More Speculation about the Stolen Letters

    1167. To Edward Montagu, 27 October 1773

    1168. To Unknown, 27 October 1773

    1169. From Lord Dartmouth, 28 October 1773

    1170. To Israel Williams, 30 October 1773

    1171. To William Whately, 31 October 1773

    Hutchinson was perhaps understandably obsessed by his desire to know how his letters to Thomas Whately had come to Boston. By late October, Hutchinson had dismissed his early suspicions that William Story brought the Whately letters with him from London. Hutchinson became increasingly certain that John Temple had stolen the letters from Thomas Whately’s files without Whately’s brother’s knowledge and that Benjamin Franklin had transmitted them to Boston. Both Andrew Oliver and Hutchinson had written William Whatley in an effort to learn more. Hutchinson wrote Whately a second time on 31 October to assure him that Story was not the guilty party, with the implication that it was far more likely to have been Temple.

    1167. To Edward Montagu

    Boston 27 October 1773

    Dear Sir, I am much obliged to you for your kind notice the 23d of Augt. which the long passage of the Vessel it came by kept from me until to day.1 I could not help flattering myself that even Jun. Amr. would have been ashamed of so detestable a manouvre as that of the Letters but I find he justifies it.2 The chief manager on this side the water now declares that he never expected any good effect & that he pushd the affair from the importunity of a brother Representative who was offended at my mentioning his name in one of my letters3 & altho the Party are not less enraged against me yet my friends resent the injury & upon the whole I think the interest of Government as well as my own interest here will be rather served than hurt. How it will be in England I cannot say having received no public Letters in answer to any of mine upon the subject. The Lieutenant Governor says that if the least ear is given to so wanton so effrontive an address to the Throne every servant of Government in America will be discouraged.

    Some of my friends here have urged me to a rougher treatment of the Assembly in return for their rudeness to me but I know this is what they wish for & the rudeness is merely to provoke me for such a return that they may have a pretence for something still more illiberal than any thing they have yet offered. Their talents ly this way, when the Court is sitting by publick messages in the recess by illiberal pieces in the news Papers many of which come from the same pen with the messages.4 I could very well have justified a dissolution of the Assembly if I had not been sure of the people’s construing it to proceed from a consciousness of guilt. Some of them wished it they would then have concealed the Letters & willingly sufferd the false rumors which had been spread concerning them to be universally credited. I cannot yet be satisfied who sent the Letters here they are sent back to him whoever he was. I always supposed a Gentleman who himself had corresponded with Mr Whately & is now in England might ask for a sight of some of his own letters on some pretense or other & having a file of NE letters might take out these and, Mr Whately dying, retain them & either send them here or deliver them to the other Gentleman you mention to be sent by him.5 One Story who had been in London & left it a month before Mr Whately died sollicited me for a place that was vacant & upon my declining it he let me know by a letter that he hoped he should not be obliged to make publick the substance & purport of some writings of mine he had seen in London & which I should not like to have known.6 I supposed Mr T with whom he had some connections here might shew them to him in London but that they were not sent here until after Mr Whately died. The Lieutenant Governor has taken some pains to make a certain discovery. If he succeeds I will let you know it. Story affirms these are not the Letters he referred to.7

    The Admiral has passed thro two thirds of his station to the general satisfaction of the people & more to his own comfort than if he had been at Halifax. He is fortunate in the promotion of his two sons & I rejoice with him. He seems however to be frequently looking homewards & I dare say next summer will cheerfully sing his Nunc dimittis8 & I think I should join with him if I did not feel a strong attachment to my County & a fondness for leaving my bones in it ungrateful as it is.

    My sentiments agree with yours. I cannot concede to the claim of Independence which is really the sole point contested without a flagrant departure from my trust. My adherence makes me obnoxious to the leaders of the people here & I see I am traduced in the news papers in Engld & its possible you think that I may be given up by Administration. I endeavour to prepare for whatever may be the event. I will venture to prophesy that my Successor will either give up the point I have thot it my duty to maintain or will meet with more trouble in maintaining it than even I have done. I am Dear Sir Your much obliged faithful Servant,

    AC (Massachusetts Archives, SC1/series 45X, 27:564–65); at end of letter, “Mr Montagu.”

