act, so in the whole progress of them they have gone on in the same way, not one of their Resolves being true & yet calculated to make the people believe them true, but I cannot omit observing that the future support of Government in this Province if not in others depends upon a proper animadversion both upon the Council & House. The former are most inexcusable. They have lost all sense of their being his Majesty’s Council even when they do not act in their legislative Capacity & there are some who are ready to go all the lengths of the chief Incendiary, who is determined he says to get rid of every Governor who obstructs them in their course to Independency.1 But it is such an affront to the King, the Ministry & the whole Kingdom to suppose them capable of being imposed upon by such barefaced falshoods & by so unjustifiable a reason for the removal of a Governor that I think it will meet with universal detestation. I dont know how to give you a better conception of the heart of the man who framed this report & these resolves & upon whose Asseverations of the truth of them most of the rest of the council gave their voice for them than this Anecdote. Gov. Bernard trusted him & others with a publick paper upon a promise that no copy should be taken. The next news paper that came out the Governor saw it in print. Upon charging this Gentleman with a breach of his word he justifyed himself alledging, that no Copy had been taken, it was printed from the Original.2 I am &c.,

    AC (Massachusetts Archives, SC1/series 45X, 27:512–13); in TH Jr.’s hand.

    1124. To Isaac Lyman1

    Boston 16. July 1773

    Reverend and Dear Sir, I am obliged to many friends for consolatory letters & to you particularly for your letter of 29th June.2

    I know the bias natural to man from self Interest & therefore I less wonder that my friends dont see the late proceedings in the same light that I do. They all agree that the proceedings of the Council & House are injurious. To me they appear infamous & detestable. From the first conspiracy to rob the Cabinets of the Dead until the letters made their Appearance, every step taken by the party has been not meerly mean, but wicked. For several weeks together they gave out that a most shocking scene wou’d soon open, then that letters had been wrote by persons of the first rank here proposing the most arbitrary tyrannical measures against the Constitution & to take off the Heads of all who had been chief Opposers of Government. Peoples minds were prepared to receive any thing & if they had bro’t Chevy Chase into the House3 & proved it had been sent to England by the Governor they woud have found some latent treasonable meaning against the Constitution & a Vote wou’d have passed accordingly. It wou’d be to no good purpose to make a publick Declaration of my preserving the Constitution. I can say in a private letter that when I have been desired to project a better plan for a Council than the present Constitution, I have conscientiously scrupled it, & when this has come to the knowledge of a Gentleman in England to whom the Minister communicated my Answer, I have been told that I should one day repent of my scrupulosity.4 I have had but one principle in Government. There must be one supreme Authority in every state. I have ever endeavoured that this Colony shou’d possess every liberty which can consist with this principle. If this tends to subvert the Constitution there was no need of procuring private letters in a base way, for the History which I published & many publick Speeches & messages announce the same principle. I think the deluded people must be undeceived. If they shou’d not I know notwithstanding that the great Governor of the World always does right & I desire to acknowledge it when I am in Adversity as well as in prosperity. You very justly observe that so far as respects me personally I need not be much concerned, it cannot be many years before I shall be beyond the reach of the most envious & malicious enemy. I desire your prayers that while I remain I may be faithfull to the people & to the King, that I may preserve the decens & rectum.5 You may be assured that I have but little if any concern from any danger of my being superceded, more than a War Horse feels when his heavy Accoutrements are to be taken off & he sees a quiet stable or Pasture just by him. I am &c.,

    AC (Massachusetts Archives, SC1/series 45X, 27:514–15); at end of letter, “Revd. Mr. Lyman”; in TH Jr.’s hand.

    1125. To Israel Williams

    Boston 20 July 1773

    Dear Sir, I mislaid the list of Officers you gave me at Springfield which is the only reason the Commissions were not sent & I must desire you to send another list. Bowdoin at the Council and Adams in the House have certainly shown themselves very adroit, but it will be a reproach upon the body of the people to the latest posterity that they have suffered themselves to be made such dupes, especially after a publick declaration in the House that all that was intended was to raise a general clamour against the Governor & Lieutenant Governor and then they should be sure of their removal.1

    The deception cant last longer than it did in the time of the witchcraft. Truth, at worst, will finally prevail. As for the Resolves they are every one false, most of them are villanous.2 I would have declared them to be so in the most open manner, if it had been in character, & would in the same manner have vindicated every part of the Letters. In so plain a case if but a few persons only remain undeceived, a free open testimony against the delusion will soon undeceive the rest.

    I pitied the poor Members more than one half of them being forced to vote in verba Magistri3 either directly against their judgment or without understanding what they voted.

