The Response of the Council

    1207. To Lord Dartmouth, 24 December 1773

    1208. Memorandum, [24 December 1773]

    1209. To Israel Mauduit, [28?] December 1773

    1210. To Edward Montagu, 28 December 1773

    1211. To William Robertson, 28 December 1773

    1212. To Unknown, 30 December 1773

    1213. To Sir Francis Bernard, 1 January 1774

    1214. To James Gambier, 2 January 1774

    1215. To [Richard Jackson], 2 January 1774

    1216. To Francis Maseres, 3 January 1774

    Following the Boston Tea Party, Hutchinson repeatedly summoned the Council to meet but was unable to procure a quorum until 21 December, when it refused to advise to anything beyond ordering the attorney general to investigate and lay the results before the grand jury. Hutchinson knew the investigation would result in nothing, since the grand jury would refuse to indict anyone, even though many of the principal actors in the affair were rumored to be well known. Furthermore, the Council in its response, written by James Bowdoin, raised constitutional objections to the Tea Act that appeared to excuse, if not even justify, the violence. Bowdoin passed along the minutes of the proceedings (generally regarded as confidential) to the press, where they were published verbatim on 27 December.

    1207. To Lord Dartmouth

    Boston 24th Decemb 1773

    (No 38)

    My Lord, Since the date of my Letter No 37 I have met the Council at Cambridge and required their advice upon the late high handed riot in the Town of Boston.1 The gentlemen, in general, agreed something was necessary to be done, but were divided in opinion whether a proclamation should issue offering a reward upon conviction of any person informed against or whether the Attorney General should be directed to inquire into the affair and to lay it before the Grand Jury. After debate four of them were in favour of the latter proposal & three only of the former.2 I have reason to think there will be no prosecution by a Grand Jury. I cannot find any persons who were at the meetings of the people willing to give any account in writing of the persons who were most active there nor of any of their transactions. There are some gone and others going to England who were present at some of the meetings.3

    The more important matters which have been the subjects of my late Letters to your Lordship have prevented me from acquainting you that the Surveyors employed to mark out the line between this Province & New York, as settled at Hartford in May last, found the needle to be greatly affected by the Iron oar which is very plenty in that Country and, having run a considerable part of the distance before they discovered their error could not afterwards agree upon the part of the line where they should begin to correct it. The Council at New York have advised the Governor to lay a copy of the Report of their Committee before His Majesty’s Principal Secretary of State and also to know of me if I have any objection to completing the line from the place where the New York Committee proposed to begin the correction, to be considered as a temporary line only. I have directed the Committee on the part of this Province to be ready to reassume the business and to complete it as soon as the season of the year will admit and I foresee inconveniences from settling a temporary line known to be erroneous, I therefore humbly pray your Lordship that no proceedings may be had upon the report of the New York Committee. I conceive there is no danger of fresh disputes between the borderers seeing, in a few months, the true line may be ascertained.

    It is necessary for me also to acquaint your Lordship that some of the Members of the Council have lately asserted a right to copies of the minutes of Council in order to printing them, if they think fit, without the consent of the Governor, and a copy of the late extraordinary Report has been obtained in order to its being published.4 I apprehend the Minutes of the Privy Council are so far from being open to all the King’s Subjects that the Governor may restrain the Secretary from giving out copies, even to the Members of the Council lest they should publish them. This affair will make a new subject of contention, & I pray your Lordship that the Governor may have a special Instruction for his conduct & for the conduct of the Secretary who I am well assured will readily conform to his Majestys Pleasure. I have the honour to be My Lord Your Lordship’s most humble & most obedient Servant,

