Acquittal Brings Optimism

    739. From Thomas Gage, 5 November 1770

    740. To Sir Francis Bernard, 6 November 1770

    741. From Sir Francis Bernard, 6 November 1770

    742. From Sir Francis Bernard, 10 November 1770

    743. To Thomas Pownall, 11 November 1770

    744. To Thomas Gage, 12 November 1770

    745. From Thomas Gage, 12 November 1770

    The acquittal of Captain Thomas Preston on 30 October 1770, Hutchinson’s principal goal for the previous eight months, led to increased optimism about the possible outcome of the forthcoming trial of the soldiers involved in the Boston Massacre shootings. Little of the evidence at Preston’s trial supported the town’s contention, as presented in the Short Narrative of the Horrid Massacre, that Regulars somehow premeditated a plan of systematic violence on the night of 5 March. Instead, the facts, as revealed at the trial, suggested that the soldiers had acted in self-defense. This new view, as Hutchinson noted, prompted some residents of country towns to believe that they had been deliberately deceived by the Bostonians and began to erode support for the patriot vanguard.

    739. From Thomas Gage

    New York November 5th: 1770.

    Sir, I return you many thanks for your Letter of 28th: Ultimo, which has given me great Pleasure, for I think from your Account of Captain Preston’s Tryal, that the Jury cannot possibly give a Verdict contrary to the Opinion of the Judges.1 And tho’ there might be no Danger of his Life, should they give a contrary Verdict, yet, tho’ we are acquainted with the Heats of a Faction, the Violence and Prejudices that have too generaly prevailed in Boston for some Years past, the World in general is not so well informed of them; And it will be more for Captain Preston’s honor, to be acquitted by the Laws of his Country, than to owe his Preservation, to the Justice and Mercy of the Crown. I am in hopes too, that during the Course of his Tryal, many Circumstances may have appeared favorable to the Soldiers in their Cause. Since this unhappy Affair, I have taken all Pains to procure a fair and impartial Account of it, which perhaps was not easy to procure, but from what I have been able to gather up, had you or I been in the Situation those Men were in, I do believe that we should have fired in Defence of our own Lives.

    I write by this Post to Colonel Dalrymple, and have taken Occasion to mention what you desire in such a Manner, that I think he cannot have any Suspicion that you have wrote to me on the Subject. I wonder indeed that it did not occur to himself, that Small Pieces of Ordnance Answer all the Ends of a Salute.2

    The Papers inform us of the Attack made upon you about the Invasion of the Charter, in the Affair of Castle William, but you have taken such Precautions, that their Attempts on that Side have had no success. I hope they will Succeed as ill in all other Attempts upon your Government. I am with great truth and Esteem, Sir, &ca.

    AC (Clements Library, Thomas Gage Papers); at foot of letter, “Governor Hutchinson.”

    740. To Sir Francis Bernard

    Boston 6 Novr 1770

    Dear Sir, When I wrote you a few lines the last evening, I had no expectation that I should have a melancholy occasion to write you again this morning.1 Mr. Frank has been for several weeks composed but the powers of his mind appeared to be weakned & he has been weak in body and Perkins seemed to apprehend danger of a Hectick although he imagined it might be prevented with proper care.2 Two or three days ago he fell into a Diarhaea which notwithstanding all the help which could be afforded sunk him so fast that yesterday afternoon he died. Mr. Logan has just left me.3

    The first news must be shocking to you but upon reflection it will appear to be right for his case was desperate and As soon as ever strength of body had returned, if it could have been recovered the disorder of the brain would have returned with it. Of his own accord he gave me an account of a blow he received at Westminster School & by his manner of relating it I tho’t he was sensible himself that the Effects of it then remained.4 There has been no neglect on the part of your friends. I am most sincerely Dear Sir Your faithful humble Servant,

    AC (Massachusetts Archives, SC1/series 45X, 27:50); in WSH’s hand.

    741. From Sir Francis Bernard

    Hampstead, Nov. 6th. 1770

    No 46

    Dear Sir, I received your Packet this day; & as a Mail is to be dispatched tomorrow & no Ship for Boston is in readiness. I won’t omit acknowledging the Receipt of your Letters; tho’ I cant enter into any particulars of them at present, as I have only part of the Close of a tiresome day to write what I shall send by the Packet.

