Selected Correspondence

    July 1772–May 1774

    The Governor’s Salary

    1001. To Lord Hillsborough, 2 July 1772

    1002. To William Sanford Hutchinson, 4 July 1772

    1003. To Lord Hillsborough, 15 July 1772

    1004. From Andrew Oliver, 17 July 1772

    1005. To William Palmer, 21 July 1772

    1006. To [John Pownall], 21 July 1772

    Version 1

    Version 2

    During the first few weeks of the summer session of the General Court, Thomas Hutchinson was encouraged by an apparent spirit of compromise that enabled him to return the assembly to its traditional meeting place in Boston. He could not, however, persuade the members to take any measures to stem the tide of unauthorized settlers in the Eastern Country and was surprised when a committee of the House inquired whether it was true that he was now paid by the crown. When he acknowledged the new source of his salary, a new committee, now led by Joseph Hawley, drew up a series of resolutions denouncing the innovation as an invasion of the province’s charter rights and declaring that Hutchinson was, therefore, no longer a governor of the sort people had agreed to accept, and his powers no longer obtained. Hutchinson believed he effectively countered the argument in his message proroguing the General Court. Unbeknownst to him, however, the House prepared a remonstrance on the last day of the session, which it instructed Benjamin Franklin, its agent, to lay before the king.

    1001. To Lord Hillsborough

    Boston 2d. July 1772

    (No 30)

    My Lord, I thought it necessary to recommend to the Assembly of the present year the State of the Eastern part of the Province.1 I had principally in view the discouragement of further settlements there by the appearance of my Message to the two Houses in print, not expecting that any effectual measures would be taken by them.2

    Mr. Scammell the Inspector was in Boston the beginning of the last month. I gave him the best advice and assistance I could. He seemed somewhat disheartened from the uncertainty that he was in whether he should be allowed over & above his Salary, the necessary expence of Assistants Guides &ca. in his march through the Woods and in making his Surveys. He acquainted me that he had wrote to the Lords of the Treasury and prayed their directions but could not obtain an answer and he begged I would mention his case to your Lordship. If he must bear the expence of what assistance is necessary to the speedy finishing his business it will take most if not the whole of his Salary: If he is to go through his business without assistance it will require several years to accomplish what he apprehends your Lordship expects from him in order to determining upon proper measures relative to that part of this Province which lies between Kenebeck and Nova Scotia.

    I will take the liberty to inclose the last letter I received from Mr. Scammell.3 I am with very great respect My Lord Your Lordship’s most humble and most obedient servant,

    RC (National Archives UK, CO 5/761, ff. 158–59); at foot of letter, “Right Honble. the Earl of Hillsborough”; docketed, “Boston 2d. July 1772. Governor Hutchinson (No. 30) Rx 13th. August.” AC (Massachusetts Archives, SC1/series 45X, 27:355–57); in EH’s hand. SC (National Archives UK, CO 5/768, ff. 249–50); docketed, “Govr. Hutchinson, Boston 2d. July 1772 (No. 30) Rx 13th August”; at end of letter, “Inclosures 1. Govr Hutchinson’s Speech to the Assembly. 2. Letter from Mr Scammell to Governor Hutchinson.” Enclosures to RC: TH to Massachusetts General Court, 2 July 1772 (National Archives UK, CO 5/761, ff. 160–61); Thomas Scammell to TH, 8 June 1772 (National Archives UK, CO 5/751, ff. 162–63).

    1002. To William Sanford Hutchinson

    Boston 4 July 1772

    Dear Billy, I repeat writing to you to shew you that I am not unmindful of you & to give the satisfaction of hearing that we are all well there being no remarkable occurrence worth communicating to you. Your new sister you expected & no doubt have seen the mention of her in the Newspaper. Your brother & she are now at Milton & together with Peggy, who is to write to you in two or three days by Jack Clark bound to Liverpool are indulging in Cherries and Strawberries which are in perfection.1 This Letter I hope will find you at Edinburgh pursuing something more refined than the pleasures of sense & constantly aiming at improvements in knowledge & virtue that you may make your father happy in the prospect of your usefulness2 & importance after he has made his exit till which time be it sooner or later I hope to continue your affectionate father,

    AC (Massachusetts Archives, SC1/series 45X, 27:357).

