The Virginia Resolves

    1103. To Lord Dartmouth, 17 April 1773

    1104. To John Pownall, 19 April 1773

    On 12 March 1773, the Virginia House of Burgesses adopted resolutions establishing its own committee of correspondence and urging other colonies to do the same in order “to obtain the most early and Authentic intelligence of all such Acts and Resolutions of the British Parliament, or proceedings of Administration, as may relate to or affect the British Colonies in America.” Boston Whigs cheered the decision as the culmination of the process they had initiated in establishing their own committee in November 1772. Hutchinson feared the principles contained in The Votes and Proceedings of the Freeholders and Other Inhabitants of the Town of Boston had now gained general acceptance throughout the continent.

    1103. To Lord Dartmouth

    Boston 17th. April 1773

    (No. 17)

    My Lord,1 Although the Resolves of the Virginia Assembly will undoubtedly have been transmitted to your Lordship before you can receive them from hence, I think it proper notwithstanding to inclose a Newspaper in which they are published here together with a Letter which accompanied them.

    An Indian Chief, deputed by the Penobscot tribe principally to signify their earnest desire that a Priest may be allowed to come among them to baptize their children and to perform the other Offices of the Romish Religion, has lately been in Boston.2

    By a Law of the Province, soon after the Charter in the 19th. year of K. William, any Romish Priest who shall come into the Province unless ship wrecked or drove here by inevitable necessity is subjected to perpetual imprisonment and if he breaks prison and is taken he is to suffer death.3 I promised, however, that His Majesty should be acquainted with their desire, because I thought it would be pleasing to them, and in compliance with my promise, I will inclose a copy of the conference I had with the Indian.

    There is no probability that the Assembly will repeal the Law or relax the severity of it, and if the Indians should remove to Canada or Nova Scotia for the sake of a Priest I know of no damage that can accrue from it. The number of Indian families settled on Penobscot river is about sixty. I have the honour to be My Lord Your Lordship’s most humble & most obedient servant,

    RC (National Archives UK, CO 5/895, ff. 68–69); at foot of letter, “Rt Honble. the Earl of Dartmouth”; docketed, “Duplicate of a Letter No. 17 from Governor Hutchinson to the Earl of Dartmouth, dated April 17. 1773, relative to the resolves of the Virginia Assembly; and a conference he has had with a Penobscot Indian on the subject of sending a Priest to that Tribe. P.p. 29. Read Decr: 20. 1773.” DupRC (National Archives UK, CO 5/762, ff. 153–54); at head of letter, “Duplicate”; at foot of letter, “Rt Honble. the Earl of Hillsborough”; docketed, “Boston April 1773 Governor Hutchinson (No 17) (Dupl. Origl not recd) Rx 29th May Encl.” AC (Massachusetts Archives, SC1/series 45X, 27:477–79); at foot of letter, “Rt Hon Earl of Dartmouth”; partially in EH’s hand. SC (National Archives UK, CO 5/768, ff. 328–29); docketed, “Boston—April 1773 Governor Hutchinson (No. 17) To the Earl of Hillsborough Rx 29th. (Dupl. Origl. not received)”; at end of letter, “Inclosures 1. A Boston Gazette 2. Conference with a Penobscot Indian.” Enclosure to RC: Conversation between TH and Orenay, an Indian of the Penobscot Tribe, 1 April 1773 (National Archives UK, CO 5/895, ff. 70–71). Enclosures to DupRC: Copy of above enclosure (National Archives UK, CO 5/762, ff. 155–56); Boston Gazette, 12 April 1773, pp. 1–2 (National Archives UK, CO 5/762, ff. 157–58).

    1104. To John Pownall

    Boston 19 April 1773

    Syms

    Dear Sir, Our Patriots say that the Votes of the Town of Boston which they sent to Virginia have produced the Resolves of the Assembly there appointing a Committee of Correspondence & I have no doubt it is their expectation that a Committee for the same purpose will be appointed by most of the other Assemblies upon the Continent. If any thing therefore be done by Parlt respecting America it now seems necessary that it should be general and not confined to particular Colonies as the same spirit prevails every where tho’ not in like degree.

    I am to meet a new Assembly the 26th of May which I have reason to think will consist of the same persons as the last Assembly & in the same temper.

    I have sometimes heard it proposed that the Parliamt should ^address His Majesty to^ appoint three or any other number of persons of respectable rank & characters to visit the several Colonies properly authorized & instructed to inquire into their state & to make report as a preparatory step to measures to be taken by Parliament & some have been of opinion that a perfect knowledge of their state cannot so well be obtaind in any other way. For my part every measure appears to me of such uncertain success whilst the body of the people hold such absurd principles in Government & all the Servants of the Crown are so intirely at their mercy that I am utterly at a loss what to suggest. The Leaders boast that they will submit to no regulations & that by their united strength they shall be able to oppose them. Excuse my mentioning with freedom to you every thing which comes into my head as among many things some may be thought worthy of consideration.

