Who Sent the Letters?

    1144. To Sir Francis Bernard, 6 September 1773

    1145. To Thomas Gage, 7 September 1773

    1146. To John Pownall, 8 September 1773

    1147. To William Tryon, 10 September 1773

    1148. To William Dalrymple, 16 September 1773

    Throughout the early fall, Hutchinson continued to write more letters explaining his version of the controversy surrounding the Whately letters and defending himself against the charges advanced in the General Court’s mid-June petition to the king for his removal. Nearly every letter included speculation about who might have conspired to obtain the letters, who dispatched the letters to Massachusetts, and what their intent in doing so might have been.

    1144. To Sir Francis Bernard

    Boston 6 Sep 1773

    Dear Sir, I hope we shall soon hear how Mr Wh. private Letters got to Boston. I think the violence of the people here is pretty well over but a Gentleman at Newpt. I am informed is greatly hurt & the Assembly are taking measures to obtain from our Heroes the original of his Letter in order to bring an action in that Colony where he expects no mercy & must quit his business & living.1 Will not the betrayer of a private correspondence with such a villanous intention be detested by all men who have any sense of honour? The party here say the Letters came from a man of honour who is lately in great favour & will be the support of their cause. They don’t however chuse to name him. The chief actors laugh in their Sleeves at making so many Dupes in the Assembly but if they receive such an answer from England as I think they must receive they will repent that they ever made the stir they have done.

    Story I think has near done his business a second time as he is sued for his new debts & I am told not able to pay them. He does much mischief by a double part which he acts.2 I have said so much about the Eastern Country that I am afraid to say any more. The Inhabitants are become so numerous that a petition is afoot to divide the County of Lincoln & to make two Counties of it.

    You think the Assembly will keep up the provocation. They will have a great deal of assurance if they should. They have complained to the King that I forced them to deny the authority of Parliamt. I will avoid, at all events, saying any thing upon the subject. Surely they will not take it up of their own accord. Whether they do or not their complaint is groundless and the allegation false & they sought the contest & made it absolutely necessary for me to call upon them as I did. When I say they I mean the heads who have the entire direction of the whole Assembly as much as the Master of a puppet shew has of his puppets. I could counteract them more successfully than I do if they had no support from your side of the water. I am not without hopes that the late advices which I am informed they have received that they can expect no favorable answers whilst they continue to deny the authority of Parliamt. may have some good effect but I must wait till another Session before it can be made certain. I forwarded your letter to Goldthwait from whom I seldom hear.3 I am Dear Sir Your faithful & affectionate Servant,

    AC (Massachusetts Archives, SC1/series 45X, 27:539); at head of letter, “Sir FB.”

    1145. To Thomas Gage

    Boston 7 Sep 1773

    Sir, I should not have followd you to Engld with my correspondence if I had not stood in peculiar need of the friendship of a Gentleman well acquainted with the affairs of Amer. in general & with the disposition of the principal Actors in this Province in particular.1 Not having any pretence for framing articles of charge for male administration in the course of 4 years as they did tho without any success against my predecessor they have procured a number of private letters wrote all but one before my administration commenced to Mr W. a Gentleman who began a correspondence with me without my seeking being desirous of informing himself of the state of the Province & of occurrences there from time to time. These Letters they have resolvd contain misrepresentations & exaggerations & tend to subvert the Constitution & having passed the like Resolves upon some of the Lieutenant Governor’s Letters obtaind in the same way they have addressed the King that both of us may be removed from the Government for ever. In the form of their proceedings they ape that of the H of Lords or Coms & in their debates they urged that these Resolves were sufficiently formidable for an Address & that when the King’s Servants become obnoxious to the people he will of course remove them without any farther inquiry.

    There are no misrepresentations nor exaggerations in any of the Letters nor any thing relative to the constitution of this Province but as there is mention of the interposition of Parl. to provide some adequate penalties for such riotous disorderly persons as compel others to disobey Acts of Parlt. this they say is subverting the constitution of the Colony over which Parlt has no power & with these principles they have the impudence to address the King.

    I know how disagreeable complaints against the Servants of the Crown must be even when they are altogether groundless. I have with infinite caution avoided even a pretence for such complaints. A conspiracy of this sort it was not possible to guard against. Very few men are capable of searching the Cabinets of the dead & pilfering private confidential Letters & perhaps no other Assembly in the World would have countenanced such an action by receiving the Letters & afterwards misrepresenting & perverting every expression in them.