    I am very sorry for the Publication of Mr Olivers Narrative; tho I had no other hand in it than not guarding against that Use being made of it, after I had suffered it to be put among the Informations received from Boston, among which it was read at the Council Board.1 I think you sent a duplicate to Ld H: but it was not material as I certainly communicated my Copy to Lord H & could not avoid it.

    Don’t be apprehensive of the resentment of any of the Council upon this Occasion: when they find they are like to have a lasting Connection with you, they will be in good humour. For I am much mistaken if any one of them and especially the Gentleman whose Declaration being made public gives the greatest Offence, will be sorry to find himself not subject to the Precariousness of an annual Election for the future.2 They seem to have worked out their own Salvation, & it should be done with fear & trembling.

    I am very glad their Conduct of late has been such as will in some measure retrieve their former Proceedings. I am a strong Advocate for making the Alteration of the Council by strengthening the Establishment & not changing the Men.3 It is true there are some among them that have little Pretension to the Kings favor; but I am not for making Distinctons at this time. I am not afraid of a Mans making a worse royal Councellor, for having swam with the popular Stream when he could not stem it.

    I am got into diffuse writing without intending it. I have only to add that I will write to you fully by the first Opportunity & then shall be able to tell you what is doing in Parliament as it is to meet this day sev’night: I will say at present that what is intended to be done with your Government is of the gentlest kind and will tend to confirm the Charter instead of destroying it, by giving an Emendation now necessary to its being. I am &c.,

    P.S. The Commissions stand still for the Arrival of Lord Privy Seal who is expected in town every day.4

    John may come to England in pursuance of Engagements entered into before he knew of his Appointment without any Danger.5

    P.S. to No. 46.

    P.S. Nr 13

    Since the date of the foregoing I have enquired into & recollected the occasion of the publication of Mr Olivers Narrative & I find that I have more to answer for than I at first imagined. A Gentleman having expressed a desire to refute the Boston Narrative; a friend of yours & of mine, & of Mr Olivers also, applied to me to get him a sight of the informations which had been received.6 I procured them & gave them in a bundle unopened. I afterwards found when it was too late, that instead of the Substance which might have been used properly & without hurt, Mr Olivers Declaration was printed verbatim. I condemned myself then as I do now for my inadvertence in not guarding against this. But these particulars had slipt my memory when I first received your Letter.

    I am sorry for the trouble this is like to give, as this want of caution is less excusable in me, who have suffered so much in this way myself, than in another.7 But I cannot think it can be lasting or of consequence. The truth of the information cannot be doubted: I myself can see the Gentleman speaking the words which gave the offence. And shall these Gentlemen who by the by have themselves destroyed the confidentiality of the Council drive you into a measure full of danger, & not suffer the Secretary to minute the Arguments made use of to oblige you to a submission, & afterwords complain that you had the caution, & the Secretary the honesty to ascertain & authenticate a true State of the force which was put upon you, instead of the false account of it which was dictated to him in Council?8 The whole proceeding is like the Party whom they were supporting at that time, deceitfull & insidious: and you need not give them any other answer, than that what you did was just & necessary to your own justification, and that the publication being contrary to your intention & desire, you are not answerable for it.

    SC (Houghton Library, Sparks 4, 8:137–38, 144–45); at foot of letter before the postscripts, “His Excellcy Govr Hutchinson.”

    742. From Sir Francis Bernard

    Hampstead, Nov. 10. 1770.

    No 47.

    Dear Sir, My Lord H has shown me your Letter in Answer to his desiring your Opinion of what ought to be done for the reforming the Government of your Province.1 He observes that it is like a Lawyers Opinion, in which doubts & difficulties are stated but no Conclusion is drawn. He should have judged from this Letter that you had no Desire there should be an Alteration of your Government in the Appointment of the Council, if your former Letters had not shewn that you expected, not without Impatience, such an Alteration.2 I confirmed this by observing that your Letters to me & the Secretary’s & some others showed plainly that the Supporters of Government rested all their Hopes of a restoration of Government upon the intervention of Parliament, which must certainly emancipate the Council, whatever else they might do. I therefore had no Doubt but that your Opinion was in favor of making the Council independent of the Assembly, however at this time when the Execution of it was drawing near you might be cautious of expressing. And I added that if this Measure should not be executed by Means of your not giving your Testimony to it, I was sure you would heartily repent of your not speaking out.