    1168. To Unknown

    Boston 27 Octo 1773

    Syms

    Dear Sir, A Gentleman in Lond has advisd me by the last Ship of your friendship in making inquiry of Mr Whately the Banker how private letters to his brother could find the way to NE.1 I am bound to thank you for it by the first opportunity. The Gentleman adds that Mr Whately would not suspect Mr Temple because it had been affirmd that one Story carried the letters to NEngd. in the life time of Mr Whately deceased & therefore they could not be obtaind after his decease from his brother the Banker. Story pretended that he had seen some of my writings in Eng. but he affirmed to me that he did not mean the Letters which were before the Assembly that he never saw them and they were not brot by him to NEng. & I cant trace them in this country farther back than the last Spring. Mr Pitts whose wife was Aunt to Mr Temple acquainted the Secretary that he had read the letter which accompanied them that they were to be shewn to 13 persons named of which number he was the second & then returned.2 The letter he added was anonymous but he well knew the hand writing. I dont find that any of the party here deny that Mr. T procured them but some of them say they did not come immediately from him.

    I always tho’t my self of too little consequence to be entitled to such marks of infernal rage & malice as I see in the late Ledgers. I have one comfort that there are not the least grounds for any one charge they bring against me. The Council say in one of their Resolves that I have declared there must be an abridgment of English Liberties.3 They might just as well have charged David with having said “There is no God.”4 I see an attempt to vindicate this expression which does me but little service. When I wrote these Letters some of my Correspondents proposed a representation of the Colonies in Parl. & said that without it they could not enjoy the Liberties of Englishmen. This caused me to write as I did. “It gave me pain to think the Colonies could not enjoy every Liberty which the Kingdom could but I did not see how it could be helped. A representation was not practicable & I had never seen any other scheme which satisfied me.”5 No candid man will intend any other meaning. I write all such letters currente calamo.6 If I had supposed they were to be printed I should have expressed my self more carefully. I explain this expression because I see they harp so much upon it in the English papers. I dont observe any other which can be even tortured to serve their purpose.

    What should tempt some Gentlemen who have espoused the cause of Gov Wentw. to be inimical to me as I am informed they are I cannot conceive.7 I never concernd my self in the least degree in his dispute & have been careful even to shun all conversations about it. I have reason to think that false stories have been wrote to him from Engld. & that he has given credit to them & possibly he may have communicated them to his friends. When my letter dated in August comes to your hands I hope to hear from you & that I shall be able to make a better judgment how the extravagant doings of our Assembly are received by the sane part of the kingdom than I am from any intelligence I have yet had.8 I am Dear Sir Your faithful & most obliged Servant,

    AC (Massachusetts Archives, SC1/series 45X, 27:565).

    1169. From Lord Dartmouth

    Whitehall 28th: Octr. 1773

    Sir, As it is probable that you may have thought fit to have availed yourself of the King’s Permission to come to England inclosed to you in my Dispatch No. 4.1 I shall avoid entering at large into the Matters contained in those Dispatches which have been received from you since that time, & shall confine myself to such points only as I have immediately in command from the King.

    The inclosed Order of His Majesty in Council2 will inform you of the Steps which have been taken in consequence of the Doubt that had occurred how the Governor was to act with regard to the Judgement to be given when he differed in opinion from the Major part of the Council in Cases respecting the proving of Wills & Administrations, and I am to signify to you, His Majesty’s Plerasure that you do acquiesce in the Determination of the Majority of Councillors present acting as a Court for proving Wills and Administrations, & deciding Controversies concerning Marriage and Divorce, although you should differ in Opinion from that Majority.3

    The King having been informed that a practice hath been lately introduced into His Colony of Massachuset’s Bay of appointing in various Instances Committees of Correspondence which sit & act during the Recess of the General Court by Prorogation, and it having been represented to His Majesty that this practice is both unusual and unconstitutional, it will be your Duty to signify to the Assembly His Majesty’s Disapprobation thereof, & to use all prudent Means for inducing them to desist from so unwarrantable a Proceeding. I am &ca.,

    Dartmouth.

