The May Elections

    985. To Sir Francis Bernard, 29 May 1772

    986. To Lord Hillsborough, 29 May 1772

    Although the May elections strengthened the government party, they did not give it a majority in the House. Several government party councilors, whom Hutchinson thought might be turned out, were not, and the governor hoped to separate John Hancock from Samuel Adams further by accepting the former into the Council. Although Hancock declined to take a seat there, Hutchinson hoped he could count on Hancock’s support to find a suitable compromise by which the General Court might at last return to Boston.

    985. To Sir Francis Bernard

    Boston 29 May 1772

    not sent

    Dear Sir, Until I have more favorable accounts of your health I shall write you but seldom because I think attention to any affairs which are unpleasing must be of disservice.1 I have nothing of that sort to make the subject of this Letter. We have finishd the affair with Goldthwait as well as I expected & as well perhaps as if there had been no compromise for he has secured to Mr. Bernard all that he had attached which I think is not more than equal to one half the debt which is the proportion Goldth. has agreed to pay. Logan I suppose will write you particularly upon this Subject.2 We have just finishd the Election. I believe I have told you that Brattle Gray & Hall are firm friends to Government.3 Adams pushed at no other & yet failed in all of them. There was only one vacancy except what was made by the two negatives last year—& that was caused by Henshaws resignation.4 That they filld with Philips of Andover who is better than one half the old ones tho but indifferent.5 The two who had been negatived were reelected.

    I had settled it some months ago to accept Hancock & have seen the good effects of it not that I can depend upon his being for any time of the same mind but it breaks the connexion & they are all jealous of him and in the greatest part of their measures he forsakes them. The other Bowers the Lieutenant Governor urged me to accept but he is so ordinary a man I could not bring my self to it.6 Philips of Boston & Adams the Lawyer came near to a choice.7 They would most certainly have kept Bowers company. One that I have accepted for 2 or 3 years past I wished to be rid of but I should have had him in the house & I dont know which would be the worse. It has been suspected here that he is the Author of some of the most virulent pieces in the press. He certainly prevented the Council from comitting the printer when they were generally disposed to do it.8 I much doubt whether the late favour shewn to one of his family in England will have any good effect upon him. You cant conceive how Mol. Ad. Cooper & the rest of that clan triumphed when the news came of [his] appointment & how dejectd the friends of Government were in general.9 I tell them there must be good reasons for it which they are not acquainted with. But this is digression.

    There is a considerable number of good men added to the House this year. We dont yet know our strength. I doubt whether we have a majority. Han. carries Ad. in his chariot but when they come to Court they seldom vote the same way.10 If the former exerts himself as he promised me will do I think it not improbable that before the end of the year if not before the end of the Session they will apply to me in such a manner as that I may bring [them] to Boston consistent with my Instruction. I wish to do it chiefly that I may have the Members every day at my table and provide an Antidote for the poison of that white liverd fellow that you usd so much to detest.11

    Your news papers are under cover to My Ld Hillsb. In one of them you will see the Instructions for the Town of Boston.12 It was intended to have added another Instruction that the Members should endeavour that the Judges should have their Commissions during good behaviour & that Salaries of 300£ should be settled on them with an addition to the Chief Justice & the Meeting was adjourned for the sake of this motion & the general voice was for it until somebody stated that it may be the House would not agree to it & in that case the Minority knowing the mind of the Town would probably settle the same Salary them selves & so the motion was dropd rather than rejected.

    This is a chit chat letter which I hope will rather amuse you than give you any trouble or thought. I wish to hear of your restoration to health & business & am with sincere regard & esteem Dear Sir Your faithful & affectionate Servant,

    AC (Massachusetts Archives, SC1/series 45X, 27:340–41); at foot of letter, “Sr F Bern.”

    986. To Lord Hillsborough

    Boston 29 May 1772

    (No 26)

    My Lord, I have the honour of your Lordship’s letter No 14.1

    My Assembly are again sitting. I will inclose the Gazette of yesterday which contains the proceedings at the Election and the Instructions of the Town of Boston to its Members which, however criminal, are looked upon as matter of course,2 the Meetings of that Town being constituted of the lowest class of the people, under the influence of a few of a higher class but of intemperate & furious dispositions and of desperate fortunes. Men of property and of the best characters have deserted these meetings where they are sure of being affronted. By the constitution Forty pounds sterling, which they say may be in Cloaths Houshold furniture or any sort of property is a qualification enough and even into that there is scarce ever any inquiry and any thing with the appearance of a man is admitted without scrutiny.

    The change of Members in the new Assembly is not unfavorable, but I have no expectation of propriety in their proceedings and it is doubtful whether they will apply to me in such form, for their removal to Boston, as will justify me in carrying them there. If they should not I think we shall have no great complaints of the burdens and grievance of sitting at Cambridge. Your Lordship’s advice to me, to endeavour to bring them back from their excesses by argument and persuasion has been followed with success and, although attempts were made in many Towns to charge their members with Instructions, I do not hear of any except from the Town of Boston.