    1003. To Lord Hillsborough

    Boston 15. July 1772

    (No 31)

    My Lord, Not having been able to put an end to the Session of my Assembly until yesterday I have only time before this Ship sails to inclose to your Lordship their late messages to me and my answers. The attempt to find a new cause of grievance from the payment of the Governor’s Salary by order from His Majesty will rather serve than hurt the cause of Government.1 Their Resolves or Declarations upon this Subject are so ill founded that, when the Answer appears with them the whole will tend to quiet rather than disturb the minds of the People. This was the case with the opposition to the Kings Instructions the last Session.2 We have not a word said now concerning the Governor’s conforming to the King’s Instructions except to justify him in doing it.

    They refuse to make any grant for the Repairs of the Province House, which will require 4 or 500 £ Sterling to make it merely decent, and seem to point out by their Answer to my Message that the charge should be provided for in the same way with the Salary. It is a dishonour to His Majesty’s Commission that the Governor lives in it in its present state one half the Houses of the Private Gentlemen of the Town being as good Houses when it was in order, and all of them in better repair than this House at present.3

    The Council voted to desire me to issue a Proclamation forbidding all persons to intrude upon the Lands East of the Province of Main but the House nonconcurred & confined their desire to Trespasses upon the Woods only which the Council finally concurred thinking it better than nothing.4 I think it will do no good.

    The two Houses have applied to me to represent to His Majesty the distressed state of several Towns which were settled under this Province and by the running the line with New Hampshire were considered for some time as within the Jurisdiction of New Hampshire and were at the expence of new grants from that Province. After 20 years they were determined to be in New York.5 They acquiesce in the Jurisdiction wherever His Majesty shall order them, but they think it hard to be at the Expence of 720 Spanish Dollars each Town besides near 300 more to Sollicitors in order to obtain a further confirmation from New York. One Town particularly by the name of Hinsdale has received grant from this Province & NHampshire & lately a pitch has been made of 10,000 acres and their most ancient improvements are taken in. This Town was granted by the Massachuts. in the year 1672. I wrote to Govr. Tryon in the winter upon the subject of this Town. He wrote me in answer that he had a peremptory mandamus to grant Colonel Howard 10,000 acres of land wherever he should pitch provided it had not before been patented and as Colo. Howard had pitched upon Hinsdale and although that had been patented by this Province & N Hampshire both yet as it had not been by NYork, he thought himself bound to confirm or accept the return of the Survey of the Lands.6 This proceeding is so contrary to equity that I think it will never be approved of by His Majesty. By the next opportunity I will state the case of these Sufferers more particularly for your Lordship’s consideration.

    I must My Lord do justice to the Council who refused to take any notice of a Message of the House upon the Subject of the Governor’s salary being paid by the Crown, for although a connexion which is still in opposition to government urged a consideration of this message yet it could not prevail, some of the new Members which I have admitted since my being in the Chair being firmly attached to Government and some of them of superior understanding to this connexion. Indeed they have behaved with propriety through the whole of the Session.

    The two Houses renewed their grants of 900£ Sterling to Mr. Bollan and 600£ to Mr. Franklin which were laid before me and I refused to assent to them.7 They have passed a great number of laws which as soon as I have time to remark upon I shall transmit according to my Instructions.

    I am to acquaint your Lordship that the Superior Court sat the week before last at Falmouth in Casco bay. The Attorney General and one of the Judges assure me that all proper measures were used for bringing to justice the persons concerned in the assault upon the Comtroller Mr. Savage, that notwithstanding he had given such information upon oath to the then Chief Justice as induced him to issue his Warrant against two Shipmasters who were apprehended & have been kept several months from their business yet when he came before the Grand Jury he could not swear to their persons and it is past doubt that he was mistaken and the general opinion is that the Assault was made by a number of Seamen unknown belonging to the Ships then in the harbour & the Attorney General assures me that the Inhabitants, though almost all who are in trade are Smuglers, expressed an abhorrence of this particular Action and that the Grand Jury would readily have found a Bill if there had been evidence to support it.8 I have no doubt that Mr Savage pitched upon the wrong persons and it is also without doubt that he met with the abuse he has sworn to though he can make no discovery. The Jury examined every person as a Witness suggested to be likely to have any knowledge of the fact. I am with the greatest respect My Lord Your Lordship’s most humble & most obedient servant,

    My letter book being in the Country I am not certain whether I have acknowledged the receipt of duplicate of your Lordship’s Letter of 18 April & the Packets for NYork which I immediately forwarded.

