Freedom for Ebenezer Richardson

    952. To Lord Hillsborough, 12 March 1772

    953. To Sir Francis Bernard, 14 March 1772

    Despite an instruction from the judges of the Superior Court that customs informant Ebenezer Richardson acted in self-defense when an angry crowd attacked his home on 22 February 1770, a jury found him guilty of the murder of Christopher Seider on 21 April of that same year. The judges did not pass sentence, hoping for a royal pardon, word of which did not finally arrive until May 1771. The judges, dissatisfied with the form of pardon, refused to order his release until the matter was finally resolved in March 1772. Thus, Richardson spent over two years in jail.

    952. To Lord Hillsborough

    Boston 12 March 1772

    No 22

    My Lord, On the 3. Instant I received your Lordship’s letter No. 11.1 As the Superior Court was then sitting for this County I sent for the Judges and comunicated to them so much of that part of the Letter, which respects the case of the late prisoner Richardson, as I judge necessary.

    The reasons given by your Lordship for his discharge; upon his recognizing to plead the King’s pardon when called upon, agreeable to the practice both in the Kingdom and the Colonies, have not only convinced the Judges of their duty and induced them to liberate him without delay, but they have also convinced me of the impropriety of the proposal I made to your Lordship for admitting a pardon by virtue of His Majesty’s warrant under the Seal of the Province, which proposal I should not have made if I had known the long established practice in the Kingdom, as I am sensible an alteration in a particular instance must have been very inconvenient.2

    Its probable that the trouble I have given your Lordship will be the means of preventing any doubt or delays in cases of the like nature which may happen for the future.

    I propose to meet the Assembly the 8th. of April at Cambridge3 I find upon enquiry into the state of the Treasury that there are surplusses of former funds which will be sufficient to defrey the ordinary charges of Government at least for one year to come, when they are appropriated for that purpose, which I will recommend to the Assembly, that I may keep off the dispute about the Tax, in which the people in general are warmly though very erroneously engaged, and I hope, by giving them time, they will grow more calm, as they have done in other instances, and that Truth will finally prevail.4

    I should have mentiond to your Lordship that I did not communicate to the Judges of the Superior Court your intention to send a copy of the Newgate Pardon. As the Prisoner is discharged without it I could wish this Letter might arrive seasonably to prevent that trouble.

    The Letter which came under my cover for Lord William Campbell I inclosed to Governor Martin by a Vessel bound to North Carolina and desired him to send it forward by first opportunity to Charlestown where I am informed Lord William will continue some time to come.5 I have two Letters for Mr Paterson at St. Johns waiting for the spring to open a communication, which we have not had all Winter with that Island.6 I have the honour to be with great respect My Lord Your Lordships most humble and most obedient servant,

    RC (National Archives UK, CO 5/761, ff. 76–77); at foot of letter, “Rt Honble. the Earl of Hillsborough”; docketed, “Boston 12th. March 1772. Govr. Hutchinson (No. 22) Rx 22d. May.” DupRC (National Archives UK, CO 5/894, ff. 192–93). AC (Massachusetts Archives, SC1/series 45X, 27:301–02). SC (National Archives UK, CO 5/768, ff. 230–31); docketed, “Boston March 12th. 1772 Govr. Hutchinson (No. 22.) R. 22d. May”; at foot of letter, “Inclosures Two Boston Gazettes of March 5. & 12. 1772.” Enclosures to RC: Massachusetts Gazette and Boston News-Letter, 5, 12 March 1772 (National Archives UK, CO 5/761, ff. 78–79, 80–81).

    953. To Sir Francis Bernard

    Boston 14 March 1772

    Dear Sir, There being no Vessel near sailing & Mr John being very desirous of having a Letter conveyed to you I send it under cover directed to My Lord Hillsborough by the Packet.

    I am very glad to receive my publick Letters by the December Packet. They have enabled me to liberate a poor fellow who has been in close prison more than two years most of the time after we knew His Majesty’s pleasure to grant him a pardon.1 He hapned to be discharged when the Inhabitants of the Town were engaged in an Affair at their annual meeting & by this means we saved a tumult at least if nothing more. I am also freed from my suspence about meeting the Court & shall not prorogue it beyond the time it now stands to the 8th. April. I am trying to provide for the charges of this and the next year without any Tax there being surplusses of funds which will answer to borrow upon and I hope to keep off a controversy in the Genl Court until I have a better prospect of a favorable issue than I have at present. I find by Letters to the Comissioners of the Customs that you are not like to go to Ireland. I shall have the pleasure of the continuance of your correspondence. The late interruption of it I attribute to your absence from Town.2

    I am glad to hear by Mr Bernards letters that Lady Bernard enjoys a better state of health & pray my respectful compliments to her. I am Dear Sir Your faithful & most obedient Servant,

    The Sheriff & his family are in great distress. No news of Mr Apthorp & wife since their embarking in a poor scooner at New York the 28th November for No Carolina. They had a violent snowstorm the 2d or 3d of December and as we have now heard from all parts of the Continent & Islands there seems little or no hopes left.3

    AC (Massachusetts Archives, SC1/series 45X, 27:302–03).