    I told my Lord that I had not acquainted you with the Plan that was proposed except by distant Hints, not thinking myself at Liberty so to do. He said that he wished that I had done it: for if I had been more explicit to you, you probably would have been more so to him. He wished that I would do it now: for tho your Answer would not probably arrive till after the Business was over in Parliament, yet he should be glad to have your Sentiments upon it. And as it appeared to him and me that you had wrote to him in your last with more Caution than was needful he desired me to assure you that you might write to him, private, upon this Subject or any other with the utmost Confidence.

    I wrote to you before, that tho’ there was no Doubt but that the Charter was forfeited, there were many Reasons against taking Advantage of the Forfeiture; of which one alone was sufficient, that as there was very little of the Charter from which a Departure was wanted, there was no Occasion to destroy the whole in Order to amend a part. The Power of Parliament to correct & amend a Charter, without the Pretence of a Forfeiture, had been often exercised; & particularly in the City of London within living Memory, without a Dispute. And as the cheif Reformation of the Government, which counteracted the Charter was one only it would be better to do it by Amendment than by Forfeiture; as the Power of Parliament to amend was sufficient whether there was a Forfeiture or not.

    This being premised it was next considered what was wanted to the Reformation of the Government. This being considered fully amounted to about 10 Articles: out of these were struck all such as were not immediately necessary & could be done either by the King, or by the Governor & Council or by the general Court, where the Business could wait for better times. This has ultimately reduced the Alterations to two only, 1 the vesting the Appointment of the Council in the King: 2 that Jurors shall be returned according to the Laws of England, of which some late Statutes are excellently calculated to prevent Prejudice.

    The Plan being thus reduced: the next Consideration was to execute the Change of the Council in the most gentle & easy Manner. For this Purpose it was proposed to take in the whole present Council without making any Distinctions & to add to them all those who have been left out without resigning; these we find to be 9, which added to the present Number make the whole 34. But at the same time the King’s Intention is to be signified that this Council when reduced to 30 is to continue at that Number, being as I say, the Number intended by the Charter. This Proposal for forming the Council was mine, & since it was made, it has been much confirmed by the late Advices of the Alteration of the Conduct of the Council. I hope this Indulgence will not be abused; I am sensible that it will be the Means of introducing some violent Men who are very little intitled to the King’s Favor. But I thought it was not worth while for the sake of two or three mistaken Men to make a Distinction in what is intended as a general Act of Grace. I hope you will have no Occasion to complain of this Sensitive Measure.

    And now I have stated this Plan & shown it to be so very easy moderate & practicable, I cannot promise you that it will be carried into Execution. My Lord H thinks very rightly upon this Subject & is a Wellwisher to the Cause. But there is the Concurrence of so many Persons necessary to the carrying on a Measure which is sure to be litigated in both Houses of Parliament, that I know not what to think. This time two years, the vesting the Appointment of the Council in the King was as much intended as it is now; & yet was defeated. At the present time there is a Concurrence of Circumstances more favorable to this Business than ever has happened at any time within my Knowledge. If this Opportunity of reforming your Government is neglected, I shall give up all Expectations of any thing being done for the Regulation of America. For by the same Means by which this Intention was prevented, must every other Measure for Securing the Dependance of America upon Great Britain be defeated. I am &c.,

    SC (Houghton Library, Sparks 4, 8:138–42); at foot of letter, “His Excellency Govr. Hutchinson.”

    743. To Thomas Pownall

    Boston 11 Nov. 1770

    Dear Sir, I am obliged to you for your kind notice by Commodore Gambier. Your Recommendation will add to my inducements to shew him every Civility. You will have heard of Cap Prestons acquittal. I think the Letters which the prosecutors received from Engd advising them to incline to Mercy rather than shew rigid Justice must have had some weight & slackened their ^violent^ career.1 But if they had it was only from a view to their own Interest & to avoid disobliging Gentlemen in England on whose favour they depend for I am sure they have not a spark of Gratitude & make no scruple of sacrificing the best friends of the Country to the cause of Party.

    You will also have heard of the change of the Garrison at the Castle which our Heroes affect to call a surrender to the Kings Troops & this not only in the News Papers but in the Votes of the House for both are composed by the same person.2 They have taken great pains to make it an Invasion of their Charter, but they will fail I having done no more than changed one Garrison for another & very consistent with my Instructions & with the Sentiments of Gen. Gage so that there is no occasion of inquiring whether King William ever intended to grant a Charter which should divest His Successors of any part of their constitutional military authority or, if that was the intention, whether the Grant is not so far a nullity.