    RC (National Archives UK, CO 5/763, ff. 35–36); at foot of letter, “Rt Honble. the Earl of Dartmouth”; docketed, “Boston 24th. Decembr. 1773 Governor Hutchinson (No. 38) Rx 14th. February 1774.” AC (Massachusetts Archives, SC1/series 45X, 27:603–04); at head of letter, “Welshman & Glasgow”; in TH Jr.’s hand. SC (National Archives UK, CO 5/769, ff. 45–47); docketed, “Boston 24th December 1773. Governor Hutchinson. (No. 38.) Rx 14th Feby 1774.”; at end of letter, “Inclosures. No. 1. List of persons coming to England 2. Minutes of the Council of the Massachusets Bay Decr. 21st. 1773.” SC (Staffordshire Record Office, Dartmouth Collection, D(W)1778/I/ii/924); at head of letter, “Extract.”; docketed, “Extract of a letter from Governor Hutchinson to the Earl of Dartmouth. Dated Boston 24th Decr. 1773. Rx 14th. Febry 1774. (No. 18.)”; excerpt of first two sentences only. SC (Clements Library, Wedderburn Papers); docketed, “Extract of a Letter from Govr. Hutchinson to the Earl of Dartmouth dated Boston 24 Decemr 1773 No 18”; excerpt of first two sentences only. AC (Massachusetts Archives, SC1/series 45X, 25:563); docketed, “Extract of a Letter from Governor Hutchinson to Lord Dartmouth dated December 24th: 1773”; in EH’s hand; partial excerpt of second paragraph only. Enclosures to RC: Note to Dartmouth (National Archives UK, CO 5/763, f. 37); Massachusetts Council minutes, 21 December 1773 (National Archives UK, CO 5/763, ff. 39–40).

    1208. Memorandum

    [24 December 1773]

    In Briga. Dolphin Capt Scott went passengers Mr. Mackensy & Mr Frazier Merchants who at least are knowing to the general report of the persons who were chief Actors & probably were present at the Meetings.

    In Ship Hayley—Scott are passengers Mr Turner & Mr Williamson the latter not only present at the Meetings but a reputed messenger from the people of Philadelphia to promote uniformity of measures.

    In Ship [blank in MS] Capt Welshman goes passenger Mr Tyler who I am informed has been at the Meetings and is not considered as of the Party.

    The Dartmouth Hall is now loading to sail in ten days, the master, & owner who I am informed is bound to London have been repeatedly present & examined & can give a very full account of persons votes speeches &ca.,1

    RC (National Archives UK, CO 5/763, f. 37); docketed, “In Governor Hutchinson’s Letter of the 24th Decemr 1773 No 38.” AC (Massachusetts Archives, SC1/series 45X, 27:602).

