The Arrival and Departure of the 64th and 65th Regiments

    847. From Thomas Gage, 22 April 1771

    848. To Sir Francis Bernard, 23 April 1771

    849. From Thomas Gage, 28 April 1771

    850. To Thomas Gage, 29 April 1771

    One unfortunate consequence of the slow tempo of transatlantic communication was the failure to countermand in time orders for the 64th and 65th Regiments to move south from Halifax to New York through Boston. The troops were already on their way when official word of peace arrived. No sooner did the transports drop anchor in Boston Harbor than General Thomas Gage ordered them back again to Halifax, but at least the troops were there for such a short time that they remained onboard ship, and Hutchinson never had to face the same dilemma as Francis Bernard concerning where to house them.

    847. From Thomas Gage

    New York April 22d: 1771.

    Sir, By the last Post from Boston I am informed that the Men of War and Transports are Sailed to Halifax for the 64th: and 65th: Regiments; And I am on that Account obliged to trouble you with my Request to provide Quarters for those Regiments when they arrive at Boston, till they can be brought forward towards this Province or sent back to Nova Scotia. It is impossible to Judge till the Packet arrives what is best to be done, for the Ship that has brought the News of the Convention with Spain, informs us also that the Armaments were continued in Great Britain. A few Days will probably remove all doubts, but if the Packets arrival is delayed much longer, I must continue to proceed in the Execution of my first Orders; So that the trouble you will have with the 64th: and 65th: Regiments, will in either Case be of very short Duration.

    You will receive inclosed a Printed Copy of the last Mutiny Act passed for America.1 I would transmit the others with the Clauses inserted in 1768, but they are too bulky for the Post. They shall be sent you by the first good Opportunity. I have the honor to be with great Regard and Esteem, Sir, &ca.

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

    848. To Sir Francis Bernard

    Boston 23d April 1771

    No 2

    Dear Sir, I have received your Letters by Mr Gale two days ago I sent Mr Bernard his letter but have had no opportunity of seeing him. The Court which is sitting at Cambridge will be over in a few days and I will then advise and assist him as far as in my power.1 The Council are very near right. The House are still influenced by the Boston Members. There is a prospect of a favorable change in many of the Country Towns the next Election. Boston I expect nothing from but further resentment for negativing three of their Members chosen Commissaries. I have also negatived two Truck Masters and have kept in Goldthwait at present for they decline making any further attempt this Session.2

    It is not possible to determine that we should have been in a better state if the Constitution had been altered than we are without such an alteration. The changing the Garrison at the Castle placing the Kings Ships here and putting it out of their power to stop the Governors support has had a much greater effect than I expected and being all irresistable sunk the spirits of the Faction and has at least given a Temporary relief. If it should prove lasting the point aimed at is gained, if it should not we shall have less to say when the proposed alteration shall take place than we should have had without this forbearance. I am not able to perfect a plan for accomplishing what I know to be the one thing needful I mean the punishment or prevention of the denial of the authority of Parliament over the Colonies. It is more necessary here than the punishment of the denial of the Kings right to the Crown ever was in England and until this provision is made by an Act of Parliament the form of Government being altered will not be sufficient to preserve Order in the Colonies. I am shocked at the impudence of the News Papers upon this subject and more so at some of the Messages or Resolves of the Assemblies, and yet all seem to pass without notice in England. I send you a new peice in the infamous paper of this week which perhaps you will think proper to shew to My Lord Hillsborough.3 After the Court is up I will write further. I am Dear Sir Your faithful & most Obedient Servant,

    AC (Massachusetts Archives, SC1/series 45X, 27:153–54); at foot of letter, “Sir F Bernard”; in WSH’s hand. Contemporary printings: Boston Gazette, 4 September 1775; Massachusetts Spy, 13 September 1775; Essex Journal, 22 September 1775.

    849. From Thomas Gage

    New York April 28th: 1771.

    Sir, His Majesty’s Sloop Favourite arrived here Yesterday in the Evening with Dispatches dated on the 22d. of January; There is of course nothing new to acquaint you with. Lord Hillsborough informs me of the Declaration Signed by the Spanish Minister, and in Consequence thereof, transmits His Majesty’s Orders, to desist from the Prosecution of the Orders before transmitted to me.

    I lose no time to inform you of this Event by Express, who carry’s Orders for the Return of the 64th: and 65th: Regts: to Halifax.

    Your Favor of the 22d. Inst. was received last Night with two Certificates; but there is not time to make out the Warrants by this Opportunity. I send you a Copy of the Mutiny Act for N: America. I am with great Regard & Esteem Sir &ca. &ca.,

    AC (Clements Library, Thomas Gage Papers); at foot of letter, “[His Exc]y Govr. Hutchinson.”

