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Full text of "The memorial history of Boston : including Suffolk County, Massachusetts, 1630-1880"

THE 



MEMORIAL HISTORY 



OF 



BOSTON 



1630-1880. 




Presented to the 

UNIVERSITY OF TORONTO 
LIBRARY 

by the 

ONTARIO LEGISLATIVE 
LIBRARY 

1980 



THE MEMORIAL HISTORY OF BOSTON. 



And I will restore thy judges as at the first, and thy counsellors as at the beginning : after- 
ward thou shall be called ... the faithful city. ISAIAH I. 26. 




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THE 



MEMORIAL 



HISTORY OF BOSTO1* 



INCLUDING fJlf* 

SUFFOLK COUNTY, MASSACHUSETTS. 





1630-1880. 



EDITED 

BY JUSTIN WINSOR, 

LIBRARIAN OF HARVARD UNIVERSITY. 

IN FOUR VOLUMES. 
VOL. III. 

THE REVOLUTIONARY PERIOD. 
THE LAST HUNDRED YEARS. PART I. 



Issued under tin business superintendence of tkt projector, 
CLARENCE F JEWETT. 



BOSTON: 
TICKNOR AND COMPANY. 

211 Crcmoiit Street. 




SEEN BY 
PRESERVATION] 

SERVICES 



'&>* .<. 















*> 



U 



Copyright, 1881, 
BY JAMES R. OSGOOD & Co. 



All Rightt Reserved. 




CONTENTS AND ILLUSTRATIONS. 



FRONTISPIECE. View of Charlestown during the Battle of Bunker Hill, taken 

from Beacon Hill (described on p. 87) Fating titlepage 

INTRODUCTION. 

MAPS OF THE REVOLUTIONARY PERIOD, i ; PLANS OF THE BATTLE OF BUNKER 
HILL, i ; BKIIISH LINES ON BOSTON NECK, v ; MAPS OF BOSTON SUBSEQUENT 
TO THE REVOLUTION. The Editor vii 

ILLUSTRATIONS: FMan of Boston (Gentleman's Magazine) in 1775, Heliotype, i; 
Nix's Mate in 1775, heliotype, i; Plan of Boston, 1775 (Pelham's), Miotype, 
iii ; Plan of Boston (Page's), Miotyfe, iii j Boston Light in 1789, viii ; Castle 
Island in 1789, ix. 

AUTOGRAPHS : Henry Pelham, iii ; James Urquhart, iii ; Osgood Carleton, viii. 



Eeboluttonar 



CHAPTER I. 

THE BEGINNING OF THE REVOLUTION. Edward G. Porter 



ILLUSTRATIONS : James < >tU,t, ; Revenue Stamp, 12; Table of Stamps, 12; Lieut.- 
Governor ( Miver's ( >ath, 1 5 ; Letter by James ( His, 20 ; Boston Harbor from 
Fort Hill, and Boston from Willis's Creek, two Heliotyfes, 23 ; Thomas 
Cashing. 34; Samuel Adams, 35; Josiah Quincy. Jr., 37; Extract from John 
Adams's brief, 38 ; Boston Massacre, 40; Andrew Oliver, 43; Revere'- 
graving of Hancock, 46; John Adams's diary on the Tea-party, 50; Earl 
Percy, 58; Warren House, 59; General Warren, 60; Mrs. Warren, 63. 

AUTOGRAPHS: Chai. Poxtott,4J J.imes ()ti>, d: Lord Georjjr Grcnville, 8; Isaac 
Barre.n; Karl of Bute. 13; "TheSonsof LilHitv." i;: Puke of Grafton, 
21; Lord North, 26; Town';. Committee (Thomas Cu-liin^, Jonathan 
Mason, Edward Payne, Win. Phillips, Joseph Waldo, Isaac Smith, Ebenezer 



v ijj THE MEMORIAL HISTORY OF BOSTON. 

AUTOGRAPHS (continued) : 

Storer, Wm.Greenleaf), 29; General Knox, 32 ; Thomas Gushing, 34 ; Josiah 
Quincy, Jr., 37 ; Samuel Shaw, 38; Sampson S. Blowers, 38; Bcnj. Lynde, 38; 
It-tier signatures (James Bowdoin, Samuel Pemberton, Joseph Warren), 39; 
Andrew Oliver, 43; Peter Oliver, 43; William Cooper, town clerk, 44; Earl 
Percy, 58 ; Joseph Warren, 60 ; Adino Paddock, 62 ; Jedediah Preble, 64 ; 
Artemas Ward, 64 ; Earl of Chatham, 65 ; General John Thomas, 65 ; Gen- 
eral William Heath, 65. 



CHAPTER II. 

THE SIEGE OF BOSTON. Edward B. Hale 67 

ILLUSTRATIONS : Paul Revere, 69 ; Fac-simile of " A Circumstantial Account " 
(Apr. 19, 1775), 73; Gage's order, 76; Panorama from Beacon Hill in 1775, 
heliotype, 79 ; Mifflin's plan of the lines on Boston Neck, heliotype, So ; Colonel 
Trumbull's map of Boston and vicinity, heliotype, 80; British lines on Boston 
Neck, looking in and out, two keliotypes, 80 ; plan of the redoubt on Bunker 
Hill, 82; "General morning orders, June 17, 1775," fac-simile, 83; "On the 
field," fac-simile, 86; After the Battle, 88 ; .General Knox, 95; General Howe's 
proclamation, 97; Washington at Dorchester Heights, 98; Major Judah 
Alden, 99; Washington medal, heliotype, 100. 

AUTOGRAPHS : Paul Revere, 69 ; John Parker, 74 ; Timothy Ruggles, 77 ; Israel 
Putnam, 80; Admiral Samuel Graves, 81 ; General Wm. Howe, 81 ; General 
Henry Clinton, 81 ; General John Hurgoyne, 81 ; Colonel William Prescott, 
82 ; Colonel Richard Gridley, 82 ; John Brooks, 83 ; General R. Pigot, 85 ; 
Joseph Ward, 86; John Jeffries, 87 ; John Stark, 89; John Manly.oxs; Judah 
Alden, 99. 

SUPPLEMENTARY NOTES. The Editor 101 

ILLUSTRATIONS: Plan of Lexington fight, 102; Wadsworth house, 107 ; Holmes 
house, 108; Artemas Ward, 109; Washington Elm, no; Craigie house, 
112; Elmwood, 114; Roxbury parsonage, 115; plan of Roxbury fort, 115. 

AUTOGRAPHS: Richard Devens, 101 ; Peter Thacher, 103; James Barrett, 103; 
K. Derby, 103; John Sullivan, 104; Daniel Morgan, 104; Thomas Learned, 
104; Alexander Scammell, 105; John Nixon, 105; Nathanael Greene, 105, 
117; Charles Lee, 105; William Bond, 105; Ebenezer Bridge, 106; Ralph 
Inman, 106; Ephraim Doolittle, 107; Artemas Ward, 109; Benjamin 
Church, in; William Eustis, in ; John Warren, 112 ; William Gamage, Jr., 
112; Joseph Reed, 113; John Glover, 113 Andrew Craigie, 113; Wil- 
liam Prescott, 115; John Greaton, 116; Thomas Chase, 116; Ebenezer 
Learned, 117. 



CHAPTER III. 

THE PULPIT, PRESS, AND LITERATURE OF THE REVOLUTION. Delano A. Goddard 119 

ILLUSTRATIONS: Joseph Green, 132; The Afasstukusetts Spy, fac-simile, 135; The 
Independent Chronicle, fac-simile, 139; fac-simile of Warren's second Massa- 
cre Oration, 143. 

AuTor.RAPiis: Samuel Mather, 127 ; John Mein, 131 ; Daniel Leonard, 133; R. 
T. Paine, 144; William Tudor, 144; Benjamin Church, Jr., 145; Phillis 
Wheatley, 147. 



CONTENTS. ix 

CHAPTER IV. 

1. 1 IF. IN HOSTON IN THE REVOLUTIONARY PERIOD. Horace E. Sfuddtr . . . 149 
ILLUSTRATIONS: I.iK-rty Tree, 159; Ptaet-extra (of 1783), 174. 

AUTOGRAPHS : Boston merchants of the Revolutionary period (John Amory, 
Richard Salter, Timothy Fitch, Daniel Malcom, Alexander Hill, Richard 
Gary, Joshua Henshaw, John Scott, Samuel Eliot, Henry Lloyd, John Erv- 
ing, Jr., Joshua \Vinslow, Samuel Hughes, Thomas Gray, Thomas Amory, J. 
Rowe, Jos. Green, Edward I'ayne, Nicholas Boylston, John Hancock, Wil- 
liam liowvs, Klii-mvrr Morer, William Coffin, Sol Davy, John Barrett, 
Nathaniel Greene, Thomas Russell, Jno. Spooner, Joseph Lee, Joseph Sher- 
burne, \V. Phillips, John Avery, Isaac Winslow, Win. Fisher, Benjamin 
Halloweil, Jona. Williams, Nathaniel Appleton, Daniel Hubbard, Jona. 
Mason, Henderson Inches, Nathaniel Gary, Harrison Gray, Jr.), 152, 153; 
John Lovell, 160; James Lovell, 160; French officers (Lauzun, Comte dc 
Grasse, Barras, De Ternay, Gomte de Rochambeau), 166; Lafayette, 173. 

SriTLEMENTARY NOTES. The Editor 175 

ILLUSTRATIONS : Washington's proclamation, 181 ; Order to Captain Hopkins, 
184 ; Bill for pine-tree flag, 188. 

AUTOGRAPHS: William Tudor, 185; Baron Steuben, 185 ; Solomon Lovell, 185 ; 
Peleg Wadsworth, 186 ; Artcmas Ward, 186. 



East $unrjrrto gears. 

PART I. 



CHAPTER I. 
THE LAST FORTY YEARS OF TOWN GOVERNMENT. Henry Cabot Lodge . . . 189 

ILLUSTRATIONS: John Adams, 192; James Bowdoin, 195; Washington, 198; 
Triumphal arch, 200; Hancock house, 202; Hamilton statue, 206; Gerry- 
mander, 212; George Cabot, 214. 

AUTOGRAPHS: George R. Minot, 194; B Lincoln, 194; John Hancock, 201; 
Increase Sumncr, 204 ; Moses Gill, 205; Caleb Strong, 205 ; James Sullivan, 
208; Elbridge Gerry, 211; Massachusetts signers at Hartford Convention 
(George Cabot, Nathan D.uu . !!.<;.< >ti-. Win. 1'rescott, Timothy Bigelow, 
Joshua Thomas, S.iinl. S. Wilde. J.i-cph I.yman, Stephen Longfellow, Jr, 
Daniel Waldo, George Bliss, Hadijah Baylies), 213. 

CHAPTER II. 

BOSTON UNDER THE MAYORS. ^iltnfX M . />'//^/',V 21 7 

ILLUSTRATIONS: John Phillips. ,h (Juiiicy, 2:-; <,>uim\ Market and 

F.ineuil Hall, :^S ; Park Stn-ct. 2\2; Harrison Gray Otis, 235 ; Theodore 
Lyman, 237; Samuel A. Eliot, ^44. 



THE MEMORIAL HISTORY OF BOSTON. 

AUTOGRAPHS : II. G. Otis, 235 ; the mayors (John Phillips, Josiah Quincy, H. G. 
Otis, Theodore Lyman, Jr., Charles Wells, Samuel A. Eliot, Samuel T. Arm- 
strong, Jonathan Chapman, M. Brimmer, Thomas A. Davis, Josiah Quincy, 
Jr., Benjamin Seaver, John P. Higclow, J. V. C. Smith, Alexander II. Rice, 
F. W. Lincoln, Jr., J. M. Wightman, Otis Norcross, N. B Shurtleff, William 
Gaston, Henry L. Pierce, Samuel C. Cobb, Frederick O. Prince), 290, 291. 



CHAPTER III. 
BOSTON AND THE COMMONWEALTH UNDER THE CITY CHARTER. John D. Long 293 

CHAFFER IV. 
BOSTON SOLDIERY IN WAR AND PEACE. Francis W. Palfrey ...... 303 

ILLUSTRATIONS: Thomas G. Stevenson, 317; William F. Bartlett, 318; Paul J. 
Revere, 319 ; Robert G. Shaw, 321 ; Wilder Uwight, 322 ; Henry L. Abbott, 
323 ; Soldiers' Monument, 324. 

CHAPTER V. 

THE NAVY AND THE CHARLESTOWN NAVY YARD. George Henry Preble . . 331 

ILLUSTRATIONS : Plan of Navy Yard as originally purchased, 337 ; Isaac Hull, 
339; plan of Navy Yard (in 1823), 342 ; (in 1828), 350; (in 1874), 366. 

AUTOGRAPHS: Commandants (Samuel Nicholson, Wm. Bainbridge, Isaac Hull, 
C. Morris, W. M. Crane, W. B. Shubrick, J. U. Elliot, John Dowries, John 
B. Nicholson, Foxhall A. Parker, F. II. Gregory, S. H. Stringham, W. L. 
Hudson, J B. Montgomery, E. G. Parrott, Chas. Steedman, John Rodgers, 
Wm. F. Spicer, E. T. Nichols, M. Haxtun, F. A. Parker, George M. 
Ransom), 352, 353. 

CHAPTER VI. 

THE ANTISLAVERY MOVEMENT IN BOSTON. James Freeman Clarke .... 369 

ILLUSTRATIONS: William I, loyd Garrison, 373; Charles Sumner, 391 ; The'odore 
Parker, 394. 

AUTOGRAPHS: Theodore Parker, 394; John A. Andrew, 400. 

CHAPTER VII. 

FHE CONGREGATIONAL (TRINITARIAN) CHURCHES. Increase N. Tarbox . . . 401 
ILLUSTRATIONS : Lyman Beecher, 408. 

AUTOGRAPHS : Joseph Eckley, 406 ; J. Morse, 407 ; E D. Griffin, 407 ; John Cod- 
m.in, 407; Wm. Jenks, 407 ; Lyman Beecher, 408; B. B. Wisner, 409; W. 
Adams, 409; Justin Edwards, 409; N.Adams, 410: J. S. C. Abbott. 410; 
Silas Aiken. 411 ; W. M. Rogers, 41 1 ; Samuel Green, 41 1 ; E. N. Kirk, 412 ; 
W. I. Budington, 412 ; J. B. Miles, 413. 



CONTENTS. xi 

CHAPTER VIII. 

THE BAPTISTS IN BOSTON. Henry M. King 421 

ILLUSTRATION : Samuel Stillman, 422. 

CHAPTER DC. 
THE METHODIST EPISCOPAL CHURCH. Daniel Dorchester 433 

CHAPTER X. 

THE EPISCOPAL CHURCH. Phillips Brooks 447 

ILLUSTRATIONS : Tremont Street (about 1800), 451 ; J. S. J. Gardiner, 453 j Ruins 
of Trinity (in 1872), 457. 

CHAPTER XI. 

THE UNITARIANS. Andrew Preston Peabody 467 

ILLUSTRATIONS : James Freeman, 473; Joseph S. Buckminster, 475. 

CHAPTER XII. 

A CENTURY OF UNIVERSALISM. A. A. Miner 483 

ILLUSTRATIONS: John Murray, 486; First Universalist meeting-house, 489; 
Hosea Ballou, 493; Columbus Avenue Church, 501. 

AUTOGRAPHS: John Murray, 486; Edward Mitchell, 490; Sebastian Streeter, 
490; Abner Knceland, 491 ; Edward Turrier, 491 ; L. S. Everett, 491 ; Calvin 
Gardner, 491 ; J. S. Thompson, 491 ; E. H. Chapin, 492 ; Thomas F. King, 
492 ; T. S. King, 492 ; Hosca Ballnu, 493; Thomas Whitlemore. 497 ; Paul 
Dean, 498; Walter Balfour,499; H. Ballou, 2d, 502; J. G. Bartholomew, 
502; Benj. Whittcmore, 503; Lucius R. Paige, 503; Otis A. Skinner, 504; 
Thomas B. Thayer, 504 ; Sylvanus Cobb, 504. 

CHAPTER XIII. 
THE NEW JERUSALEM CHURCH. James Reed 509 

CHAPTER XIV. 

THE ROMAN CATHOLIC CHURCH. William Byrne 515 

ILLUSTRATIONS: Cathedral of the Holy Cross, 516; Bishop Cheverus, 518; 

Mount Benedict, 522. 

AUTOGRAPHS : John Thayer. 515; J. Carroll, 517; John Chevcru*. jiS; F. A. 
Matignon, 519; P. I'.vnic, 519; Benedict, Bishop Fenwick, 520; John B. 

I'it/patrick, 526. 



xii THE MEMORIAL HISTORY OF BOSTON. 



CHAPTER XV. 



CHARLESTOWN IN THE LAST HUNDRED YEARS. Henry H. Edes 547 

ILLUSTRATIONS: Richard Devens, 550; the Edes house, 553; Charlestown (in 
1789), 554 ; Tufts's Map of Charlestown (in 1818), 568. 

AUTOGRAPHS : Josiah Bartlett, 548 ; Nathaniel Gorham, 549 ; Richard Devens, 
550; Walter Russell, 551 ; Samuel Swan, 551 ; Samuel Holbrook, 551 ; Phil- 
lips Payson, 551; John Kettell, 551; Samuel Devens, 551; David Dodge, 
551 ; Charles Devens, 551 ; John Leach, 552 ; Robt. B. Edes, 552 ; Wm. J. 
Walker, 552 ; Josiah Wood, 552 ; Thomas Edes, Jr., 552 ; Samuel F. B. 
Morse, 553 ; Joseph Cordis, 554 ; Joseph Hurd, 554 ; Samuel Sewall, 554 ; 
Ebenezer Breed, 555; Nathan Tufts, 555; Nathaniel Austin, Jr., 555; Isaac 
Rand, 555; Aaron Putnam, 556; Samuel Dexter, Jr., 557; Timothy Trum- 
ball, 557 ; Franklin Dexter, 557 ; L. Baldwin, 557 ; M. Bridge, 557 ; Samuel 
Payson, 558 ; Benjamin Frothingham, 559 ; Jedediah Morse, 560 ; Wm. I. 
Budington, 561 ; Thomas Prentiss, 562 ; James Walker, 562 ; David Wood, 
Jr., 562; William Austin, 564; Thomas Russell, 564 ; Richard Frothingham, 
566 ; Thomas B. Wyman, 566 ; Solomon Willard, 566 ; Timothy Walker, 
567 ; Oliver Holden, 570. 

CHAPTER XVI. 

ROXBURY IN THE LAST HUNDRED YEARS. Francis S. Drake 571 

ILLUSTRATIONS: Henry Dearborn, 574; Meeting-house Hill (in 1790), 577. 
AUTOGRAPHS: H. Dearborn, 574; W. Eustis, 575. 

CHAPTER XVII. 

DORCHESTER IN THE LAST HUNDRED YEARS. Samuel J. Barrows .... 589 
ILLUSTRATION : Thaddeus Mason Harris, 593. 

CHAPTER XVIII. 
BRIGHTON IN THE LAST HUNDRED YEARS. Francis S. Drake 60 1 

ILLUSTRATION : The Winship mansion, 608. 

CHAPTER XIX. 

CHELSEA, REVERE, AND WINTHROP FROM THE CLOSE OF THE PROVINCIAL PERIOD. 

Mellen Chamberlain 6n 

CHAPTER XX. 

THE PRESS AND LITERATURE OF THE LAST HUNDRED YEARS. Charles A. 

Cummings 6l? 

ILLUSTRATIONS: Benjamin Russell, 619; George Ticknor, 661 ; Ticknor's li- 
brary, 662; Prescott's library, 667 ; Eilward Everett, 671; original draft of 
Longfellow's " Excelsior," fac-simile, 673 ; Verse from Lowell's "Courtin'," 
fac-simile, 674. 