    I have no great doubt that sooner or later this proceeding will reflect more infamy upon all concerned in it than any publick transaction since the Country was settled, for it was founded upon such baseness as no civilized people have ever countenanced, and has been conducted through every part of its progress with falshood and deception, which although for a short time they have their Intended Effect yet as soon as they are discovered prove ignominious to the Authors of them. I am Your Assured friend & obedient Servant,

    RC (Massachusetts Historical Society, Israel Williams Papers); at foot of letter, “Colonel Williams”; endorsed, “1773” and “10th. July 1773.” AC (Massachusetts Archives, SC1/series 45X, 27:516); in TH Jr.’s hand.

    1126. To Sir Francis Bernard

    Boston 2d Aug ^31 July^ 1773

    Robson

    Dear Sir, In my last I took no notice of what you say upon the subject of the Eastern Country.1 Two of the Judges returned from their Circuit say that the people of the province of Main wish to be seperated from Massachusetts Bay & never more than since B——ns & A——m’s late Resolves.2 You speak of the consent of the old Colony. Is there not something singular in the present case?3 Main & Sagadahoc were two seperate Governments. They are not granted to the Province of Massa. Bay. The three Governments with Plimouth, by the Charter are made one Government, I might have added, Nova Scotia also. What evidence is there of the consent of Main or Sagadahoc or Nova Scotia to change their former state & become one Government with Massa. Bay? You will say they acquiesced. The Majority of the whole submitted, but Sagadahoc was considered as but one & Main as but three to twenty eight. Nova Scotia soon seperated.4 If King William could change the Constitution of Main & make it one with Massas. Bay Parliament may as well seperate & restore it to its former state. This is for speculation only occasioned by the difficulty you suppose may be in the way.

    Our Politicians have exposed themselves by their late Resolves beyond what they had done before. It is an open declaration that no Governor who opposes their measures shall have any peace. If they are properly animadverted upon the cause of Government may be served. The Council who ought to be a support to the Governor have by receiving if not procuring his private letters before he was Governor, by putting a sense upon them he never intended, by declaring them to contain misrepresentations meerly because they censure some proceedings of a former Council of which some of the present were members, by publishing these letters, accompanied with their Comments done every thing in their power to misrepresent the Governor to the people & in this way, to make him obnoxious, & all this in Order to found a concluding resolve, that he is become unpopular and therefore it must be for his Majesty’s Service &c that he shou’d be removed. The whole proceeding is such an affront to the King that it cannot pass without immediate notice & directions for some mark to be put upon the chief promoter or promoters of it. Whether this shou’d be done by an Order of his Majesty in Council or by a signification of His Majesty’s pleasure by his Secretary of State I submit, but I wish to have it done in such a way as shall shew a full sense of the irregularity & criminality of the proceedings & that it may not only appear to the two Houses but be made publick to the people.5

    If my friends do not deceive themselves & me even the Patriots at New York & Philadelphia cry same upon this extravagance of the Boston Assembly and a Gentleman from Virginia assures me that they have not a much better opinion there of our Politicks but hold us in great contempt. And even within the Province the rage abates and some who were zealous say they have gone too far, and I flatter my self they will find they have when they hear how such an insult is received in England. I expect no intelligence of parliamentary Proceedings by the June Packet for we have a Ship some days later by which the Speaker of the House has a letter from their Agent advising that nothing had been done in Parliament nor could he tell what would be done but should be able to do it by the next Ship.6 He adds that the Right of Parliament to bind the Colonies in all cases would be made a point of.7

    AC (Massachusetts Archives, SC1/series 45X, 27:519–20, 518); primarily in TH Jr.’s hand.

    1127. To James Gambier

    Boston 2 Aug 1773

    Dear Sir, Can you think it possible that Mr B—— in the Council & Mr A—— in the House should make a great majority in each to believe that half a dozen harmless letters wrote by me to Mr Whately before I was Governor & as many wrote by the Lieutenant Governor before he was such would be sufficient to support an Address to the King to remove us both? And yet they certainly have done it. The very name of a discovery of a private correspondence prepared the people for whatever construction the Masters of the puppets inclined to put upon it & because in a Letter dated the 10. of Aug. I assert that when the Commissioners withdrew to the Castle it would not have been safe for them to have remained in Town the C. have resolved that this Letter excited Administration to send Troops here altho the Letter was dated but about 6 weeks before the Troops arrived & was wrote to a Gentleman in the opposition & who of course was not likely to have any thing to do with Administration.1