    850. To Thomas Gage

    Boston 29. April 1771

    Sir, I have the honour of your letter of the 22d. I expect the Transports the first Easterly winds. I know of no steps I can take, previous to the determination how the Troops are to be disposed of, except those I have already taken by issuing my Proclamation and Preparing the People for their reception by the Publick notice in my speech to the Assembly. In all the conversation I have had with Colo Dalrymple he supposed that they would either remain on board the Men of War & Transports until they should be sent back or land at Dorchester neck in order to their marching to the southern Provinces or Part might Possibly be accommodated at the Castle but all would depend upon your advices from the Ministry at the time when they arrive. If the service would admit I should rather avoid any dispute with the people of this Town but if the Service requires they should land there I will do my duty and will endeavour to persuade every one concerned to do theirs be the event what it may.

    I thank you for the Mutiny Act. Colo. Dalrymple tells me he has the Act preceding which may save you the trouble of sending it. I am not sure that our captious Lawyers will not take exception to a copy printed in New York as no evidence. I have represented the necessity of my being regularly furnished with all Acts respecting the Colonies as soon as they are passed.

    My Assembly have gone through their business. The body of the House have such illiberal notions that civility is not to be expected from them. The Council are freindly to me all the Opposition being kept up by three or four who are connected with a Gentleman now in England vindicating his own and his friends conduct to Administration.1

    A Vessel arrived this morning which left London the 6 March and I have Papers of that day but nothing of moment in them. I am with very great Regard & esteem Sir Your most humble & most Obliged Servant,

    RC (Clements Library, Thomas Gage Papers); at foot of letter, “His Excellency General Gage.” AC (Massachusetts Archives, SC1/series 45X, 27:155–56); at foot of letter, “Gen Gage”; in WSH’s hand.

    851. To William Palmer

    Boston 29. April 1771

    Sir, My sons have shewn me a Letter from you by Capt. Lyde & desired me to give you my opinion upon the subject of it. I wrote you formerly of the hazard of large purchases when an article is high but you can best judge of the probability of its continuing to keep its price in England. Were it not for the Holland Tea the vent of English would have answered your expectation here but the profit is immense upon Holland Tea which some say cost but 18 & the 3d duty is saved. Many hundred chests have been imported & I have no hopes of this Springs adventure selling to profit because I suspect that upon the advices from America the article will fall in England. If it should not what is shipped may go off in time without loss for there must be buyers of English Tea the transportation of Dutch by water being attended with trouble & risque. I think it safest to wait a little longer to see the success of this adventure before you make further Purchases for shipping. I have wrote in haste being pressed with business. I am Sir Your very humble Servant,

    AC (Massachusetts Archives, SC1/series 45X, 27:157); at head of letter, “Mr Willm Palmer.”

    852. To Lord Hillsborough

    Boston 1 May 1771

    (No 3)

    My Lord, In conformity to the uninterrupted usage from the first year of the present Charter I have dissolved the Assembly and issued Writs for a new Election. I can find no clause in the Charter which makes a new House of Representatives necessary every year and I think if the practice had been otherwise it would have been well warranted, and it would have strengthened Government if the Governor could have continued a House of Representatives that should be well disposed, but, an usage of fourscore years has rendered such continuance as impractable as if the Charter had been expressly in favour of it.

    The Party in the House in opposition have failed in many Points and on a motion for an Address of Congratulation they carried the Negative by one vote only. Their Address or Answer to my speech, which I shall inclose to your Lordship, was substituted instead of it and falls much short of what was intended by the faction.1 I am not without hopes of a majority in favour of government upon the new Election.

    The Council, during the Session, shewed a good disposition until I communicated to them your Lordship’s letter which respects the Lieutt. Governor’s conduct while Secretary.2 I informed them the Letter was in consequence of the censure passed upon him by the Council and the Present Secretary has so entred it upon his minutes. They have notwithstanding passed a Vote in which they will not allow that it could refer to the proceedings of Council. Two or three gentlemen, who are of a particular connexion and were most violent against Governor Bernard, had prepared several Resolves much more exceptionable than the Vote which passed but they were rejected3 and I expected my friends would have carried a Vote for rejecting the whole motion. A majority finally agreed to the Vote which I shall inclose and which being matter of Record after the Record of your Lordships letter will I think convey to Posterity greater dishonour than if the Letter had stood alone.4

    The Laws which have Passed this Session are of no great moment. As soon as they can be Prepared I will transmit them with remarks, in conformity to my Instructions. There are five Bills to which I refused my assent. My reasons for not assenting to the two for the Governors Support are contained in my Answer to the Message of the House to me upon the subject.5 The other three I thought most advisable to take your Lordship’s directions upon being doubtful whether His Majesty would approve of my giving my assent without a suspending clause which the Assembly will never suffer to be brought into any of their Bills. That for establishing a marine Corporation I refused because a Bill for establishing a Society for propagating the Gospel among the Indians had lately been disallowed by His Majesty after it had received the Governor’s assent, one reason of which disallowance I imagined to be the tendency of such an Act to call in question the power of the Crown, by the Governor, to grant Charters of Incorporation without the aid of the General Assembly. I do not know that the persons interested in the Bill would not be content with such a Charter.

