Initiating the “Great Controversy”

    1062. To John Pownall, [4] January 1773

    1063. From Lord Dartmouth, 6 January 1773

    1064. To Lord Dartmouth, 7 January 1773

    1065. To John Pownall, 7 January 1773

    By the start of the year, over a third of Massachusetts towns had adopted the principles outlined in The Votes and Proceedings of the Freeholders and Other Inhabitants of the Town of Boston. Greatly alarmed, Hutchinson feared that if he did not act quickly, a majority of towns would instruct their representatives in the General Court to pass similar resolves, and that the General Court in turn would urge assemblies in the other colonies to join them. Therefore, he recalled the Court sooner than he otherwise would have done in order to attempt something he had always avoided in the past: making a comprehensive exposition of the principles of the British Constitution and the place of the colonies within it. Without such a statement from him outlining the opposite side of the argument, Hutchinson feared the country towns would readily acquiesce to Boston’s leadership (TH History, 3:265–67).

    For Hutchinson, the idea of divided sovereignty was a logical absurdity. “I know of no line,” he wrote, “that can be drawn between the Supreme Authority of Parliament and the total independence of the colonies: It is impossible there would be two independent Legislatures in one and the same state.” Always confident in the power of his own reasoning to convince the opposition, Hutchinson at the conclusion of his speech challenged those who disagreed with him to show him the error in his reasoning. Thus, Hutchinson precipitated an ideological controversy that would make it difficult for peacemakers on both sides of the Atlantic to pass over the constitutional differences that separated the two sides (Reid, Briefs, pp. 20, 22).

    1062. To John Pownall

    Boston [4] Jany 1773

    Nicoll to Glasgow

    Duguids Vessel

    My dear Sir, I have not answered your very kind & confidential Letter of the 6 Octr.1 Nothing could confirm me more in my own plan of Measures for the Colonies than finding it to agree with your Sentiments. You know I have been begging for measures to maintain the Supremacy of Parliament. Whilst it is suffered to be denied all is confusion and the Opposition to government is continually gaining Strength. What can be more insolent than the Resolves passing every day in the Towns of this Province. I wished to see the resentment of Parliament, rather than to begin a controversy here upon the Subject, but I could avoid it no longer. Most of the Towns in the Province would have made the same declarations with those which you have seen and I must have brought upon myself the indignation of Parliament if I had sat still when it’s Authority was treated with so much contempt. My calling upon the Assembly to declare, if they have any exceptions to what I have laid down as the principles of their Constitution, has engaged the Faction, but it has also embarrassed them and I think, they will enable me by their answer to it to serve Government by a Reply, and to make apparent the reasonableness and necessity of coercion and to justify it to all the world.

    When once this Authority is no longer denied I wish for all the tenderness imaginable in the exercise of it and I think you agree in sentiment with me. Indeed what now appears a heavy burden whilst the Authority is disputed will appear light & trivial as soon as it comes to be acknowledged.

    I have wrote you how far the R Island Commissioners had proceeded: An Express came from them or rather they wrote by the return of a Messenger which Admiral Montagu sent to them who arrived in Town on Thursday and this morning, Monday, the Admiral set out for Newport. I have a Letter dated the day before yesterday.2 I find that the Deputy Governor had attended the Commissioners and given in his deposition of the knowledge he had of the Affair and of the pains he took to discover the Actors and it is said to be a fair candid Account. The Chief Justice also had voluntarily appeared and offered all the service in his power. They seem to be satisfied that no persons from the Town of Newport were concerned and that it was not known there ’till twelve oClock the next day.3 They waited until the Admiral arrived before they began to examine any witnesses. None had come in upon the Proclamation and they do not seem to expect any. Simeon Potter a Merchant who is charged by a Molatto now on board one of the Men of War, as steering the boat in which the Molatto himself pretends to have been, appeared also at Newport and left word that he would be ready to appear again if called upon.4 The Admiral supposes Capt. Duddingstone could swear positively to several persons, if so it is unfortunate that he is not here.