CONTENTS. xiii 

AUTOGRAPHS: Benj. Russell, 619; Nathan Hale, 628; Epcs Sargent, 630; Joseph 
T. Buckingham, 631 ; Jeremy Bclknap, 635 ; Willard Phillips, 639 ; J. Q. 
Adams, 642 ; Jared Sparks, 647 ; C. M. Sedgwick, 648 ; L. Maria Child, 648 ; 
Jacob Abbott, 649 ; Richard H. Dana, 650 ; Charles Sprague, 650 ; John 
Pierpont, 651 ; S. Margaret Fuller, 656; George Ticknor, 661 ; Samuel G. 
Howe, 664 ; George Bancroft, 665 ; W. H. Prescott, 666 ; Daniel Webster, 
670; J. L. Motley, 670; Edward Everett, 671; J. R. Lowell, 674; Oliver 
Wendell Holmes, 674; John G. Whittier, 675 ; Nat uniel Hawthorne, 676; 
H. B. Stowe, 678; R. H. Dana, Jr., 679; G. S. HUlard, 679; Edward E. 
Hale, 680; E. P. Whipple, 681. 



INDEX 683 



INTRODUCTION. 



MAPS OF THE REVOLUTIONARY PERIOD. In the Introduction to the 

second volume the Editor offered as full a list as he could make of the 
maps of Boston and its vicinity, belonging to the Provincial Period. He 
brought the enumeration down to a time when the struggle of the Revo- 
lution began to require a new issue of maps, and at this point he again 
takes up the list. 

1774. A Chart of the Coast of New England, from Beverly to Scituate Harbor, in- 
cluding the Ports of Boston and Salem. Engraved by J. Lodge. This map appeared in 
the London Magazine, April, 1774(10 X 7'A inches). In the upper left-hand corner is a 
Plan of the Town of Boston (5 X 3> inches). There are but few names of interest on 
the plan. There is a copy in the Boston Athenseum. The same plate was used in the 
American Atlas, issued by Thomas Jefferys in 1776, and printed by Sayer and Bennett. 

1774. A Map of the most Inhabited Part of New England, by Thomas Jefferys, Nov. 
29, 1774 (37M" X 40 inches 'i. In one corner is a map of the town (8^ X 5% inches), 
and also a chart of the harbor (8^ X S'/i inches), " from an accurate survey." See Mass. 
Hist. Sec. Proc., September, 1864. This map is contained in The American Atlas, by 
the late Mr. Thomas "Jefferys, London, Sayer and Bennett, 1776, numbers 15 and 16. It 
was also re-engraved for a Map of the most Inhabited Part of New England, published 
without date, at Augsburg, by Tobias Conrad Letter. 

The map of the town seems to be based on the London Magazine map of the same date : 
is called A New and Accurate Plan of the Town of Boston in New England. Mr. A. O. 
Crane issued a fac-simile, Boston, 1875. See the map described under 1784. 

1775. A Plan of the Town and Chart of the Harbor of Boston, exhibiting a View 
of the Islands, Castle, Forts, and Entrances into the said Harbor. Dated Feb. I, 1775 
(14 X 12 inches) : includes Chelsea and Hingham, and gives soundings. It appeared 
in the Gentleman's Magazine, January, 1775. Cf. Mass. Hist. Sac. Proc.. May, 1860. It 
is given herewith in fac-simile. The view on the same page of heliotype is of Nix's Mate 
as it appeared at this time, now only a shoal. This is a reduction of one of the Des 
Barres series of coast views. 

1775. BATTLE OF BI'NKER HILL. The earliest plan of the battle is a slight sketch, 
after information from Chaplain John Martin, drawn by Stiles in his Diary, anil reproduced 
in Historical .Magazine, June, 1868 : where will also be found a rude plan, made by print- 
ers' rules, given in Kivin^ton'.t dazeUs. Aug. 3, 1775. This last is reproduced in Fro- 
thingham's Siege of Boston. Lieutenant Page ' made an excellent plan, based on a survey 

1 Page was one of the royal engineers, and Finland on leave in January, 1776, when the 
served as aid lo Howe; was wounded; was in LonJsn ( !iim " a> the only one 

VOL. in. a. 



Ji THE MEMORIAL HISTORY OF BOSTON. 

by Montresor, of the British Engineers, showing the laying-out of Charlestown. The suc- 
cessive positions of the British line are indicated on a smaller superposed sheet. This 
was issued in London in 1776, called A Plan of the Action at Bunker's Hill on the \-jth 
June, 1775, between His Majesty's Troops under the Command of Major-General Howe, 
and the Rebel Forces. The same plate, with some changes, was dated April 12, 1793, and 
used in Stedman's American War. It was re-engraved, reduced, by D. Martin, substitut- 
ing " American " for " Rebel," and " Breed's " for " Bunker's " : a he title, with a few other 
changes in names, and issued by C. Smith in 1797, in The American War from 1775 to 
1783. See HunnewelPs Bibliography of Charlestown and Bunker Hill, 1880, p. 18, where 
a heliotype is given. It was again re-engraved, much reduced (5% X 9 inches), for Dear- 
born's Boston Motions, 1848, p. 156; and soon after, full size, following the original of 1776, 
in Frothingham's Siege of Boston. 1 A map of Boston, showing also Charlestown and Bun- 
ker's Hill, but called Plan of the Battle on Bunker's Hill. Fought on the \jth of June, 
\ 77 j. By an Officer on the spot. London, printed for K. Sayer and T. Bennett, . . . A T ov. 
27, 1775, has the text of Burgoyne's letter to Lord Stanley on the same sheet. It has 
been reproduced in F. Moore's Ballad History of the Revolution, part ii. 

Henry de Berniere, of the Tenth Royal Infantry, made a map similar in scale to 
Page's, but not so accurate in the ground plan. It was called Sketch of the Action on the 
Heights of Charlestown, and having been first mentioned in the Gleaner, a newspaper 
published at Wilkesbarre, Pa., by Charles Miner, as found recently in an old drawer, it 
was engraved, in fac-simile, in the Analectic Magazine, Philadelphia, February, 1818 ; 
where it is stated to have been found in the captured baggage of a British officer, and to 
have been "copied by J. A. Chapman from an original sketch taken by Henry de Berniere, 
of the fourteenth regiment of infantry, now in the hands of J. Cist, Esq." General Dearborn 
commented on this plan in the Portfolio, March, 1818 (reprinted in Historical Magazine, 
June, 1868), with the same plan altered in red (19^ X 12^ inches), which alterations were 
criticised by Governor Brooks in June, 1818. See N. E. Hist, and Geneal. Reg , July, 
1858. G. G. Smith worked on this rectified plan in producing his Sketch of the Battle of 
Blinker Hill, by a British Officer (12 X 19 inches), issued in Boston at the time of the 
completion of the monument in 1843. 

Colonel Samuel Swett made a plan (18^ X I2} inches), based on De Berniere's, which 
was published in his History of the Battle of Bunker Hill, and has been reproduced, full 
size, in Ellis's Oration in 1841 : and reduced variously in Lossing's Field-book of the Rev- 
olution, in Ellis's History, and Centennial History ; and in other places. 

There are other plans in the English translation of Botta's War of Independence, in 
Ridpath's United States, and in other popular histories. A good eclectic map is given in 
Carrington's Battles of the American Revolution, ch. 15. A map of Charlestown and plan 
of the battle (16^ x 14 inches), by James E. Stone, was published by Prang & Co. in 
1875. Felton and Parker's large survey of Charlestown, 1848, is of use in identifying 
localities, being made on the same scale as Page's plan ; and it helped Thomas W. Davis 
in making a Plan showing the redoubt, breastwork, rail-fence, and grass protection, which 
was published in the Bunker Hill Monument Association's Proceedings, 1876, of which a 
section is given in Dr. Hale's chapter. 

1775. A Plan of Boston, in New England, with its Environs; made by Henry 
Pelham (and often signed by him) under permission of Ja : Urquhart, town major, Aug. 
2.S, 1775. It shows the lines about the town and the harbor. It was printed in two 
sheets (together, 42^ X 28^ inches), and published in London, June 2, 1777, done in 

now living of those who acted as aides-de-camp Frothingham, it will be seen, was in error 
t.i iiiner.il Howe, so great was the slaughter of in supposing his to be the earliest American re- 
is that day. He particularly distinguished production. See Mass, ffist. Soc. Proc., June, 
liiiii-idf in the storming of the redoubt, for which 1875, where will be found his account of the 
he received General Howe's thanks." Mass, maps and views of Charlestown before and after 
///rf. Sac. Proc., June, 1875, p. 56. the battle. 




--V:- 








A'r/wAr/ ,'WW./. 

-,v rA- 
A-*,- 



;t 










FROM TIIK (i MAN'S M\. \XIXK, 1775. 





'/,. ,t, . V,.,'d /,,/r '' ' - '' 



Nix's M \ i r: IN i 775. 



INTRODUCTION. iii 

aquatinta by Francis Jukes. Dr. lielknap said of it in 1789: " I believe there is no more 

correct plan than Mr. Pelham's." Belknap Papers, ii. 1 15. There is a copy in Harvard 

^^- ^. College Library, and a tracing made from 

i> / Isf/) thi* by tJeorge Lamb was given in the 

// \i^-f^-^^y Evacuation Memorial, 1876. There are 

I's/ &4/t/4/lJ' g/ ^--^^-<*^>^V- X two c P' es ' n tne Massachusetts Ilistnr- 

jf ical Society's Library ; another is owned 

^^ by Samuel S. Shaw, Esq. Frank Moore, 

in his Diary of the American Revolution, 

gives a reduced representation of it; and a small fac-simile will be found in S. A. Drake's 
Old Landmarks of Middlesex. A reduced fac-simile of it is also given herewith. 






f 9/ 4 

C/CL: 66r&i*^c 

Cfin+m ~4ta. 



J 



1775. A Plan of the Town of Boston with the Intrenchments, etc., of His Majesty's 
Forces in \^^,from the observations of Lieut. Page, of His Majesty's Corps of Engineers, 
and from the plans of other gentlemen ; engraved and printed for William Faden, Oct. I, 
777 (iitf X 17% inches). It is reproduced by Frothingham, in his Siege of Boston, 
and also in the present History. It gives the peninsula only, with a small bit of Charles- 
town, and according to Shurtleff it gives names to several streets, etc., different from 
Bonner's. There was a later edition, October, 1778. The original drawing of this plan 
is in the Faden collection in the Library of Congress. 

1775. Boston, Us Environs and Harbour, with the Rebels' 1 Works Raised against that 
Town in 1775, from the Observations of Lieut. Page, of His Majesty's Corps of F.ngi- 
n,;-rs, and from the /'fans of Capt. Montresor ; scale. 2% inches to the mile: extends 
from Point Alderton to Cambridge, and from Chelsea to Dorchester (33 X 18 inches) ; 
"engraved and published by William Faden, Oct. I, 1778." There is a copy in the Massa- 
chusetts Historical Society's Library, book 572, No. 3, " Miscellaneous Maps." The 
original drawing is in the Faden Collection, Library of Congress. 

1775. . / large chart of Boston Harbor, and the neighboring country, surveyed 1 by Samuel 
Holland* (42 X 30 inches and without title), dated Aug. 5. 1775. It takes in Nahant, Nan- 
tasket, and Cambridge. It was subsequently dated Dec. I, 1781, with some changes, and 
with the fortifications of the siege marked in and explained in marginal references ; and is 
included by Des Barres in the Atlantic \tptune, part iii. No. 6, 1780-83. A text, some- 
times with this later issue, says it was composed from different surveys, but principally 
from that of George Callendar, 1 769, late master of His Majesty's ship ' Romney." Richard 
Frothingham's copy of this later plate was used in making the reproduction in ShurtleflPs 
Description of Boston, 1870. The same plate was used in Charts of the Coast and Harbors 
of New England, from Surveys t<ik,-n by Samuel Holland, etc., for the use of the Royal 
Navy of Great Britain. By J. F. W. Des Barres, 1781. 

1 Samuel Holland was Surveyor-general of ready to run the line between Massachusetts 

the northern colonies, and, working down the and New York. He adhered to the crown 

coast from the north, he had completed his sur- in the Revolutionary war, and died in I-ower 

vc-ys as far south as Boston in 1773; and in 1775 Canada in 1801. Sabine's American Layalitlt, 

be reported to Lord Dartmouth that he was i. 537. 



iv THE MEMORIAL HISTORY OF BOSTON. 

An outline map of Boston Harbor and Massachusetts Bay is contained in a series 
called Charts of the Coast and Harbors of New England, by J. F. W. Des Barres,from 
Surveys by Samuel Holland and his Assistants, who have been employed on that service 
since the year 1764. 

1775. Seat of War in New England by an American Volunteer, -with the Marches 
of the several Corps sent by the Colonies towards Boston, witli the attack on Bunker Hill. 
London, Sayer and Bennett, Sept. 2, 1775. (18 X 'S/^ inches.) It extends from Lower 
New Hampshire to Narragansett Bay, and west to Leicester. It was reproduced in the 
Centennial Graphic, 1875. 

On the same sheet are two marginal maps, Plan of Boston Harbor (5^X6 
inches) ; and Plan of Boston and Charlestown, the latter showing pictorially the battle 
of Bunker Hill in progress, and the town burning, (5^ X 12 inches). It seems to fol- 
low for Boston the London Magazine map, and is fac-similed in W. W. Wheildon's New 
History of the Battle of Bunker Hill, 1875 ; also in the accounts and memorials of the 
battle prepared by David Pulsifer, James M. Bugbee, and George A. Coolidge. It also 
very closely resembles the following : 

1775. Plan of the Town of Boston, with the attack on Bunker's Hill, in the Peninsula 
of Charlestown, on June 17, 1775. J. Norman, Sc. (u> X 7 inches, folding.) The 
Charlestown peninsula represents the town burning, and the British troops advancing to 
attack the redoubt. This map appeared in An impartial History of the War in America 
Boston: Nathaniel Coverley and Robert Hodge, MDCCLXXXI. vol. i. ; and in the second 
(1782) Newcastle-upon-Tyne edition of a book, published in London, of a like title, the 
first English edition having appeared in 1779. See Henry Stevens's Hist. Coll., i., 
No. 435. 

1775. Map of Boston and Charlestown, by An English Officer present at Bunker 
Hill. London, Sayer and Bennett, Nov. 25, 1775. (14 X 14 inches.) 

1775, Boston and the Surrounding Country, and Posts of the American Troops, 
Sept., 1775, is the title of a sketch in Trumbull's Autobiography, showing the lines of cir- 
cumvallation as drawn by himself. Mass. Hist. Sac. Proc.. April, 1879, P- 62. ' l ' s given 
in fac-simile, in Dr. Hale's chapter in the present volume. 

1775. Plan of Boston and its environs, showing the true situation of His Majesty's 
Army, and also those of the Rebels ; drawn by an Engineer at Boston, Oct., 1775 ; pub- 
lished, March 12, 1776, by Andrew Dury ; engraved by Jno. Lodge for the late Mr. 
Jefferys, geographer to the King. (25 X '7^ inches.) In Charlestown it shows the 
" Redoubt taken from ye rebels by General Howe," with the British camp on Bunker 
Hill. It includes Governor's Island, and takes in the Cambridge and Roxbury lines. It 
bears this address : "To the public. The principal part of this plan was surveyed by 
Richard Williams, lieutenant at Boston, and sent over by the son of a nobleman to his 
father in town, by whose permission it is published. N. B. The original has been com- 
pared with, and additions made from, several other curious drawings." 

1775. Map of Boston, Charlestown and vicinity, showing the lines of circumvalla- 
tion ; in Force's American Archives, iii. and reproduced in W. W. Wheildon's Siege 
and Evacuation of Boston and Charlestown, 1876. 

1775. Plan of Boston, with Charlestown marked as in ruins ; in the Gentleman's 
Magazine, October 1775. 

1775. A new and correct plan of the Town of Boston and Provincial Camp is in 
the Pennsylvania Magazine, July, 1775. It resembles that in the Gentleman's Magazine, 
January, 1775, and was engraved by Aitkins (7% X 10^ inches), showing the peninsula 
only. In one corner of the plate is a plan of the Provincial Camp, scale two miles to one 
inch, with the circumvallating lines. It is reproduced in W. W. Wheildon's Siege and 
Evacuation of Boston and Charlestown; Moore's Ballad History, etc. 

1775. A new Plan of Boston Harbour from an actual survey, C. Lownes, sculp. ; 
in the Pennsylvania Magazine, June. 1775. (7^ X io l A inches.) It has this legend: 
" N. B. Charlestown burnt, June 17, 1775, by the Regulars." 



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INTRODUCTION. V 

1775. To the Honl. Jno. Hancock, Esq., . . . this Map of the Seat of Civil War 
in America is . . . inscribed by ... B. Romans. It extends from Buzzard's Bay to 
Salem, from the ocean to Leicester. (15 X 17 inches.) It contains also a marginal Plan 
of Iloston and its Environs, 1775 (3 X 3/4 inches), showing the circumvallating lines. In 
the lower right-hand corner is a small view (i X 6,!^ inches) of The Lines thrown up on 
Boston Neck by the Ministerial Army. The key reads : "I, Boston ; 2, Mr. Hancock's 
house; 3, enemy's camp on M': ;?] Hill; 4, block house; 5, guardhouses; 6, gate and 
draw-bridge ; 7, Beacon Hill." 

1775. An inaccurate map of Boston and environs (io# X 8# inches), made in June, 
1775, and published, Aug. 28, 1775. in Almon's Remembrancer, i. It gives the head- 
quarters of the opposing forces, their camps, lines, etc. The second edition of the first 
volume ot Almon contained a map giving forty miles about Boston, a plan of the town, 
and a map of the vicinity. 

1775. A small Map of Boston and Vicinity, after one made during the British occu- 
pancy, is given in Harper's Monthly, June, 1873, in an article by B. J. Lossing, describing 
some views of Boston in the collection of Dr. Thorn is Addis Emmet of New York. 

1775. Boston and circumjacent Country, showing present situation of the King's 
Troops, and the Rebel intrenchments. July 25, 1775. (16^ X '7 inches.) A fac-simile 
of this, from the original manuscript owned by Mr. Charles Deane, is given in the Mass. 
Hist. Soc. Proc., April, 1879. 

1775. A draught of the Harbor of Boston, and the adjacent towns and roads, 1775, is 
the inscription on a manuscript map (t2 X 9 inches) in the Belknap Papers, i. 84, in the 
Massachusetts Historic.il Society's cabinet. 

1775. Plan of Dorchester Neck, made for the use of the British Army, given in T. C. 
Simond's History of South Hoston, p 31. The History of Dorchester, p. 333, speaks of a 
map (of which an engraving is given) drawn by order of the British general, showing nine 
houses on the Neck, as being in the M.s.u IIUM us Historical Society Librcry ; but it can- 
not now be found. Simond's map was simply drawn from 1'elham's, with names added. 

1775. Boston and Vicinity, following Pelham for the country and Page for the harbor 
(13 X 9/4 inches), was compiled by Gordon for his American Revolution, in 1788 

1775. Boston and Vicinity. 1775-1776; engraved for Marshall's Washington; Phila- 
delphia, C P. Wayne, 1806. (8^ x I3.K ) I' follows Gordon's, and was reduced for 
subsequent editions. A wood-cut of a similar plan is given in Lossing's Field-book 
of the Revolution, i. 566. See also Carringtoh's Battles of the American Revolution, 
p. 154. 

1775. Map of Boston and Vicinity. It is an eclectic map, showing the lines of cir- 
cumvallation, and was engraved for Sparks's Washington, iii. 26, and is also given in 
the Boston Evacuation Memorial, 1876. It was followed in Guizot's Washington, and in 
Bryant and Gay's United States, iii. 427. 

1775. Boston and its Environs in 1755 and 1776 (6# X 9 inches). Shows the har- 
bor and the lines of circumvallation. An eclectic map, engraved for Frothingham's Siege 
of Boston, p. 91. 