    The Bill respecting the Militia is calculated to charge the disorderly state of it to a wrong cause, a defect of duty in the Officers, when the true cause is want of subordination in the Men. There is a clause which virtually repeals a clause in a former law altering the age when men are to be exempt from ordinary military duty from 60 to 50 years.

    The Bill which prohibits the Importation of Negro Slaves appeared to me to come within His Majestys 7th Instruction to Sir Francis Bernard which restrains the Governor from assenting to any Laws of a new and unusual nature. I doubted, besides, whether the chief motive to this Bill which, it is said, was a scruple upon the minds of the people, in many parts of the Province, of the lawfulness, in a meerly moral respect, of so great a restraint of Liberty, was well founded; slavery by the Provincial Laws giving no right to the life of the servant and a slave here is considered as a servant would be who had bound himself for a term of years exceeding the ordinary term of human life and I do not know that it has been determined he may not have a property in Goods notwithstanding he is called a Slave.

    I have reason to think these three Bills will be again offered to me in another Session I having intimated that I would transmit them to England that I might know His Majesty’s Pleasure concerning them.

    The two Houses elected the Speaker, to manage the Trade with the Indians, whom I negatived, as I did afterwards Mr Hancock & Mr. Adams, as also two persons whom they chose by a very small majority in the place of Mr Goldthwait the Truck master.6 After so many negatives they would chuse no more so that the two Officers chosen last year must continue until others are chosen in their stead. They also renewed their Votes for Grants to their Agents Mr DeBerdt & Mr Bollan to both which I have again declined assenting.7

    I urged them to repair the Governors House which is in very bad condition but they have declined it,8 some of their leaders intimating that if I would carry the Court to Boston they would make it a Palace, but whilst they dispute His Majestys authority to cause the Court to be held in any place except Boston I may not ask his leave to hold it there.

    I have mentioned to your Lordship every thing which I remember to have passed of a publick nature in the Session, the private business does not deserve your Lordships notice & most of it is too trivial for the Legislature to spend their time about and I wish I may be able by degrees to break them off from it.

    I have a favourable account from the Eastern part of the Province and hope shall suppress or keep under the disorderly spirit there but the Intruders multiply every day. I have the honour to be most respectfully My Lord Your Lordships most humble and most obedient Servant,

    RC (National Archives UK, CO 5/760, ff. 152–53); docketed, “Boston 1st May 1771. Governor Hutchinson (No 3) Rx 15 June D——8.” DupRC (National Archives UK, CO 5/894, ff. 137–38); at head of letter, “Duplicate”; docketed, “Massachusets. Duplicate of a Letter No. 3. from Gov. Hutchinson to the Earl of Hillsborough, dated May 1771, relative to the proceedings of the Council & Assembly in their last Session.” AC (Massachusetts Archives, SC1/series 45X, 27:157–60); at head of letter, “By the Towers & Calahan alias Davies”; in WSH’s hand. SC (National Archives UK, CO 5/768, ff. 192–97); docketed, “Boston 1st. May 1771. Governor Hutchinson. (No. 3.) Rx 15th. June.”; at foot of letter, “Inclosures. 1. An Act to incorporate Jonathan Gardner Junr. & Others into a Society by the name of the Marine Society at Salem. 2. An Act for granting the Sum of £1,300 for the support of His Majesty’s Governor. 3. An Act for granting the Sum of £506 to His Excy. Thomas Hutchinson Esqr: in Consideration of his Services while Lieut. Governor. 4. An Act to prevent the Importation of Negro Slaves into this Province. 5. An Act for rendering more effectual an Act Entitled an Act for regulating the Militia. 6. Extracts from the Minutes of the General Court. 7. The Boston Gazette of 2d. May 1771.” SC (Houghton Library, Sparks 43, 1:131); docketed, “Thos: Hutchinson to the Earl of Hillsborough”; excerpt of sixth paragraph only. Enclosures to RC: Acts passed by the General Court (National Archives UK, CO 5/760, ff. 154–63); Extract of minutes of the General Court, 23 April 1771 (ff. 164–65); Massachusetts Gazette and Boston Weekly News-Letter, 2 May 1771 (ff. 166–67). Contemporary printings: Boston Gazette, 4 September 1775; Massachusetts Spy, 13 September 1775; Essex Journal, 22 September 1775 (first paragraph only).