    I can easily perceive what part of the measures it is of which you have much doubt, and I wished myself that, if it had been thought reasonable that the Statute of Henry the 8th. should extend to the plantations, it had been made to extend by an additional Act, seeing the plantations were not in esse at the time of the Statute, rather than by a signification of the Sense which one or both of the Houses of Parliament had of the Statute;5 and for the Act of Parliament of the last Session which makes such offences committed in America triable in any County in England though the Act passed before the fact was committed it was not possible it should be known at R Island.6 Acts I know, in general are in force from the Session but this was law when there were no Colonies 3000 miles distant. I dont find any doubt of the facts being committed within the body of the County.7

    There is but little room at present to expect a fair trial in that Colony. Jury, if not Judges will be under a bias. On the other hand if any other remedy could be found than removing persons to such a distance where it may happen to be out of their power to produce such evidence as they might have had at home, it would certainly be best, for such a measure will give a general alarm. As the apprehending persons if there should appear sufficient evidence against any does not ly with the Commissioners but with the Magistrates of the Colony it renders the execution of the Commission less difficult on the part of the Commissioners but at the same time there is less probability of any parts being carried into execution, except an enquiry into the conduct of the Government.

    The affair of taxing the Commissioners may be kept off at least ’till June and maybe another year but I am at a loss how finally to evade it.8 If the party in opposition desired peace it would be an easy matter but they are seeking for fresh cause of contention to keep up their importance. I have no doubt of the Royal Authority to give me the Instruction and it is kindness to the people to prevent an Act rather than disallow it and the Instruction is founded in reason for the Commissioners &c receive their Salaries for the business of the whole Continent & spend them in this Government but to talk reason to an obstinate house of Representatives is canere Surdis,9 and I have no hopes of their complying with the Instruction. I shall not dare to depart from it without some signification of the Kings Pleasure. Can they be convinced of their folly in this way? I have told them it was a kindness to them to restrain me from giving my assent to such an act rather than the King should disallow it. They never will agree to a suspending clause until the Kings pleasure shall be known but I may possibly prevail upon the House to alter the act so as that no tax in consequence of it shall be levied or if it be an act also for supply of the Treasury, that no money shall be borrowed by force or upon the credit of the Act until six months are expired from the time of passing of it. But I should not care even to do this without a signification of His Majestys pleasure in some way or other, The apparent Reason to the House would be that I supposed it immaterial and so not a Departure from the Spirit of my Instruction, if it was left to His Majesty to judge of the propriety of the Bill before it could have any effect instead of my preventing it from passing. If it should be disapproved of in this way by the King there can be no exception taken and I think they will not frame another bill in the same form if the objection to a former is made known to them which used to be done formerly when Bills were disallowed though it has not been practised of late. If it rests wholly upon the Instruction they will go on perseverely from Session to Session as long as they can endeavouring to force through the same bill & complaining of the terrible Grievance of Instructions.10 I shall be greatly obliged to you if you will suggest to me any other way which may have occurred to you of avoiding the difficulty. I think I have formerly observed to you that I do not desire to ease my own shoulders of a burden and by that means let down the authority of government and only wish to get rid of it provided it may be done and the honour of government saved.

    A Vessel is to sail for London next week when I fancy I shall be able to tell you the most that is to be expected from the Rhode Island Commission. I am with the greatest esteem Dear Sir Your faithful humble Servant,

    AC (Massachusetts Archives, SC1/series 45X, 27:439–42); at foot of letter, “Jno Pownall Esq.”; primarily in EH’s hand. Contemporary printings: New England Chronicle, 29 June 1775; Boston Gazette, 3 July 1775; Newport Mercury, 10 July 1775; Massachusetts Spy, 12 July 1775; Norwich Packet, 24 July 1775; Remembrancer for the Year 1776, part 2, p. 60 (all first four sentences only).