1775-1776. BRITISH LINES ON BOSTON NECK. Several plans are preserved. The 
main defence was at Dover Street, the outer works being near the line of Canton Street. 
A manuscript plan, "the courses, distances, etc., taken from the memorandum lxx>k of 
a deserter from the Welch Fusileers," is preserved in the Lee Papers, belonging to the 
American Philosophical Society of Philadelphia, and of this a description is given in the 
Mass. Hist. Soc. Proc., April. 1879, p. 62. A reduced fac-simile is given in Dr. Hale's 
chapter. It has an explanatory table of the armament in the hand of Colonel Mifflin, 
Washington's aid. and is signed T. M. A plan nearly duplicate, sent by Washington to 
Congress (Force's American Archives, fourth series, p. 29), is copied by Force (p. 31), 
and is reproduced in Wheildon's \/<\<- </,/ / >./. <i//V> of Boston. Cf. Trumbull's Au- 
tobiography, p. 2?, where it is mentioned that Trumbull, an aid to General Spencer, who 



vi THE MEMORIAL HISTORY OF BOSTON. 

had made a sketch of the works, by crawling up under cover of the tall grass, had hoped 
by this means to recommend himself to the Commander-in-Chief. " My further progress 
was rendered unnecessary," he adds, " by the desertion of one of the British artillery- 
men, who brought out with him a rude plan of the entire work. My drawing was also 
shown to the General ; and their correspondence proved that, ns far as I had gone, I was 
correct. This (probably) led to my future promotion." In the Pennsylvania Magazine, 
Aug. 1775, is an Exact Plan of General Gage's Lines on Boston Neck in America.* (9 X 
\\% inches.) The scale is a quarter of a mile to 4}f inches. It gives both the outer 
and inner lines. In the text a statement is made of the guns mounted, ending, 
"This is a true state this day, July 31, 1775." A drawing of the British lines on 
the Neck, dated August, 1775, is in the Faden collection of maps in the Library of 
Congress. An engraved view is given in heliotype in Dr. Hale's chapter. A somewhat 
rude delineation of the lines on a contemporary powder-horn is noted in Mass. Hist. Soc. 
Proc,, June, 1881. 

1776. Chart of Massachusetts Bay and Boston Harbor; published, April 29, 1776; 
extends from Cape Ann to Cape Cod. It appeared in the Atlantic Neptune, dated Dec. 
i, 1781. According to Shurtleff, one edition of this map is dated May, 1774. It also 
appeared, with the earlier date, in Des Barres' Charts of the Coast and Harbors of New 
England, 1781. W.P. Parrott in 1851 issued a reproduction of the Des Barres map of 
the harbor. 

1776. Chart of Boston Bay; published Nov. 13, 1776. Takes in Salem, Scituate, 
and Watertown. (39 X 3^ inches.) The surveys were made by Samuel Holland. As 
appearing in the Atlantic Neptune, 1780-83, it is dated Dec. I, 1781, and signed by J. F. 
W. Des Barres. It is also included in Des Barres' Charts of the Coast and Harbors of 
New England, 1781. The Back Bay is called " Charles Bay." 

1776. There is in the Massachusetts Historical Society's Cabinet a rudely drawn map 
of the harbor and adjacent parts (8 X 7/4 inches), in which the positions of the American 
forces are given. The Continental army is put at twenty thousand, and the Royal forces 
in the town at eight thousand. 

1776. The North American Pilot for New England, etc., from original surveys by 
Captain yohn Gascoigne, Joshua Fisher, Jacob Blarney, and other Officers and Pilots 
in His Majesty's Service. London, Sayer and Bennett, 1776. This contains a chart of 
the harbor of Boston, with the soundings, etc. (34 X 21 inches). The course up the chan- 
nel, from below Castle William, is marked by bringing the outer angle of the North 
Battery in range with " Charlestown tree," which stands on the peninsula, inscribed 
" Ruins of Charlestown.'' Harvard College Library has the volume, and the loose map 
is in the Massachusetts Historical Society Library, and in the Public Library. Cf. Mass. 
Hist. Soc. Proc., Sept. 1864. A second edition, .1800, is also in the College Library, and 
has the same map. 

1776. Map of the seat of War in New England. London ; printed for Carrington 
Bowles, 1776. (6)4 X 4/4 inches.) It has on the margin a small chart of the harbor and 
environs. 

1776. The seat of the late War at Boston, in the State of Massachusetts (7 X 10 
inches), taking in Salem, Marshfield, and Worcester, is given in the Universal Asylum 
and Columbian Magazine, July, 1789. 

1776. Plan of Boston in the Geschichte der Kriege in und aus Europa, Nuremberg, 
1776- 

1776. Carte du port et havre de Boston, par It Chevalier de Beaurain, Paris, 1776 
(28 X 23 inches). It bears the earliest known representation of the Pine-tree banner, in 
the hands of a soldier, making part of the vignette. There are copies in the Massachu- 
setts Historical Society Library, and in Harvard College Library. 

1776. (?) There is in the collection of maps made in Paris for the State, by Ben Per- 
ley Poore, and preserved in the State archives, one entitled, Carte de la Baye de Boston, 










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INTRODUCTION. yii 

situtte dans la Nouvelle Angleterre (7 X &A inches), which is marked, "Tome i. No. 
30," as if belonging to a series. 

1776. Carte von dent Hafen und der stud Boston, mil den umliegenden Gegenden 
und den Ldgern sowohl der Amenkaner ills auch der Knglaiider, ran <tem Cktval de 
Beaurin, nach <lem Pariser original von \ 776. Frentzel, sculpt. This also appeared in the 
first part of the Geographische Belustigungen, Leipsic, 1776, by J. C. Muller, of which 
there is a copy in Harvard College Library. 

1778. The Atlas Ameriquain Septentrional, a I'aris, ekes Le Rouge, ingenieur Geo- 
graphe du Rot, 1778, repeated the " Plan de Boston " from Jefferys' American Atlas of 
1776, with names in English and descriptions in French. Mass. Hist. Soc. Proc., Sep- 
tember, 1864. There was also an edition " after the original by M. Le Rouge, Austin 
Street, 1777," styled La Nouvelle Angleterre en \fcuilles. 

1780. Carte particuliere du Havre de Boston, reduite de la carte anglaise de Des 
Barres, par ordre de .M. tie Sarline, 1780 (23 X 34 inches). It has the seal of the " D<5p6t 
gdncrale de la marine," and makes part of the Neptune Americo-Septentrional, public par 
ordre du Roi. 

1780. /'Ian of the new Streets in Charlestown, -with the alteration of the old. Sur- 
veyed in 1780 by John Leach. No scale given. (25 V X 19^ inches.) It shows parts of 
Main and Henley streets, the Square, and Water Street. The names of all abutters on 
the streets are given, with accurate measurements of each lot. It is manuscript. 

1782. A New and Accurate Chart of the Harbour of Boston in New England in 
North America (6)4 X 9 inches), published in the Political Magazine, November, 1827. 



MAPS OF BOSTON SUBSEQUENT TO THE REVOLUTION. The following 
list gives all, or nearly all, the maps of Boston (including the harbor and 
the vicinity, and considerable portions of the town or present city) pub- 
lished between the close of the Revolution and the middle of the present 
century : 

1784. Plan of the Town of Boston (9 X 6 inches). This map is interesting as show- 
ing the outline of the "tri-mountain" in relation to the streets of 1784, when the origin. il 
elevation had not been materially changed. It appeared in the Boston Magazine, October. 
1784, accompanying a Geographical Gazetteer of Massachusetts, which was originally issued 
in instalments in that magazine. The original is in a copy of the magazine in the Boston 
Public Library. It was re-engraved in the New York edition (1846) of A Short Narra- 
tive of the Horrid Massacre, and in Kidder's History of the Boston Massacre, Albany, 
1870. It resembles the London Magazine map of 1774. 

1787. Dr. Belknap made a plan of so much of the town as was swept by the fire of 
April in this year, which spread along Orange Street, taking Hollis Street church, extending 
to Common Street. A fac-simile of his sketch is given in the Belknap Papers, i. 470. 

1789. Chart of the Coast of America, from Cape Cod to Cape Elizabeth. Sold by 
Matthew Clark, Boston, October, 1789. It has a marginal chart of Boston Harbor 
(7X6 inches). This chart belongs to a collection of North American charts dedicated 
by Clark to John Hancock. 

1789. A map of the town (<)% X 7 inches), engraved by John Norman (who had his 
printing office near the Boston Stone), which appeared in the Boston Directory l of this 
year, the earliest one published. Dr. Belknap speaks of it as very imperfect See 
Belknap Papers, ii. 115, and Afass. Hist. Soc. Proc., June, 1875. 

1 This first Boston Directory was reprinted, again separately in that year, from tin 
correcting the alphabetizing, in Dearborn's Bus- type. Copies of the first Directory usually waul 
ton Notions ; also in the Directory of 185;, and the map; the Public Library copy has it. 



Vlll 



THE MEMORIAL HISTORY OF BOSTON. 



1791. The American Pilot. Boston, John \orman, 1791. O. Carleton, 1 Sept. 10, 
1791, certifies on the title that he has compared the charts with Holland's and Des Barres', 
and other good authorities. A map of the coast from Timber Island, Maine, to New York, 
shows Boston Harbor (about 4X4 inches). 

1794. Dr. Belknap sketched a plan of that part of the town lying between Washington 
Street and Fort Hill, showing the new Tontine Crescent. A fac-simile is given in the 
Belknap Papers, ii. 351. 

1794. The English Pilot, London, Mount & Davidson, gives a large chart of the Sea 
Coast of New England from Cape Cod to Casco Bay, lately Surveyed bv Captain Henry 

^_^ Barnslcy. Sold by W. 6- I. 

'/^^ /Z7/- Mounl & T - Pa e i London. It 

^&^#n^/zz&^ gives a space of about three 

c^C^^/, inches square to Boston Har- 

bor. The Pilot also contains 

^ a large chart of the Coast of 

New England from Staten Island to the Island of Breton, as it was actually surveyed by 
'Captain Cyprian Southack. Sold by I. Mount, T. Pcte, 6- W. Mount, London. This 





BOSTON LIGHT, 1 789." 

plate has a marginal Plan of Boston (it^ X 7 inches), which seems to be Southack's 
reduction of Bonner, made sixty years before, in 1733. See Vol. I. p. liv. 

1794. Matthew Withington's Map of Ro \~bury is the earliest manuscript map of that 
part of the present city. See Dr.ike's Town of Roxbuty, p. 52. There are copies of this 
at the State House and in the city surveyor's office. 

1794. A Plan f Charlesttnon, surveyed in December, Vjy . . . By Sam 1 - Thompson, 
surveyor. Scale, 200 rods to tui iiuh (i6|< X io>< inches.) It is stated in the margin 
that there are 344 acres within the neck, and 3,940 without the neck; that White Island, 
at the east end of Maiden Bridge, contains 16 acres ; and that the whole acreage therefore 



1 Osgood Carlcton was born at Haverhill in 
1742, and died in 1816. He served in the Revo- 



cral Court, in 1801. Miss. Hist. Soc. Prof., i. 
p. 141. He was an original member of the Mas- 



liition ; and after the war taught mathematics in sachusctts Society of the Cincinnati. 

Itostnn, and published various maps, amoni; 2 This is a fac-simile of a plate in the Massa- 

others a map of the State, by order of the Gen- chusetts Magazine, February, 1789. 



INTRODUCTION. 



IX 



is 4.300, which includes Mystic Pond (zoo acres), and also all brooks, creeks, and roads 
in the town. The adjoining towns are shown by different colored lines. Only the county- 
roads in Charlestown are marked, and the site of the meeting-house on Town Hill is 
indicated. This plan is now in the Secretary's office at the State House, and has never 
been reproduced. 

1795. An original map of the town, surveyed by Osgood Carleton for the selectmen, 
is preserved in the city surveyor's office, Boston. City Document, No. m;, of 1879. 

1795. Carleton's survey was used in a small map ( i .} >. X 9 inches), which was en- 
graved by Joseph Callender for the second Boston Directory, published by John West, 
1796. This same date was kept on the map in the Directories of 1798 and 1800. In 1803 
the date is omitted, and a few changes are made in the plate. In 1807 the map is en- 
titled simply I'lan of Boston, and the references are omitted. 

1797. An accurate /'/an of the I own of Rostov, and its viiini/y. . . . Also, part of 
Charlestown and Cambridge, from thi surveys of Samuel Thompson, Esq., and part 
of Roxbury and Dorchester from those of Mr. Whithcrington [sic] (all -which surveys 




CASTLE ISLAND, 1789.' 

were taken by order of the General Court). By Osgood Carleton, teacher of mathemat- 
ics in Roslflii. 1. Norman, Sc. Published as the act directs. May 16. 1797. (37 X 40 
inches.) See Ufass. Hist. Soc. Proc , 1880, p 365. There is a heliotype of the Boston 
part of it reduced, in Vol. IV., following the Harvard College copy. 

1800. A new Plan of Boston, from actual surveys by Osgood Carleton, with correc- 
tions, additions, and imfirtniements. This is of the peninsula only (27 X 20 inches), and 
is seemingly a section of the 1797 map. It was reproduced in 1878 by G. B. Foster, in 
fac- simile, somewhat reduced. 

1801. Plan of East Roston; in Sumner's History of East Boston. 
1803. See 1795 (Directory map). 

1806. A new Plan of Boston, drawn from t/u- best authority's, with the latest im- 
provements, additions, and corn -,/////.>. fax/on, published and sold by W. Norman, Pleas- 
ant Street ; sold also bv \\'il'i,im /'///,//. \o. 59 Cornhill. This is the 1800 plan, with 
the plate lengthened to include South Boston, '-taken from the actual surveys of Mr 

1 This cut shows, in fac-simile, a plate of this fortification which appeared in the Mauackiattt, 
Magazine, M.iy. 1/89. 
VOL. III. *. 



X THE MEMORIAL HISTORY OF BOSTON. 

Withington" (35 X 19 inches). There are changes of ward-numbers and bounds. The 
lower part of the plate, below Dover Street, is re-engraved. There is a copy in the Boston 
Public Library. 

1809. Directory map, published by Edward Cotton ; engraved by Callender (15 X 9 1 A 
inches). 

1814. A map showing houses and estates (28 X 36 inches), drawn by J. G. Hale*, 
engraved by T. Wightman. A fac-simile was issued by Alexander Williams in 1879. 

1814. A plan "of the contemplated design of erecting perpetual tide-mills," engraved 
by Dearborn, on wood, dated February, 1814. A copy in the American Antiquarian 
Society's Library is indorsed by Isaiah Thomas, " Done by the new method of printing 
the colors, 1813." This plan is given in reduced heliotype in Mr. Stanwood's chapter in 
Vol. IV. 

1817. Chart of Boston Harbor ; surveyed by Alexander Wads worth, by order of 
Commodore William Bainbridge ; engraved by Allen & Gaw ; published in Philadelphia 
by John Melish in 1819; scale, 1500 feet to one inch (42 X 36 inches). Scale, 1500 feet 
to one inch. 

1818. Plan of the Charlesto-wn Peninsula. . . . From accurate survey by Peter 
Tufts, Jr., Esq. Engraved by Annin & Smith, Boston. (21 X I7X inches). See 
Mr. Edes's chapter in this volume. 

1819. Boston and Vicinity (31 j X 25 inches), by John G. Hales, engraved by Edward 
Gillingham. Some issues are dated 1820. To this year are ascribed two volumes of 
original plans of streets, lanes, and abutting houses, made by Hales for the selectmen, 
which are preserved in the city surveyor's department. See City Document No. 119, of 
1879. Hales's engraved map was reissued, with revisions by Nathan Hale, in 1829 and 

1833. 

1821. Hales's Survey of Boston and Vicinity has a map of the Back Bay, showing the 
" Great Dam," or Mill Dam. 

1821. Blunt's New Chart of the New England Coast has a marginal chart of Boston 
Harbor. 

1824. Plan of Boston (4 X 6X inches), by Abel Bowen, shows the original water- 
line and parts of the out- wharf. In Snow's History of Boston ; also in Bowen's Picture 
of Boston, 1828; and in Snow's Geography of Boston, 1830. 

1824. Plan of Boston (22 X 22 inches), by William B. Annin and G. G. Smith ; re- 
issued frequently by .Smith, and used in the municipal registers and school documents. 

1826. Boston and Vicinity (6 X 3 '4 inches), by A. Bowen; in Snow's History of 
Boston, 1826 and 1828 ; and in Bowen's Picture of Boston, 1828. 

1828. Plan of Boston (14^ X 9 inches), by Hazen Morse; in Boston Directory, 
published by Hunt and Simpson, and then by Charles Simpson, Jr.; continued in use 
till 1839, with changes and additions. 

1829 See 1819. 

1830. Plan of the Town of Charlestown, in the County of Middlesex .... made in 
August, 1830, under direction of the Selectmen, conformable to Resolves of the Legislature 
passed March I, 1830; by John G. Hales, surveyor. Scale, 100 rods to the inch. (26^ 

X 15 !4 inches.) The principal roads without the neck are laid down, and all the principal 
streets on the peninsula are shown. This is drawn in inclia ink and colors ; is preserved 
in the office of the Secretary of the Commonwealth, and has never been reproduced. 

1831. Mitchell's United States has a map of Boston and Vicinity (4'X X 3'4 inches). 

1831. Surveys of Dorchester (with Milton) made by Edmund J. Baker; lithographed 
by Pendleton ; scale, 3 miles to I inch (33 X 26 inches). 

1832. Town of Roxbury, by J. G. Hales ; scale, loo rods to I inch (25 X '7^ inches); 
includes the present West Roxbury. It is reduced in F. S. Drake's Town of Roxbury. 

1833. See 1819. 

1835. Plan of Boston (4 X 2 M inches), by Annin; peninsula only; in Boston 
Almanac. 



INTRODUCTION. XI 

1835. Map of Boston (21 X 2! inches): includes Charlestown and Lechmere Point; 
engraved by G. G. Smith. 

1835. Map of Boston (31 X 22 inches) ; drawn by Alonzo Lewis ; engraved by G. W. 
Boynton ; published by the Bewick Company. 

1836. Map of Massachusetts, from surveys ordered by the Legislature in 1830 ; has 
a marginal map of Boston (sH X 4# inches); published by Otis, Uroaders, & Co. 

1837. Map of Boston (5^ X 5 inches) ; engraved by Boynton for Boston Almanac; 
used in later years. 

1837. Chart of Boston Harbor; surveyed by B F. Perham ; directed by commis- 
sioners (L. Baldwin, S. Thayer, and James Hayward) appointed March, 1835. 

1837. A Plan of South Boston, old bridge to free bridge; surveyed and drawn by B. 
F. Perham, L. Baldwin, S. Thayer, and J. Hayward, commissioners. 

1837. A Plan of South Boston, East Boston, and Charlestown; surveyed and drawn 
by B. F. Perham, L. Baldwin, S. Thayer, and J. Hayward, commissioners. 

1837. A Plan of Cambridge Bridge, and Boston and Roxbury Milldam ; was surveyed 
and drawn by B. F. Perham, under authority of L. Baldwin, S. Thayer, and J. Hayward, 
commissioners ; and of the same date and authority one of Cambridgeport, East Cam- 
bridge, and Charlestown. [A'o title.] 

1837. A Plan of Cambridgeport, East Cambridge, Charlestown, Chelsea, East Boston, 
and South Boston ; drawn by B. F. Perham, under the authority of the commissioners, L. 
Baldwin, S. Thayer, and J. Hayward. [No title.] 

1838. Plan of Boston (15 X n inches); in T. G. Bradford's Illustrated Atlas of the 
United States, Boston. 

1838. Plan of Boston (15% X 9% inches), by Hazen Morse and J. W. Tuttle ; in 
Boston Directory, 1839, and in later years. 

1839. Plan of Boston (18 X I? inches), showing Governor's and Castle islands; en- 
graved by G. W. Boynton for Nathaniel Dearborn ; issued with various dates, and pub- 
lished from 1860 to 1867, with alterations, by E. P. Dutton & Co. It is based on the 1835 
map of Lewis. 

1839. A 1'lan of South Boston, showing the additional wharves since 1835, also 
harbor liiif r< com mended by Commissioners in 1839; drawn by G. P. Worcester, H. A. 
S. Dearborn, J. F. Baldwin. C. Eddy, commissioners. 

1839. A plan of Charlestown, Chelsea, and East Boston, showing the harbor line ; 
was drawn by G. P. Worcester under the authority of the commissioners, H. A. S. Dear- 
born, J. F. Baldwin, and C. Eddy. [.\V< title]. 

1839. A plan of Cambridgeport, East Cambridge, and Charlestown, showing the har- 
bor line; recommended by the commissioners, H. A. S. Dearborn, J. F. Baldwin, and C. 
Eddy. [A<> title]. 

1841. Boston and Vicinity, by Nathaniel Dearborn. It follows the large State map. 

1842. Boston and Vicinity (4X4 inches) : in Mitchell's Traveller's Guide through 
the United States ; issued with later dates. 

1842. Map of Boston (14 X u/4 inches); engraved by Boynton for Goodrich's 
/Vi to riii I Geography. 

1842. Map of Boston, including the Charlestown peninsula (15 X 12 inches); en- 
graved by R. B. Davies for the Society for the Diffusion of Useful Knowledge, London. 

