Chronology

    July 1772–June 1774

    Entries appearing in italics occurred in England.

    1772

    10 July: The House of Representatives passes a series of resolutions asserting that the payment of the governor’s salary by the crown is an unconstitutional violation of the charter.

    14 July: The House sends a petition concerning the governor’s salary to its agent, Benjamin Franklin, to present to the king.

    14 July: TH responds in a message to the resolutions of the House and prorogues the General Court until 7 January 1773.

    14 August: Lord Hillsborough resigns as secretary of state for the colonies and is replaced by Lord Dartmouth.

    30 August: The Privy Council meets to consider the burning of the Gaspée.

    10 September: The Massachusetts Spy prints an article addressed “To the King,” which TH believes is seditious.

    14 October: Concern over the judges’ salaries prompts the circulation of a petition to call a Boston town meeting.

    28 October: The Boston town meeting formally asks TH if he knows that the salaries of the judges are being paid by the crown.

    30 October: Having been rebuffed by TH, the Boston town meeting petitions him to call a meeting of the General Court concerning the judges’ salaries. TH refuses.

    2 November: The town appoints a committee of correspondence to communicate its sentiments to other towns in the province.

    3 November: The Boston Committee of Correspondence convenes its first meeting with James Otis Jr. as chair and appoints three subcommittees to draft a statement of principles as a report to the town.

    20 November: The Boston Committee of Correspondence presents a draft of its report to the town meeting.

    30 November: The town meeting orders that the committee’s report be printed and distributed to other Massachusetts towns in pamphlet form as The Votes and Proceedings of the Freeholders and Other Inhabitants of the Town of Boston.

    10 December: TH receives word of the appointment of a royal commission of inquiry into the destruction of the Gaspée.

    1773

    6 January: TH’s opening message to the General Court refutes the constitutional arguments outlined in The Votes and Proceedings and asserts the supremacy of Parliament, concluding, “I know of no line that can be drawn between the supreme authority of Parliament and the total independence of the colonies.”

    25 January: The Council responds to TH’s opening message.

    26 January: The House responds to TH’s opening message.

    16 February: TH delivers a rebuttal to the messages of the Council and the House.

    25 February: The Council responds to TH’s rebuttal.

    2 March: The House responds to TH’s rebuttal.

    6 March: TH delivers his final speech to the General Court before he prorogues it.

    22 March or slightly before: The seventeen letters sent by Benjamin Franklin from England in December arrive in Massachusetts.

    24 March: Thomas Cushing writes to Franklin, enclosing another petition to the king and asking Franklin for permission to take copies but not to publish TH’s and Andrew Oliver’s private letters to Thomas Whately.

    25 March: The town of Boston passes a series of resolutions refuting charges made by TH in his messages to the General Court that the town had exceeded its corporate capacity by engaging with provincial and imperial affairs when it established the Boston Committee of Correspondence and published The Votes and Proceedings.

    18 May: Commissioners of Massachusetts and New York, meeting in Hartford, Connecticut, sign an agreement finally resolving the boundary dispute between the two colonies.

    2 June: TH’s letters to Whately are read before the House, after the galleries are cleared.

    9 June: The letters are read before the House a second time with many members of the public in the galleries.

    15 June: The House orders the letters printed, and copies are distributed to each representative the next day.

    16 June: The House resolves to petition for the removal from office of TH and Andrew Oliver.

    22 June: The House resolves concerning TH’s removal are printed in the Boston Gazette, and the Boston Committee of Correspondence distributes a pamphlet containing the printed letters throughout the province.

    25 June: Following the House’s example, the Council resolves to petition for TH’s and Oliver’s removal as well.

    28 June: Large excerpts from the Whately letters appear in the Boston Gazette, accompanying the Council’s resolves.

    14 October: Letters in the Massachusetts Spy criticize the impact the Tea Act will have on commerce.

    25 October: A broadside by “Scaevola” (Thomas Mifflin of Philadelphia) calling for the resignation of the tea consignees is reprinted in the Boston Gazette.