    1063. From Lord Dartmouth

    Whitehall January 6th. 1773

    Sir, Since my letter to you of the 9th: of Decr. I have received your dispatches Ns. 3, 4, 5 & 6, together with their Inclosures, and have laid them before the King.1

    It gave His Majesty great concern to find by these Dispatches & your letter to Mr. Pownall that there were still in Boston Men of such malevolent & factious Dispositions as to endeavour, by the most wicked & malicious Misrepresentations to prevent the return of that Confidence & Respect for Government which is so much desired by all good Men,2 and to labour to excite the deluded Inhabitants to Acts not only of Disobedience to His Majesty’s Authority, but of the most atrocious Criminality towards Individuals.

    Your assurances, however, that the Influence of these malignant Spirits is daily decreasing, and that their mischievous Tenets are held in abhorrence by the Generality of the People gave His Majesty great Consolation, and I am commanded to signify to you that His Majesty very much approves the Temper and Firmness of your Conduct upon this Occasion, and the Propriety of your Answers to the Addresses of the Town Meeting.3

    My own Sentiments and Wishes I so fully expressed to you in a former letter, that I have now only to add that I still hope the time is not far off when the Intentions of Government will be fairly weighed against the Designs & Artifices of Faction,4 and that Jealousy and Suspicion will cease to prejudice the public Judgment, and give a false Colour to Measures, which appear to have been adopted with no other View, than that of promoting the general Welfare & Happiness of the Colony.

    The Proposal you suggest in your letter No. 6, as likely to be accepted by the Assembly in compensation for their quitting all Claim to the Lands to the East of Penobscot will I doubt not have the fullest Consideration at the Council Board and I have received His Majesty’s Commands to lay your letter before their Lordships together with your former Correspondence on that subject,5 and as from the Representations you make of the State of that Country, and of the Destruction of the King’s Timber by the Settlers, it appears highly necessary that some effectual Measure should be immediately adopted for preventing so great an Evil, I shall be very glad to be able speedily to transmit to you their Lordship’s determination, which I imagine can now only be retarded by the want of the Reports of the Surveyors which I understand are now daily expected.6

    As you say care has been taken that the business of the Naval Office shall not suffer by Mr. Bernard’s Absence, the King acquiesces in the Propriety of your giving that Gentleman leave to come to England for a year.7 I am &ca.,

    Dartmouth.

    SC (National Archives UK, CO 5/762, ff. 1–3); docketed, “(No. 5.) Governor Hutchinson.” SC (National Archives UK, CO 5/765, ff. 244–46); docketed, “Govr. Hutchinson (No 5).” SC (Houghton Library, Sparks 43, 1:154); docketed, “Lord Dartmouth to Governor Hutchinson”; excerpt of paragraphs two through five only. SC (Houghton Library, Sparks 10, 4:28); at the end of the extract, “Secr. [illegible] Mass. 1773”; excerpt of parts of paragraphs two and four only.

    1064. To Lord Dartmouth

    Boston 7th January 1773

    (No 10)

    My Lord, I have the honour of your Lordship’s Letter No 3 dated the 4th November, which came to hand the last evening. Yesterday I met the Assembly. I have ever since my coming to the chair avoided as far as it was possible the points controverted between the Kingdom and the Colonies, and although I saw with great concern the publications in the Newspapers which in the most express terms denied the Supremacy of Parliament and encouraged the people to an open resistance, yet as I knew it would be to no good purpose to recommend to the Assembly any measures to suppress such publications, I contented myself with endeavouring, and that without success, to prevail upon the executive power to carry the Laws into execution. But a plan having been laid, by persons in the Town of Boston, to draw many of the Inhabitants of that Town, at a Town meeting, to make the most publick declarations against the Authority of Parliament, and to send their Letters to every Town and District in the Province to invite them to do the like, and to make their proceedings matter of record, and many Towns having followed the example of Boston, and there being danger that if no notice was taken of it there would be a more general compliance, I could no longer consistent with my duty to the King avoid bringing the concern before the Court. To do it by a slight notice would, I conceive have rather occasioned some sudden rash Resolves or Votes, which having once been passed they would with obstinacy have persisted in. I thought therefore a calm and dispassionate state of the case, if it had not the effect I wished for with the Assembly yet it would have a good effect with many of the people, who I knew were every day, through the unwearied pains of the leaders of Opposition made proselytes to these new opinions in government. And I was further convinced of the necessity of my immediate interposing from a discovery made of the determination of the same persons, who had laid this dangerous plot of drawing in all the Towns in the Province, to endeavour the same thing with regard to all the Assemblies upon the Continent, by a circular letter sent from this Assembly, upon their first meeting, inviting them to join in a publick avowal of the same principles.