    RC (National Archives UK, CO 5/761, ff. 168–69); at foot of letter, “Rt Honble. the Earl of Hillsborough”; docketed, “Boston 15th. July 1772. Governor Hutchinson (No. 31) Rx 27th. August.” AC (Massachusetts Archives, SC1/series 45X, 27:363–65); in EH’s hand. SC (National Archives UK, CO 5/768, ff. 252–56); docketed, “Govr. Hutchinson. Boston, 15 July, 1772. (No. 31.) Rx 27 August.”; at end of letter, “6 Inclosures, being Messages & Answers between the Governor & Assembly.” SC (Houghton Library, Sparks 43, 1:145); docketed, “Thos: Hutchinson to the Earl of Hillsborough Boston 15th: July 1772”; extract containing the first five sentences only. Enclosures to RC: TH to the Massachusetts House of Representatives, 13 July 1772 (National Archives UK, CO 5/751, ff. 170–71); House of Representatives to TH, 14 July 1772 (ff. 172–73); Report of the Committee for the Boundary Dispute, 14 July 1772 (ff. 174–75); Report of the Committee for the Boundary Dispute, 14 July 1772 (ff. 176–77); Report of another committee, 14 July 1772 (ff. 178–81).

    1004. From Andrew Oliver

    Boston 17 July 1772

    Dear Sir, I hapned to call in at the Council Chamber to day, where I got sight of a Petition & remonstrances to his Majesty respecting the Act of Parliament for raising a revenue in America & appropriating such part of it as his Majesty should see fit for the support of the Civil Government: This remonstrance appears to be form’d out of the Committees report & the Resolves of the House consequent thereon.1 I had never heard of this matter before & do not know whether your Excellency has seen it or not. Mr. Kilcup has it to copy, but who is to present it I know it.2 I am told that it passd on the last day of the Session, and that thro’ inattention the House never renewed the choice of an Agent.3 They may possibly presume that their making a Grant to [Mr.] Franklyn to October next will shew that they consider him as their Agent: but if a more direct appointment of him to this Service without the concurrence of the other Branches of the Legislature has not hitherto been considered as a proper qualification, I imagine this consequential Appointment, & that also not consented to, will scarcely gain him admission to the Throne.

    Jarvis is saild this morning; you may possibly think it worthwhile to look into this matter against the next conveyance. Sir Your Excellencys most obedient Servant,

    A Oliver

    RC (Massachusetts Archives, SC1/series 45X, 25:523–23a); at foot of letter, “His Excelly. Govr. Hutchinson”; addressed, “His Excellency Governor Hutchinson Milton”; endorsed, “Lt Governor 17 July 1772.”

    1005. To William Palmer

    Boston 21 July 1772

    Sir, If you found no difficulty in obtaining room for the Messages I formerly sent you in the Magazines or some other Publick Prints I must desire the like favour for the first piece in the Paper inclosed, being certain Votes of the H of Rep; and for the last piece which is my answer to them & which by appearing together in your papers will I think tend to confirm the people in Eng. of the weakness & perverseness of the Colonists who are now reduced to such imaginary grievances only & yet persevere in raising a devil.1 I am Sir Your most humble Servant,

    AC (Massachusetts Archives, SC1/series 45X, 27:368); at head of letter, “Mr Wm. Palmer.”

    1006. To [John Pownall]

    It appears likely that the following two versions of the same letter were intended for John Pownall. Pownall, as Lord Hillsborough’s secretary, had access to any papers sent to the secretary of state and would have known the details of Lord Hillsborough’s departure for his annual trip to Ireland. TH would also write Pownall in order to amplify themes or convey information he thought unsuitable for public communication to Hillsborough. Hutchinson’s letter to Pownall of 29 August 1772, No. 1017, below, makes reference to a letter of this date.

    Long passages of the first version of the letter are either cancelled or marked with TH’s characteristic wavy X. Generally, the second, revised version of the letter drops more specific complaints against individuals (in this case, James Bowdoin) or problems of the Massachusetts constitution (multiple sessions of the legislature) in favor of a broader analysis of the weakness of royal authority in the colonies and the need for parliamentary intervention to block the growing power and expanded claims of the assemblies. The second version concludes with remarks on the disrepair of the Province House and the need to augment judicial salaries, topics that were unaddressed in the first draft.