    1209. To Israel Mauduit

    Boston [28?] December 1773

    Welshman

    Dear Sir, There is no Tyranny so great as that which is excercised by the people when they take the Government from the hands of those who are entrusted with it by the Constitution. You have seldom met with a stronger proof of the truth of this observation than what I am now to relate to you. The Importation of Teas by the EI. Company afforded a fine subject for our sons of Liberty to employ their talents upon. They pretend to have received advice that the Company were averse to it but were compelled by Ld North in order to enforce the payment of the three penny duty in America. The success with the Stamp masters encouraged them to the like attempts with the Consignees of the Teas who were first summoned to appear at Liberty tree to refuse upon Oath to execute the trust & a great body of people appeared there expecting a Compliance. The Consignees not appearing the mob besieged them in one of their Warehouses threatning them with the consequences of their refusal but not succeeding in this way a Town meeting was called & committees appointed to deliver the votes or resolves &c of the Town not without a hint from one of the Committee that 1000 men were waiting an answer & therefore they shou’d think of the consequence.1 Not succeeding in this way, an attempt was made to take them out of their houses in the Evening, but some kept from home & others prepared to defend their houses, they having all had private notice of the design & this attempt did not succeed tho’ one of their houses was much damaged which is not yet repaired. The Gentlemen finding no protection from the Civil magistrate & it being the general voice that the Tea shou’d not be landed applied to the Governor & Council for protection for their persons & the Teas. It soon appeared the Council wou’d not advise to protection for either its being their opinion as much as it was the opinion of the people that the Teas ought not to be landed & they as much as say so in their answer to the Governor when he required their Advice. Two of the Consignees therefore withdrew from the Town to avoid any further Application from people who had no Authority to make them. Those who remained despairing of being able to sell or even to land the Tea without leave from the people entered into a treaty with the Select men of the Town & after other proposals they went so far as to engage not ^to make no attempt^ to sell it until the Company cou’d be acquainted with the Circumstances of the Case & give further orders & consented that the Select men shou’d put a lock on the Warehouses. They were then told by the Select men that nothing short of sending the Teas back wou’d be satisfactory. This was requiring an Impossibility for the teas cou’d not be cleared for any port without the duties being paid & no vessel cou’d go out of the harbour without a clearance & the Governor’s pass. The next day a meeting of Town & Country was called by printed Notifications. The people were prepared by the Committees of Correspondence of divers Towns who had for sometime before held their meetings like a little senate in Boston. There was a great appearance of the people who immediately came to a resolution that at all events the Tea shou’d go back to the place from whence it came. Nobody supposed the persons of the Consignees safe & they withdrew to the Castle where they have been shut up from their families four weeks & can do no part of their other business which does not relate to this dispute. The Owner & master of the first ship which arrived were then sent for & they promised the Ship shou’d go back & carry the Tea in 20 days but declared they were compelled to it & wou’d enter a protest. No preparations being made for the Ship sailing the Committee of Correspondence sends for the owner to know the reason, he declares to them he will not send the ship & that his promise was made in durance. This occasioned another meeting of Town & Country when the owner was required first to apply to the Custom House for a clearance & that being refused, to me for a pass which you will easily suppose I did not grant. All this time nobody suspected they wou’d suffer the Tea to be destroyed there being so many men of property active at these meetings as Hancock Phillips Rowe Dennie & others besides the Select men & the Town Clerk who was Clerk of all the meetings. Adams never was in greater glory. In the afternoon of the last day of the meeting the owner of the Dartmouth came to Milton to demand or desire a pass for his Vessel, after I had told him that when his vessel was regularly cleared out & not before he shou’d have a pass. I asked him what he imagined the intentions of the people to be with respect to the Tea he said he had always supposed they had no other Intention than forcing it back to England & he believed they wished to have the vessel go down & be stopped by a shot from the Castle that they might say they had done all in their power. I had heard that some persons had that day advised him to haul his ship from the wharff into the stream & I offered him a letter to the Admiral recommending ship & goods to his protection. He said he had been so advised but cou’d not get hands & shou’d have made himself obnoxious to the people by doing it or by applying to the Admiral that he was under no concern about his ship the rage was against the Tea. The Speakers in the meeting kept the people together until he returned with the answer which I had given when Dr. Y——g pronounced him a good man who had done all in his power to gratify the people2 & charged them to do no hurt to his person or property & immediately after the meeting was declared to be dissolved & the wharffs were surrounded with the greatest part of the same people whilst a select number prepared for the purpose were unloading the vessels & emptying 340 Chests of Tea into the Dock which was done completely in two or three hours. Nobody seriously pretends to seperate the meeting in Doctor Sewalls meeting house from the meeting at Griffins wharff where the three ships lay but they say all is to be justifyed.3 The people had done everything in their power with the Consignees & the owners of the vessels to get rid of the Tea but cou’d not do it & were under a necessity of destroying it & they had better pay for it than suffer the duties on it to have been paid. This I assure you was said where of all other places in the Government it ought not to have been said. Upon Information of an Intention to go down with the Ships without a clearance I renewed to Colo Leslie the Orders to stop all vessels without a pass & gave notice to Admiral Montagu who disposed his ships to prevent their passing thro’ the other channels as Capt Hall suspected they intended they shoud. This was all in my power unless the owners of the Ships wou’d have hauled them off under the protection of the men of war even if I had known of a design to have destroyed the Tea. The Civil Magistrate & the Military Officers I had early called upon without the least effects. I had sent the Sheriff also with a proclamation which I required him to read in their meeting. He was to blame for asking leave to do it & I doubt not it encouraged them to treat it with greater contempt.4

    We have some persons among us who tell the chief Actors in these meetings that the EI Company would be glad to sell half their stock in the same way but such people never think of consequences & seem at present in good spirits. Such a narrative I thought would not be disagreeable to you as I doubt not you will have various & contradictory Accounts. I am Sir Your obliged & most obedient Servant,

    The less my name is used the better.