    2 November: During the early morning messages are delivered to the homes of the consignees calling on them to resign a day later at the Liberty Tree.

    3 November: A small crowd at the Liberty Tree is disappointed when the consignees fail to appear. A part of the crowd led by William Molineux confronts the consignees at Richard Clarke’s warehouse to demand their resignation. A forcible attempt to enter Clarke’s counting room ensues.

    4 November: TH receives official notification of the Tea Act.

    5 November: A town meeting, chaired by Samuel Adams, votes to adopt resolutions, previously passed at Philadelphia, calling on the consignees to resign, and the tea not to be landed but to be sent back to England.

    17 November: Jonathan Clarke arrives from England. A crowd attacks the house of his father, Richard, the same evening.

    18 November: The town meeting again calls on the tea consignees to resign. The consignees themselves petition TH to allow the tea to be landed and stored at Castle William until they can receive further instructions from England.

    28 November: The Dartmouth, the first of the tea ships, owned by the Rotch family of New Bedford, arrives.

    29 November: The Body of the Trade resolves that no duty shall be paid and the tea sent back, and demands once again that the consignees resign their commission. TH Jr., the Clarke family, and Benjamin Faneuil Jr. seek protection at Castle William.

    30 November: On the second day of the town meeting, TH orders the sheriff to require the “illegal” assembly to disperse.

    2 December: The tea ship London arrives at Charleston, and the consignees there soon resign, initiating a debate about what will happen to the unsold tea.

    3 December: The second Boston tea ship, Eleanor, arrives, with James Bruce, master, and John Rowe, owner.

    7 December: The third Boston tea ship, Beaver, arrives, with Hezekiah Coffin, master. It is also owned by the Rotches.

    11 December: During a storm, William, the fourth tea ship, is driven ashore on Cape Cod.

    11 December: William Whately and John Temple fight a duel over Temple’s alleged role in obtaining TH’s and Oliver’s letters.

    14 December: The Body of the People reassembles to demand why the tea has not yet been returned to England. Francis Rotch is sent to the Customs House and Naval Office to request a clearance for his vessel.

    16 December: Francis Rotch reports to the Body on his unsuccessful attempt to procure a clearance. He is then sent to TH at Milton to plead for a pass that will enable the Dartmouth to leave the harbor. At the news of TH’s refusal, crowds surge to the wharf to witness the destruction of the tea.

    22 December: The East India Company tea is successfully unloaded in Charleston and stored in the Customs House.

    25 December: Benjamin Franklin publishes a notice in the London newspapers declaring that neither Whately nor Temple had given him the letters, and that he alone was responsible for transmitting them to Boston.

    27 December: The tea ship Polly is stopped before entering the port of Philadelphia and obliged to return to London.

    1774

    20 January: News of the Boston Tea Party reaches London.

    25 January: Customs official John Malcolm is tarred and feathered.

    26 January: The General Court reconvenes.

    29 January: The Privy Council hears the petition of the Massachusetts General Court for the removal of TH and Andrew Oliver.

    3 March: Andrew Oliver dies.

    7 March: More tea arrives in Boston aboard the Fortune and is thrown into the harbor.

    14 March: Lord North announces the ministry’s response to the Boston Tea Party.

    31 March: The king signs the Boston Port Act.

    2 April: General Thomas Gage is appointed the new governor of Massachusetts.

    14 April: Lord North introduces the Massachusetts Government Act.

    19 April: The tea ship Nancy arrives off Sandy Hook but returns to London without unloading its cargo at New York.

    21 April: Lord North introduces the Administration of Justice Act.

    12 May: Copies of the Boston Port Act arrive in Boston.

    13 May: The Boston town meeting calls on other colonies to suspend trade with Great Britain. General Thomas Gage arrives in Boston to assume the governorship.

    18 May: The Boston town meeting divides over proposals to pay for the destroyed tea.

    20 May: The king signs both the Massachusetts Government Act and the Administration of Justice Act.

    30 May: Farewell addresses are presented to Hutchinson.

    1 June: Hutchinson departs for England aboard the Minerva.