1843. .!/<//> of ///< City of K,txbmy (34 X 25 inches) ; surveyed in 1843 by Charles 
Whitney ; published in 1849; scale, 1,320 feet to I inch. 

1844. Topographical Map of Massachusetts, by Simeon Boyden, shows Boston Har- 
bor, with considerable detail, on a size of about 5X5 inches. 

1844. Map of Boston (\\Yi X 9 inches); peninsula only; in Dickinson's Boston 
Almanac. 

1844. Map of East Boston (34 X 21 inches), by R. H. Eddy ; drawn by John Noble, 
June, 1844. 

1846. Map of Boston, including East and South Boston ; engraved by G. G. Smith 



xii THE MEMORIAL HISTORY OF BOSTON. 

1846. Mystic River; }. Hayward, E. Lincoln, Jr., commissioners. 

1846. Charles Rirer to the. head of tide waters; drawn by L. Briggs, Jr., J. Hayward, 
and E. Lincoln, commissioners. 

1846. Plan of part of the City and harbor, showing lines of high and low water ; by 
G. R. Baldwin. 

1846. South Bay ; J. Hayward, E. Lincoln, Jr., commissioners. 

1847. Boston Harbor and the Approaches ; from a trigonometrical survey, under the 
direction of A. D. Bache, by commissioners S. T. Lewis and E. Lincoln. 

1847. Plan of Boston ; an original manuscript plan, made by W. S. Whitwell for the 
water commissioners; in the city surveyor's department. See City Document, 1879, No. 
119. 

1847. Chart of the Inner Harbor ; T. G. Gary, S. Borden, E. Lincoln, commissioners ; 
A. D. Bache, superintendent United States coast-survey. 

1848. Plan of the City of Charlestown, made by order of the City Council from actual 
survey ; by Felton &* Parker, and Eben' Barker. Scale, 400 feet to an inch. Litho- 
graphed by J H. Bufford, Boston. (32^ X 25 inches.) 

1848. Map of Boston, including South and East Boston, by N. Dearborn. 

1848. In N. Dearborn's Boston Notions, and engraved by him, appeared these maps : 
i. Plan of Boston (6X4^) inches ; 2. Boston and Vicinity (3X4 inches) ; 3. Boston 
Harbor (4^ X 8 inches). These maps appeared in other of Dearborn's publications 
about Boston, Guides, etc. 

1849. Boston and Vicinity (n X <) 1 A inches); in Boston Almanac, and in Homans's 
Sketches of Boston. 

1849. J. H. Goldthwait's Railroad Map of New England has a marginal map (2^ X 
2j inches) of Boston and vicinity. 
1849. See Roxbury map of 1843. 

1849. Chelsea Creek, between East Boston and Chelsea. Exhibiting the circumscribing 
line to which wharves may be extended ; surveyed by J. Low and J. Noble, S. T. Lewis, 
and E. Lincoln, Jr., commissioners. 

1850. Map of Boston (u X g/4 inches): engraved by Boynton for the Boston 
Almanac. . 

1850. Map of Dorchester (36 X 28 inches); surveys made by Elbridge Whiting for 
S. Dwight Eaton ; lithographed by Tappan and Bradford. 

1850. Inner Harbor, showing commissioners' 1 lines proposed by S. Greenleaf, J. Giles, 
and E. Lincoln, commissioners. 

1850. South Bay ; S. Greenleaf, J. Giles, and E. Lincoln, commissioners. 

After this date the maps are very numerous. 




THE 



MEMORIAL HISTORY OF BOSTON. 



-IBcboluttonar? 



CHAPTER I. 

THE BEGINNING OF THE REVOLUTION. 

BY THE REV. EDWARD G. PORTER, 

Patttr of Ikt Hattctck Ckxrck, 



WHATEVER period we fix upon as the beginning of the American 
Revolution, we are sure to find some preceding event which, in a 
greater or less degree, might justly claim recognition on that account. It 
has generally been conceded that the war opened with the outbreak of 
hostilities on the morning of April 19, 1775; and that opinion will prob- 
ably never be reversed. But as there were reformers before the Reforma- 
tion, so there were many public acts in the Province deemed revolutionary 
before the memorable engagement on Lexington Common. Blood had 
been previously shed in a collision between the king's troops and American 
citizens in the streets of Boston. Remonstrances against the arbitrary 
measures of the British Government had repeatedly taken the shape of open 
and defiant resistance. The Congress of 1765 had issued a Declaration of 
Rights which, though accompanied by expressions of loyalty to the king, 
was a very pronounced, step towards colonial union and independence. 
The utterances of Franklin, of Otis, and of Samuel Adams, and the favor 
with which they were received, clearly indicated the ardent aspirations of 
the people for political liberty. Kvery successive encroachment of the 
Crown was met by an immediate and determined protest. For years the 
public mind had been in a state of such chronic agitation that the peace 
was at any time liable to be disturbed by acts of violence. 

It is greatly to the credit of the colonists, as British subjects, that the 
final rupture was so long in coming. They would certainly have been justi- 
fied in the judgment of mankind had they precipitated rebellion in the 

VOL. Ill I. 



2 THE MEMORIAL HISTORY OF BOSTON. 

earlier stages of their oppression When we remember what indignities 
had been heaped upon them ever since the abrogation of the charter in 
1684; when we recall the sufferings to which they were subjected by the 
passage of the numerous navigation laws restricting their commerce and 
prostrating their industries; when we bear in mind that the affection, which 
for a century and a half the colonists sincerely cherished for the mother 
country, was never cordially reciprocated, we are not surprised that a feel- 
ing of estrangement at last grew up among them. The wonder is that it 
did not assert itself long before. For, be it remembered, the spirit of free- 
dom which took up arms in 1775 was not a sudden development nor an 
accidental discovery. The people had always had it. They brought it with 
them from the Old World, where, from the days of King John, it had been 
the birthright of the English race. 1 

And so the Revolution, when it came, was only the assertion of this old 
principle, a fundamental principle with the colonists, and one which they 
had never surrendered. Under its guidance they had repeatedly engaged in 
acts which they considered lawful and patriotic, but which the officers of 
government condemned as refractory, rebellious, or treasonable. These 
public acts, extending through many years, constitute no unimportant part 
of our history, since they contributed largely to bring about the final issue, 
and, by their close relation to subsequent events, belong to the Revolu- 
tionary period. 

The excitement in Boston during the winter of 1760-61, connected with 
the application of officers of the customs for writs of assistance in searching 
houses for contraband goods, must ever be regarded as one of the most 
important of the early movements foreshadowing the approaching conflict. 
To understand the bearing of this event, it is necessary to take a glance at 
the condition of political affairs at that time. 

George III. had just come to the throne. Canada had been conquered 
from the French. England, flushed with victory, was yet oppressed with a 
heavy debt ; and the attention of her ministers was turned to the system of 
colonial administration with a view to a large increase of the revenue. The 
Colonies came out of the war with many losses, to be sure, but trained and 
strengthened by hardship, encouraged by success, and eager to return to 
the pursuits of peace. The population was increasing ; new and valuable 
lands were occupied ; and business began to revive with extraordinary 
rapidity. 

From this period we can distinctly trace the growth of two opposing 
political principles, both of which had existed in New England side by 
side from the very beginning with only an occasional clashing, but which 
now were destined to contend with each other in an irrepressible conflict. 

1 [The development of the spirit is more ad- outcome of independence was not faced seriously 
mirably traced than elsewhere in Richard Froth- till quite late. For references in this matter see 
ingham's Rise of the Republic. The inevitable Winsor's Handbook, p. 102. En.] 



THE BEGINNING OF THE REVOLUTION. 3 

These principles found expression in the two parties long existing, 1 but 
which now began to draw apart more and more ; namely, the party of free- 
dom, and the party of prerogative, the former insisting upon the right of 
self-government under the Crown, and the latter maintaining the authority 
of the Crown in the place of self-government. The question at issue was a 
radical one, and upon it turned the whole history of the country. 

Without stopping to discuss the weakness of England's position, the want 
of statesmanship in her councils, and the strange infatuation with which she 
pursued lu r fatal policy, we cannot overlook certain acts of trade which at 
this time were enforced by the Court of Admiralty, and which were designed 
to make the enterprising commercial spirit of America tributary to Great 
Britain. Much of the mischief brought upon the Colonies can be traced to 
the Board of Trade, a powerful organization devised originally by Charles 
II. and re-established by William III. to regulate the national and colonial 
comin TCe. 1'hough only an advisory council, having no executive power, 
its influence with the king and ministry was such that its recommendations 
were usually adopted. Burke 2 speaks of this notable body as a kind of 
political "job, a sort of gently-ripening hot-house, where eight members of 
Parliament receive salaries of a thousand a year for a certain given time, in 
order to mature, at a proper season, a claim to two thousand." The Board 
was intended to make the Colonies " auxiliary to English trade. The 
r'.nglishman in America was to be employed in making the fortune of the 
Englishman at home." 3 

At the time of which we are now speaking, a profitable though illicit 
trade had sprung up between the northern colonies and the West Indies. 
Instructions were sent to the colonial governors to put a stop to this trade. 
Francis Bernard, late Governor of New Jersey, and a well known friend of 
British authority, having succeeded Pownall as Governor of Massachusetts, 
informed the Legislature in a speech shortly after his arrival " that they 
derived blessings from their subjection to Great Britain." The Council, in 
a carefully worded reply, joined in acknowledging the " happiness of the 
times," but instead of recognizing their " subjection," they spoke only of 
their " relation " to Great Britain ; and the House, weighing also its words, 
spoke of " the connection between the mother country and the provinces 
on the principles of filial obedience, protection, and justice." 4 An oppor- 
tunity soon occurred to show that the difference in language between the 
Royal Governor and the General Court was a deep-seated difference of 
principle and of purpose. 

For many years the custom-house officers had availed themselves of 
their position to accumulate large sums, especially from a misuse of forfeit- 

1 [They were exemplified in the long - * Speech on the Economical Reform. 

;;le for the maintenance of the first charter " Palfrey, History of New England, vol. iv. 

(-ee Mr. Deanc's chapter in Vol. I.), and in the p. 21. 

conflict over the royal governors' salaries sub- * Harry, llhl. of Mass., ii. 256; Bancroft, iv. 

sequcntly (see Dr. Kllis's chapter in Vol. II). 378; and Dr Ellis's chapter in Vol. II. at this 

ED.] History. 




4 THE MEMORIAL HISTORY OF BOSTON. 

ires under the old Sugar Act of 1733. This practice, added to the official 
rigor and party spirit with which they enforced the commercial laws, led to 
a general and deep-seated feeling of antipathy towards them on the part 
of the merchants. 1 This antipathy was greatly aggravated by a decision in 
the Superior Court against the treasurer of the Province, and in support of 
the attitude of the offi'cers of customs. 2 

In November, 1760, Charles Paxton, 3 who was the head of the customs 
in Boston, instructed a deputy in Salem to petition the Court for "writs of 

assistance," to enable them forcibly 
to enter dwelling-houses and ware- 
houses in the execution of 

their duty ' Exce P tions were 

at once taken to this applica- 
tion, and a hearing was asked for by James Otis, an ardent young patriot, 
whose connection with this case forms one of the most brilliant chapters in 
our history. At the first agitation of the question he held the post of 
advocate-general for the Colony, but rather than act for the Crown he had 
resigned the position. " This is the opening scene of American resistance. 4 
It began in New England, and made its first battle-ground in a court-room. 
A lawyer of Boston, with a tongue of flame and the inspiration of a seer, 
stepped forward to demonstrate that all arbitrary authority was unconstitu- 
tional and against the law." 6 The trial came on in February, 1761. Thomas 
Hutchinson, who had just succeeded Stephen Sewall as chief-justice, sat 
with his four associates, "with voluminous wigs, broad bands, and robes of 
scarlet cloth," in the crowded council chamber of the old Boston town house, 
" an imposing and elegant apartment, ornamented with two splendid full- 
length portraits of Charles II. and James II." The case was opened for the 
Crown by Jeremiah Gridley as the king's attorney, and the validity of writs 
of assistance was maintained by an appeal to statute law and to English 
practice. Oxenbridge Thacher calmly replied with much legal and technical 
ability, claiming that the rule in English courts was not applicable in this 
case to America. James Otis 6 now appeared for the inhabitants of Boston, 
and in an impassioned speech of over four hours in length he swayed both 
the court and the crowded audience with marvellous power. He said: 

1 A petition was sent to the General Court 4 John Adams to the Abbe Mably. ll',>i-k>. 
at this time, charging the officers of the Crown v. 492. 

with appropriating to their own use moneys be- 6 Bancroft, iv. 414. 

longing to the Province. This petition was This eloquent champion of liberty was a 
signed by over fifty leading merchants, whose native of liarnstable, and a graduate of liar- 
names may be found in Drake's ///.t/. of Boston, vard in 1743. He began the practice of law at 
657, note. Plymouth, but two years later removed to Boston, 

2 Hutchinson, Matiacluitetts /lay, iii. 89-92; where he rose to distinction as an earnest advo- 
Minot, Hist, of Muss., ii. 80-87 ; Harry, 262, 263. cate of his country's i ights. His father, the elder 

3 [There is a portrait of Paxton in the Otis, was a distinguished politician and Speaker 
Mass. Hist. Society's gallery. One, supposed to of the House, and a candidate for the vacant 
be by Copley, is in the American Antiqua- judgeship which Governor Bernard had given to 
rian Society at Worcester. It is not recognized Hutchinson. See Tudor's Life of Otis; Hutch- 
by Perkins. ED.] inson, iii. 86, et scq. ; Barry, pp. 258-259. 



THE BEGINNING OF THE REVOLUTION. 5 

" I am determined, to my dying day, to oppose, with all the powers and facul- 
ties God ha-> given me, all such instruments, of slavery on the one hand and villany 
on the other, as this writ of assistance is. ... I argue in favor of British liberties 
at a time when we hear the greatest monarch upon earth declaring from his throne 
that he glories in the name of liriton, and that the privileges of his people are dearer 
to him than the most valuable prerogatives of the Crown. I oppose that kind of power 
the exercise of which, in former periods of English history, cost one King of England 
his head and another his throne." 

Otis then proceeded to argue that while special writs might be legal, the 
present writ, being general, was illegal. Any one with this writ might be a 
tyrant. Again, he said, this writ was perpetual. There was to be no return, 
and whoever executed it was responsible to no one for his doings. He 
might reign secure in his petty tyranny, and spread terror and desolation 
around him. The writ was also unlimited. Officers might enter all houses 
at will, and command all to assist them ; and even menial servants might 
enforce its provisions. He said : 

" Now the freedom of one's house is an essential branch of English liberty. 
A man's house is his castle ; and while he is quiet, he is as well guarded as a prince. 
This writ, if declared legal, totally annihilates this privilege. Custom-house officers 
might enter our houses when they please, and we could not resist them. Upon bare 
suspicion they could exercise this wanton power. . . . Both reason and the Con- 
stitution are against this writ. The only authority that can be found for it is a law 
enacted in the zenith of arbitrary power, when, in the reign of Charles II., Star Chamber 
powers were pushed to extremity by some ignorant clerk of the exchequer. But 

u if the writ could be elsewhere found, it would still be illegal. AH precedents are 
under the control of the principles of law. . . . No acts of Parliament can establish 
such a writ. Though it should be made in the very words of the petition it would 
be void, for every act against the Constitution is void." * 

Notwithstanding this forcible argument, and the soul-stirring eloquence 
with which it was presented, it did not prevail. The older members of the 

1 It is greatly to be regretted that this cele- rior Court, 1761-1772, which were published in 
brated speech, which, in the judgment of many, 1865, edited by his great-grandson General Sam- 
originated the party of Revolution in Massachu- uel M. Quincy, with an appendix on the writs of 
Mtts, Wu never committed to writing, Vnr such assistance by Horace Gray, the present Chief- 
fragments of it as \ve have we are indebted to a Justice of the Commonwealth. The late Horace 
few notes taken at the time, and to some inci- Binney of Philadelphia wrote of the book, at the 
dental allusions found in Irtius (> f Bernard and time, to Miss E. S. (Juincy: "I have now read 
Hutchinson. John Adams, late in life, "after a the reports, and with great satisfaction. They 
l.i]i-c ill ' tiftv -si -veil vc.ir.-.' 'wrote out. In -request, had good law in Massachusetts in the days of 
,i- miirh as he could remember of the argument your grandfather, as well as good lawyers and 
of the speech. See Minot, ii. 91-99; Tudor's a good reporter. Mr. Gray's appendix is one of 
Life of Otis: Bancroft, iv. 416, noU- ; Corrcs- the most clear, accurate, and exhaustive exposi- 
pondencc of John Adams and Mr*. Warren in 5 lions that I have read, and has brought me much 
.1/,/xr. Hist. ('.-//. iv. vio; F.sstx /nst. ///../. CtU. better instruction than I had before. I rather 
Aug. 1860; Adams's / //,' ,;/;,/ U\>i ks of Jo/in think they were legal under the act of Parlia- 
Adams,\. 59,81,8::; ii. 104. ^, ^-'4 [The insc ment. but I cannot believe they were const it u- 
can be studied from a contemporary point of tional, either here or in England, except as any- 
view in the reports made by the Josiah Ouincy thing an act of Parliament docs is constitu- 
of that day, of cases in the Massachusetts Supc- tional." ED.] 



THK MEMORIAL HISTORY OF BOSTON. 



court were favorably disposed; but they yielded to the solicitations of 
Hutchinson, who proposed to continue the cause to the next term, in order, 
meanwhile, to apply to England for definite instructions. In due time the 




answer came, in support of his well known position; and the court, with the 
semblance of authority rather than law, decided that the writs of assistance 
should be granted whenever the revenue officers applied for them.' 2 

1 [This cut follows a painting by Blackburn, 
in 1755, now owned by Mrs. Henry Darwin 
Rogers, by whose permission it is here copied. 
Having been more than once before engraved 
(see A. B. Durand's in Tudor's Life of Otis ; 
another by I. R. Smith ; and a poor one in Loring's 
Ilnthlred floston Orators}, it was admirably put 
on steel by Schlecht, in 1879, f r Bryant and 
Gay's United States, iii. 332. There is a gene- 
alogy of the Otis family in N. E. Hist, and Geneal. 



Keg. iv. and v.; also see Freeman's History of 
Cafe CoJ. Otis at one time lived where the 
Adams Express Company's building on Court 
Street now is. No American has received a 
more splendid memorial than Crawford has be- 
stowed on Otis in the statue in the chapel at 
Mount Auburn. See an estimate of Otis in Mr. 
Goddard's chapter in the present volume. ED.] 
- Ilutchinson, iii. 96; Bancroft, iv. 418; 
Barry, p. 267. 



THE BEGINNING OF THE REVOLUTION. 7 

But Thacher and Otis had not spoken in vain. 1 They had electrified 
the people, and scattered the seeds which soon germinated in a spirit of 
combined resistance against the encroachments of unlawful power. Among 
those attending the court was the youthful John Adams, wlm had just been 
admitted as a barrister, and whose soul was ready to receive the patriotic 
fire from the lips of Otis. " It was to Mr. Adams like the oath of Hamilcar 
administered to Hannibal. It is doubtful whether Otis himself, or any person 
of his auditory, perceived or imagined the consequences which were to flow 
from the principles developed in that argument." 2 Patriots were created 
by it on the spot, men who awoke that day as from a sleep, and shook 
themselves for action. Every one felt that a crisis was approaching in the 
affairs of the Province, if indeed it had not already come. 