    The Resolves of the C & H were published in the News papers & seen by all the people in the Province. The Letters themselves published separate were seen but by few. The people supposed the Resolves well founded & were universally greatly incensed. When they have had opportunity of seeing the Letters they are generally grown cool.

    It is said by some the Letters were sent to Mr Bowdoin. There is no evidence of it. He was the principal Promoter of the Resolves in the C. and it has been suggested has some expectations for one of his family if not for himself by a change in the Government.2 Whensoever it shall appear to the King that I can no longer promote His Service I shall willingly submit to be superseded & whensoever I shall be sensible of it my self I will pray His Majesty’s leave to resign my Comission. I think it cannot be for His Majesty’s Service to shew any countenance to such a wanton as well as weak & puerile proceeding & altho they at first succeded by inflaming the minds of the people their doings are now condemned by a great part of the best people in the Province and if censured as I flatter my self they must be in Eng. will hurt their own cause more than any of the other irregular steps which they have heretofore taken. I have the honour to be Sir Your most humble & most obedient Servant,

    AC (Massachusetts Archives, SC1/series 45X, 27:540–41); at head of letter, “Gen Gage.”

    1146. To John Pownall

    Boston 8 Sep 1773

    Dear Sir, Nothing has occurrd since my last to the Secretary of State of importance eno to be the Subject of a publick letter. Upon an attempt to celebrate the 14 Aug. the day when the first riotous opposition was made to the Stamp Act the appearance was discouraging to the Undertakers scarce any person of note being present except two of the Boston Representatives Mr A. and Mr H.

    At the Superior Court held last week in this Town the Grand Jury some of whom no doubt were returned for that purpose officiously applied to the Court not to take their Salaries from the Crown. They had given in their Bills & were imediately dismissed without any Answer. A person also who has been a noted old offender by promoting Tumults and Riots was returned upon the Petty Jury & was attempting to excuse himself from serving because the Judges were to be paid by the Crown which would make the Court unconstitutional, but he was silenced by the Chief Justice as soon as his intention was discovered.1 These attempts seem not to be approved of by people in general. If the measure you approve of respecting their Comissions should take place it would silence many who have made the want of it their object if not their objection to Salaries from the Crown.2 There are others who will never be satisfied but after every reasonable concession will insist upon those that are unreasonable. This however should not prevent those that are reasonable.

    The friends of Government seemed to give up the cause when they found the Opposers of it could carry a point so extravagant as that of the late Resolves and I considered my self for some time without any support but time has already produced a change of sentiments in many & several persons of the first character in different parts of the Province by their Letters to me have expressed their detestation and a firm dependance that they will finally tend to establish my own reputation with the people & to strengthen the authority of Government and I am assured that one of the heads of the Opposition has lately declared the measure to be the most ill judged of any they have yet taken & I cannot but hope that it will be seen in its true light & so received in England as to discourage them from attempting in the like way to disturb the peace of the Province for the future. I am Dear Sir Your faithful & most obedient Servant,

    AC (Massachusetts Archives, SC1/series 45X, 27:538–39, 541); at head of letter, “Mr Pownall.”

    1147. To William Tryon

    Boston 10 Sep 1773

    Dear Sir, I thank you for your very kind letter and the friendly advice you have given me which perfectly agrees with my own sentiments.1 The people begin to open their eyes & some who used to be most forward in opposition condemn the late proceeding. There has been such a mixture of knavry & folly that I think no Assembly besides upon the continent could have countenanced such a proceeding. I wait with some impatience to hear what notice is taken of the Resolves in England. Some Letters say that Doctor F—— has great interest with Lord D—— which he will employ in favour of the Assembly whose Agent he is2 but there is such insolence in their requisition to have a Governor & Lieutenant Governor removed without any reason assigned or rather for a reason worse than none that if there is no censure passed upon them I shall think they intend to give up everything.

    I hope your journey contributed to your health. I am Sir Your faithful & most humble Servant,

    AC (Massachusetts Archives, SC1/series 45X, 27:541); at foot of letter, “His Ex Gov Tryon.”