    The Speaker was with me this morning & let me know he had a letter from Doct Franklin & that from conversation with Lord Dartm. he thought he might encourage him to hope that consideration would be had of the sevral matters represented as grievances & that as far as should be judged proper they would be redressed, but that it was a work of time & in the mean time he advised to be quiet.1 I asked whether the proceedings of the Town of Boston & of so many other Towns & the countenance shewn them by the House could be thought consistent with this advice. He answered that he opposed the Town meetings of Boston as not advisable & besides he had no real expectation at that time of such encouragement. He professes a willingness to submit to all the regulations the Colonies were under before the Stamp Act but he is not the person of the greatest influence with the party. I told him I saw no prospect of peace whilst the Supremacy of Parlt was denied, He acknowledged there was no line to be drawn but if Parlt could bind the Colonies they were all Slaves. This is always the conclusion of the Party & by this conclusion they strike the minds of the people in general & raise a violent prejudice against all who maintain the Supremacy of Parliamt. Mr Danforth the Senior Councellor has been very free & open in support of Government & has opposed their proceedings in the late Session in a particular manner. He has a son going to England in this Ship who has the character of a Man of Virtue & of good understanding. He has had an education at our College & has had a philosophical turn of mind. He supposes that he has discovered a method of affording a constant supply of cold water for the warm tubs of the Distillers & saving all the labour they are now at for such supply, and wishes to obtain a patent for the sole privilege of the invention.2

    I am extremely cautious in taking the liberty of recomending persons to you but if this young gentleman had no personal merit yet his fathers merit would require me to do what I may with propriety. I have comitted to his care all the publick papers to be delivered with his own hand which will oblige him to wait on you & I beg leave to ask the favour of you to direct him to the easiest method of obtaining what he is pursuing if it shall be practicable. He can give a good account of himself & may be able to mention many things not proper for a letter which may be worth knowing. I am Sir Your faithful & most obedient humble Servant,

    AC (Massachusetts Archives, SC1/series 45X, 27:480–81); at end of letter, “Jno Pownall Esq.” 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, pp. 60–61 (all excerpt of first paragraph only).

    1105. To William Sanford Hutchinson

    Boston 20 Ap 1773

    My dear son, I was glad to receive your letter by Mr Smith giving me so particular an account of your affairs.1 I have not time before this ship sails to give you a particular answer. In general I can tell you that I cannot think of your being absent longer than until the first Spring Ships come from London to Boston the next year. In the mean time be as frugal in your expence as will consist with decency. You save for your self. You must think likewise how you are to live in the world. I am at a loss for any employment for you when you return. I wish there was any thing I could ask for you but I know of nothing at present.

    I am concerned to have you spend your time to advantage this Summer & the next Winter. I dont know what to think of your going to France. I must advise & consider & hope to be able to write you by the next opportunity.

    Present my compliments to Doctor Robertson & thank him for his very polite obliging letter.2 Your brothers & sisters think much that you have not wrote to them. I am your Affectionate father,

    AC (Massachusetts Archives, SC1/series 45X, 27:482).

    1106. To William Palmer

    Boston 21 Ap 1773

    Sir, The fall of Teas must occasion a heavy loss. As it could not be foreseen we must not blame a want of foresight. As you observe it is a staple article. It may rise especially if the drawback be all allowed as you have assurance it will be and part of the duty taken off here as others say.1 When this is settled I think it will be best to remove it here by convenient shippings concerning which I have before wrote.

    You think my son’s allowance for expences too small. Adm Montagu tells me his son has had but 100£ a year allowed him for expences at Oxford.

    I have a long letter from my son at Edinburgh but have not time now to write him a full answer. I have no thoughts of his continuing abroad longer than the present year but even in that time there may be danger of his acquiring a lavish careless habit. I must desire you therefore to recommend frugality to him especially as he must expect I shall deal equally with my children & if one will take more than his part in my life time he cannot have it after my death. I am Sir Your most humble Servant,

    AC (Massachusetts Archives, SC1/series 45X, 27:483); at head of letter, “Mr W Palmer.”

    1107. To Lord Dartmouth

    Boston 25 April 1773

    No 19

    My Lord, Having received the last evening, your Lordship’s circular Letter of Feby 2d., acquainting me that the Queen was happily brought to bed of a Prince, in which event all His Majesty’s Subjects ought to express their great satisfaction;1 and having also your Lordships letter (No 6) of the 3d of Feby.; and a Ship bound to London being detained by contrary winds a few Leagues from the Town I think it necessary for me to add a short Letter to those which I have already wrote to your Lordship by the same opportunity.