In tracing the causes which led to the final independence of America, 
it is always to be borne in mind that independence, in the political sense 
of the word, was not what the colonists originally desired. They were 
proud of their position as British subjects; and not until their loyalty had 
endured a long series of shocks, did it occur to any one that a separation 
was either possible or desirable. This will explain the docility with which 
the people of New England submitted to gross abuses and high-handed 
political measures through a period of over thirty years without doing 
more than to assert their rights, and to seek peaceable means of redress. 
They loved the mother country, and rejoiced in her prosperity. 3 Her his- 
tory, her greatness, her triumphs, were all theirs. Their literature, their 
laws, their social life, their religious faith, were all English. Most of the 
towns and counties in Massachusetts were named after those in England, 
showing the affection the colonists had for the country from which they 
came. The architecture of Boston houses was almost an exact reproduc- 
tion of that which prevailed in London or Bristol. A relationship of 
blood, of affection, and of interest was maintained by the closest com- 
munication which that age afforded. Packets were continually plying 
between the two countries; personal and business correspondence was 
frequent ; and, in ordinary times, this intimacy was not affected by the 
official character and conduct of those who represented British authority 
on these shores. If the exercise of that authority had not exceeded its 
just limits, it would certainly have been a long time before the colonists 
would have demanded or accepted anything like a political separation. 
They were not adventurers, seeking capital out of conflict, but peaceable, 
industrious, law-abiding citi/.ens; asking only for equality with their fellow- 
subjects, and deliverance from special and unequal legislation. They knew 
their rights under the charter, and were resolved to maintain them; and 
in this they were simply true to the traditions of the Anglo-Saxon race 

1 [The lawyers engaged in this can- !'. Adam's Life of John Adams, i. 81. 

characterized in the chapter in Vol. IV. by Mr. nc. Historical Vim of the American 

John T Morse. |r. En.) Kf;vlutii>n, pp. s;, 6 



8 THE MEMORIAL HISTORY OF BOSTON. 

from which they sprang. Their lot was cast in troublous times, but the 
trouble was not of their fomenting. They never invoked revolution, but 
were driven to it at last against their will by the stern logic of events. 
One of these events has already been described ; but properly speaking, 
the great struggle did not begin with the excitement attending the appli- 
cation for writs of assistance. That excitement did not affect the coun- 
try at large, nor did it seriously disturb the loyalty of the people of 
Boston. It led to much discussion and speculation, but to no organized 
resistance. 

The first direct occasion for the uprising in America was the attempt on 
the part of the British Government to raise a revenue from the Colonies 
without their consent and without a representation in Parliament. Upon 
this turned the whole controversy, which lasted more than ten years and 
terminated in the final appeal to arms. 

After the Peace of Paris, 1 England took a position of undisputed su- 
premacy among the great powers of Europe. Her political and diplomatic 
influence was greatly increased by her military successes and her new terri- 
torial acquisitions. But this pre-eminence was attended by an exhausted 
treasury, and the first important question for her statesmen to ask was, how 
to increase the revenue. The American colonies, it was known, were gain- 
ing rapidly in population and wealth. There was no doubt of their ability 
to furnish large sums to the Crown. The people were loyal, and would be 
likely to sustain further draughts upon their resources. 

So reasoned Charles Townshend, first lord of trade and secretary for the 
colonies in the new ministry formed by the Earl of Bute. No sooner did 
Townshend take office than he was ready with his audacious scheme to 
ignore charters, precedents, laws, and honor; to abrogate the rights and 
privileges of colonial legislatures ; and to give Parliament absolute author- 
ity to tax an unwilling people to whom the privilege of representation had 
never been granted. 

Townshend's scheme, in the form in which he presented it, did not suc- 
ceed ; but shortly after, in March, 1763, Grenville, first lord of the ad- 
miralty, eager to advance the inter- 
ests of British trade, brought in a 
bill "for the further improvement 
^ m ' s m ajesty's revenue of the cus- 
toms," authorizing naval officers on 
the American coast to act as custom-house officers. This bill soon passed 
both Houses and became a law. 2 

Bute's ministry was of short duration. Grenville soon took his place, 
supported by Egremont and Halifax, and retaining Jenkinson as principal 
secretary of the treasury. This triumvirate ministry was so unpopular as 
to become a "general joke;" 3 and was called "the three Horatii," "the 

Signed in February, 1763. :1 \Valpole to Mann, April 30, 1763. See Lord 

2 Bancroft, v., 92 ; Barry, ii. 278. Mahon (Stanhope), History of England, xli. 





THE BEGINNING OF THE REVOLUTION. 9 

Athanasian administration," a "sort of Cerberus," a "three-headed monster, 
quieted by being gorged with patronage and office." ' 

One of Grenville's earliest measures was a bill for enforcing the Naviga- 
tion Acts, in which he met with no opposition from Parliament or the King. 
1 1 is next plan was to provide for the army in America by taxing the 
Colonies. Upon this matter he consulted the board of trade, to ascertain 
" in what mode least burdensome and most palatable to the Colonies they 
can contribute toward the support of the additional expense which must 
attend their civil and military establishment." 2 The head of the board of 
trade was now the young Earl of Shelburne, an Irish peer, who was begin- 
ning to have great influence in British councils. On many questions he was 
a follower of Pitt, and was naturally opposed to /extending the authority of 
Parliament. His reply gave no encouragement to the ministry; yet they 
continued pursuing their favorite project, and did all in their power to 
create a public sentiment in its favor. Before any action was taken Egre- 
mont died, and Shelburne was succeeded by the Earl of Hillsborough. 
Grenville now renewed his exertions for the passage of a revenue bill ; and 
at a meeting of the lords of the treasury Grenville, North, and Hunter 
in Downing Street, on the morning of September 22, a minute was 
adopted directing their secretary, Jcnkinson, " to write to the commis- 
>ioncrs of the stamp duties to prepare a draught of a bill to be presented 
to Parliament for extending the stamp duties to the Colonies." 3 In obedi- 
ence to this order the famous Stamp Act was prepared, and subsequently 
presented to Parliament. Probably its origin is not due to any one man. 
Bute thought of it, Jenkinson elaborated it, North supported it, Grenville 
demanded it, and England accepted it. It has generally been called, and with 
good reason, Grenville's measure. Whatever of credit or of odium attaches 
to it must be given to him. He did not expect the favor of the Colonies, 
but he was anxious to secure support at home ; and as there was some 
doubt of the bill's passing without an exciting debate, he did not press the 
matter at once. Hoping also, possibly, to conciliate the Colonies, he yielded 
to the urgent solicitations of some of their representatives 4 who maintained 
that the proposed stamp duty was " an internal tax," and therefore that it 
\\ould be better to " wait till some sort of consent to it shall be given 
by the sever.il assemblies, to prevent a tax of that nature from being levied 
without the consent of the Colonies." 6 And so, "out of tenderness to the 
Colonies," the bill was not brought in for a year. 

Meanwhile the Administration succeeded in carrying a measure, April 
5, 1764, imposing duties on various enumerated foreign commodities im- 
ported into America, and upon colonial products exported to any other 

1 \Vilkcs to Karl Temple, in GretrvilU Papers, sylvania; and Richard Jackson, his own private 

ii. Si. secretary. 

- li.uuioft, v. 107. * Grem'illt CorrespondtrKt, ii. 393; Afaisa- 

8 Treasury .^fiiiutfs. Sept _'-'. 17(1', I Jcnkin- chusctts Gazftlf, May 10, 1764; Bamroft. v. 183; 

I,, it, i. Scpl. .",. i;Ci;; 11. unroll, v. 151. U.urv. p -'S|: Kii/niaurice, Lifeof William, Earl 

4 Thomas IVnn ami William Allen, .if Penn- of SHelburnt, i. 318, 319. 
vni in. 2. 



10 THE MEMORIAL HISTORY OF BOSTON. 

place than Great Britain. A heavy duty was also laid upon molasses and 
sugar. To enforce the provisions of this bill, enlarged power was given to 
the vice-admiralty courts, and penalties under the act were made recover- 
able in these courts. 1 

The news of the passage of the Sugar Act stirred up an intense com- 
motion in all the maritime towns of America ; the merchants everywhere 
held meetings, adopted memorials to the assemblies, and sent protests to 
England. In Boston, James Otis prepared a Statement of the Rights of the 
Colonies, and Oxenbridge Thacher expressed similar views in a pamphlet 
entitled Sentiments of a British- American?- A committee Otis, Gushing, 
Thacher, Gray, and Sheafe was also appointed to correspond with the 
other Colonies ; and circulars were sent out stating the dangers that menaced 
" their most essential rights," and desiring the " united assistance " of all 
to secure, if possible, a repeal of the obnoxious acts, and to " prevent a - 
stamp act, or any other impositions and taxes, upon this and the other 
American provinces." 3 

The Legislature, which had been prorogued month after month by Gov- 
ernor Bernard, to impede its action, finally met in October. Letters were 
received from the agents in England, and an address to the King was pre- 
pared ; but as it failed of acceptance with the Council, it gave place to a 
milder address to the House of Commons, stating the objections which had 
been urged against the Sugar Act, and praying for a further delay of the 
Stamp Act. 4 

With the year 1765 the long dreaded measure, which had come to be 
regarded as the very symbol of usurpation, came into effect. At the open- 
ing of Parliament in January, Grenville presented the American question as 
one of obedience to the authority of the kingdom ; and shortly after, with 
the support of Townshend, Jenyns, 6 and others, he proposed a series of 
resolutions, fifty-five in number, embracing the details of the Stamp Act, 
the essential feature being the requirement that all / :gal and business 
documents in the colonies should be written on printed or stamped paper, 
to be had only of the tax collectors. All offences under this act were 
to be tried in the admiralty courts, and the taxes were to be collected 
arbitrarily, without any trial by jury. 

1 Minot, ii. 155; Holmes, Annals, ii. 125, ct against. To what purpose will opposition to 

sef.; Barry, ii. 286. any resolutions of the ministry be, if they are 

3 Both published in Boston, June, 1764. The passed with such rapidity as to render it impos- 

Gcneral Court sent a letter of instructions to Mr. 'sible for us to be acquainted with them before 

Mauduit, the agent of Massachusetts in London, they have received the sanction of an act of 

expressing the state of feeling. " If all the Col- Parliament ? A people may be free and toler- 

onies," says the letter, " are to be taxed at pleas- ably happy without a particular branch of trade ; 

ure, without any representation in Parliament, but without the privilege of assessing their own 

what will there be to distinguish them, in point taxes, they can be neither." Minot, ii. ioS-175; 

of liberty, from the subjects of the most abso- Bradford, i. 21, 22. 

lute prince? Every charter-privilege may be " Hutchinson, iii. no; Minot, ii. 175. 

laken from us by an appendix to a money bill, J Massachusetts Records ; Journal House of 

which, it seems, by the rules on the other side of Representatives, 1764, p. 102. 
the water, must not at any rate be petitioned 6 Bancroft, v. 231-234. 



THE BEGINNING OF THE REVOLUTION. n 

Grenville advocated his bill with many plausible arguments and explana- 
tions. He had evidently anticipated all the difficulties it would encounter 
in England, but he failed utterly to comprehend the situation it would 
create in America. As was expected, it passed in a full house, February 
27, without serious opposition, obtaining a majority of five to one. Among 
those who spoke and voted against it the names of Jackson, Beckford, 
Conway, and Barre deserve especial mention, as they afterward received 
the thanks of the Province for their services. 

Colonel Barrd ' will always be gratefully remembered by the American 
people in connection with this event. Townshend having said that the 
Colonies were planted by the care, nourished by the indulgence, and pro- 
tected by the arms of England, Barre rose and said : 

u They planted by your care ! No! your oppressions planted them in America. . . . 
They nourished up by your indulgence .' They grew by your neglect of them. . . . They 
pr tected by your arms ! They have nobly taken up arms in your defence. . . . And 
believe me, reinemlx.-r I this day told you so, the same spirit of freedom which 
actuated that people at first will accompany them still." a 

"The sun of liberty is set," wrote Dr. Franklin to Mr. Thompson 3 the 
very night that the act was passed ; " the Americans must light the lamps 
of industry and economy." 

The news of the passage of the Stamp Act reached Boston in April, and 
produced immediate alarm and indignation throughout the province. 4 
Massachusetts and Virginia " the head and the heart of the Revolution" 

were the first to denounce the act, and they were soon followed by New 
York and Pennsylvania and all the other colonies. The determination was 
everywhere expressed that the act should never be executed. Sober men 
resisted it, because they saw that it would block the wheels of trade, prevent 
exchanges of property, interfere with all industry, and undermine their lib- 
erties, which they were not prepared thus to surrender. The case would 
have been entirely different if the colonists had levied these stamp duties 

1 Isaac Harre was born, 1726, of a Huguenot Barr^ and his Times," in Afacmillan's Magazine, 
family living in Ireland; graduated at Trinity December, 1876. The town of Barre, in Massa- 
College, Dublin ; entered the army and served chusetts, which was first named for Hutchinson, 
in the French war ; was a warm friend of Wolfe, was afterward named for Barrel 

4 [It was in his speech of Feb. 6, 1765, 
that Karre had called the opposing party 
in the colonies the "Sons of Liberty," and 
the name brought over was soon adopted 
by them. El).] 

and was wounded at Quebec. Through the in- * Afterward secretary of the Continental 
fluence of Lord Shclburne he entered Parlia- Congi 

ment in 1761, after the fall of Pitt's ministry. * [The act was at once issued in a pamphlet 

His tpeechtt were spirited, and often aggrcs- bv Edes and Gill, then keeping their press on 
sive and harsh. He denounced tyranny and the site of the present Adams Express Corn- 
corruption, and usually appealed to the moral pany's office, in Court Street. See Snow's 
sympathies of men. He had something of the ffiuteu,p.2y^. For the feelings engendered, see 
vehement, fiery eloquence of I'itt, and was a Warren's letter, in Frothingham's Life t'f ll'ir- 
debater to Ix: feared See article on "Colonel ><, and John Adams's Wprks, 111.465. El>.] 




12 



THE MEMORIAL HISTORY OF BOSTON. 




A STAMP. 1 



upon themselves, through their own assemblies, as the American people 
have since freely done to meet the cost of war ; or if they had been allowed 

a voice in the government which exercised this 
authority. 

It was an important principle which they felt 
to be at stake, a principle which had hitherto 
been maintained in their relations with the mother 
country, and which they could not now see vio- 
lated without a distinct and determined resist- 
ance. 

At this juncture the Legislature of Massachu- 
setts, at the suggestion of Otis, proposed the 
calling of an American Congress, consisting of 
committees from each of the thirteen colonies, to 
meet at New York in October, "to consult to- 
gether," and consider the matter of a "united representation to implore 
relief." 

While the leaders of the people 
were thus taking counsel of one an- 
other in solemn deliberations as to 
the course to be pursued, the popu- 
lar feeling against the act, and the 
officers appointed to execute it, ran 
high in Boston. An occasion soon 
occurred to show how the people 
felt upon this subject. The birth- 
day of the Prince of Wales, in Au- 
gust, was kept as a holiday. Crowds 
assembled in the streets, shouting 
"Pitt 2 and liberty!" Andrew Oli- 



STAMP-O FFICE, 
Lincoln' i-Inn, 1765. 



TABLE 

Of the Prices of Parchment and Paper for the Service 
of America, 



Ixk b, , ,. , 



-t. '1 



< Tw^nf ) Horn Sttro-pnxt 

1 S-l-jKfiwI / FoofcCjp it N.e-j>eotr 

- j 0. M E-gh-ptner Wtl. D- ilb p, .ntfd Notoca 1 

- by 1 1 l Ttn pence I fo. Indolura J 
by jo. ji Ihjrcmvpcnct J Fo[ Port i< Ont Shilling l 

Dem, - II Two Sh.ll.np f 
. Tbm ShJtapj 
*,,,,,,. j 



Medium 



Paper for Printing 



ver, brother-in-law of Hutchinson, 
having been appointed stamp distrib- 
uter, it was proposed that he be i 
hung in effigy; and two days later, KSUS^i;;' 
August 14, the public saw suspended 
from the old elm known as Liberty Tree 3 a stuffed figure of the obnoxious 
official, together with a grotesque caricature of Bute. 4 This pageant had 



Bool Fool. Ci 

rocket Pol Pol 



o,.-6o.1 

ll 30*. Mch 

.J1. ) 



1 [There are a number of these stamps in the 
cabinet of the Massachusetts Historical Society; 
but our engraving is cut from one lent l>y l>r. 
Samuel A. Green. The impression is on a blue 
soft paper, secured by a transverse bit of soft 
metal, with another square piece of paper bearing 
the royal monogram covering the metal on the 
reverse. The accompanying reduced fac-simite 
of a schedule of prices for stamps is from a 
copy of the Broadside, kindly loaned by Dr. 
(in < n. ED.] 



2 A change had just taken place in the minis- 
try, and Pitt had returned to office. 

8 [See the engraving in chapter iv. of the 
present volume, with note. This fourteenth of 
August became a memorable anniversary for the 
Sons of Liberty, who eight years later, 1773, 
celebrated it by a "festivity " on Roxbury Com- 
mon. Drake, Town of Koxbury, p 266. ED.] 

4 A large boot, designed to represent Lord 
Bute, with a head and horns upon it. Bute had 
been frequently burned in effigy in England in 



HIE BEGINNING OF THE REVOLUTION. 13 

been prepared by a party of Boston mechanics, 1 called Sons of Liberty, 
who, prompted by the intense feeling of the hour, devised this method of 
expressing it. Great excitement followed, and thousands assembled to view 
the spectacle. When the news reached Hutchinson he ordered the sheriff 
to remove the effigies; but nothing was done until evening, when they were 
taken down by those with whom the proceedings originated, and carried in 
procession, escorted by a great concourse of people, through the street, 
into the Old State House, and under the council chamber where Bernard, 





Hutchinson, and their advisers were assembled. " Liberty, Property, and 
no Stamps ! " was the shout which greeted the ears of those dignitaries. 
After repeated huzzas, the populace moved on to Kilby Street, where they 
destroyed a frame which the stamp distributer was said to be building for an 
office. Taking a portion of it, they proceeded to Fort Hill where Oliver 
lived, and burned the effigies in a bonfire before his house. Boston had 



thf i;iii<e iif a j.ii k hoot, a pun upon his name 

as John, Earl ut IJiite. Honfires of the jack- 
boot were repeated dur- 
ing several years both in 
England and America. 
M.ilnw (Sianhopc). His- 
tory of Engliimi, v. 2^. 

[One of the most considerate of the English 

writers is Gr.ihanie, //;..AVT ,>/' : 

iv. iSj. See Winsor's IfanJhvt, p. 4, for other 

references. K I > | 

1 Benjamin Edes. printer; Thomas Crafts, 




painter; John Smith and Stephen Cleverly, braz- 
iers ; John Avery, Jr.. Thomas Chase, Henry 
l'..i->. and Henry Welles. 

- [Subscription to a paper sent by the Order 
in Boston to the Sons of Liberty in Ni-w Hamp- 
shire, preserved in the Betknaf Puprrs, iii., in the 
cabinet of the Ma-~.u hu-i tt> Historical So- 
rr punch-bowl, said to have been 
ilu' Suns of Liberty, ln>ni;ht by William 
iltcr the Revolution, and now owned by 
K. C. M.u-k.iv. \v.is lately exhibited in the Old 
South Loan Collection. En] 



14 THE MEMORIAL HISTORY OF BOSTON. 

rarely witnessed such a scene. No one knew what wouW come of it. 
Bernard and Hutchinson took refuge in the Castle. The next day a proc- 
lamation was issued by the Governor, offering one hundred pounds reward 
to be paid upon the conviction of any person concerned in this transac- 
tion ; l but no one cared to act as informant against such a strong current of 
popular feeling. A few days later, August 26, a mixed crowd collected 
near the Old State House, and proceeded to the house of the registrar of 
the admiralty, opposite the court house, and burned his public and private 
papers. They next plundered the house of the comptroller of customs, in 
Hanover Street, and then hurried to the mansion 2 of Lieut-Governor 
Hutchinson, who had incurred the increasing dislike of the people in con- 
sequence of his subserviency to the Government, his greed of office, 
and his supposed influence in favor of the Stamp Act. Hutchinson and 
his family escaped ; but the mob sacked his house and destroyed a large 
quantity of plate, pictures, clothing, books, and a valuable collection of 
manuscripts relating to the history of the colony. 3 This was a disgraceful 
proceeding, and would never have taken place but for the frenzy occasioned 
by the free use of liquor among the " roughs " who led on the mob. 4 A 
large public meeting was held the next morning in Faneuil Hall, and resolu- 
tions were passed strongly deprecating these lawless proceedings, and call- 
ing upon the selectmen to suppress such disorders in the future, and pledging 
the support of the inhabitants to preserve the peace. 5 That the leading 
Patriots had no sympathy whatever with this riotous outbreak is seen also in 
a letter written by Samuel Adams to Richard Jackson, the colonial agent in 
London, in which he denounced these proceedings as " high-handed out- 
rages," of which the inhabitants, " within a few hours after the perpetration 
of the act, publicly declared their detestation. All was done the day follow- 
ing that could be expected from an orderly town, by whose influence a spirit 

1 Drake, History of Boston, p. 696. 1766, relative to the riot of the year before. He 

2 In Garden-court Street ; taken down about says he came into Boston about eight o'clock in 
1830. See Introduction to Vol. II. p. xi. the evening and overtook a much greater num- 

8 [Hutchinson, Massachusetts Bay, iii. 124; ber of men than was usual, not in one large 

also see Introduction to Vol. I. of this History, body but in little companies of four or five per- 

p. xix. and Vol. II. p. 526; and Drake's Land- sons; and that the report of the disturbance 

murks, p. 167. El).] being actually begun had already, at that time, 

4 [See contemporary accounts in Josiah reached Roxbury. 