    Version 1

    [21 July 1772]

    Not sent

    Dear Sir, You see by the papers which I transmitted in my last letter to My Ld Hillsb that the H. of Rep. still suffer themselves to be carried away by the crafty designs of a few wretched men who make no scruple of sacrificing the Country if they can but keep up their importance among the people.1 When I ask the Members separate what good can come from such rash intemperate measures they answer that the House in general have no prejudice against the Governor but they suppose a design is formed to inslave them by degrees and they shall be justified to posterity by asserting their just rights which may be easier reassumed than if they had been tamely given up. Many well meaning men in the House when I ask them the reasons of their conduct answer that it is not with design to distress or trouble me but they ought make a stand against the measures which the Ministry are taking to inslave them altho they were sure they were unable to carry their point. But notwithstanding what they call a stand whenever there is an apprehension of vigorous measures in England the Crests of the Party fall and they have generally been careful to do the most extravagant things just at the close of a Session of Parliament insinuating to the Members that before the next Session the first resentment will cool and die away, and they seem now to have taken additional courage from the general run of Letters from England that the Ministry are averse to any measures concerning America which has given the Nation so much trouble. I tell them I had reason to think that when it was determined by an Act of Parliament to take away their Charter I had by the most favorable representations I could make of the general disposition of the Inhabitants and of the general conduct of the Legislature in former times a few instances of short duration excepted, contributed to the delay of the execution of the design but if they would persist in such injudicious and unjustifiable measures I could not expect to succeed in any future applications.2

    When the first of these Resolves was argued in the House between thirty & forty voted against it & seventy odd in favour of it.3 The minority was the best part of the House in the general esteem of the people. Several of them thereupon absented themselves from the House not thinking it worth while to attempt any thing against the rest of the proposed Resolves after this principal point had been carried. I do not find that any thing more is expected from this proceeding than the keeping up discontent in the minds of the people. I do not wish at any time to be obliged to make argumentative Speeches to either the Council or House and would willingly have omitted it upon this occasion, but I found it was expected from me and that the designed effect may in a great measure be prevented by it.4 If this foolish proceeding should be despised in England yet it seems necessary for some way to be found by which the people here may know the contempt with which it is received & that this is the reason why no further notice is taken of it. If it should be thought to deserve the notice of Parliament and it should be judged necessary to vacate the Charter I dont know what the Assembly could well do to render them more without excuse or to stop the Mouths of the people of the Province but will there not be time for a Bill to be brought in the first of the Session and a copy of it to be sent to me & notice given to the Assembly and an Answer received before Parliament rises.5 I mention this in order to remove every exception if after such a space for repentance they should refuse to improve it. I hope I shall be excused for continuing as long as I truly may to represent the proceedings of the House as coming from a poor unhappy deluded people the major part of which are intimidated by a few who threaten them that if they don’t come into all their measures they shall be branded as Tories and left out of the House the next year. There was the fullest evidence that can be of this undue influence in their late foolish Resolves as they presume to call them. They were put to vote separately & some were carried by a small majority only but when the whole Report at the close came to be put together & it was determined that a list of the Voters on each side of the Question should be printed & then 19 only had courage to appear on the unpopular side altho more than 100 were present. I have not known a more ordinary performance. Many who are well affected to the Party blame them for laying themselves so open to my remarks. Indeed I dont find that any thing more was intended by it than to keep up discontent in the minds of the people in which they will fail. I never liked argumentative Messages or Speeches from Governors to their Assemblies but I knew no way so likely in the present case to prevent the Success of their design which was to raise a new Disturbance.6 A Dissolution would have done no good but on the contrary might have lost me those good men who are now of the House upon a new Election.

    I have no thoughts of meeting them again until after Christmas unless something extraordinary should occasion it and before that time I may have answer to my Letters & may know His Majestys pleasure and whether it is judged proper to treat this conduct with contempt especially if I should be fortunate enough to have my Letters received before My Lord Hillsborough goes to Ireland, and whether it is judged proper to treat this affair with contempt as an impotent effort of the Faction or to make it serve as a sufficient ground for a reform of the Constitution by Parliament.

    You have justly observed in one of your Letters that in general the Council of this Province have behaved as well as the Council of any Colony and altho they have been of late greatly debased by the spirit of the late times I should have been supported, by them frequently as I have been this Session if it was not for the Opposition of a single member whose son in law is receiving favour in England.7 There is one mischief in the Constitution which I do not remember to have been taken notice of & is greater than what arises from the Council itself. I must meet the Assembly once a year for the Election. When assembled they will find business whether necessary or not, and it is more difficult to put an end to a Session against their mind, than it would be to avoid assembling them if there was no certain time fixed for it. This inconvenience has been improved upon, for the Summer being a busy time with them at home they have urged it as reason for doing nothing more at that Session than is of publick importance & so have constantly been convened maybe to redress imaginary Grievances in the Winter or Spring & I question whether they have ever once failed of it from the Charter & now they look upon a Winter Session also as part of their Constitution.8 This adds great weight to the popular scale for if there was no one time more than another which they could claim for the meeting of the Assembly which is the case at NYork & N Hampshire in ordinary times one Session in a year or 15 or 18 months would answer all necessary purposes for Seven eights of the time is now spent in doing private business which is not proper for a Legislative Assembly but ought to be done by the executive Courts. If our Demagogues had only so small a proportion of their time to signalize themselves and even that depended upon the pleasure of the Governor it would render them comparatively with what they are now of very little importance. This cant be helped whilst the Councellors continue to be annually elected.