    AC (Massachusetts Archives, SC1/series 45X, 27:604–06, 607); at head of letter, “I Mau-duit”; primarily in TH Jr.’s hand.

    1210. To Edward Montagu

    Boston 28 Decr. 1773

    Dear Sir, The Admiral tells me he writes to you by every opportunity and supply’s you with all printed papers, otherwise, as I know that from your Connections with America you are attentive to occurrences there I wou’d have found a few minutes to have given you a brief account of them. A few days after the date of my last letter to you it first appeared that a Committee of the House or of the Town of Boston, for they both have their standing Committees, had been carrying on a Correspondence with the other Governments as far at least as Pensylvania.1 The effect began to appear at the same time to Gov. Tryon at New York who wrote a private letter to me on the Subjects.2 He was determined to protect the Kings Subjects in the enjoyments of their liberties & properties for which purpose he had the advantage of me in more respects than one. The people there had been habituated to the Kings Troops who had been employed from time to time as a gaurd to the Officers of the Customs when seizures had been made in order to preserving the peace, the people here threatned destruction to any person who shoud attempt to introduce a soldier into the Town. He had a Council disposed to support him in measures for the King’s Service; my Council were entirely at the devotion of the people & some of them who had most influence consulted by them in all their measures. My best chance therefore was the arrival of the Teas at New York first, & there being landed there, I hoped, wou’d facilitate the landing here. But it hapned just the reverse & after more acts of Tyranny, by a very great Assembly of the Inhabitants of Boston & the Towns adjacent than wou’d be credible to relate in order to compel the Consignees to send the Teas back to England, a thing impossible they suddenly resolved upon the destruction of the Teas which they accomplished in a very short time. This was not suspected until a few hours before it was effected. You will naturally ask what can excuse all the powers of Government from not suppressing so flagrant an Invasion of its authority. The Council as you will see by their own minutes which they have unnecessarily & unwarrantably published in the news papers justify a refusal to do any act for the protection of the Teas. The Select men of Boston, three of the Representatives of the Town & the representatives of four or five other Towns made part of the unlawful assembly. The Town Clerk of Boston was the Clerk of it, in short there was no part of the Authority except the Governor himself which was not either favorers of the Scheme or afraid to appear against it. The Governor called upon the civil Magistrate to do their duty & upon the Officers of the Militia to assist when required but it was canere surdis3 & when he required the Sheriff to go into the midst of them & read his proclamation requiring them upon their utmost peril to disperse he, poor man, first asked leave of the moderator & having read it both the Governor & his proclamation were treated with infinite Contempt. There is no account of the arrival of the Tea either at New York or Pensilvania but the spirits of the people were rising every day at both places when the last post left them tho’ neither of them had received intelligence of the destruction made at Boston.4 The former may possibly land the Tea but not sell it the latter, I think, will do neither.5 Had the Council here given the same advice which the Council gave at New York the Teas would have been landed & secured.6

    This being plain narrative may be pushed to writing especially as it is no more than has been published to the world. I am Dear Sir Your faithful & most obedient Servant,

    AC (Massachusetts Archives, SC1/series 45X, 27:601); at foot of letter, “Mr. Montagu”; primarily in TH Jr.’s hand.

    1211. To William Robertson

    Boston 28. December 1773

    Reverend and dear Sir, The prospect of being able to contribute a mite to the great work, in which you are engaged, made your Queries welcome to me. Those, which relate to the Indians, I put into the hands of Mr. Gideon Hawley, who was several years a Missionary, from the London Society for propagating the Gospel among the Indians, to one of the settlements or as they call them, castles of the Iroquois, and is now in the same service among the only collection of Indians in this Province.1 He is a pious worthy man, but I take the present Missionary2 to the Iroquois to be a person who has made & preserved more observations of the customs & manners of that people, & I therefore, furnished him with the same set of Queries, and expect from him, next month, a more copious answer to them, which, when I receive, I will transmit to you. To the remaining Queries I send you the best answers I am capable of giving.