    I have not received any answer from Mr. Tryon to the proposals from this Government, which I communicated by letter the 26th. of April, & I imagine he must be at Albany.3 One of the Members of my Assembly, who lives near that Province, acquaints me that an Act had passed that Assembly for taking all the lands as far as Connecticut River into a County of that Province and that the Act was laid before His Majesty.4 I have been afraid of this report’s obstructing the expected settlement and persuade the people that there is no grounds for it and that, if there had been, such an Act would not be allowed without notifying this Province which is affected by it. I have the honour to be with great respect My Lord Your Lordship’s most humble & most obedient Servant,

    RC (National Archives UK, CO 5/761, ff. 122–23); at foot of letter, “Rt. Honble. the Earl of Hillsborough”; docketed, “Boston 29th. May 1772. Governor Hutchinson (No. 26) Rx 20th July.” AC (Massachusetts Archives, SC1/series 45X, 27:339); at foot of letter, “Ld Hillsborough.” SC (National Archives UK, CO 5/768, ff. 243–44); docketed, “Govr. Hutchinson, Boston 29th. May 1772. (No. 26) Rx 20th. July”; at foot of letter, “Inclosure: Massachusett’s Gazette of the 28th May 1772.” SC (Houghton Library, Sparks 43, 1:144); docketed, “Thos: Hutchinson to the Earl of Hillsborough Boston May 29th: 1772”; excerpt omitting the first sentence and last paragraph. Enclosure to RC: Massachusetts Gazette and Boston Weekly News-Letter, 28 May 1772 (National Archives UK, CO 5/761, ff. 124–25).

    Map of the Province of New York, 1772. By Gerard Bancker. This map accompanied the materials sent to the Colonial Office by the province of New York supporting its claims to land west of the Connecticut River. The part of the town of Hinsdale that was claimed by New York as Cumberland County (shaded in pink), where Colonel Thomas Howard took up his patent, lies just west of the river and immediately above the border with Massachusetts. Courtesy of the National Archives, Kew

    987. From Lord Hillsborough

    Whitehall, June 6th. 1772

    (No. 16.)

    Sir, I have received your Dispatches Ns. 22, 23 & 24, and have laid them before the King.1

    I am very glad that my Letter to you No. 41, had the Effect to procure the Discharge of Mr Richardson, & that all Difficulties in the minds of the Judges, as to the present Mode of pardoning Convicts in the Plantations recommended to His Majesty’s Mercy, are removed.2

    The manner in which you communicated to the Assembly the King’s Orders & Intentions with regard to the Removal of the General Court to Boston, is approved by His Majesty, and I am glad to find you are of opinion that their Answer to you upon that Point is intended merely to save Appearances, and that they will, in the next Session, acquiesce in the Conditions upon which alone you are authorized to assemble them at their usual Place of Meeting.3

    The Decency and Propriety, with which you say the House of Representatives have gone through their Business in the last Session, has given His Majesty the greatest Satisfaction;4 and, as it will be your Duty to do every thing in your Power to cultivate and improve this happy Disposition, so you may rest assured that I will not fail, as far as depends upon me, to recommend to His Majesty’s Consideration such Measures as shall appear to me to be proper for restoring Peace and Tranquillity in His Government of the Massachuset’s Bay, and for promoting its Welfare and Prosperity.

    The Return made by the Grand Jury upon the Bill laid before them by the Attorney General in the Case you mention, is a Disgrace to all public Justice, and I cannot but lament that an Institution founded on such just Principles of true Liberty should be perverted to such unworthy Purposes.5

    The Refusal of the Assembly to make any Addition to the Salaries of the Judges of the Supreme Court, and your Opinion that they will never give what is adequate to their Services, having led me to consider the State of those Officers, I lost no time, since the Receipt of your last Dispatches both public and private, to communicate my Ideas upon that subject to Lord North;6 and I have the Satisfaction to inform you that his Lordship intirely concurs with me in the Propriety of recommending to His Majesty to give adequate Salaries to His Law Officers in the Massachusets Bay; but not having had an Opportunity of laying the matter before the King, I must postpone saying any thing farther upon it to you by this Packet, excepting that I think what I have already said will enable you, at least for the present, to prevent the Resignation of those who, from their Abilities and Integrity, have been and may continue to be of use to the King’s Service. I think however I ought to add, that an adequate Provision for so large a Number of Judges as five may amount to more that the Revenue can bear; and as I am informed that three are fully sufficient for the Business of the Superior Court, it may probably be thought right to extend the Salaries no farther, & to recommend the reducing the Number from five to three by Act of the General Court, or otherways that the Assembly should grant a permanent Provision for the two Junior Judges.

    I have long considered the Case of Captain Philips as a very hard one, and I shall be glad to have it in my Power to procure him some Redress, which I will not fail to attempt.7 I am &ca.