    I dont know whether you give yourself the trouble to read their messages upon this & other points they have been contending for the last year. They have so bad a cause & are such poor Supporters of it that I have no reason to boast of a Victory over them. I have more hopes that the body of the people are sick of their Misleaders than I have had since the Governor left the Province. Their choice of Mr. Franklin for their agent I believe is owing to the recommendation of Mr. B—— & Doctor C——3 and of Mr. Lee in case of the other’s absence or refusal to the recommendation of Mr. Read a Secretary or Deputy of the Jersies lately arrived from London whose Letters to some of the party his Correspondents to that purpose were read in the House and occasioned the choice.4 I am Dear Sir Your most Obedient Humble Servant,

    AC (Massachusetts Archives, SC1/series 45X, 27:51); at head of letter, “Gov Pownall.” Contemporary printing: Boston Gazette, 5 February 1776.

    744. To Thomas Gage

    Boston 12 Nov. 1770

    Sir, I thank you for your favour of the 5th.1 The trial of the Privates will not come on until to morrow sennight. I hope the Judges will hold their integrity and resolution. They deserve applause for what is past and the greater because Honesty is not yet Trumpt among us in this Province.

    I am obliged to you for conducting what relates to the Castle in the manner you have done. They still keep pecking at it in the Assembly but to little purpose.

    In one or two of your Letters you gave me a hint of the possibility of the old Garrison’s being restored. If you have any special reason to think it in any measure probable I should take it as a favour if you would let me know it, because it may have some influence upon my own conduct. Every thing that I have looks the other way, for it seems not only to be part of a plan the remainder of which depends upon Parliament and which, at divers times before, may well enough be supposed to fail, but it seems also to be a part of measures for lessening the weight in the popular scale and preserving the Independance of the Servants of the Crown even if nothing should be done by Parliament. But I may be mistaken having no intelligence from the Ministry upon which to found any conjectures but meerly judge from facts & comparing them one with another. I am with great Truth Sir Your most faithful & obedient Servant,

    RC (Clements Library, Thomas Gage Papers); at foot of letter, “His Excellency General Gage.” AC (Massachusetts Archives, SC1/series 45X, 27:51); at head of letter, “Gen Gage.”

    745. From Thomas Gage

    New York 12th. Novr: 1770.

    Sir, Tho’ a Packet arrived last Monday we have no News so late as what you have had by private Ships; Lord Hillsborough was in Ireland, and most People in Office retired to the Country. It was said parliament would meet early on Account of the American Affairs. The Stocks have fallen a little; and some Ships were Ordered to the Mediterranean; but there was no appearance of a Rupture yet tho’ the News Papers have been full of it:1 The Duke of Bedford had been in a declining Way, but very much restored by drinking Tunbridge Waters, and was gone much recovered to Wooburn.

    I am now to thank you for your Letter of the 28th: Instant and rejoice on the Honorable Acquittal of Capt. Preston.2 The Effort made afterwards to distress him will only add to the Weight hanging over the Heads of the Faction, and Serve to Convince the World the more of their Malice and Inveteracy. We conceived Hopes of this Happy Event, from the Names of the Jurors, which some Person had transmitted to his Correspondent here, and Gentlemen acquainted with many of them told us, they did not believe an honester Jury could have been Selected.3 I hope the same Jury will try the Soldiers. The Judges have gained great Reputation, from the Firmness and Resolution they shewed to do their Duty, in Defiance of the Threats of the Mob.

    I am with great Regard and Esteem Sir &ca.

    P:S Since Writing, I have seen a Gentleman of my Acquaintance arrived last night from England. He left Plymouth the 1st: of October. The Spaniards have Seized Falkland Island, and sent home all our People. Immediately on the News a Squadron was Ordered to be fitted out, and a hot Press for Seamen was began. A Messenger was sent off for Madrid, to know whether the Court of Spain avowed what had been done; and to demand Satisfaction. If She refuses Reparation and Avows this Act of Hostility, War will Commence. The British Minister it’s said, is directed to get a decisive Answer, or leave Spain in 24 Hours after the Messenger arrives. The Armament that seized the Island was fitted out at Buenos Ayres, and many think the Spanish Court will disavow any knowledge of it, and throw the Blame upon their Governor.

    AC (Clements Library, Thomas Gage Papers); at foot of letter, “Govr: Hutchinson.”