    I am told they have made themselves contemptible in the neighbouring Colonies. What an air of arrogance as well as wantonness does it carry when they pray the King to remove the Governor & Lieutenant Governor not for any acts of male administration but for private Letters wrote before the Administration commenced or was in prospect. And even these Letters do not contain anything more than was notorious here nor any sentiments of which they have the least reason to complain. It is saying in other words you must appoint a Governor & Lieutenant Governor of our Kidney or they shall never live easy.2 They declare in their debates they dont expect to be called upon to support their charges its eno’ for them to let the King know the Governor does not please them & they are sure of an exchange. And tho they should not change for the better yet Dr Franklin tells them somewhere in his History of Pensilvania upon such an occasion that there is a Scotch Proverb change of Devils is blithsome.3 Indeed every body who will not do just what they would have him will make himself obnoxious & I have it from good authority that they are not altogether satisfied with their last advices from their Agent & think he does not vindicate all their doings so fully as he ought.4 I should be under no concern at being called to answer such a charge before any just tribunal but I should hope for such frivolous reasons neither the Lieutenant Governor nor I shall be required to take a long voyage at our respective times of life. I should have the pleasure of kissing your hands once more and of seeing my daughter & the rest of your agreeable family. I have seen a letter from Mr Hood which mentions the Royal Bounty to you of 1500£ which I hope is an earnest of a further & permanent provision.5

    The Servants of the Crown are in a most disagreeable situation in the Colonies. If they are faithful they cannot enjoy the favor of the people who are struggling for Independence on the Crown & Kingdom. If this fidelity is not construed more than necessary yet you are sure of abuse in the English News papers & the grossest falshoods are asserted in such a manner as to obtain no doubt some credit. I am less anxious about the time than I am about the manner of my retreat. I hope to quit with honour. To be removed upon such a requisition I may call it I hope cannot be the case for to indulge them would only encourage them to go a step farther & in the next instance to nominate a Governor & Lieutenant Governor. Indeed in all the experience I have had I have always found that conceding any point to which they had not just claim has been so far from satisfying them that it has encouraged them to insist upon a second point with more zeal & vigor than they had done the first. For this reason I have avoided giving up any one point to them & it is this alone which incenses them against me. If such wantonness & insolence be censured as I hope they will be Government may eventually be strengthened rather than disserved. I am Dear Sir Your sincere & affectionate humble Servant,

    AC (Massachusetts Archives, SC1/series 45X, 27:526–27); at end of letter, “James Gambier Eq.”

    1128. To John Pownall

    Boston 2 August 1773

    Robson

    Dear Sir, The late proceeding by the Council and House appears to me so extravagant that by a proper resentment shewn against it in England the cause of Government may be served & the promoters of it will bring the resentment of the people upon themselves. For the Council especially who are supposed to support the Governor, to receive his private letters before he was Governor procured in a base & infamous manner torturing them in order to give a sense he never intended & then to publish them with their comment meerly to make him obnoxious to the people1 and then to conclude with a resolve that he is unpopular and therefore it must be for his Majesty’s Service he should be removed is not only a breach of Trust in them but is an affront to the understanding of the King and of his Ministers by supposing them capable of being influenced by such frivolous groundless pretences.

    Then for the House to judge & determine and come into such a number of resolves which they make the foundation of their Address for the removal of the Governor & Lieutenant Governor, nothing can be said in excuse except what one of their principal Members said in the debate when he was asked what they should do if they should be called upon to support their resolves, he made answer that they were the representatives of a free people and accountable to God only & their Constituents, which makes their Address rather a requisition.2

    If his Majesty’s disapprobation of the late proceedings of the Council & House shall be signified and the disposition which the Council have shewn to weaken & destroy the interest of the Governor with the people could in particular manner be censured I think it would open the eyes of great part of the people & discourage the combinations formed, against Government, between the Heads of the Opposition here and, to use their own word, their Coadjutors in England.

    But In what way this is done or whether it can be done I must submit. The opinion and declaration of the Privy Council wou’d have most weight, but if that shou’d be judged too much, His Majesty’s sense of the Proceedings signified to me to be communicated to the two Houses or communicated by the Secretary of State in answer to their letter if an Answer be thot proper is the least that seems necessary.

    I have never met with an Instance of publick Proceedings discovering so much weakness & so much malice. Several of the poor deluded members have declared to me they were not able to act their own minds & others have said that if the Members had been free they themselves & they doubted not the Majority would have voted directly the contrary. Upon the final tryal when 28 only in the House were Nays3 the doors were open & the floor in all parts where there was room covered with the heads of the Opposition to Government who are not members of the House, and to facilitate the Execution of the plan it was publickly given out that the Letters came over with the privity & consent of one or more of his Majesty’s ministers of State and incredible as it is it was believed & had the intended Influence & effect. I am Dear Sir Your faithful humble Servant,

    AC (Massachusetts Archives, SC1/series 45X, 27:517–18); at end of letter, “Mr. Pownall”; in TH Jr.’s hand.