The End of the “Great Controversy”

    1085. To Thomas Gage, 7 March 1773

    1086. From William Tryon, 8 March 1773

    1087. To Lord Dartmouth, 9 March 1773

    1088. To Sir Francis Bernard, 10 March 1773

    1089. To Unknown, 10 March 1773

    The rebuttal made by Hutchinson on 16 February to the initial counterarguments of the Council and House not only failed to convince them but prompted each chamber to make another formal rejoinder, on 25 February and 2 March, respectively. Once again, Hutchinson regarded the message of the House as the more serious intellectual challenge. As part of the House’s response to Hutchinson, John Adams had crafted a learned dissertation on feudal tenure, arguing that the colonies owed loyalty only to the “natural person” of the king and not to “the king in Parliament,” the usual formulaic description of sovereignty in eighteenth-century Britain. In his final message to the General Court on 6 March before he prorogued the legislature, Hutchinson the historian could not resist attempting to refute Adams point by point. By the end of the dispute, both sides were exhausted, and neither had persuaded the other. The controversy, however, reignited issues that Hutchinson’s superiors in Whitehall, particularly Lord Dartmouth, had hoped would die down, and the patriots had been forced to articulate deep-seated principles about which they would have preferred to remain ambiguous.

    John Adams, c. 1791–1794. By Charles Willson Peale. Ever the striver, John Adams as a young man was intensely jealous of the wealth and honors that seemed to accrue so easily to Hutchinson. Although not a member of the General Court at the time, he supplied the learned legal precedents for the House of Representatives to use in its responses to Hutchinson’s defense of imperial sovereignty in the Great Controversy during the early months of 1773. He believed his cousin Samuel’s decision to make public Hutchinson’s letters to Thomas Whately to have been a mistake. Courtesy of Independence National Historical Park, Philadelphia

    1085. To Thomas Gage

    Boston 7th. March 1773

    Sir, From my first coming to the Administration of the Government of the Province I have avoided disputing with the Assembly upon points which I wished to see the Government in England undertake, at all events, to determine and settle, and I am afraid that the Controversy I have been engaged in which has appeared in all the news papers will leave some impressions to my disadvantage where the motives to it are not known.

    As I wish to retain a share of your esteem, I beg leave to acquaint you that, by an unfortunate mistake soon after the Charter, a law passed which made every Town in the Province a Corporation perfectly democratick, every matter being determined by the major vote of the Inhabitants,1 and although the intent of the Law was to confine their Proceedings to the immediate Concerns of the Town, yet for many years past the Town of Boston has been used to interest itself in every affair of moment which concern’d the Province in general.

    The grand Incendiary of the Province stirred up the Inhabitants of Boston to call a Town Meeting to consider of a rumour that the King had allowed Salaries to the Judges of the Superior Court, and prepared a long report for a Committee appointed by the Town, in which, after many principles inferring Independence were laid down, many resolves followed all of them tending to sedition & mutiny, and some of them expressly denying Parliamentary authority, which report was accepted, together with the form of a circular Letter which was voted to be sent to every Town and District in the Province, being about 250 in the whole. The Principal Towns, near Boston, soon followed the Example, and about one third of the rest had done the like when I met the Assembly. Had I been silent I think scarce any of the rest would have stood out. It was another part of the plan that, when all the Towns had asserted these Principles, the House of Representatives should likewise assert them, which they could not well avoid after all their Constituents had done it, and that they should be sent to every Assembly upon the Continent desiring a publick avowal of them and a consultation upon measures to maintain them.

    I knew that these principles were gaining ground in every part of the Province and, if no notice was taken, it would be construed a tacit approbation by the people here, and I had reason to fear it would be deemed a great neglect of my duty by the King. To call upon the Assembly to suppress them, without shewing that they could not be supported, would have produced some rash Resolves and caused the Towns to go on with great rapidity. I was compelled therefore to shew the unwarrantableness of the proceedings by laying before them the true principles of their Constitution in as simple & concise a manner as I could.

    The Council would have acquiesced if Mr Bowdoin had not persuaded them that he could defend Lord Chatham’s doctrine that Parliament had no right of taxation, but by his repugnant arguments he has exposed himself to contempt.2 The House were persuaded into a long Answer, by a Gentleman of the Law, in esteem with them for his sanctity and patriotism, though not one of them could give any account of it after they had unanimously voted it.3 I had determined to make no reply until I closed the Session but the few Friends to Government pressed me to it by urging that if I gave no opportunity for considering the Reply the construction among the people, would be that I was afraid of their Remarks upon the Reply. In compliance with the desire of my friends I gave them opportunity for it. By their trifling distinctions and shameful evasions they have dishonoured themselves extremely, and by their open avowal of principles incompatible with any degree of subordination I think they must open the eyes of the nation and lose every advocate they had there.