    SC (National Archives UK, CO 5/762, ff. 386–87); docketed, “Govr: Hutchinson. (No. 12.)” and “Drat: to Govr: Hutchinson 28th: October 1773. (No 12.) Encl.” SC (National Archives UK, CO 5/765, ff. 273–74); docketed, “Govr. Hutchinson (No 12).” SC (Houghton Library, Sparks 43, 1:172); docketed, “Lord Dartmouth to Govr: Hutchinson”; excerpt of last paragraph only.

    1170. To Israel Williams

    Boston 30. October 1773

    Dear Sir, I know you are anxious about our Affairs in England. When I heard last from Lord Dartmouth he had seen the Resolves but not the Letters & he had received no letter from me upon the subject; his sentiments, however, of the proceedings were more favorable to me than I could venture to hope for; nor have I ever received a kinder letter from him.1 The Speaker has shewn me a letter from Franklin dated three weeks later than mine from Lord Dartmouth, in which he tells him that “he had recieved the Address of the House & sent it to the Secretary of State, that he had seen the Great men about the Court, that they were all of opinion the Letters were not sufficient foundation for the Resolves & that it was not likely Mr Hutchinson would be removed, but that he had desired leave to come to England & would be at liberty to resign and would be provided for in England”; and then adds—“this is all conjecture.”2 I am assured there never was any thing done in the Country which has set it in so bad a light with all sorts of people in England.

    I cannot determine any thing until I have my publick letters. I have no reason to suppose my leave to be any thing more than a suspension of the restraint I am under by my Instructions. If I should be provided for in England, I am told Governor Pownall labours hard to be my Successor. The letters were pilfered from Mr Whatelys Executor as I always supposed. I have the fullest approbation of my conduct in the New York affair & my representations were favorably recieved. The House refused to give me thanks. When I first entred into publick service I asked my father’s advice. My son says he if you can be content with Country pay accept—otherwise not. I desired him to explain himself. Depend upon it says he if you serve your Country faithfully you will be reproached & reviled for doing it. I could bear it, if at the same time they were hurting me they were not destroying themselves. I am Sir Your faithful friend & Servant,

    RC (Massachusetts Historical Society, Israel Williams Papers); endorsed, “30th. Octr 1773.”

    1171. To William Whately

    Boston 31 Octo 1773

    By Folger

    Sir, It has been reported that the original letters which had been wrote by the Lieutenant Governor & by me to your late worthy brother were bro’t over here by one Mr Story. I am desired by the Lieutenant Governor to acquaint you that altho Mr Story gave out that he had seen in London writings of mine yet he has affirmd to me those Letters were not the writings he meant & that he knew nothing of the manner in which they came here. Indeed, there is no room to suppose they were sent here until after your brothers death.1 If they were pilfered from his cabinet or files it is such an infamous deed that every man who has any sense of honour must detest it & I think the Receiver, for it is said they were not sent over by the person who took them, if he was acquainted with the manner of their being obtained has a share in the guilt. The Government in England has been greatly disserved by the confusions caused here. The Lieutenant Governor as worthy a man as lives has been distressed beyond measure. I say nothing of the abuses to which I have been subjected here and in England, for the man whoever he is, that has done so base a deed ought to be deemed an enemy to the Publick & exposed as such that it may be less in his power to be a like base for the future. He has taken care not to send over the first letter I wrote to your brother dated on May 1768 because, as I see by the answer there are some conciliatory proposals.2 I did not copy it & shall be obliged to you, if it be on his files, for the copy of it which may be of some use to convince the people here that I have never aimed at their being any further dependant than is absolutely necessary for their own real benefit. I am,

    I seldom fail of having a packet made up every month at Ld Dartmo Office. A letter lodged there the first Wednesday will come safe.

    AC (Massachusetts Archives, SC1/series 45X, 27:566); at end of letter, “Mr. Whately [Banker?] in Lombd Street.”