    The part of your Lordship’s letter, which requires the most speedy answer, relates to a person who stands charged with murder upon the High Seas & whose Trial was to have come on the 2d. of June,2 but upon the advice from your Lordship, that according to the opinion of the Law Servants of the Crown, the Court of Commissioners hath not jurisdiction in such a case, I shall oppose all further proceeding in the Trial. I have had no time to examine the Act of K. William, nor the Royal Commission any further than to observe that murder is not expressly mentioned.3 There have been many Trials before this Court, for murders upon the High Seas. As Felonies, at Common law, will comprehend murders, I imagine they must have not attended to any different construction when the fact was committed not within the cognizance of the Common Law, but, as the principles upon which the opinion of His Majesty’s Law Servants is grounded may be of importance for the regulation of future trials, I beg the favour of your Lordship to furnish me with them. I must also pray for directions how to proceed with the Prisoner. There can be no proof that the fact was committed within any County. His own confession, though he denies being the author, shews that it was upon the high seas. If he should be sent to England to be tried there upon the Statute of Henry the 8th. I do not see how he could be convicted, as the evidence consists of a great number of circumstances all which amount to a most violent presumption, but it is not possible to have the witnesses necessary to prove those circumstances sent to England.4 I shall endeavour to have him detained in prison until I can receive your Lordship’s answer, for a more atrocious crime has hardly ever been committed.

    If I could, consistent with my duty to the King, have avoided any controversy with the Assembly upon constitutional points, it would have been most agreeable to me,5 for my time of life & my constitution, not the firmest, render me unfit for affairs of such moment and which necessarily cause great anxiety. It affords me relief that the propriety of the measure appears to His Majesty and that he is pleased to approve of it.

    As your Lordship sees no objection to my consenting to the payment of Mr DeBerdts account for the reasons you are pleased to mention, I shall very willingly give my consent;6 and with respect to the practice of the Assessors in taxing the Officers of the Crown I find no complaint by the Commissioners for several years past. I must observe to your Lordship that the Acts or Laws of which complaint was made have ever since been in force & practised upon, the last not expiring until the next year, and my difficulty arises from not being able to give my consent to any future Tax bills, unless His Majesty’s pleasure be signified to me,7 and the only objection, I know of, must arise from an apprehension that it will be yielding up a point, in compliance with the opposition to Government, and yet the insisting on it will be attended with more difficulty than some others much more important.

    The other matter mentioned by your Lordship is of greater moment and, if it shall be thought advisable, it must be in consequence of such a Temper & Conduct and such Resolutions in the Representatives of the people as your Lordship wishes to see.

    I am sorry no more has been discovered in our late proceedings, and that the effect of those proceedings has not been more favorable among the people in general, who although they know not how to remove the absurdity of more than one Supreme Legislative yet, from the great authorities by which the doctrine was held in England, that no Englishman could constitutionally be taxed but by his consent in person or by his Representative, the people here universally embraced it & justified themselves in maintaining it, and, even among the thinking people, scarce one in fifty but will be ready to say that if the contrary is true the people in America are Slaves. I have ever told them the authority cannot be given up, but I had no doubt every indulgence would be shewn consistent with retaining the authority; but at present, reason and argument have no weight. From the best accounts of the state of the other Colonies, the same distinctions are made there. It must therefore be a radical cure of the whole, rather than of any one Colony fully to answer the purpose. As the Session of Parliament will be so near to a close, I have no expectation that an affair so difficult & so important can be determined upon until another year. I have the honour to be My Lord Your Lordship’s most humble & most obedient Servant,

    RC (National Archives UK, CO 5/895, ff. 74–75); at foot of letter, “Right Honble. the Earl of Dartmouth &ca”; docketed, “P.p. 32. Read Decr. 20. 1773.” DupRC (National Archives UK, CO 5/762, ff. 162–63); at head of letter, “Duplicate”; at foot of letter, “Rt Honble. the Earl of Dartmouth &ca”; docketed, “Boston 25th April 1773 Governor Hutchinson (No 19) Dupl Origl not reced Rx 29th: May Encl.” AC (Massachusetts Archives, SC1/series 45X, 27:484–85); at head of letter, “Syms”; in EH’s hand. SC (National Archives UK, CO 5/768, ff. 330–35); docketed, “Boston April 25th. 1773 Governor Hutchinson. (No: 19.) Rx 29th: May. (Dupl. Origl. not received).” SC (Houghton Library, Sparks 10, 4:36); at end of letter, “[P.p. 32. Read 20 Decr. 1773]”; docketed, “Govr. Hutchinson To Lord Dartmouth” and “Govr. Hutchinson To Lord Dartmouth 25 Apl. 1773.”; excerpt of paragraphs three through five only. SC (Houghton Library, Sparks 43, 1:164); docketed, “Thos: Hutchinson to the Earl of Dartmouth”; excerpt of paragraphs four and five only.