    I saw the impropriety of such argumentative speeches or messages to an Assembly but I knew the people were more attentive to any matters which come from the Governor in this way than to any other Publications. I have, undoubtedly, stopped the Towns in their progress and prevented the proposed application to the other Governments, but nothing short of a conviction that Parliament is determined upon measures effectual for the purpose will reduce the people to order and such conviction alone I think will be enough without carrying the measures into execution. I have the honour to be Sir Your most humble & most obedient Servant,

    RC (Clements Library, Thomas Gage Papers); at foot of letter, “[His Exc]ellency General Gage”; docketed, “received March 18th.” AC (Massachusetts Archives, SC1/series 45X, 27:461–62); at foot of letter, “His Excellency General Gage”; in MH’s hand.

    1086. From William Tryon

    Fort George New York 8 March 1773.

    Sir, I Received your dispatch of the 20th. of February on the first of March while I was sitting in Council and immediately went upon the consideration of the same. The minute and report of his Majesty’s Council of this Province herewith transmitted on the subject of your dispatch will I trust be fully satisfactory to your Excellency and the General Assembly of your Government.1

    I assure you I have not the least intention or inclination to exercise Jurisdiction within the disputed District of our two Governments that may create any well founded jealousy among the Settlers on those Lands; entertaining, as I now do, the pleasing expectation that the Commissaries will this Spring finally ascertain the Line of partition between the two Provinces. I am, with real respect Your Excellency’s most obedient Servant,

    Wm. Tryon

    SC (National Archives UK, CO 5/762, ff. 304–05); at foot of letter, “His Excellency Govr. Hutchinson.”

    1087. To Lord Dartmouth

    Boston 9th. March 1773

    (No 14)

    My Lord, I wish I was able to transmit to your Lordship a more favorable account of the proceedings of the Assembly since the date of my last Letter.1 I have closed the Session and do not intend ever to meet them again. The News paper which I cover contains the two last Messages of the Council and House and my Answer to them, also the Resolves of the House on the Salaries of the Judges and I shall cover an attested copy of an Address from the Council upon the same subject.

    Your Lordship very justly observes that nice distinctions upon civil rights are far above the reach of the bulk of mankind to comprehend. I experience the truth of it both in the Council and House of Representatives; the major part of them are incapable of those nice distinctions and are, in each House, too ready to give an implicit faith to the assertions of a single Leader. I therefore offered them a view of their Constitution in such plain language and upon such manifest principles that it was the general voice in each House that they were not to be denied, and the only resource of the Leaders was, by cloudy and obscure Answers to perplex the minds of the Members, and then to strike them by advancing that what the Governor had laid before them as their Constitution was perfect slavery and therefore could not be just.

    The Resolves concerning the Judges are inexcusable. In both, there is mention of the tenor of their Commissions, the pretence being that they are during pleasure. If they were during good behaviour, in express terms, it would remove all the cavils; I call them cavils because the Commissions are really during good behaviour at present, seeing the Judges cannot be removed without the voice of the Council which makes an exception from them come with an ill grace. As they have always been of a form which neither expresses during pleasure, nor during good behaviour, although the form was settled here, I may not comply with the general voice of having them expressed during good behaviour without His Majesty’s special leave & direction.

    By the first Vessel direct from hence I will transmit attested copies of the Messages now sent in the News paper and also the several Acts or Laws which have passed in the last Session with my observations upon them according to my Instruction. I have the honour to be My Lord Your Lordship’s most humble & most obedient Servant,