Quincy's Diary, .Mass. Hist. Soc. Prof., April, These papers also contain, as illustrating this 

1X58; and Joshua Ilenshaw's letter, in fi. E. period: a report on the condition of the North 

Hist and Cental. A',;:;., July, 1878, p 268. Battery in 1765, and estimates for rebuilding it 

Among the papers in the Charity Building is in 1768; a report to the Governor on the popu- 

a copy of a deposition tending to show that the lation of Boston in 1765; and depositions as to 

authorities had warning of the riot. Ebenezer trouble with British officers in 1768. These 

Simpson testified to the selectmen that, Aug. papers should be calendared. En.] 
26, 1765, being at Spectacle Island, he met a 6 (Drake's Boston, p. 701. There are on file in 

man-of-war's boat, and one of the men told him the city clerk's office various warning letters ad- 

that there was to be a mob in Boston that night, dressed to Benjamin Cudworth, deputy-sheriff, 

with intent to pull down the Lieut.-Governor's in a disguised hand ; and also others to Stephen 

house, and that their ship's crew was sent for. Greenleaf, sheriff, regarding Cudworth. They 

Among these papers is also a copy of a letter were read to the town, and pronounced " abu 

from Warren to the selectmen, dated July 3, sive." ED.] 



THE BEGINNING OF THE REVOLUTION. 15 

was raised to oppose and suppress it. It is possible these matters may be 
represented to our disadvantage, and therefore we desire you will take all 
possible opportunities to set them in a proper light." ' 

Throughout the colonies the same spirit of determined opposition to the 
Stamp Act was everywhere seen. Many of the officers appointed to dis- 
tribute the stamps were compelled by the " unconquerable rage of the 
people " to resign, Oliver among the rest. Towns and legislatures hastened 
to make their declaration 
of rights, following one 
another " like a chime of 
bells," and planting them- 
selves firmly upon the Brit- 
ish Constitution and their 
chartered liberties. In the 
Massachusetts Assembly a 
series of fourteen resolves, 
prepared by Samuel 
Adams, asserting the in- 
herent and inalienable 




rights of the people, were ^** 

particularly considered 
and passed in a full house. 2 

These resolves met w i t h **&?'.'% """'? 

great favor, and were ex- ^ 

tensively published and 
quoted throughout the 
country. On October j the first American Congress ever held, composed 
of delegates from the different colonies, met in New York to take into con- 
sideration their rights, privileges, and grievances. 4 After mature delibera- 
tion in which members from all parts of the country participated, resolutions 
were passed embodying the warmest sentiments of loyalty to the King and 
respect for " that august body, the Parliament," and setting forth, in plain 
but temperate language, the reasonable demands of America. such as the 
right to trial by jury, in opposition to the recent extension of the admiralty 
jurisdiction ; and the right to freedom from taxation except through the 
colonial assemblies. The Congress also sent an address to the King, a 
memorial to the House of Lords, and a petition to the House of Commons. 
Before adjourning, this Congress consummated a virtual union by which 
the colonies became, as the delegates prophetically expressed it, " a bundle 
of sticks which could neither be bent nor broken." 6 

1 \Vclls. Life of Samuel Adams, 1.63. * [James Otis here showed his power of 

- Ibid., i. 74-77. leadership. Soe Tudor's Otis ; Bancroft, v. ; 

3 [Mr. R. II. D.ui.i. |i.. liroii^ht this oath to Flamlcr-'-. Kutledgt ; Ramsey's South Carolina. 

tlu- attention of the Mas- ,;u IIUM tt- Historical El>.| 

Society, in June, iS;2, their /V,>, ,<,/;;'..- of that . r.ift, v. -,46. [Thi> congress was a re- 
date showing a f,i:-*imi!,- of it; the present is spon-c to the call of Mas>.u hn-rtt-. Its pro- 
mil uh.it irtliidil. Kn.| cecdin^v arc in Almfln'* i i>.] 



16 THE MEMORIAL HISTORY OF BOSTON. 

In the mean time there had been further changes in the ministry, result- 
ing in the elevation of the Rockingham Whigs to power. This announce- 
ment was received with great satisfaction, as it was understood that the 
new cabinet was more friendly to American claims. That this opinion 
had some foundation appears in the orders sent to the royal governors and 
to General Gage, commander of the forces at New York, only one week 
before the Stamp Act was to take effect, recommending " the utmost pru- 
dence and lenity," and advising a resort to " persuasive methods." l 

When the first of November came, the people were prepared to prevent 
the execution of the odious act by refusing as one man to buy or use the 
stamps. In Boston they tolled the bells of the churches and fired min- 
ute-guns. Vessels in the harbor hung their flags at half-mast. " Liberty, 
Property, and no Stamps ! " was the watchword passing everywhere from 
mouth to mouth. Effigies of Grenville and Huske 2 were suspended from 
Liberty Tree early in the morning, and in the afternoon were taken down 
and carried to the court house and to the North End, and then back to 
the gallows on' the Neck, where they were hung for a short time, and 
afterward were cut down and torn to pieces. The crowd then quietly dis- 
persed, and the night was entirely free from disturbance. 3 

As the Stamp Act had become a law, only stamped paper was legal ; 
and as the people were firm in their determination not to use it, they were 
obliged to suspend business. The provincial courts were closed ; mar- 
riages ceased ; vessels were unmoored ; and all commercial operations were 
paralyzed. Merchants in New York, Philadelphia, and Boston agreed not 
to import from England certain enumerated articles ; and in general the 
people ceased using foreign luxuries, and turned their attention to domestic 
products. Frugality was the self-imposed order of the day, and it was not 
without its results. 

In December a town-meeting was held in Boston, and a committee ap- 
pointed to request of the Governor and Council that the courts might be 
opened. 4 At the opening of the Legislature in January, the House, in re- 
plying to the message of the Governor, demanded relief from the existing 
grievances. " The custom-houses are now open," they said, " and the 
people are permitted to transact their usual business. The courts of justice 
also must be opened, opened immediately; and the law, the great rule of 
right, duly executed in every county in this province. .This stopping of the 
course of justice is a grievance which this Court must inquire into. Justice 
must be fully administered without delay." 5 The Council laid this address 
upon the table; but, in an informal way, gave assurances that the courts 



Gazette, Feb. 6, 1766; Debates Adams, Thomas Gushing, John Hancock, Ben- 

in l',,rli.,m<;it, iv. 302-306. jamin Kent, Samuel Sewall, John Rowe, Joshua 

1 John Huske, a native of Portsmouth, N. H., Henshaw, and Arnold Welles; and they were 

who had removed to England -and obtained a authorized to employ Gridley, Otis, and John 

seat in the 11, HIM/ of Commons, and taken a Adams as counsel. Diary of John Adams in 

prominent part in f.m>r of the Stamp Act. Works, ii. 157, et sef. ; Barry, p. 307. 

; Drake, Rostsn, pp. 707, 70^. 5 Massachusetts Gazette, Jan. 23, 1766; Hutch- 

1 I In- committee w.is composed of Samuel inson. iii. 145. 



THE BEGINNING OF THE REVOLUTION. 17 

would be opened at the next term, and business allowed to be transacted 
as usual. 

This bold attitude of the American people caused no little annoyance and 
anxiety to the Administration. The case was, moreover, complicated by the 
change of sentiment in England regarding the justice of the policy initiated 
by Grenville. The English people were not prepared to repudiate their 
own love of liberty, nor to force upon any of their fellow-subjects the meas- 
ures of absolutism against which their own glorious history had been a 
standing protest. Especially were the commercial and manufacturing 
towns in England dissatisfied with this policy; for it had reacted most un- 
favorably upon them, interrupting trade, injuring credit, and creating much 
suffering and discontent. We are not surprised, therefore, to find that 
both sympathy and interest prompted the nation to urge the repeal of an 
act which was as hostile to their own welfare as to that of America. 

Upon the reassembling of Parliament in January, 1766, the King, in his 
speech, stated that " matters of importance had happened in America, and 
orders had been issued for the support of lawful authority." ' The Lords 
responded, as usual, in terms of deference and co-operation ; but in the 
House of Commons, which was unusually full, a debate ensued such as 
perhaps had never been heard before within its walls. The venerable Pitt, 
after an absence of more than a year, had arrived in town that morning. 
Though in a very feeble condition, and suffering from the gout, he took his 
seat while the debate was in progress, and soon after rose and made his ever 
memorable speech, a masterpiece of fiery eloquence in which he de- 
nounced the Stamp Act, and demanded its immediate repeal. He said : 

" It is now an act that has passed. I would speak with decency of every act 
of this House, but I must beg indulgence to speak of it with freedom. The subject 
of this debate is of greater importance than any that has ever engaged the atten- 
tion of this House, that subject only excepted when, nearly a century ago, it was a 
question whether you yourselves were to be bond or free. . . . On a question that 
may mortally wound the freedom of three millions of virtuous and brave subjects 
beyond the Atlantic Ocean, I cannot be silent." 

He then proceeded to argue that as the colonies had never been really or 
virtually represented in Parliament, they could not be held " legally or con- 
stitutionally or reasonably subject to obedience to any money bill " of the 
kingdom. In replying to Grenville he said, a little later on : " The gentle- 
man tells us America is obstinate; America is almost in open rebellion! I 
rejoice that America has resisted." Upon this the whole House started as if 
touched by an electric shock. Near the conclusion of his speech he 
said : - 

" In a good cause, on a sound bottom, the force of this country can crush Amer- 
ica to atoms. . . . But in such a cause your success would be hazardous. America, 
if she fell, would fall like the strong man ; she would embrace the pillars of the State, 

1 Massachusetts Gauttt, March 27, 1766. 
VOL. III. 3. 



l8 THE MEMORIAL HISTORY OF BOSTON. 

and pull down the Constitution along with her. . . . Upon the whole I will beg leave 
to tell the House what is really my opinion. It is that the Stamp Act be repealed, 
absolutely, totally, and immediately ; that the reason for the repeal be assigned, be- 
cause it was founded on an erroneous principle. . . ." 

Thus spoke the Great Commoner; with what effect upon the minds of 
the House appeared in the current of sympathy which at once turned toward 
him, and which, a little later on, expressed itself in the famous repeal. 
Toward the last of the month the House resolved itself into a committee 
of the whole to consider petitions for the repeal, which had been presented 
by the merchants of London, Birmingham, Coventry, Bristol, Liverpool, 
Manchester, and other towns. The sittings of this committee were con- 
tinued more than two weeks. Among others, Benjamin Franklin, then a 
colonial agent in London, was summoned to the bar of the House; and his 
minute examination concerning the feelings and wishes of the Colonies con- 
tributed more to his personal fame than any previous occurrence in his life ; 
and it is doubtful whether he ever wrote or said anything abler than his ad- 
mirable replies on this occasion. In all that he said he was prompt and 
pertinent, accurate and concise, wise and true. The House of Commons 
listened to him for ten days, and must have been as much astonished at his 
answers as the whole American people were delighted with them. 2 

The committee who had listened to this remarkable examination soon 
" reported that it was their opinion that the House be moved that leave be 
given to bring in a bill to repeal the Stamp Act." 

The crisis came on the night of February 21, when every seat was occu- 
pied, and the galleries, lobbies, and stairs were crowded with eager specta- 
tors. The debate was opened by Conway, one of the ministry, and a warm 
friend of the Colonies. He was followed by Jenkinson, Burke, Grenville, 

1 Bancroft, v. 382-396; Debates in Parliament, " Q. And what is their temper now ? 
iv. 285-298. "A. Oh, very much altered. 

2 As a specimen of Franklin's shrewdness, " Q. Did you ever hear the authority of 
take a few of his answers : Parliament to make laws for America questioned 

" Question. Do you think it right that Amer- till lately ? 

ica should be protected by this country and pay "A. The authority of Parliament was al- 

no part of the expense ? lowed to be valid in all laws except such as 

"Answer. That is not the case. The Col- should lay internal taxes. It was never disputed 

onies raised, clothed, and paid during the last in laying duties to regulate commerce, 
war near twenty-five thousand men, and spent " Q. If the Stamp Act should be repealed, 

many millions. and the Crown should make a requisition to the 

" Q- Were you not reimbursed by Parlia- Colonies for a sum ot money, would they grant 

ment ? it ? 

"A. . . . Only a very small part of what "A, I believe they would, 
we spent. " Q. What used to be the pride of the 

" Q. Do you think the people of America Americans ? 

would submit to pay the stamp duty if it was "A. To indulge in the fashions and manu- 

moderated ? factures of Great Britain. 

" A. No, never, unless compelled by force " Q. What is now their pride ? 

of arms. " A. To wear their old clothes over again 

" Q. What was the temper of America to- till they can make new ones." Bigelow, Life of 

ward Great Britain before the year 1763? Franklin, 1.467-510; Sparks, Franklin, pp. 298- 

" A. The best in the world. . . . 300. 



THE BEGINNING OF THE REVOLUTION. 19 

and Pitt. About half-past one in the morning the division took place, and 
Conway's bill of repeal was carried triumphantly by a vote of two hundred 
and seventy-five against one hundred and sixty-seven. Pitt and Conway 
were tumultuously applauded as they left the House, while Grenvillc ' was 
i;iveted with hisses. The final debate on the repeal was still more decisive. 
In the Lords the bill was carried by a majority of thirty-four; and on the 
day following, March 17, it received the reluctant sanction of the King, who 
spoke of it as " a fatal compliance." London was delighted with the result; 
the church bells were rung merrily; ships displayed their colors; the 
streets were illuminated ; and a public dinner was given by the friends of 
America. In Boston the news was received with every conceivable demon- 
stration of joy. 2 Liberty Tree was decked with lanterns ; bells and guns, 
flags and music, illuminations and fireworks, proclaimed in unmistakable 
language the gratitude and loyalty of the people. 8 New York voted statues 
to the King and to Pitt. Virginia voted a statue to the King, and South 
Carolina one to Pitt. Maryland passed a similar vote, and ordered a por- 
trait of Lord Camden. Boston had previously voted letters of thanks to 
Barre and Conway, and requested their portraits for Faneuil Hall. 4 

In the outburst of joy at the repeal, the public mind had not considered the 
full meaning of the accompanying declaratory act 6 claiming for Parliament 
absolute power to bind America " in all cases whatsoever." This act was a 
fatal mistake, and a wanton blow at the well known American principle of 
local self-government ; for it soon became evident that the object of Parlia- 
tiK-nt was, after all, political subjugation. This was precisely the point upon 
which the colonists had taken their stand. It was not the mere pecuniary 
loss involved in the enforcement of the stamp tax that they were consider- 
ing, they were abundantly able to pay that, but it was the underlying 
question of right; and if that were not conceded, it would soon be found 

1 Walpole, ii. 299, 300. Stamp Act and the revolutionary proceedings in 

3 (Speaker Gushing had enclosed, June Boston, is printed in Afass. Hist. Coll. iv. 367. 

22, 1766, a letter of thanks to the king, and the There is in the collection of Charles P. Green- 

fac-simile on the next page is from Otis's letter ough, Esq., of Boston (whose treasures have 

to Gushing on this vote of thanks. The original been very generously put at my disposal, and 

is in the Lee papers in the University of Vir- from which I have often drawn in this and the 

ginia Library. The principal demonstrations final volume), a letter from London merchants to 

took place May 19, 1766. An obelisk was erect- those of Boston, offering congratulations and 

ed on the Common and decked with lanterns : encouragement on account of the repeal of the 

ll.mcock illuminated his house and discharged Stamp Act. A similar letter from business cor- 

fireworks in front of it from a stage; and these respondents was conlributed to the Mass. Hist. 

were responded to by similar demuustr.it ions by Sot. Prix., March, 1876, p. 260, by Mr. T. i . 

the Sons of Liberty at the workhouse. Views Amory. !'.!>.] 

of the obelisk were engraved by Reveie. and 4 This was done at a town-meeting held Sept. 

one of them is given much reduced in Drake's 18, 1765. The poitr.iits arrived in due time, and 

I.amlmttrks, p. 359. The earliest rumor of a re- were him;; in K.iueuil Hall ; but what l>ccamc of 

peal had appeared in the .Massachusetts Gazdte, them afterward is not known. They are su|v 

April 3, 1766, having come from Philadelphia posed to have been removed when the British 

two days before. See Thornton's Fulfil of the army had control of the town. Drake, pp. 703, 

Kfri'liitii'ti, p. 120, where is also Cliauni.y's dis- 704. [See supplements notes to the next 

course on the repeal. ED.] chapter in this volume. ED.] 
3 [A paper by General Gage concerning the 6 6 George III. e xii. 



2O 



THE MEMORIAL HISTORY OF BOSTON. 



that the repeal was only a nominal and 
triots saw in this much to excite alarm ; 




a temporary relief. Leading Pa- 
but for the time being, and for the 
sake of harmony, 
they were willing to 
remain silent. 1 

No well defined 
sentiment of union 
had as yet taken 
possession of the 
public mind. Not 
until it became evi- 
dent that there was 
no other way of 
maintaining their 
freedom, did any of 
the Colonies think 
of measures tend- 
ing to united action. 
One of the first to 
anticipate this ne- 
cessity was Jona- 
^r \ than Mayhew, the 

jX ^^v^ P atl "iti c pastor of 
^ > ^\ the West Church in 
ir\ \ Boston, who, writ- 

* ing to his friend Otis 

one Lord's Day 
morning in June, 
1 766, said : 

" You have heard 
of the communion of 
churches ; while I was 
thinking of this in my 
bed, the great use and 
importance of a com- 
munion of colonies 
appeared to me in a 
strong light. Would 
it not be decorous for 
our Assembly to send 
circulars to all the rest, 
expressing a desire to 
cement union among 
ourselves? A good 



1 Wells, Life of Samuel Adams, \. u6-n8. 



THE BEGINNING OF THE REVOLUTION. 21 

foundation for this has been laid by the Congress at New York ; never losing sight of 
it may be the means of perpetuating our liberties." ' 

The possibility of such a union seems to have occurred to at least one 
English statesman at this time ; for in the same month in which the above 
words were penned we find Charles Townshend boldly advocating in the 
House of Commons a radical measure aimed not only to secure a revenue, 
but also to prevent any such accessions of strength as the Colonies might 
gain by combined action. No man in the ministry was better informed 
than Townshend upon American affairs. He knew the resources of the 
people ; he anticipated their rapid development ; and the scheme which he 
now promulgated was expressly devised to make the whole colonial power 
tributary to the Crown. Therefore he favored the abolition of all their 
charters ; and the substitution of a government in which the local assem- 
blies should be restrained, a general congress forbidden, and the royal gov- 
ernors, judges, and attorneys become independent of the people. 2 

Townshend soon had further opportunities for prosecuting his scheme ; 
for in the reconstruction of the ministry, which took place in the month of 
July, he was selected as chancellor of the exchequer by the Duke of 
Grafton, in the strangely incongruous ad- 
ministration of Pitt, now created Earl of 
Chatham. Townshend was the leading spirit 
in the new government, and availed him- 
self of every opportunity to urge the ad- 
, vantages of an American civil list. He 
had been, with Grenvillc, a firm advocate of the Stamp Act. He ridiculed 
the distinction between internal and external taxes. He insisted that 
America should share the heavy financial burden of England. 3 In the ab- 
sence of Chatham, who was most of the time suffering from feeble health, 
he dictated to the ministry its colonial policy. " I .would govern the 
Americans," said he, " as subjects of Great Britain ; I would restrain their 
trade and their manufactures as subordinate to the mother country. 
These, our children, must not make themselves our allies in time of war 
and our rivals in peace." With such purposes the resolute and reckless 
chancellor pushed his way into favor with Parliament, ignoring the scruples 
of his associates and defying the opposition of his enemies, until he suc- 
ceeded in carrying the famous Townshend revenue bill through both 
Houses, and obtained the royal assent. These acts levied a duty on gla-s, 
paper, painters' colors, and tea; established a board of customs at Boston 
for collecting the whole American revenue ; and legalized writs of assistance. 
The revenue was to be at the disposition of the Kin^, and was to be chiefly 
employed in the support of officers of the Crown, to secure their indepen- 
dence of the local legislatures. " The die is thrown ! " cried the Patriots of 

1 Bradford, Life of Mayhao, 428, 429. [See rroft, vi. 9, 10. 

also Mr. Goddarcl's chapter in the present vol- ' Fitzmaurice, Life of William, Earl of Sket 

iimr Kn.] burnt, iii. y et seq. 




