Preparing to Depart

    1266. To Sir Francis Bernard, 2 May 1774

    1267. To [John Pownall?], 2 May 1774

    1268. To Israel Williams, 14 May 1774

    1269. From Peter Oliver, 15 May 1774

    1270. To Lord Dartmouth, 17 May 1774

    The second group of ships leaving for Boston in spring 1774 would have brought news of the king’s speech on 7 March but not the details of the Boston Port Act, which was introduced by Lord North on 14 March and swiftly passed through Parliament, receiving the royal assent by the end of the month. Copies of the act appeared in Boston newspapers on 12 May, the day before General Gage arrived to relieve Hutchinson. The prospect that Hutchinson might be allowed to resume the governorship so inflamed popular opinion that the governor’s friends advised him to remain at the Castle until his departure on 1 June.

    1266. To Sir Francis Bernard

    Boston 2d May 1774

    Dear Sir, I write to you only to shew that I am not unmindful of you, for I never found it more difficult to know what to write. Callahan arrived yesterday from London with papers to the 15. March.1 The people are exceedingly alarmed. I have no publick or private advices. There is a general expectation of vigorous measures in England. I hear of some very rash declarations from persons not worth regarding; others I am told are profoundly silent. We had just before received the Order of His Majesty in Council upon the Affair of the Letters which is mortifying but does not raise their resentment so much as the removal of Doctor Franklin. & Mr. T. from the places.2 I thank God I feel no pleasure from revenge. If the same purposes might be answered by them being in place as by their being out I coud wish them both restored. They are both expected in America. As I am altogether unacquainted with the plan of measures except what I see in the news papers which I give no heed to, I can take no step. I staid til the last minute before I issued Writs for calling the Court at Boston, imagining it probable or at least possible that part of the plan might be the removal of the Court to some other place.3 If it should I know not how I shall regularly cause them to meet there until they have first met at Boston. I blame nobody. It is inevitable. But it is unfortunate. Packetts are always tardy. Mr. Bernard is gone to Kennebeck to settle some Affairs which I mention that you may not wonder you dont hear from him.4 I am &ca,

    AC (British Library, Eg. 2661, f. 25); in TH Jr.’s hand.

    1267. To [John Pownall?]1

    Boston 2d. May 1774

    Private

    Dear Sir, Just before my Lord Dartmouth came into Office I received advice of the appointment of Salaries to the Judges and to the Attorney & Sollicitor General.2 Mr. Quincy the Sollicitor General informs me that his friend upon applying for a Warrant was informed that it was not made out.3 I imagine that there must have been an undesigned omission in not preparing the warrant, or that his friend did not regularly apply, for the directions to make out the warrants mention the Sollicitor General as explicitly as any of the other officers. I acquainted him with it immediately & his dependance has been upon it, and I dare say he has lived as if it was part of his Income. He has in some instances been very serviceable to Government. I beg your inquiry into the affair & your endeavors that he may not be disappointed.

    A Ship arrived yesterday from London with papers to the 15. of March. The people are much alarmed. I have no publick Intelligence since the beginning of Feby. and my friends ceased writing supposing me to be on my passage to England as I should have been if the death of the Lieutenant Governor had not prevented. There has not yet been time to judge what effect these advices will have on the spirits of the people. I am with very great regard & esteem Sir &c,

    AC (British Library, Eg. 2661, f. 25); in TH Jr.’s hand.

    1268. To Israel Williams

    Castle William 14 May 1774

    Dear Sir, As our friendship is of so ancient a date I cannot leave the Country without telling you my motives to it.1 The appointment of General Gage to the Government is the consequence of my own representations to His Majesty of the difficulties of my situation, and it was done not to slight but to oblige me, and I dont believe that ever a Servant of the Crown obtained a discharge with stronger testimonials of the approbation of his Sovereign or with Stronger assurances of the continuance of his favour; and yet I feel more satisfaction from one Paragraph of a Private Letter from so upright and good a man as Lord Dartmouth than from all those publick testimonials or assurances. After the strongest expressions of Regard & esteem his Lordship goes on “The conscious sense which you profess of an upright & uniform regard to the duty of your station, joined to a dispassionate & Real concern for the welfare of the People over whom you Preside, which equally appear throughout the correspondence that I have had with you, do at this moment, if I am not deceived in my opinion of you, supply you with that steadiness and fortitude which discover them selves in your firm and temperate conduct and which under such support it is not in the power of the most unreasonable prejudice or even of the most inveterate malice to shake or intimidate.”2

    I go with great Reluctance but I think it will be more for my quiet as well as more for my honour & Reputation to be abroad for some time than to remain here, for every step which Gage shall take will be laid upon me though I should come and live with you at Hatfield, and I shall be less able to avoid abuse now I am in a private station. There will be no need of evidence its enough not to be absolutely impossible. I am now charged with advising to the late Act for shutting up Boston, altho’ I never suggested to the Ministry any measure whatsoever, and, if I had been called upon to do it, I never could have brought my self to one so severe and distressing.