    954. To James Gambier

    Boston 14 March 1772

    My Dear Sir, I was very glad to hear by the Arethusa of your safe arrival at Portsmouth & more so to hear by the December Packet of your gracious reception by our Royal master & his ministers upon your arrival in London. Both your Letters were a long time in their passage.1 The first stopped several weeks in Virginia & came to hand about the middle of February the other not till the 3d of March, owing to a very different winter from the last altho I have known the cold more severe yet seldom more constant we having had scarce a pleasant day since the 1st of Decemb. and now the Snow upon the ground is supposed to be two feet thick upon the level but the calculation is too large. I fear Apthorp & his wife perished in one of the many snow storms we have had intelligence having been received from all the Islands & no news of them since they left NYork the latter end of November in a miserable single deck bound to NCarolina.2 If even in the Salisbury Mrs Gamb. suffered so much by the Sea how imprudent was it in Mr Apthorp to expose his Lady to the hardships of a winter passage in a wretched Scooner even if he had been sure of arriving at his port.

    I am glad Mrs Gamb. had recoverd from the fatigue of her voyage & that your illness was only a seasoning & hope both of you & the children, my little daughter particularly will be long happy together.3

    I delivered your message to the two good old men.4 They are much in the state you left them. If one of them should want a successor in my time I am really at a loss where to find him. No body fit for the place would come from England. There [are] some circumstances would recommend the person you hinted at [hole in MS] are others discouraging. If he has acted from principle his principles would be an effectual bar, but if I should live a little longer I shall, I fear, doubt whether any of us who are concernd in political affairs act from principle. If I condemn all the rest of the world you will think me arrogant to except my self.

    We have been free from disturbance this winter. The scurrility of the News papers has been much as it used to be and about as much regarded. I have not met my Assembly but expect to do it in about three weeks. They expect to revive the old dispute about taxing the Commissioners. I will keep it out of sight if I can, if not I am sure I have a good cause.

    The Lieutenant Governor & Paxton desire their compliments. Mr Burch I dare say writes to you. Dalrymple looks in upon me every day. I wish his situation was more to his mind. The Servants of the Crown maintain perfect harmony. You know I keep within my own department except my assistance is desired in any other.

    It was strange carelessness in me to suffer the volume of Admiralty Statutes you was so obliging as to send me to remain 2 or 3 months after you sailed without notice. By the first vessel which goes to London I will send it to you in the Masters chest & give you advice of it.

    It will give me the greatest pleasure to hear that you are provided for to your mind. I am with very great regard & esteem Dear Sir Your faithful & most obedient Servant,

    AC (Massachusetts Archives, SC1/series 45X, 27:303–04); at foot of letter, “Com. Gambier.”

    955. To [Sir Francis Bernard]

    Boston 16 Mar 1772

    My Dear Sir, I have wrote a few lines to you under my Ld Hillsboroughs cover which I sent to NYork by the last post. Mr Sewall has since been with me to comunicate a Letter he has received from Mr Lane by way of Philade which makes him very uneasy. He is afraid from the Contents of that Letter that Ld Hillsboro’ & Ld North will both be displeased at the proposal for his receiving an annual payment out of the Salary to Mr Franklin in case he had succeeded Sewall as Judge of the Admiralty at Halifax.1 Now you are sensible not only that the proposal did not come from Mr Sewall but that he was informd when it was made to him that Ld H. would have no objection the office not being in his department and that Mr Franklin had engaged that Lord Sandwich would approve of the stipulation. I know Mr Sewall not only would never have made such a proposal but he never would have hearkend to it when made if he had not been assured he should give no offence and you know that all which has passed on his part has been open without a possibility of concealment. I am sure therefore if it was meerly from your regard to justice you will prevent his suffering in the esteem of the Ministry by any misapprehensions they may have had of the part he has taken in this transaction. Mr Lane says he was told that no provision would be made for an Attorney General. I suppose the provision for the Judge is done with also. This will discourage them the Chief Justice especially who would not have taken the place if it had not been for the encouragement you gave in your letter to me of July 18th. I dont know where to find another set of J[udges]. The B[ar]. will not furnish me unless I could justify appointing Sons of Liberty. Mr Lane may be misinformed. I am Dear Sir Your faithful humble Servant,

    AC (Massachusetts Archives, SC1/series 45X, 27:304–05).