22 THE MEMORIAL HISTORY OF BOSTON. 

Boston when they received the news of the passage of Townshend's bill ; 
"the Rubicon is passed. . . . We will form an immediate and universal 
combination to eat nothing, drink nothing, wear nothing, imported from 
Great Britain. . . . Our strength consists in union ; let us above all be of 
one heart and one mind ; let us call on our sister Colonies to join with us 
in asserting our rights." l Governor Bernard having refused a petition to 
summon the Legislature, a town-meeting was called Oct. 28, 1767; and the 
inhabitants voted neither to import nor to use certain articles of British 
production. A committee was appointed to obtain subscribers to such an 
agreement, and the resolutions were extensively circulated throughout the 
country. The newspapers took up the subject with great warmth, and 
aided in a very important degree the formation of public opinion at this 
critical period. Able writers contributed timely letters, among which those 
written by a " Farmer of Pennsylvania " 2 attained a very wide celebrity for 
their calm and vigorous treatment of the great constitutional questions of 
the day. The communications sent by the Massachusetts Legislature in 
January, 1768, to members of the Cabinet and to the provincial agent in 
London, contain the full argument respecting the claims of the colonies. 
These papers, as well as the petition to the king which accompanied them, 
and the circular-letter to the sister colonies which was issued shortly after, 
were all drafted by Samuel Adams, whose masterly grasp of the great 
political issues of the time attracted universal attention and gained a host 
of friends to the cause of liberty. The circular-letter just alluded to met 
with a very gratifying response from the other assemblies, and was a most 
efficient instrument in securing unity of purpose among the leaders of the 
people in all parts of the country. The publication of these important 
documents produced such an effect that the board of commissioners of the 
revenue immediately prepared a memorial to be sent to England, express- 
ing apprehensions for their personal safety; complaining of the unwarrant- 
able license of the American press, 3 of the non-importation league, and of 
New England town-meetings ; and asking for assistance in the execution of 
the revenue laws; adding, that there was not a ship of war in the province, 
nor a company of soldiers nearer than New York. 

This memorial, together with the reports of Bernard and Hutchinson, 
soon drew from Hillsborough, secretary for the colonies, an order sent to 
all the governors, bidding them use their influence with the assemblies to 

1 Barry, ii. 339. i n ' tne approbation uf her inhabitants inestimable. . . . 

- John" Dickinson, afterward a member of the I ' ove {m ? coaMr * en saged me in that attempt to vindi- 

. r< , . i /- rt* e cate ' ler "slits and assert her interests, which vour eener- 

first Continental Congress. [To a letter of grati- osity has thol , ght proper so hWllv , appiaud * 

tudc from lioston Dickinson returned a reply, until my heart becomes insensible of all worldly things will 

which is preserved among the Charity Building it become insensible of the unspeakable obligations which, 

papers, and is addressed " To the very respect- as an African, I owe to the inhabitants of the Province of 
able inhabitants of the town of Boston ; " and "^"uset.s Hay. for the vigilance with which they have 

watched over, and the magnanimity with which they have 

expresses the "reverential gratitude" for the maintained, the liberties of the British colonies on this 

late letter received by him: continent. A FARMER. 

PENNSYLVANIA, April n, 1768. 

The rank of the Town of Boston, the wisdom of her 8 t See Mr - Goddard's chapter in this vol- 

counscts, and the spirit of her conduct render, in my opin- lime. En. | 



THE BEGINNING OF THE REVOLUTION. 23 

take no notice of the "seditious" circular-letter, which was described as 
" of a most dangerous and factious tendency," calculated to inflame the 
minds of the people, to promote an illegal combination, and to excite 
open opposition to the authority of Parliament. The House of Represen- 
tatives of Massachusetts was required, in His Majesty's name, to rescind 
their resolutions, and to " declare their disapprobation of the rash and 
hasty proceeding." In case of their refusal to comply, it was the King's 
pleasure that the Governor should immediately dissolve them. 1 At the 
same time General Gage, Commander-in-chief of the royal forces in Amer- 
ica, was ordered to " strengthen the hands of the Government in the 
Province of the Massachusetts Hay, enforce a due obedience of the laws, 
and protect and support the civil magistrates and the officers of the Crown 
in the execution of their duty." 2 Further peremptory orders were sent to 
Gage, in June, to station a regiment permanently in Boston ; and the ad- 
miralty was directed to send one frigate, two sloops, and two cutters to 
remain in Boston harbor ; and Castle William was to be put in readiness 
for immediate use. 8 

For about a month previous to this the ship of war " Romney " had 
lain at anchor in the harbor, and her commander had occasioned much 
trouble by violently impressing New England seamen, and refusing to give 
them up, even when substitutes were offered. The excitement arising from 
this was increased by the seizure of the sloop " Liberty" (June 10, 1768), 
belonging to John Hancock, for an alleged false entry. The popular out- 
break in consequence of these proceedings, though resulting in no serious 
injury, was magnified by the commissioners into an insurrection, and made 
the occasion of still further appeals for personal protection, by force of 
arms, in the discharge of their duties. 4 The citizens, in response to a call 
for a legal town-meeting to consider the matter, gathered in such numbers 
at Faneuil Hall that they were obliged to adjourn to the Old South Meet- 
ing-house, where, with Otis as moderator, an address to the Governor was 
unanimously voted, and a committee of twenty-one appointed to present it. 6 
At an adjourned meeting the next day (June 15), Otis strongly recom- 

1 Hillsborough to Bernard, April 22, 1768. found out to be not an easy person to deal with. 

2 Hillsborough to Gage, April 23, 1768. The papers relating to these affairs of his are 
8 [The annexed heliotypes follow originals preserved among the Lee papers, in the libraries 

made by the British engineers not far from this of Harvard College and the University of Vir- 

time, and issued with I >esl!arres's series of coast ginia. Malcolm died shortly after, and they 

charts. One represents the harbor from Fort show his gravestone to-day in the Copp's Hill 

Hill; the other is a view of the town from burying-ground, with its praises of him as "an 

Willis's Creek, in East Cambridge. ED.] enemy of oppression and one of the foremost in 

4 [There is .in account of this seizure in opposing the revenue acts on America ; " and 

Drake's Boston, \i. 736. See John Adams's upon it are seen the bullet marks of the Briiish 

\\'orks, ii. 215. A prominent leader in the mob soldiers, who used it as a target during the siege. 

which endeavored to prevent the sloop from ShurtlefT's Description of Boston, p. 209. ED.] 

being towed under the guns of the " Rom- " [This presentation took place at the Gov- 

ney" was a Boston tradesman, Daniel Malcolm, ernor's house, on Jamaica Pond, where they were 

who had a year or two before some pretty sharp treated with wine, "which highly pleased [Ber- 

altercations with th revenue officers, accom- nard says] that part of them which had not been 

panied with vigorous action, so that he was used to an interview with me." Eu.] 



24 THE MEMORIAL HISTORY OF BOSTON. 

mended peaceable and orderly methods of obtaining redress, and depre- 
cated in the strongest terms all acts of mob violence, hoping that the 
cause of their grievances would yet be removed ; and added : " If not, and 
we are called on to defend our liberties and privileges, I hope and believe 
we shall, one and all, resist even unto blood ; but I pray God Almighty 
that this may never so happen." l 

The Governor disclaimed having any responsibility for the occurrences 
complained of, but promised to stop impressments. Meanwhile, Hills- 
borough's instructions to Massachusetts to rescind her non-importation res- 
olutions arrived, and were communicated in a message from Bernard to the 
General Court. Otis took the floor in reply, and spoke for two hours with 
even more than his accustomed vehemence, showing that it would be im- 
possible for this House to rescind a measure of the previous House which 
had been already executed. He spoke respectfully of the King, but ar- 
raigned the course of the ministry and the legislation of Parliament with 
great severity. The subject occupied the attention of the House for nine 
days, under the guidance of a special committee. 2 The Governor com- 
municated the threat to dissolve the Assembly in case they refused to 
comply, and pressed them for a decision. A recess was requested for 
consultation, but it was refused. The question was then put, in secret 
session, whether the House would rescind the resolution "which gave birth 
to their circular-letter to the several houses of representatives and burgesses 
of the other colonies." The vote was taken viva voce, and stood ninety- 
two nays against seventeen yeas. The answer to the Governor, informing 
him of their decision, stated that they regarded the circular-letter mod- 
erate and innocent, respectful to Parliament, and dutiful to the King ; that 
they entertained sentiments of reverence and affection for both ; that 
they, as subjects, claimed the right of petition jointly and severally, of 
correspondence, and of a free assembly; and that the charge of treason 
was unjustly brought against them. The Governor, following his instruc- 
tions, thereupon closed the session, and the next day dissolved the General 
Court by proclamation. Thus was taken away the right of free discussion 
vested in the time-honored representative Assembly of Massachusetts. It 
was an act of arbitrary power, destined to recoil heavily upon those who 
enforced it. The other Colonies felt that their liberties were invaded as 
well, and sent the most cordial assurances of their sympathy and support. 
In this we can clearly see a new impulse given to the sentiment of union as 
a necessary means of mutual security. As dangers thickened, the people 
stood more and more together, determined to assert and defend their con- 
stitutional rights against the unlawful aggressions of imperial power. It 
soon became evident that the Administration had resolved upon employ- 
ing the strong arm of military power to sustain its authority in the " re- 

1 Boston News-Letter, June id and 23, 1768. John Hancock, Colonel Otis, Colonel Bowers, 
' 2 This committee consisted of Thom;is dish- Mr. Spooner, Colonel Warren, and Mr. Saun- 
ing (speaker), Mr. Otis, Samuel Adams (clerk), ders. 



SlEOK 01 Bn^TON. 17/5-76. 










( ^ 



THE BEGINNING OF THE REVOLUTION. 25 

fractory" Province. Preparations were making to transfer two regi- 
ments from Halifax to Boston, and it was soon after announced that two 
others were expected from Ireland. This naturally led to a great excite- 
ment, and a town-meeting was called to consider what " wise, constitutional, 
loyal, and salutary measures " could be taken in the emergency. The 
Governor was requested to give information in regard to the troops, and 
to convene the Legislature. Upon his refusal, a convention of all the 
towns was proposed, to be held in Faneuil Hall within two weeks; and it 
was recommended that all the inhabitants should be provided with fire- 
arms and suitable ammunition; ' and a day of fasting and prayer was ap- 
pointed and observed in accordance with the New England custom. 

The convention met on September 22, and was composed of representa- 
tives of nearly every settlement in the province. The same officers were 
chosen for chairman and clerk that filled those positions in the late Assembly, 
and the Governor was petitioned to " cause an assembly to be immediately 
convened." He refused to receive the petition, and denounced the con- 
vention as illegal, advising the members to separate at once, or they would 
" repent their rashness." The convention did not follow his advice, but 
continued in session six days, and reaffirmed the former declarations made 
by the General Court concerning their charter rights. The proceedings 
throughout were calm and moderate. A respectful petition to the king 
was prepared, in which they wholly disclaimed the charge of a rebellious 
spirit. An address to the people was also adopted, recommending sub- 
mission to legal authority and abstinence from all participation in acts of 
violence. This was the first of those independent popular assemblies which 
soon began to exercise political power in the colonies. The Patriot lead- 
ers were wise and sagacious men, who, in asserting their rights, knew well 
how to keep the law on their side. When the proceedings of this conven- 
tion were submitted to the attorney-general, and to the solicitor-general of 
England, to ascertain if they were treasonable, both declared that they 
were not. " Look into the papers," said De Grey, " and see how well 
these Americans are versed in the crown law. I doubt whether they have 
been guilty of an overt act of treason, but I am sure they have come within 
a hair's breadth of it." 2 

No sooner had the convention adjourned than the fleet arrived in the 
harbor, bringing two regiments, with artillery, under command of Colonel 
Dalrymple. 3 In response to a requisition for quarters in the town the 
council, and afterwards the selectmen, adhering to the law, declined to act, 
stating that the barracks at Castle Island were provided for that purpose. 

1 Hutchinson, iii. app. L. ; Boston News-Letter, came near being roused in this way. Governor 

cript, s ' ]'i 22, 1768. Hernard was informed of the movement, and 

a Bancroft, vi. 206. sent Sheriff Greenleaf to remove the combus- 

8 [The Patriots had prepared to fire the hea- tilik-s. Kmthingham. /.;/v,V If'rrrcw, p. 80. An 

con above the town, and had placed a broken excellent likeness of Greenleaf, by Smibert, is 

tar-barrel in the skillet. This was perhaps the owned by Mrs. S. G. Bulfinch, of Cambridge. 

only time in which the surrounding country En.| 
VOL, III. 4. 



26 THE MEMORIAL HISTORY OF BOSTON. 

On the first of October eight armed ships, with their tenders, approached 
the wharves, with cannon loaded and springs on the cables. The Four- 
teenth and Twenty-ninth regiments, and a part of the fifty-ninth, with two 
field-pieces, landed at Long Wharf and marched with fixed bayonets, drums 
beating and colors flying, through the streets as far as the Common, where 
a portion of the troops encamped, the remainder being allowed by the 
Sons of Liberty, later in the day, to occupy Faneuil Hall. 1 We can easily 
imagine the surprise and indignation with which the people of Boston be- 
held this demonstration of authority. They keenly felt the insult offered 
to their loyalty, and though no open resistance was made it was soon appa- 
rent that such a state of things could only engender mutual hostility which 
might at any time break out in a disturbance of the peace. The odious terms 
" rebel " and " tyrant" were now spoken with increasing bitterness, and the 
lines were drawn more sharply than ever between Tory and Patriot. While 
Boston was thus in the hands of a hireling soldiery, her people waited 
anxiously for intelligence from abroad, hoping that their communications 
to the King and Parliament would meet with a favorable consideration ; 2 
but again they were doomed to disappointment. Changes had taken place 
in the cabinet, but there was no change in the purpose of the Government. 
Chatham had resigned ; Shelburne was removed ; and Lord North 3 had 
taken the place left vacant by the death of Townshend. 4 At the opening 
of Parliament, the King referred to Boston as being " in a state of diso- 
bedience to all law and government," and declared it to be his purpose 
" to defeat the mischievous designs of those turbulent and seditious per- 
sons " who had " but too successfully deluded numbers " of his subjects in 
America. An animated debate followed, in which it was said that the 
difficulties in governing Massachusetts were " insurmountable, unless its 
charter and laws should be so changed as to give the King the appoint- 
ment of the council, and to the sheriffs the sole power of returning juries." 

1 [Paul Revere's plate, showing this landing, ical period in English history. He was always a 
is given in Vol. II. p. 532. Mrs. Turrell says in favorite of the king, and a recognized leader in 
her recollections, in N. E. Hist, and Gcncal. the ministry. He never understood the charac- 
Keg., April, 1860, p. 150: "When the British 

troops came here they were lodged in a sugar- 
house in Brattle Square, which belonged to Mrs. 
Inman. I think there were three thousand of 
them. The officers lodged in the house of 
Madam Apthorp, in which I now live." But 
this paper is somewhat confused in other res- 
pects, if not in this. See John Adams's Works, 
ii- 2i 3 .-ED.] 

2 (There is in the Charity Building collection 

a draft of a letter from the selectmen, Nov. 12, ter or claims of the American people, and coi.sc- 

1768, to Pownall and De Berclt, as endorsed by quently favored a mistaken policy towards them, 

William Cooper, "on the present deplorable to which he adhered throughout the war. 

condition of this town, . . . changed from a free 4 At the early age of forty-one. Bancroft, in 

city to an almost garrison state." Kn.| summing up Ihe character of Townshend, aptly 

: I. "id \<irth, eldest son of the Earl of Guil- calls him "the most celebrated statesman who 

ford, entered the cabinet at Ihe age of thirty-five, has left nothing but errors to account for his 

and remained fifteen years, during the most crit- fame," vi. 99. 




THE BEGINNING OF THE REVOLUTION. 2J 

Burke defended the Colonies, and denounced as illegal and unconstitutional 
the order requiring the General Court to rescind their resolutions. Har- 
rington accused the Americans as traitors, adding, " The troops have been 
sent thither to bring rioters to justice." Lord North defended the recent 
act of Parliament, and said that he would never think of repealing it until 
he should see America " prostrate at his feet." 

" Depend upon it," said Hillsborough to one of the colonial agents, 
" Parliament will not suffer their authority to be trampled upon. We wish 
to avoid severities towards you ; but if you refuse obedience to our laws 
the whole fleet and army of England shall enforce it" 

The indictment against the Colonies was presented in sixty papers laid 
before Parliament. Both Houses declared that the proceedings of the Mas- 
sachusetts Assembly, in opposing the revenue acts, were unconstitutional ; 
that the circular-letter tended to create unlawful combinations ; and that the 
Boston convention was proof of a design of setting up an independent au- 
thority ; and both Houses proposed, under the provisions of an obsolete act 
of Henry VIII., to transport to England " for trial and condign punishment," 
in direct violation of trial by jury, the chief authors and instigators of the 
late disorders. In the famous debate of this session, Burke, Barre, Pow- 
nall, and Dowdeswell spoke eloquently Rn behalf of the Colonies; but the 
address and resolutions were carried by a large majority. 

After being nearly a year without a Legislature, Massachusetts was again 
permitted by the Governor, in the name of the King, to send its representa- 
tives to a General Court convened, according to the charter, on the last Wed- 
nesday in May, 1769. The first business was a protest against the breach 
of their privileges, and a petition to the Governor to have the troops re- 
moved from Boston, as it was inconsistent with the Assembly's dignity and 
freedom to deliberate in the presence of an armed force. They declined to 
enter upon the business of supplies, or anything else except the considera- 
tion of their grievances. The Governor refused to grant their petition, alleg- 
ing want of authority over His Majesty's forces; and after vainly waiting 
a fortnight for them to vote him his year's salary, he adjourned the Assem- 
bly to Cambridge, and informed them that he was about to repair to Eng- 
land to lay the state of the province before His Majesty. The Assembly 
thereupon passed a unanimous vote, one hundred and nine members being 
present, to petition the king " to remove Sir Francis Bernard ' forever from 
this government." 2 It has always been believed that much of the difficulty 
between Massachusetts and Great Britain was owing to the total unfitness 
of Bernard for the important position which he held during nine eventful 
years. His frequent misrepresentations of the spirit and conduct of the 
colonists are a matter of record. He left no friends behind him. Indeed his 
departure was an occasion of public rejoicing. "The bells were rung, guns 

1 Bernard had recently received a baronetcy, fidence of any order or rank of men within his 
"a most ill-timed favor, when he had so griev- province." Mahon, History <<f England, v. 241. 
ously failed in gaining the affections or the con- J Journal, House of Representatives, 1769,36. 



28 THE MEMORIAL HISTORY OF BOSTON. 

were fired from Mr. Hancock's wharf, Liberty Tree was covered with flags, 
and in the evening a great bonfire was made upon Fort Hill." l 

Lieut. -Governor Hutchinson succeeded to the chair as chief magistrate. 
He was a native of Boston, was acquainted with public affairs, and for many 
years had held more important offices than any other man in the province ; 
but his career had been so often marred by duplicity and avarice that very 
little hope was cherished of any improvement in the administration. His 
failure was in part owing to the difficulty he found in trying to serve both 
England and America, with a decided preference in favor of the former, at 
a time when the opinions and interests of the two countries were rapidly be- 
coming distinct. He was not the man for the times. 2 When the Massachu- 
setts Assembly, sitting at Cambridge, had refused to grant the supplies de- 
manded by Bernard, that functionary prorogued it to the tenth of January. 
When that date arrived, Hutchinson, under arbitrary instructions from Hills- 
borough, prorogued it still further to the middle of March. 