    1148. To William Dalrymple

    Boston 16 Sep 1773

    Walleys Vessel

    My Dear Sir, I fancy you must have heard of the death of poor Crosse at a season of the year when evry body must have good luck that does not die in NCarolina.1 No body can rejoice unless it be those for whom he has made vacancies. Your Letter could not reach him. You desired me to let you know if any thing occurd among us worth notice. I find the clamour raisd from the trifling Letters of the Governor & Lieutenant Governor to Mr Whately almost intirely subsided & some of the chief Actors begin to think of consequences. One of the A——s the Lawyer of whom you may have some remembrance says as I hear it is the worst thing the Court ever did. Another Lawyer who was a forward man in the H a few days ago askd one of the Judges to take lodging at his House when upon the circuit.2 The Judge declined & gave as a reason the Lawyer’s conduct in the H. He excused himself by alledging that the people had been so inflamed that he was forced to fall in with the prevailing party altho against his judgment & when he knew the address as soon as it appeared in Eng must be pronounced a Libel. If it shall have appeard so & been noticed accordingly as I hope it has I think our Affairs will take a more favorable turn. There has been the most villany mixd with folly in the progress of this affair that ever I knew in any of their proceedings. Mr Wh—— certainly had too much honour to suffer so many private letters to go out of his hands. They must have been fraudently obtaind in his life time or since his death. They were sent over here some say to Mr B——n with injunctions to shew them to a few persons only & then to send them back without taking any copies.3 The Party found it necessary for their purpose that they should be read in the H of R but first obtaind a Vote of the H that they should be returnd without any copy taken. By this means from the unsubstantiated account the sevral Members could give ten thousand stories flew thro the Province exaggerated in evry Town so that at 50 miles distance from B the Letters were said to evidence a plot to seize all the principal friends to the Country & to send them home to Eng. to be hanged. This caused a demand from the people without doors to have the Letters printed & nothing else would satisfy them. This puzzled the Managers but they were forcd to comply & to avoid a breach of promise one of the Members told the H that as he was passing thro the Common some body had put into his hands a bundle of papers which seemd to be copies of the Letters which had been read to the H and he movd that the Cl. should compare them & if they appeard to be copies it could be no breach of trust in the H if they should be printed for such copies must have been taken by some other hand.4 This shameful puerility was laughd at by the boys in the gallery. The Vote however was carried & the Letters were printed but they took care first to pass their Resolves upon them to prepare the minds of the people to receive them. After this the Letters were carefully put up & sent back to Engd to the person from whom they came who the party here say is a man of honour & in great favour with the Ministry.5 I guess only and I am not certain from whom they came but I am sure he had no design to serve the Kingdom or the Colonies & I think he must render himself detestable. When I say I hope our Affairs will take a more favorable turn I do not expect that A——s & his Coadjutors will abate of their endeavours to embarass & distress but I hope there will be more strength to oppose & counteract.6

    Mr Burch has now given over all thots of his voyage until Spring. I hear & am glad of it that Mr Gambier is provided for to his content & I shall rejoice also when I hear which I hope will be soon the same good news respecting Colo Dalrymple. I am sincerely Dear Sir Your faithful humble Servant,

    AC (Massachusetts Archives, SC1/series 45X, 27:545); at head of letter, “Colo Dalrymple.”

    1149. To Lord Dartmouth

    Boston 16. Septemb. 1773

    No 27

    My Lord, I am honoured with your Lordship’s Letter dated the 5th. of July last with several Questions relative to the State of the Province to which I am preparing the fullest Answers I am capable of and if this Vessel shall tarry so long as I expect I will cover them with this Letter, otherwise by the next opportunity; and I will not fail transmitting to your Lordship an account of any material variations which may from time to time occur in the Commerce, Cultivation and Inhabitancy of this Government.1

    There seems at present to be a general calm through the Province notwithstanding the weekly efforts of the Newspaper writers in the Town of Boston. Some who were active in promoting the late Address have endeavoured to exculpate themselves by alledging that the minds of the people in the Country had been so inflamed by the artifices of the Members of the Town and by the rumours spread concerning the private Letters of the Governor & Lieutenant Governor, that they should have been afraid to have returned home if they had not joined with the majority though they verily believed their Address would be declared a Libel and censured accordingly.