    The prevalence of a spirit of opposition to government in the Plantations, the natural consequence of the great growth of Colonies so remote from the Parent State and not the effect of oppression in the King or his Servants as the promoters of this Spirit would have the world to believe, takes up the whole of my time and thoughts at present, but it also makes me thoroughly weary of my political life, and will, probably in a little time, occasion my release from it, and enable me to renew my offers of every service I may have in my power to render you. I am with very great respect and esteem Sir Your most humble & most obedient Servant,

    RC (National Library of Scotland, Ms. 3942, ff. 142–43); at foot of letter, “Reverend Doctor Robertson.” AC (Massachusetts Archives, SC1/series 45X, 27:607); at head of letter, “Brig Commerce to Glasgo”; at foot of letter, “Revd Doctor Robertson.”

    1212. To Unknown

    Boston 30. Dec. 1773

    Hall

    My dear Sir, I thank you for your favour of 2d of Octo. I refered you in my letter of the 7th to News papers1 but since that you will have seen other later papers which will be more surprizing. Sieur Montesquieu is right in supposing men good or bad according to the Climate where they live. In less than two centuries Englishmen by change of country are become more barbarous & fierce than the Savages who inhabited the country before they extirpated them, The Indians themselves.2 It must be allowed that in times of Anarchy there is no kind of outrage which is not to be feared. No body however suspected the destruction of the Tea untill there should be an attempt to land it. If anybody suggested it as possible it was always answerd that ——— ——— ——— & men of property who had been active in all their meetings would never make themselves liable to pay for it. It now seems probable notwithstanding that it was the plan to force it back if possible & if not to destroy it. This is the consequence of the league formed the last winter by constituting Committees of Correspondence in a great part of the Towns & Districts in this Province against the authority of Parliament. My enemies then charged me with unnecessarily entering into controversy with the Council & Assembly upon the subject of this confederacy. The same persons now charge me with obstinately denying permits to the Tea Vessels to pass the Castle & thereby provoking the people to destroy the Teas which they say will be sent back from the other governments. I cannot believe it will, but if it should I shall have nothing to charge my self with on account of this mad action of the people seeing I could not by any justifiable means have prevented it. I am sure if I had shewn the least countenance to the unwarrantable & very criminal proceedings of their unlawful Assemblies I could not easily have exculpated myself.

    The Council instead of supporting me have done every thing they could to support the people in their opposition. Mr ——— was so fond of his own performance the advice given by the Council that he has forced it into print not only without my consent but after my [illegible] declaration against it he with others having demanded an attested copy in order to send to their Agent. I send you one of the papers. They could not have published any thing more out of character for His Majesty’s Council.3

    Mr Burch now wishes for a good Ship to embark in.4 He with the rest of the Commissioners have been mostly at the Castle since the last troubles began. I am Dear Sir,

    It was the substance of my answer to the Owner when he came for a pass that at all events I must refuse it until his vessel was regularly cleared: At the same time I offered him a letter to the Admiral recommending Vessel & Goods to his protection if he would haul her off into the stream; but he was afraid of the people. To have applied to the Admiral to take a ship under his protection against the will of the owner an Act of Government or the advice of the Council was first necessary. This I endeavoured to obtain but could not. Their advice was against any protection as you will see by the copy of it inclosed which Mr. B—— from a fondness for his own Performance has forced into print not only without my consent but after a declaration of my mind to the contrary.5 In the capacity of His Majesty’s Council advising his Governor it will not appear so favorable to them in England as it does among the people here who will not distinguish between that & their Legislative capacity.

    Mr Burch &ca. as above.

    AC (Massachusetts Archives, SC1/series 45X, 27:608).