    Hillsborough

    AC (National Archives UK, CO 5/761, ff. 91–92); at head of letter, “Govr. Hutchinson.” AC (National Archives UK, CO 5/765, ff. 224–27); at head of letter, “Governor Hutchinson (No. 16.).” SC (Houghton Library, Sparks 43, 1:139); docketed, “Lord Hillsborough to Governor Hutchinson Whitehall June 6th. 1772”; excerpt of paragraphs four through six only.

    988. From Thomas Scammell

    Portsmouth June 8th 1772

    Sir, Notwithstanding I was under an immediate necessity of leaving Boston, I did myself the Honor of calling on your Excellency; was informed you was gone out of Town, and would not return ’till the Begining of the next week. Mr. Flucker was so obliging as to shew me the Plans, but thought it adviseable to have your orders to send them to me;1 they will be of the greatest service; I presume to request that favor, and will safely return them. He informd me there was a plan in the Custom House which included all my District, & this also, will be of infinite use. I need not point out to you Sir, the necessity of haveing Plans, nor the advantages which will result from them; Those who travel in His Woods will experience their great efficacy, and be of the utmost consequence to me in Assigning to each Party their several Districts. To supply them regularly with provisions, is a very material part of my Duty, therefore I presume it becomes me to obtain a knowledge of the Rivers, Branches and Lakes, without which, I apprehend my measures will not be attended with the Success I sincerely wish them. Your Excellencys kind intention of mentioning to Lord Hillsborough the great expence attending the dutys of our office, will, I am certain, be thankfully acknowledged by all the Inspectors. I will promote the service to the utmost of my Power, and shall be extremely unhappy to loose the opportunity of the approaching season. I cannot express to you, the very great concern I am under at not having an answer to my letters from their Lordships. I have already laid out in this Service, all the cash I could scrape together, that His Majestys Service should not suffer, and would more, provided it was in my power. I pray leave to inform you, that I waited on Admiral Montague respecting the Carpenter of the Swan, who informed me, that it was not in his power to discharge him; that power must come from the Lords of the Admiralty.2 I shall be happy in haveing your Advice how to proceed. And am with the greatest Respect Your Excellency’s Much Obliged & Obedient Humble Servant,

    Thomas Scammell

    Sir, The Bearer will take particular care of the Plans.

    SC (National Archives UK, CO 5/761, ff. 162).

    989. To Lord Hillsborough

    Boston 12 June 1772

    (No 27)

    My Lord, Although Admiral Montagu transmits to the Lords of the Admiralty a particular account of the surprizing and burning His Majesty’s armed Scooner Gaspee by a great number of people from the Town of Providence yet I imagine so extraordinary an affair requires to have mention made of it by me to your Lordship.1

    From some former accounts of the Scooner’s having been dogged from place to place I have apprehended there would something tragical follow from a set of people to whom every servant of the Crown who does his duty will always be obnoxious. I have known the present Governor of the Colony many years and used to esteem him as the most fit person among them for the Post but the constitution is such that he is not capable of acting his own judgment and must be subservient to the designs of the illicit traders and there is no doubt that nothing more will be done by authority there than issuing a proclamation and perhaps not even that.2 If some measures are not taken in England in consequence of so flagrant an insult upon the King’s authority I fear it will encourage the neighbouring Colonies to persevere in their opposition to the Laws of Trade and to be guilty of the like & greater Acts of Violence.

    As the Town of Providence joins to this Province and is less than 50 miles from this Town and the flame may spread here I hope your Lordship will not think that I go out of my line in this information.

    Matters which relate to my own Province more immediately I beg leave to refer until the next opportunity. I have the honour to be most respectfully My Lord Your Lordships most humble & obedient servant,

    RC (National Archives UK, CO 5/761, ff. 108–9); at foot of letter, “Rt Honble. the Earl of Hillsborough &c”; docketed, “Boston 12th. June 1772. Govr. Hutchinson (No. 27) Rx 16th. July.” DupRC (National Archives UK, CO 5/894, ff. 198–99); docketed, “Duplicate No. 27;” docketed, “Massachusets. Duplicate of the Letter from Govr. Hutchinson to the Earl of Hillsborough, dated June 12, 1772, containing remarks on the surprizing & burning the Schooner Gaspee by a great number of people from the town of Providence. Read July 29th. 1772 O.o. 44.” AC (Massachusetts Archives, SC1/series 45X, 27:341); at foot of letter, “Rt Hon Earl of Hillsborough.” SC (National Archives UK, CO 5/768, ff. 239–40); docketed, “Boston 12th. June 1772. Govr. Hutchinson (No. 27.) Rx. 16th, July.”; at foot of letter, “Inclosure Massachusett’s Gazette.” SC (Houghton Library, Sparks 10, 4:22); at foot of letter, “[O.o. 44. Read 24 July 1772.]” (brackets in original); docketed, “Govr. Hutchinson to Lord Hillsbro. 12 June 1772 The Gaspee Schooner.” Contemporary printings: Massachusetts Spy, 28 June 1775; Remembrancer for the Year 1775, p. 122.