    It looks as if we might go on in the way we are in if it be thought advisable to tolerate it perhaps for many years and the opposition kept from doing any thing to any great purpose. The body of the people are less unfavorably disposed to government & especially to me personally than they have been for 7 years past but after all Government is in a languid state & the laws against Offenders are miserably executed and the Acts of Trade very little regarded and the Officers of the Customs in general wish to take their fees without making seizures to render themselves obnoxious to the people. This you must know to be the state not of this Colony only nor in a distinguishing manner but of every other Colony upon the Continent.

    When I wrote to My Ld Hillsboro I was not acquainted with one proceeding of the House. Just before I prorogued the Court the Party reported as a Committee or volunteers I am uncertain which or offered a petition or remonstrance to the King against his paying the Governors Salary which was suddenly agreed to and the House being sent for to the Council Chamber presently after no care was taken about presenting it.9 I hear now the Leaders avail themselves of a vote for paying Doctor Franklin to October next and design to send it to him as their Agent tho there has been no appointment this year nor I dont find any the last but as this Vote was intended to be an Act of the whole Court and I never gave my assent it becomes to every purpose a nullity.10 If its thought best it should not be presented its certain nobody has authority to appear for them. I think it will strengthen Government if in some way or other there be a signification of Royal if not national displeasure but that may be founded upon their Message to me which is of the same import with their Remonstrance but their Remonstrating to the King will seem to make such notice more peculiarly necessary.

    AC (Massachusetts Archives, SC1/series 45X, 27:358–62).

    Version 2

    Boston 21. July 1772

    Dear Sir, You see by the papers which I transmitted in my last Letter to my Lord Hillsborough the House of Representatives still suffer themselves to be carried away by the crafty designs of a few wretched men who make no scruple of sacrificing the Country if they can but keep up their own importance among the people. Many well meaning men in the House when I ask them the reason of their conduct answer that they do not desire to distress or trouble me but they ought to make a stand against the measures the ministry are taking to inslave them notwithstanding they are sure they shall not be able to carry their point. Notwithstanding what they call a stand as often as there is apprehension of vigorous measures in England the crests of the party fall and they have generally been careful to do the most extravagant things just at the close of a Session of Parliament insinuating to the Members that before another Session the first resentment will cool and die away.

    I hope I shall be excused for continuing as long as I truly may to represent the proceedings of the House as coming from an unhappy deluded set of Men intimidated by a few among them who threaten the rest that if they dont come into all their measures they shall be branded as Tories and left out of the House the next year.

    There was the fullest evidence that can be of such undue influence in their late foolish Resolves as they presume to call them. They were put to vote seperately and some were carried by a small majority only but when the whole Report at the close came to be put together it was determined that a list of the voters on each side should be printed and then 19 only had courage to appear on the unpopular side when more than 100 were present.

    I never liked argumentative Messages from Governors to their Assemblies but in the present case I knew of nothing so likely to prevent the success of their design which was to raise a new disturbance. A dissolution would have done no good but on the contrary might have lost me those good men who are now of the House upon a new Election. I have no thoughts of meeting them again until after Christmas unless something extraordinary should occasion it and before that time I may have answers to my Letters and may know His Majestys pleasure.