    1213. To Sir Francis Bernard

    Boston 1 Jan 1774

    Dear Sir, After the Usurpers of Government had tried every method they could think of to force the Tea back to England & all in vain they left what they call their lawful Assembly in Dr Sewalls Meeting house & reassembled at Griffins Wharffe & in two or three hours destroyed 340 Chests.

    If there is any blame they say it must ly upon the Governor who refused to give the Ships Passes at the Castle when demanded of him which they say he ought to have done though the Ships had not cleared at the Custom house.

    The destruction of the Tea is an unfortunate event & it was what every body supposed impossible after so many men of Property had made Part of the meetings & were in danger of being liable for the value of it.

    It would have given me a much more painful reflection if I had saved it by any concession to a lawless & highly criminal Assembly of men to whose proceedings the loss must be consequentially attributed & the probability is that it was a part of their plan from the beginning. I am Dear Sir Your faithful humble Servant,

    AC (Massachusetts Archives, SC1/series 45X, 27:609); at foot of letter, “Sir F Bernard.”

    “The Wicked Statesman or Traitor to His Country in the Hour of Death,” January 1774. Paul Revere created this engraving for the cover of an almanac published by Isaiah Thomas, the printer of the Massachusetts Spy. It shows Hutchinson tormented by death and the devil, who confront him with a list of his “crimes.” The paper on the table in front of him proclaims his salary of £1,500, paid by the crown, not the Massachusetts legislature. The cartoon illustrates how much Hutchinson’s popularity had fallen since he first became lieutenant governor in 1760. Courtesy of the American Antiquarian Society, Worcester, Massachusetts

    1214. To James Gambier

    Boston 2 Jan 1774

    Hall

    Dear Sir, I did not use to be so long silent after the receipt of any of your favours but a new storm occasioned by the importation of the E India Companys Teas has raged so violently for about two months past that it has employed my whole time & thoughts. The destruction of 340 Chests of Tea is an unfortunate event. I can reflect with satisfaction that it has been absolutely our of my power to prevent it without conceding to the unreasonable demands of a lawless set of men & thereby giving the government up & rendering my self obnoxious to my Sovereign.

    I am at a loss for an excuse for the man who has been the Subject in part of several of our letters who drew up the result of the Council which you will find in the News paper inclosed and afterwards caused the Proceedings to be printed not only without my consent but against an express injunction to the contrary.1 Nothing could more directly tend to encourage the people in these irregularities.

    New York & Pensilvania & No Carolina have yet their Parts to act.2

    I rejoice in your easy situation & hope that before this time it is just what you wish. I am Dear Sir Your faithful humble Servant,

    AC (Massachusetts Archives, SC1/series 45X, 27:609); at end of letter, “James Gambier Esq.”

