Chronology

    November 1770–June 1772

    Entries appearing in italics occurred in England.

    1770

    5 November: Frank Bernard, the governor’s eldest son, dies.


    20 November: The General Court is prorogued.


    27 November: The soldiers’ trial for the Boston Massacre begins.


    5 December: The jury acquits all the soldiers of murder except Matthew Kilroy and Hugh Montgomery, who are found guilty of manslaughter.


    6 December: Captain Thomas Preston departs for England.


    10 December: Samuel Adams, writing as Vindex, begins a series of articles in the Boston Gazette denouncing the verdicts in the Massacre trials.


    12 December: Four civilians linked to the customs service accused of roles in the Massacre are tried and immediately acquitted.


    24 December: Jonathan Sewall, writing as Philanthrop in the Boston Evening-Post, begins a series of replies to Adams.

    1771

    22 January: The Spanish ambassador to London disavows the seizure of the Falkland Islands, ending the expectation of war with Spain.


    14 March: TH’s commission as governor-in-chief is proclaimed in Boston.


    27 March: Alderman Richard Oliver and London Lord Mayor Brass Crosby are imprisoned in the Tower in the “printers’ crisis.”


    2 April: James Lovell addresses what would become an annual commemorative celebration of the Massacre for the town of Boston.


    16 May: The North Carolina Regulators are suppressed by Governor William Tryon at the Battle of the Alamance.


    22 June: The Massachusetts House of Representatives issues its Protest, reiterating its charter right to meet in Boston.


    6 July: Hutchinson prorogues the General Court after the House sent him a message denying the legitimacy of the American Board of Customs Commissioners and Parliament’s right to raise a revenue within Massachusetts.


    24 October: Hutchinson proclaims a general thanksgiving for the “continuance of civil and religious privileges.” Most Boston clergy refuse to read the proclamation from their pulpits.


    12 November: Arthur Savage, the customs comptroller for Falmouth (Maine), is forcibly taken from his house and threatened by an unknown group of men.


    14 November: “Mucius Scaevola” attacks Hutchinson as a “monster in government” in the pages of the Massachusetts Spy.


    27 November: The Council issues warrants for the arrest of persons involved in assaulting Arthur Savage.

    1772

    8 April: The General Court reconvenes in Cambridge.


    25 April: The General Court adjourns.


    27 May: The newly elected General Court convenes in Cambridge.


    10 June: The Royal Navy schooner Gaspée is burned in Narragansett Bay.


    16 June: The General Court meets in Boston for the first time since 1769.