    Whether I shall live to return or if I do Return shall find you alive God only knows. Be that as it may let both of us living & dying more & more put our trust & confidence in him.

    When you see Worthington communicate this letter to him. You have both always been my friends, and I don’t remember to have heard any thing from either of you that looked as if there was any interruption of the friendship which used to subsist between you, but I have heard from others that there has been some abatement.3 If this information be true let me do one good Office before I leave the Country and by my intreaty Prevail on you to be thoroughly reconciled.

    I will not answer your last letter. Write to me upon the same subject when I am in England.

    When you see your good kinsman at Long Meadows thank him for his letter & for his prayers for me which I hope he will continue.4 Excuse so rough a letter which I have not time to transcribe. Yours Affectionately,

    RC (Massachusetts Historical Society, Israel Williams Papers); at foot of letter, “Colo Williams.”

    1269. From Peter Oliver

    Middleborough, May 15th, 1774.

    Dear Sir, I sincerely congratulate you on your present relief from a most troublesome government, and that your successor is a gentleman of so aimiable a character, and who doubtless will act with that firmness which is so absolutely necessary at this important crisis. I am sorry that you are obliged to retire to the Castle, but am persuaded you are quite right.

    I did not go to Barnstable by reason of violent threatnings; and the gentlemen of the county tho’t me prudent for it. I was determined to go to Plymouth court this week, and great numbers of my neighbours urged me, and were to go with me; a number of gentlemen also, had agreed in Plymouth to meet me on the road, to escort me as a guard, and others in the town to receive me at entering. On Friday last I wrote to Mr. Trowbridge in Plymouth, to let me know his mind, as to the legality of holding a court at all, there being but four justices in commission, and the council refusing to appoint a fifth:1 As also to know whether the court, if they met, would dispute with the grand or pettit jury, on their refusal to take the oaths, or fine upon the refusal. Instead of writing an answer to me, Mr. Trowbridge came here on Saturday: I could obtain no answer to the first question, and as to fining on refusal, I could not be supported, and so the court is to be adjourned: And I am determined to make no further attempts to sit in court, until I can find myself supported in maintaining the honor of the court, and securing my person. As to the affair of the grand jury’s libel at Worcester court, I did not know of their conduct, until I saw it in the newspaper; and had any of my brethren been charged in so infamous a manner, I would forever have quitted the bench, rather than have such indignity to them, to have passed unnoticed.2 How is it possible to let a brother judge, a friend, or even a brute to be treated in so indignant a manner, I have no conception of it in my ideas of humanity. But so it is, and if the supreme court is content with such rudeness, inferior jurisdictions are to be exculpated in suffering the common wealth to be destroyed.

    I wish you could find a moment to tell me when you design to embark, for I shall be very uneasy to suffer myself not to see you before you leave us. I am, dear Sir! with the sincerest affection,

    PETER OLIVER.

    MS not found. Contemporary printing: Essex Journal, 6 October 1775; at head of letter, “To His Excellency Gov. Hutchinson, Castle-William.”

    1270. To Lord Dartmouth

    Castle William 17th May 1774

    Private

    My Lord, I don’t remember ever to have received a Letter which gave me greater comfort and satisfaction than your Lordship’s private letter of the 9th. of April. A small Vessel had arrived a few days before which left London after the appointment of General Gage, & no body having received any intelligence of the motives to it, a great many conjectures were formed. Your Lordship’s letter enabled me to make known the true motives to the appointment and stopped the progress of that triumph which had began among the enemies to Government. It also relieved me from anxious fears lest some impressions had been made to my disadvantage. The measure appeared to me perfectly right, and the assurance given me of His Majesty’s most gracious approbation of my services together with your Lordship’s declared sense of my regard to the duty of my station and of my concern for the welfare of the people over whom I presided prepared me to resign the Chair without the least reluctance.

    I will, as far as I am able, fortify my self against my present unpopularity with the considerations which your Lordship so kindly prescribes, without despairing of the return of the favour of the people which I have found by experience uncertain and fluctuating.

    The inclosed paper will shew your Lordship the wild schemes of those people who have governed the Town for seven years past.1 There are many considerate persons who seem to be waiting an opportunity to consult together upon such measures as may tend to obtain the Royal favour and a restoration of the Trade of the Town, though they think nothing can be brought to effect until the Regiments arrive.

    I have taken passage for my self and part of my family in Capt Callehan a Ship in the London trade and expect to sail in ten days and shall wait upon your Lordship immediately upon my arrival in England. I am very respectfully My Lord Your Lordship’s most obliged faithful humble servant,

    RC (National Archives UK, CO 5/763, ff. 178–79); at foot of letter, “Rt Honble. the Earl of Dartmouth &ca”; docketed, “Castle William Boston 17 May 1774 Mr. Hutchinson (Private) Rx 22d. June.” SC (National Archives UK, CO 5/769, ff. 77–78); docketed, “Castle William 17th. May 1774 Mr. Hutchinson (Private) Rx 22d. June.”