    It looks as if we might go on in this way if it be thought advisable to tolerate it for years to come. The Demagogues have nothing left to quarrel about. The business of taxing the Commissioners must come on sooner or later. I will keep if off as long as I can. They have it in their power however to prevent that aid which we want from the legislative. Government is in a languid state. The Laws against Offenders in some capital points cannot be executed. The Acts of trade are very little Regarded. The Custom House officers when they know of breaches dont care to hazard their lives by Seizures and prosecutions. The case you know is the same in every other Colony. The eastern lands have new intrusions upon them every day and there can be no prosecution. When there is a general disposition to oppose the execution of laws from an opinion that they are unconstitutional it seems necessary that the legislative power should afford every further aid to the Executive. In this subordinate state the Legislative declines and rather countenances the people in their opposition. The next resort is to the supreme Legislative. The interposition of this Authority is become necessary to effect due submission to the laws. Meerly for that purpose any interposition will always be thought inexpedient by that party in England which wishes to clog all publick measures. It will in time become necessary to retain the Colonies in any degree of subordination. Then the Nation will be roused and unite in measures for that purpose. As soon as the Colonies are convinced of this it will immediately appear that all this new doctrine of independance will be disavowed, and the first inventors or broachers of it will be sacrificed to the rage of the people who have been deluded by them. Until then or so long as I continue in my present Station I must make the best use I can of that check which they allow to be mutual and prevent their further advance, by all means in my power. If I am able to do any thing farther, it must be by convincing the majority of the people of the absurd principles of their present Leaders and persuading them to receive more just notions of Government in general and of their own Constitution in particular. In this way I have certainly lessened the numbers of the Opposition and moderated the tempers of the whole.

    When I wrote to my Lord Hillsborough I was not fully acquainted with one proceeding of the House. Just before I prorogued the Court a petition or remonstrance to the King was voted in the House and so suddenly that they never ordered to whom it should be sent to be presented. I hear now the Leaders avail themselves of a vote for paying Doctor Franklin to October next and design to consider him as the Agent of the House although there has been no appointment this year nor do I find any the last and this vote being designed to be an Act of the whole Court upon the refusal of my assent became to all intents and purposes a nullity. I dont know but it will be thought most advisable it should be presented that the arrogance as well as folly of the thing may be more fully chastised for it certainly must strengthen government to have some marks of Royal if not National Resentment upon this occasion but as the Votes or Resolves are of the same import it may be thought best not to suffer this to be presented and if it should no body can produce proper authority for it.

    You will have seen the Messages about the Province House.11 It is in a scandalous condition. If I should lay out two or three hundred or less to make it habitable is it probable I may be reimbursed if the Province continues to refuse to grant any thing towards repairs? And will you give me leave to ask if any provision is seriously thought on for the Judges for if not I would not press the Chief Justice longer than to the end of the year nor Judge Hutchinson who I think as able a Judge as has sat on the Bench at any time and who seems rather inclined to return to the Inferior or County Court than to go through so much fatigue for so wretched a Salary.12

    I had one or two more things to add but I must have tired you already and will reserve them for another Letter. I am with great Regard & Esteem &c.

    AC (Massachusetts Archives, SC1/series 45X, 27:365–68); in EH’s hand. Contemporary printings: Boston Gazette, 26 June 1775; New England Chronicle, 29 June 1775; Massachusetts Spy, 5 July 1775; Connecticut Gazette, 7 July 1775; Essex Journal, 29 September 1775; Remembrancer for the Year 1776, part 2, pp. 57–58 (all excerpt of a portion of the fifth paragraph only).

    1007. To Lord Hillsborough

    Boston 28 July 1772

    (No. 32)

    My Lord, On the 24th. Instant a detachment of about 70 men, under the command of Captain Armstrong, of the 64th. Regiment arrived here from Halifax and the next day Colonel Dalrymple resigned the command of the Castle.

    Pursuant to His Majesty’s 43d. Instruction I have committed the custody thereof to the said Captain Armstrong during his being the Commanding Officer of the 64th. Regiment within the Province and to the Commanding Officer of the said Regiment for the time being agreeable to the recommendation of General Gage.

    On the 27th. Instant the 14th. Regiment sailed from Boston for the West Indies.1

    I should not do justice to Colo. Dalrymple if I did not acquaint your Lordship that at the time of the exchange of the Garrison of the Castle and at all times since he has cooperated with me in the most proper measures for maintaining the King’s authority & for defeating the schemes of such as wished to make that exchange the occasion of fresh tumult and disturbance.2 I have the honour to be My Lord Your Lordship’s most humble & most obedient Servant,

    RC (National Archives UK, CO 5/761, ff. 198–99); at foot of letter, “Rt Honble the Earl of Hillsborough”; docketed, “Boston. 28th. July 1772. Governor Hutchinson (No. 32) Rx 12th. Octr.” AC (Massachusetts Archives, SC1/series 45X, 27:370–71); in EH’s hand. SC (National Archives UK, CO 5/768, ff. 258–59); docketed, “Boston 28 July 1772. Governor Hutchinson. (No 32.) Rx 12. Octor.”