    I am not without apprehensions, My Lord, that the Assembly will still do some irregular thing, but I think they would have done much worse if I had been silent upon this occasion and, whatsoever may be the success I humbly hope for His Majesty’s approbation of my endeavours to promote His Service, which I know to be inseparable from the true interest of His Colonies.

    I have a Letter from Chief Justice Oliver at Newport the 5th. Instant advising me that they had published their Commission & were entring upon their business & had so far met with great civilities. Your Lordship will see in an inclosed Newspaper Extracts from the Letter to Governor Wanton which I am informed were brought to this Town from Rhode Island several days before any of the Commissioners had arrived there.1 I have the honour to be very respectfully My Lord Your Lordships most humble & most obedient Servant,

    RC (National Archives UK, CO 5/895, ff. 44–45); at foot of letter, “Rt. Honble. the Earl of Dartmouth”; docketed, “P.p. 17. Read Decr. 20. 1773.” DupRC (National Archives UK, CO 5/762, ff. 37–38); at head of letter, “Duplicate”; at foot of letter, “Rt. Honble. the Earl of Dartmouth”; docketed, “Boston 7th January 1773 Governor Hutchinson (No 10) (Duplicate Origl not reced) R: 22 February.”; notation, “Entd.”; in EH’s hand. AC (Massachusetts Archives, SC1/series 45X, 27:436–37); at head of letter, “Glasgo belongs to Anderson [sailed] the 8th [illegible]”; in EH’s hand. SC (National Archives UK, CO 5/768, ff. 284–87); docketed, “Boston 7th: January 1773. Govr: Hutchinson (No. 10.) (Duplicate. Origl: not recd) Rx. 22d. February.”; at end of letter, “Inclosure.—Boston Gazette, of 11th. Janry 1773.” SC (Houghton Library, Sparks 43, 1:156); docketed, “Thos: Hutchinson to the Earl of Dartmouth”; excerpt of all but the last paragraph. SC (Houghton Library, Sparks 10, 4:31); at end of letter, “[P.p. 17 Read 20 Decr. 1773—no inclosure]” (brackets in original); docketed, “Hutchinson to Dartmouth” and “Gov. Hutchinson To Lord Dartmouth 7th. Jany 1773.”

    1065. To John Pownall

    Boston 7th. Janry 1773

    Dear Sir, Every other Attempt to raise a Disturbance in this Province having failed, the Leaders of the Opposition laid out a Plan to draw every Town in the Province & every District to make a separate Declaration against the Authority of Parliament, which being done the House of Represents, were to express their Approbation and by a Circular Letter to the other Assemblies on the Continent, to draw them into an Assent to or Avowal of the same Principles. The Towns in this Province did not, in general, comply immediately, but many of the principal Towns complied & others were following & I have no doubt the major part would have been brought to it in a short time.

    I have never had more Difficulty to determine what was my most prudent Step. I was loth to bring this point before the Assembly, but when I saw that by neglect the several Towns, without understanding what they were doing, would have bound themselves by their Resolves, & their Representatives would have thought themselves bound to do nothing in the General Court contrary to the Resolves of their Towns, I found myself under a Necessity of stating the Case between the Kingdom & the Colonies particularly this Colony.1 I had no Concern on my own Account for my Principles were known & people in general thought more favorably of me on account of them than they will do when they see with what Reasons they are supported, but I was afraid of being charged with bringing on a fresh Dispute, although it was inevitable in a short time after & would come on with less Advantage to Government than it will do after laying so plain a State of the Case before them. I hope I shall be happy in your seeing this Affair in the same light that I do. I can, as yet make no Judgment of the Effect. At the Delivery of the Speech the Members seemed to be amazed, three Quarters of them having taken for granted that all that had been done by Parliament was arbitrary & unconstitutional without having ever been informed what is their Constitution. I flatter myself that it will be of Service. Neither House have yet taken any Step in consequence of it. I am &c.,