    1215. To [Richard Jackson]1

    Boston 2d Jany. 1774

    Hall

    Dear Sir, Our liberty men had lost their reputation with Philadelphia & New York having been importers of Teas from England for three or four years past notwithstanding the engagements they had entred into to the contrary. As soon as the news came of the intended exportation of Teas of the E I Company which must of course put an end to all Trade in Teas by private Merchants, proposals were made both to Philadelphia & York for a new Union,2 & they were readily accepted, for although no Teas had been imported from England, at either of those places, yet an immense profit had been made by the Importation from Holland, which wou’d entirely cease if the Teas from the E I Company should be admitted. This was the consideration which engaged all the merchants [. . . .]3 to the plan. Adams, & many others who [. . . .] trade but this was a fine opportunity for throwing [. . . .]ple, & it was represented as a scheme to force down [. . . .] its trade with Holland they were told was a mere sham [. . . .] the Governments would unite to make a stand, & if [. . . .] now, they wou’d preserve their liberty: if they shoud now [. . . .]ave, they & their posterity forever. In this province the [. . . . con]ducted by what is called the Committees of Correspondence [. . . .] authority of Parliament & which I called upon the [. . . .]ter to suppress, at other times by the Town of Boston in [. . . . ta]ken by the Selectmen & lastly by an Assembly of all sorts of [. . . . wi]thout restriction from Town Country or other Colonies. The first [. . . .] was upon the Consignees to attempt compel them to refuse to have [. . . .] to do with the Teas & they brought them by degrees & one act of violence [. . . .] others to engage that they shou’d not be offered for sale until further orders cou’d be had from the Company but they then inlarged their demands & declared nothing less than shipping the Teas back shou’d be satisfactory & upon failure pronounced them Enemies. This was out of their power they fled to the Castle for protection where they have been prisoners for five or six weeks.4 Having drove them off they sent for the owners & masters of the Vessels some of which promised to send their Vessels & Teas back & in the meantime this new authority placed a military watch over the Vessels every night. At length the owner of one of the vessels not having complied with his promise he was required to apply to the Collector for a clearance which was refused because the Teas had not paid the duty. He was then required to demand of me a pass or permit to sail without clearing at the Custom House which you will easily believe I refused & im[mediate]ly thereupon the greatest part of the people who were assembled [. . . .]ed to the wharffs where the vessels lay & in a few hours, the whole Tea then arrived, was destroyed. This they say if they shou’d finally be saddled with the value of it, is a less evil than to have submitted to the duty, but the Governor who refused a pass for the Ships & had provided for stopping them at the Castle & the Admiral who had disposed his Ships so as to s[hut] the other channels ought to bear the loss. I know from good Authority this has been the language of some of the Clergy of the greatest note among us. It is the general expectation here that the Teas will not be landed any where & it is said such an united opposition will be an indemnification for the whole whereas if one province alone had been refractory it wou’d have been made to smart. I write nothing but plain facts which nobody will deny. It is not safe to trust anything to writing which wou’d discover a disposition to measures for inforcing the Governments & restoring Authority to the hands of those with whom by the constitution it is intrusted for it is become meritorious to intercept or in any way to make discovery of letters wrote from hence.5 I have received His Majestys Order in Council respecting the judicial authority of the Governor founded upon your opinion. It will b[. . . .] if the grand point between the Kingdom & the Colonies [. . . .] settled. I am Sir Your most obedient humble [Servant],

    AC (Massachusetts Archives, SC1/series 45X, 27:610; 26:165); primarily in TH Jr.’s hand.

    1216. To Francis Maseres1

    Boston 3 Jany. 1774

    Sir, I may not any longer omit thanking you for your repeated notice of me by the tracts which I have received from my good friend Mr. Green.2 The first, I read with pleasure. Of the latter which is but just now, come to my hands, I have only had time to take but a short view, but have seen enough to convince me, that it will afford much entertainment when I can find leisure to read it with attention. Nothing but the attention which I owe to the publick hinders me from doing it immediately. America has been so long indulged some say from an Opinion, that it is an easy matter to reduce it to order at any time that it now requires more than common wisdom & fortitude to save it from perfect Anarchy. A blundering fellow, who has been an encourager of every mob for four or five years past made a sensible remark a few days ago that the government of this Province is like an old stone wall which not being regarded in the part where it first gave way, the other parts more easily following until it all came to the ground; but he added we, meaning the mobility—design to build it up again.3 The proceedings here have been so outrageous that they must have alarmed the whole Kingdom. We have no advice of the arrival of the Teas at New York or Philadelphia. The inclosed news paper affords but an unfavorable prospect of their reception there. The minutes of the Council of this province which you see in this paper have, upon the whole, a tendency to encourage the people in their disorders & were forced into print by one of the Council not only without the consent but against the injunction of the Governor to the Contrary.4 Indeed there is no part, at present, of the legislative or executive branches of Government, disposed to discountenance the irregularities of the people but the Governor himself & his situation is so unfortunate that by discovering his disposition he exposes himself to the most illiberal abuse of the most abandoned part of the people & has nothing more in his power than to refuse his assent to any Acts which they think proper for their purpose. Give me leave Sir to congratulate you upon the repeated marks of honor which I see by the publick papers have been conferred upon you. I am with very great esteem &c,

    AC (Massachusetts Archives, SC1/series 45X, 27:610); at end of letter, “Francis Maseres Esq”; in TH Jr.’s hand.