    RC (National Archives UK, CO 5/895, ff. 54–55); at foot of letter, “Rt Honorable the Earl of Dartmouth”; docketed, “P.p. 22. Read Decr. 20. 1773.” DupRC (National Archives UK, CO 5/762, ff. 111–12); at foot of letter, “Rt Honble. the Earl of Dartmouth”; docketed, “Boston 9 March 1773 Governor Hutchinson (No 14) Duplicate Origl not Recd Rx 12 May”; notation, “Entd.” AC (Massachusetts Archives, SC1/series 45X, 27:463); at foot of letter, “Rt Hon the Earl of Dartmouth.” SC (National Archives UK, CO 5/768, ff. 297–98); docketed, “Boston 9 March 1773 Governor Hutchinson (No 14.) Duplicate Original not received. Rx 12 May.”; at end of letter, “Inclosure The Massachusets Gazette Mar. 18. 1773, and Slip of printed paper, containing the Resolutions of the Ho. of Representatives concerning the Salaries to the Judges.” SC (Houghton Library, Sparks 10, 4:33); at end of letter, “[P.p. 22. Read 20 Decr. 1773.]” (brackets in original); docketed, “Hutchinson To Dartmouth.” Enclosures to RC: Notice calling a town meeting for Boston on 8 March 1773 (National Archives UK, CO 5/895, f. 56); Boston Post-Boy, 8 March 1773, pp. 1–2 (ff. 57–58); Massachusetts House of Representatives to TH, 5 March 1773 (ff. 59–60); TH to the House of Representatives, 5 March 1773 (ff. 61–62); Massachusetts Council to TH, 5 March 1773 (ff. 63–64). For the enclosure of a copy of the Boston Weekly News-Letter, 18 March 1773, see the source note to No. 1068, above.

    1088. To Sir Francis Bernard

    Boston 10 Mar 1773

    Dear Sir, I fancy you have almost forgot America & find employment enough for your thoughts in improving your Estate in Buckinghamsh.1 I should be happy in spending a little time with you there but can hardly hope for it tho I think some times that if I had a good errand late as it is in life I should not be afraid of a voyage to England. To obtain a little respit from the continual vexations which I meet with from the most perverse set of men upon earth would be one inducement.

    The late Messages of the House & Council if you have patience to read them will leave you at a loss to determine which are the most nonsensical. Those of the Council are the production of Bowdoin. The House of S Adams with the aid of Hawley & the Lawyer Adams & they have such an opinion of them that they have orderd the whole Controversy to be printed in a pamphlet for the benefit of posterity.2

    The contagion which began in Boston had spread thro one third of the Towns in the Province but seems to have been stopped by my Speech to the Assembly and the consequent proceedings there.

    Surely all sorts of people in England will resent this open defiance first in the Towns & then in the House & Council.

    The next Packet I flatter my self will bring me something from you. I am Dear Sir Your faithful humble Servant,

    AC (Massachusetts Archives, SC1/series 45X, 27:465); at head of letter, “Sir F B.”

    1089. To Unknown1

    Boston 10 March 1773

    Private

    Dear Sir, When I wrote to you the 27 February I was much pressed with publick business but could not omit giving you some broken hints of measures necessary for our relief.2 As the Session is at an end I have more leisure & will suggest a few more thoughts upon the same subject. I should think myself happy in an hour’s conversation & it would be to more purpose than many letters. I must report to you that something is absolutely necessary to be done in consequence of the open declaration of the Towns & of the Council & Assembly against the supremacy of parliament if it be only preparatory or the first step towards something more effectual that is to follow. If we will be independent why should not we be threatened with what would be the consequence of our being actually so, a restraint from all trade with the Colonies which acknowledge themselves subjects.

    Is there any way of compelling Boston to be a corporation by depriving them of their present privileges and not suffering any acts of a Town. The Charter of New York City might be a good pattern. Can no restraint be laid on the other Towns from acting in any other affairs than such as immediately concern them respectively.

    If the present disputes about the Supremacy, or rather the danger of them could have been foreseen they might have been prevented by adding after the words lawful & rightful King in the abjuration & that the king Lords & commons are the supreme legislature. If added now there is no determining what convulsion it would make in America, but there would be less exception if it was made a general provision like the late alteration upon the death of the pretender & founded nor merely upon the denial in America & there is some reason that it should be so for if the Supremacy had not been denied in England few persons would dared to have denied it here.3

    Other & probably better measures will occur I only wish Government may be convinced that something is necessary to be done.

    I continue to write with as great confidence as I should converse if we were together in a private room. I am with the greatest regard Sir Your faithful humble Servant,

    AC (Massachusetts Archives, SC1/series 45X, 27:464). Contemporary printings: New England Chronicle, 1 June 1775; Essex Journal, 9 June 1775; Providence Gazette, 10 June 1775; Connecticut Courant, 12 June 1775; Norwich Packet, 15 June 1775; Remembrancer for the Year 1775, p. 182.