    SC (National Archives UK, CO 5/246, f. 28); docketed, “Govr. Hutchinson to John Pownall Esq Rx 23d Febry”; at end of letter, “Inclosure The Governor’s Speech to the Council & to the House of Representatives on the 7th. Janry 1773.” AC (Massachusetts Archives, SC1/series 45X, 27:438–39); at head of letter, “Glasgow Vessel belongs to Mr Anderson”; in EH’s hand.

    1066. To Israel Williams

    Boston 8. Jany. 1773

    Dear Sir, I have received this afternoon your Letter of the 2d. and have only time to tell you that the Commissions shall be sent you as soon as they can be made out,1 that upon the first representation I made upon the case of Hinsdale Lord Dartmouth wrote me that as I had stated the case the Grants of New York were not to be justified upon the principles of Law or Equity and upon a second and more full representation which cost me some pains he wrote that the case upon every principle of justice & humanity deserved attention and that the papers I had sent him should be laid before the Board of Trade to whom that Business was referred for consideration and report.2 I hope the Towns originally [granted]3 by this Province will be quieted. I cannot [with any] propriety appear in the controversy so [much as it] respects the Towns granted by New Hampshire. [I pray] my Letters arrived before the Act you refer to had the Royal Assent. I have never heard nor do I believe one word of what is said about a new government.4

    I thank you for your concern for me but I wish you had come to my assistance & you might have been of more service than ever. Government is deserted ten or a dozen of the best men in the Court absenting themselves at a time when it was in their power to have given a turn to the Affairs of it.5

    As to Ashfield & the case of the Anabaptist Laws in general they require more thought than I am able now to afford. I have no other interest in them than as the Publick is interested & am open to any beneficial measure.6 I am Your sincere friend & Servant,

    RC (Massachusetts Historical Society, Israel Williams Papers). AC (Massachusetts Archives, SC1/series 45X, 27:435–36); in EH’s hand.

    1067. To Lord Dartmouth

    Boston Jany 22. 1773

    (No. 11)

    My Lord, Admiral Montagu came to Town last Night from Newport. One or more of the Commissioners are expected in Town tomorrow. They had determined to adjourn the Court to the 26th. May. They had made some progress in the examination of Witnesses and if they have made any discovery they very properly keep it to themselves.1 I am afraid they will not be in Town time enough to write to your Lordship by this Ship but I imagine Admiral Montagu will be able to acquaint your Lordship with the cause of their Adjournment. I have not received any answer, to my Speech to the two Houses, but I am informed that a Committee of Council and another of the House have reported seperate Answers which now ly before the two Houses for their respective consideration.2 I have the honour to be My Lord Your Lordship’s most humble Servant,

    RC (National Archives UK, CO 5/762, ff. 45–46); at foot of letter, “To the Right Hon’ble Earl of Dartmouth”; docketed, “Boston 22d. January 1773 Governor Hutchinson (No. 11) Rx 26 March”; in EH’s hand. DupRC (National Archives UK, CO 5/895, ff. 46–47); at head of letter, “Duplicate”; at foot of letter, “Rt Honble. the Earl of Dartmouth”; docketed, “Massachusets. Duplicate of a Letter No. 11. from Governor Hutchinson to the Earl of Dartmouth, dated Janry 22. 1773, relative to the Commissioners for trying the persons concerned in plundering & burning the Gaspee Schooner;—and to the Assembly of Massachusets Bay. P.p. 18. Read Decr: 20. 1773.”; in EH’s hand. AC (Massachusetts Archives, SC1/series 45X, 27:443); in EH’s hand. SC (National Archives UK, CO 5/768, f. 289); docketed, “Boston 22d January 1773 Govr. Hutchinson (No. 11) Rx. 26th March.”