    I cannot expect that the same House or Council should acknowledge their errors & rescind their late doings, but I have reason to think that if the affair was intire they could not now be prevailed upon to pass the same Votes which they then passed. The body of the people of the Province are far from a perverse disposition. They are deluded by a few men and even among those few there are some who would wish to see an end to contention upon what they call reasonable terms, but there are others, and of too great influence, who are against all conciliating proposals and if every complaint of grievance should be satisfied they would immediately make as many more fresh complaints in the place of them. The piece with the signature A in the paper I inclose to your Lordship speaks the language of the chief man among them and is generally supposed to be wrote by him.2 The hint of a Congress is nothing new, it is what they have been aiming at the two last sessions of the General Court, and I have certain intelligence that the Speakers of the Assemblies in several of the Colonies have been invited to join with this Province and have been assured that the Assembly here are ready to do their part. I hope that the Southern Assemblies, or several of them, will not encourage such a measure. I will do every thing in my power to discourage it and for that purpose, to reconcile the friends of Government and those moderate opposers of it who wish to see an end to contention upon reasonable terms, for I am well assured it is the design of those who are for a Congress to insist upon such terms as will not admit of any other authority within the Colonies than that of their respective Legislatures.

    I shall keep off the Assembly until some time in January if I am not pressed hard by the general call of the people to meet them sooner. Some of the Members of this Town would be glad to sit all the year. By the Charter an Assembly must be held in May for the Election of Councillors. This being a busy season of the year the Members in general do not chuse to be long from home and, for that reason, a Winter Session has been the practice from the beginning. Had the Election been in Winter one Session in a year would have been sufficient, but to attempt an alteration of so long a practice would add another article to the roll of grievances, though it would really lend to the peace and quiet of the Province if there was a longer interval between the Sessions of the Assembly than what has been usual here.

    The four puisné Judges of the Superior Court have taken their whole Salaries which were granted them by the General Court for the year 1772, intending when they shall have their Warrants for their Salaries from the Crown they shall commence at the time when their Salaries from the Court ended, which makes a difference of just half a year.3 This will cause a saving of five hundred pounds to the Crown. May this sum, My Lord, be applied to the repair of the Province House? It is a scandal to the Government that it should ly in such a condition and it is in vain to apply to the House of Representatives who declare they will make no Grant for that purpose let who will be Governor unless he will refuse to receive any Salary from the King.

    The Chief Justice has refused to take any Salary from the Province after the commencement of the Salaries from the King according to the Warrants. The other Judges, as there was but a small difference between the yearly value of the Grant from the Crown and the last Grant from the Court, thought it best to receive the whole year’s Salary without any deduction, the Warrants from the Crown not having been transmitted. I have also reason to think that some of them depend upon their Grants in season to help support their families. I have the honour to be My Lord Your Lordship’s most humble & most obedient Servant,

    RC (National Archives UK, CO 5/895, ff. 90–91); at foot of letter, “Rt Honble. the Earl of Dartmouth &ca”; docketed, “Massachusets. Duplicate of a Letter No. 27 from Govr. Hutchinson to the Earl of Dartmouth, dated Septr. 16. 1773,—relative to his preparing a State of the Province;—the temper of the Inhabitants;—and the conduct of the Judges with respect to their salaries. P.p. 41. Read Decr: 20th. 1773.” DupRC (National Archives UK, CO 5/762, ff. 388–89); at head of letter, “Duplicate”; at foot of letter, “Rt Honble. the Earl of Dartmouth.” AC (Massachusetts Archives, SC1/series 45X, 27:542–44); at head of letter, “Walleys.” SC (National Archives UK, CO 5/769, ff. 4–8); docketed, “Govr. Hutchinson, Boston. Septr. 1773. No. 27 Rx 8th Novr. (Dup—Orig. not recd).” SC (Houghton Library, Sparks 10, 4:44–45); at end of letter, “[Read 20 Decr. 1773.—No inclosure filed.] P.p. 41.” (brackets in original); docketed, “Hutchinton To Dartmouth.” SC (Houghton Library, Sparks 43, 1:173); docketed, “Thos: Hutchinson to Lord Dartmouth”; excerpt of paragraph three only. Enclosure to DupRC: Boston Gazette, 13 September 1773, pp. 1–2 (National Archives UK, CO 5/762, ff. 390–91).