Meanwhile the non-importation agreements had become so general as to 
produce a visible effect upon British commerce. Exports from England to 
America had fallen off seriously, and English merchants were really injured 
more than the Americans by the narrow revenue policy of the Government. 
Lord North, perceiving this, caused a circular-letter to be sent to the Colonies, 
proposing to favor the removal of duties from all articles, except tea, enumer- 
ated in the late act. This was evidently a measure of expediency, dictated 
wholly by self-interest ; and as by retaining the duty on tea there was no 
surrender of the obnoxious claim contained in the declaratory act, it did not 
materially affect the situation in America. 

Boston at this time, in a legal town-meeting, 8 issued an Appeal to the 
World, prepared by Samuel Adams, vindicating itself from the aspersions 
of Bernard, Gage, Hood, and the revenue officers. The Appeal says : 

" We should yet be glad that the ancient and happy union between Great Britain 
and this country might be restored. The taking off the duties on paper, glass, and 

1 Hutchinson, iii. 254. [See Dr. Ellis's esti- appear as ridiculous as possible, which generally 

mate of Bernard in Vol. II. of this History, p. 65. occasioned a grin of applause." Not long before 

The Governor left his estate on Jamaica Pond, this, the Sons of Liberty had dined together, Aug. 

July 31, 1769, and embarked the next day from 14, 1769, at Dorchester, and there is a list of their 

the Castle. Lady Bernard did not leave the es- names in Mass. Hist. Soc. J'roc., August, 1869. 

tate till December, 1770. En.] John Adams's Works, ii. 218. 

- Hutchinson's History of Massachusetts Bay William Cooper, who figures largely in the 

deserves honorable mention as a work of rare town's transactions at this time, was a son of the 

ability and candor, for which students of our Rev. William Cooper, D.D., of the Brattle Street 

history will always be grateful. [See Dr. Ellis's Church; was born Oct. I, 1721, and died Nov. 

estimate of Hutchinson's administration in Vol. 28,1809. He was first chosen town clerk in 1761, 

II. p. 69; andthat by Frothingham in his War>v, and held the office till his death. In 1755-56 he 

p. 107. ED.] was a representative to the General Court. From 

8 [Cooper, the town clerk, issued the warrant 1759 to 1800 he was Register of Probate. He is 

for this meeting, Sept. 28, 1769, and the meeting buried in the Granary Burial-ground. He lived 

was held, October 4. A contemporary account on Hanover Street. He married, April 26, 1745, 

(in the Chalmers papers, ii. 37, in the Sparks Katharine, daughter of Jacob Wendell, and had 

.I/.S'.S'. in Harvard College Library) says that sixteen children. See notices in Boston Patriot, 

Cooper read the letters to the meeting, "and Dec. 6, 1809, And. Evening Transcript, July 7, 

took a good deal of pains to make the Governor 1881. ED.] 



THE BEGINNING OF THE REVOLUTION. 



2 9 



painters' colors, upon commercial principles only, will not give satisfaction. Discon- 
tent runs through the continent upon much higher principles. Our rights are invaded 
by the revenue acts ; therefore, until they are ALL repealed, . . . and the troops recalled, 
. . . the cause of our just complaints cannot be removed." 




SIGNATURES OF THE TOWN'S COMMITTEE. 1 



Society in Boston was thoroughly moved by the prevailing sentiment* 
Three hundred wives subscribed to a league agreeing not to drink any tea 



' [These autographs are from a letter sent by 
the town to Dennis De Berdt, the colony's agent 
in England, in order that through him "our 
friends in Parliament may be acquainted with the 
difficulties the trade labors by means of those 
acts." It recapitulates how the merchants and 
traders of Boston had entered into an agreement, 
August, 1768, not to import goods from Great 
Britain after Jan. I, 1770, and had made a further 
agreement, Oct. 17, 1769, that no goods should 
be sent from here till the revenue acts be re- 
pealed; and how the other colonies had not 
gone to the same extent ; and so they informed 
He Hcrdt that they had notified their corrcspon- 
dents to ship goods with the express condition 
that the act imposing duties on tra. gl 
and colors be totally repealed, and li.id forwarded 
to him papers with their views on the matter. 
The original is in a collection of a part of the 
papers of Arthur Lee. who succeeded De Berdt 
as the agent of Massachusetts, and thus retained 
many of the documents emanating from the piov- 



ince and from Boston during the early days of 
the controversy. The younger Richard Henry 
Lee, after writing the Lives of the elder of his 
name and of Arthur Lee, divided the manuscripts 
which had come to him among three institu- 
tions, the Libraries of Harvard College, of the 
University of Virginia, and of the American 
Philosophical Society in Philadelphia. No rec- 
ognizable principle of adaptation was followed 
in the division, sets being broken, those now in 
Virginia containing many papers of the utmost 
interest for Boston history, and in some cases 
when others closely allied with them are in the 
Harvard College collection. The Editor has been 
kindly entrusted with these other collections by 
their respective guardians. Those in the College 
I.iliraiv have been calendared in print under his 
direction. ED.| 

- [ Richard Frothingham has minutelv traced 

the progress of events and feelings of the people 

during this period. from October. 1768, to the 

;e, in his p.i]iers, "The Sam Adams 



jo THE MEMORIAL HISTORY OF BOSTON. 

until the revenue act should be repealed. The young, unmarried women 
followed their example, and signed a document beginning as follows : " We, 
the daughters of those Patriots who have appeared ... for the public 
interest, ... do now with pleasure engage with them in denying ourselves 
the drinking of foreign tea." ' . . . liven the children caught the spirit of 
patriotism, and imitated their elders in maintaining what they considered to 
be their " constitutional " rights. 2 

It was now nearly a year and a half since the troops had come to Boston, 
and their presence was a continual source of irritation to the inhabitants. 
Their services were not wanted ; -their parades were offensive ; their bearing 
often insulting. Quarrels would occasionally arise between individual sol- 
diers and citizens. " The troops greatly corrupt our morals," said Dr. 
Cooper, " and are in every sense an oppression. May Heaven soon deliver 
us from this great evil ! " 3 

In this state of things, any unusual excitement might at any time occasion 
disastrous results. Towards the end of February an event occurred which 
threw the public mind into a ferment, and prepared the way for the tragic 
scenes of the fifth of March. A few of the merchants had rendered them- 
selves unpopular by continuing to sell articles which had been proscribed. 
One of them in particular 4 had incurred such displeasure that his store was 
marked by the crowd with a wooden image as one to be shunned. One of 
his friends, a well known informer, 5 attempted to remove the image, but was 
driven back by the mob. Greatly exasperated, he fired a random shot 
among them and mortally wounded a young lad, 6 who died the following 
evening. The funeral was attended by five hundred children, walking in 
front of the bier; six of his school-mates held the pall, followed by thirteen 
hundred of the inhabitants. The bells of the town were tolled, and the 
whole community partook of the feeling of sadness and indignation that 
innocent blood had been shed in the streets of Boston." 

A few days later, a still more serious occurrence took place. On Friday, 
March 2, two soldiers, belonging to the Twenty-ninth Regiment, were pass- 
ing Gray's rope-walk, near the present Pearl Street, and got into a quarrel 
with one of the workmen. Insults and threats were freely exchanged, and 
the soldiers then went off and found some of their comrades, who returned 
with them and challenged the ropemakers to a boxing-match. A fight 

Regiments," in Atlantic Monthly, June, August, l Boston Gazette, Feb. 12, 1770, et seq. ; Loss- 

1862, and November, 1863; matter which is only ing, Field-Book, i. 488. 
epitomized in his Life of Warren. John Mein, 2 Lossing, "1776," p. 90. 

the printer, had refused to join in any non-impor- 3 Rev. S. Cooper to Governor Thomas Pow- 

tation agreement, and his name had been pub- nail, Jan. i, 1770. 
licly proclaimed as one to be avoided in trade. * Theophilus Lillie. 

He in turn printed the State of the Importation of 6 Ebenezer Richardson, who lived near by. 
Great Britain with the Port of Boston from Jan- 6 Christopher Snider. 

vary to August, 1768, and showed some of his ' Evening Post, Feb. 26, 1770. [See Hutch- 
detractors in the light of importers. See Henry inson ; Gordon, i. 276; John Adams's Works, ii 
Stevens's Historical Collections, i. No. 393. ED.] 227. El).] 



THE BEGINNING OF THE REVOLUTION. 31 

ensued, in which sticks and cutlasses were freely used. Several were 
wounded on both sides, but none were killed. The proprietor and others 
interposed, and prevented further disturbance. 1 The next day it was re- 
ported that the fight would be resumed on Monday. Colonel Carr, com- 
mander of the Twenty-ninth, complained to the Governor of the conduct of 
the rope-makers. Hutchinson laid the matter before the council, some of 
whom freely expressed the opinion that the only way to prevent such colli- 
sions was to withdraw the troops to the Castle; but no precautionary meas- 
ures were taken. At an early hour on Monday evening, March 5, numerous 
parties of men and boys were strolling through the streets, and whenever 
they met any of the soldiers a sharp altercation took place. The ground 
was frozen and covered with a slight fall of snow, and a young moon shed 
its mild light upon the scene. Small bands of soldiers were seen passing 
between the main guard 2 and Murray's barracks in Brattle Street, armed 
with clubs and cutlasses. They were met by a crowd of citizens carrying 
canes and sticks. Taunts and insults soon led to blows. Some of the 
soldiers levelled their firelocks, and threatened to " make a lane " through 
the crowd. Just then an officer 3 on his way to the barracks, finding the 
passage obstructed by the affray, ordered the men into the yard and had 
the gate shut. The alarm-bell, however, had called out the people from 
their homes, and many came down towards King Street, supposing there 
\\.is a fire there. When the occasion of the disturbance was known, the 
well disposed among them advised the crowd to return home; but others 
shouted : " To the main guard ! To the main guard ! That 's the nest ! " 
Upon this they moved off towards King Street, some going up Cornhill, 
some through Wilson's Lane, and others through Royal Exchange Lane. 
Shortly after nine o'clock an excited party approached the Custom House, 
which stood on the north side of King Street, at the lower corner of 
Exchange Lane, where a sentinel was standing at his post. " There 's the 
soldier who knocked me down ! " said a boy whom the sentinel, a few min- 
utes before, had hit with the but-end of his musket. " Kill him ! Knock 
him down ! " cried several voices. The sentinel retreated up the steps and 
loaded his gun. " The lobster is going to fire," exclaimed a boy who stood 
by. " If you fire you must die for it," said Henry Knox, 4 who was passing. 

1 [See Drake, f.anJmarts, 274. It was men meeting-house. His father, William, a ship- 

of the Fourteenth Reghnent who were engaged master, had married Mary, i daughter of Robert 

in this affair, and their barracks were in the Campbell; and Henry was their seventh son, 

modern Atkinson Street. F.i>.| and was born in 1750, in a house which Drake, 

'-' 1 In " main guard " was located at the head Life of Hairy A'tinjc, p. 9, depicts, and says was 

! King Street, directly opposite the south door standing, in 1873, on Sea Street, opposite the 

of the Town I louse The soldiers detailed for head of Drake's wharf. Losing his father in 

daily guard-duty met here for assignment to 1762, Henry went into the employ of Wharton & 

their several posts. r.nwe-. who had succeeded the year before to 

ptain Goldfinch. the stand of Daniel Henchman, on the south 

4 Afterward general, and secretary of war. corner of State and Washington streets. Knox 

[Knox was of Scotch-Presbyterian stock from the was in this employ when the massacre occurred; 

north of Ireland, .itul his family belonged to the but the neM vear (1771) he started busim.-.-- on 

parish of Moorhead, the pastor of the Long Lane his own account on the same street, about where 



32 THE MEMORIAL HISTORY OF BOSTON. 

" I don't care," replied the sentry; " if they touch me, I '11 fire." While he 
was saying this, snowballs and other missiles were thrown at him, where- 
upon he levelled his gun, warned the crowd to keep off, and then shouted 
to the main guard across the street, at the top of his voice, for help. A 
sergeant, with a file of seven men, was sent over at once, through the crowd, 
to protect him. The sentinel then came down the steps and fell in with 
the file, when the order was given to prime and load. Captain Thomas 
Preston of the Twenty-ninth soon joined his men, making the whole num- 
ber in arms ten. 1 About fifty or sixty people had now gathered before 
the Custom House. When they saw the soldiers loading, some of them 
stepped forward, shouting, whistling, and daring them to fire. " You are 
cowardly rascals," they said ; " lay aside your guns and we arc ready for 
you." "Are the soldiers loaded?" inquired a bystander. "Yes," answered 
the Captain, "with powder and ball." "Are they going to' fire on the in- 
habitants? " asked another. " They cannot," said the Captain, " without my 
orders." " For God's sake," said Knox, seizing Preston by the coat, " take 
your men back again. If they fire, your life must answer for the conse- 
quences." " I know what I 'm about," said he, hastily ; and then, seeing his 
men pressing the people with their bayonets, while clubs were being freely 
used, he rushed in among them. The confusion was now so great, some 
calling out, "Fire, fire if you dare! " and others, "Why don't you fire?" 
that no one could tell whether Captain Preston ordered the men to fire or 
not ; but with or without orders, and certainly without any legal warning, 
seven of the soldiers, one after another, fired upon the citizens, three of 
whom were killed outright: Crispus Attucks, 2 Samuel Gray, and James 
Caldwell ; and two others, Samuel Maverick 3 and Patrick Carr, died soon 
after from their wounds. Six others were badly wounded. It is not known 
that any of the eleven took part in the disturbance except Attucks, who had 
been a conspicuous leader of the mob. 

When the firing began the people instinctively fell back, but soon 
after returned for the killed and wounded. Captain Preston restrained his 

the Globe newspaper now is, calling his estab- of the royalist secretary of the province, Thomas 
lishment the " London Bookstore." At least one Flucker, who had vainly tried to prevent the 
book, Cadogan on the Gout, bears his imprint, union ; and a year from the day of their marriage 
1 772, and at the end of it is a list of medical and Knox had slipped out of Boston clandestinely, 
other books which he had imported. Brinley to avoid interception by Gage, while his wife 
Catalogue, No. 1585. See H. G. Otis's letter in concealed in her quilted skirts the sword her hus- 
N, E. Hist, and Geneal. Reg., July, 1876, p. band was afterwards to make honorable. ED.] 
362. In November, 1774, Knox writes to Long- Some accounts say eight. 

' 2 Usually called a mulatto, sometimes a slave ; 
and in the American Historical Record for De- 
cember, 1872, he is held to have been a half- 
breed Indian. [George Livermore gives us a 
glimpse of the past life of Crispus Attucks as a 
man in London : "The magazines and new pub- slave, in his " Historical Research on Negroes as 
lications concerning the American dispute are Slaves," in J/iw-.r. I fist. Soc. Proc. 1862, Aug., p. 
the only things which I desire you to send at 173. See also N.E. Hist, and Geneal. Reg., Oct. 
present." Il will be remembered that Knox but 1859, p. 300. Kr>.] 
six months before this had married a daughter :! [See Simmer's East Boston, p. 171. ED.] 




THE BEGINNING OF THE REVOLUTION. 33 

men from a second discharge, and ordered them back to the main guard. 
The drums beat to arms, and several companies of the Twenty-ninth formed, 
under Colonel Carr, in three divisions, in the neighborhood of the Town 
House. And now the alarm was everywhere given. The church bells 
were rung, the town drums beat to arms, and King Street was soon thronged 
with citizens who poured in from all directions. The sight of the mangled 
bodies of the slain sent terror and indignation through their ranks. The 
excitement surpassed anything which Boston had ever known before. It was 
indeed a " night of consternation." No one knew what would happen next; 
but in that awful hour the people were guided by wise and prudent leaders, 
who restrained their passions and turned to the law for justice. About ten 
o'clock the Lieut-Governor appeared on the scene and called for Captain 
Preston, to whom he put some sharp and searching questions. Forced 
by the crowd he then went to the Town House, and soon appeared on the 
balcony, where he spoke with much feeling and power concerning the 
unhappy event, and promised to order an inquiry in the morning, saying 
" the law should have its course ; he would live and die by the law." On 
being informed that the people would not disperse until Captain Preston 
was arrested, he at once ordered a court of inquiry; and after consultation 
with the military officers, he succeeded in having the troops removed to 
their barracks, after which the people began to disperse. Preston's exam- 
ination lasted three hours, and resulted in his being bound over for trial. 
The soldiers were also placed under arrest. It was three o'clock in the 
morning before Hutchinson retired to his house. By his judicious exer- 
tions he succeeded in calming a tumult which, had it been left to itself, 
might in a single night have involved the town in a conflict of much greater 
proportions. Early in the morning, large numbers of people from the sur- 
rounding country flocked into the town to learn the details of the tragedy, 
and to confer with the citizens as to what was to be done. Faneuil Hall 
was thrown open for an informal meeting at eleven o'clock. The town 
clerk, William Cooper, acted as chairman until the selectmen could be 
summoned from the council chamber, where they were in conference with 
the Lieut. -Governor. On their appearance, Thomas Cushing was chosen 
moderator ; and Dr. Cooper, brother of the town clerk, opened the meet- 
ing with prayer. Several witnesses brought in testimony concerning the 
events of the previous night. A committee of fifteen, including Adams, 
Cushing, Hancock, and Molineux, was chosen to wait on the Lieut-Gov- 
ernor and inform him that the inhabitants and soldiery could no longer live 
together in safety; and that nothing could restore peace and prevent fur- 
ther carnage but the immediate removal of the troops. 1 In the afternoon 
at three o'clock a regular town-meeting was convened at the same place, by 
legal warrant, to consider what measures could be taken to preserve the 

1 [Dr. Helknap records an anecdote told by him and demanded the removal of the troops 

Governor Hancock, of the trepidation which after then '.'jss. /fist. Sue. J'r/x., March, 

seized Hutchinson when the committee went to 1858, p. 308. EL>.] 
VOL. III. 5. 



34 



THE MEMORIAL HISTORY OF BOSTON. 





/< 










1 [This cut follows a painting which has for and is believed, from the costume, to represent 
many years hung in the Kssex Institute, Salem, the Patriot of this name; though the earlier 



Tin i;i:c;i\\i\(; OF THK REVOLUTION. 



35 




MM1TI \li\MS. 1 

peace of the town. The attendance was so large that the meeting was ad- 
journed to the Old South, which was soon crowded to its utmost capacity. 



Speaker of the same name, who died in 1748, 
nmy possibly have been the sitter. The painting 
itself has no inscription, as the courteous Libra- 
rian, Dr. Henry Wheatland, informs me. In 
1876 a descendant caused a copy of it to be 
made for Independence Hall, Philadelphia, in 
the belief that it represented the later Thimias 
Gushing. He was born in Hromfield Street, 
on the spot long occupied by the public house 
of that name. ED.] 



1 [This cut follows the larger of Copley's por- 
traits of Adams, and was painicd when he was 
forty-nine. The smaller and later one has already 
been given in Vol. II. p. .(,>>. The present pic- 
ture for many years hunt; in Faneuil Hall, and is 
now in the Art Museum ; it has been engraved 
before in Wclls's Life of Samuel Adams, vol. i., 
in Bancroft's Cnit,-J States, vol. vii., and else- 
where. It represents the Patriot, clad in dark 
red, defending the rights of the people under the 



I 
36 THE MEMORIAL HISTORY OF BOSTON. 

Samuel Adams presented the report of the committee, which was that they 
could not obtain a promise of the removal of more than one of the regi- 
ments at present. " Both regiments or none ! " was the cry with which the 
meeting received this announcement. The answer was voted to be unsatis- 
factory ; and another committee was appointed, consisting of Samuel Adams, 
John Hancock, William Molineux, William Phillips, Joseph Warren, Joshua 
Henshaw, and Samuel Pemberton, to inform the Lieut-Governor that 
nothing less than the total and immediate removal of the troops would 
satisfy the people. At a late hour the committee returned with a favorable 
report, which was received by the meeting with expressions of the greatest 
satisfaction. Before adjourning, a strong military watch was provided for; 
and the whole subject of the public defence was left in the hands of a 
'' committee of safety," consisting of those who had just waited on the 
Lieut-Governor. 

On Thursday, March 8, the funeral of the slain was an occasion of 
mournful interest to the whole community. The stores were generally 
closed. The bells of Boston, Charlestown, Cambridge, and Roxbury were 
tolled. Never before, it was said, was there so large an assemblage in the 
streets of Boston. The procession started from the scene of the massacre 
in King Street, and proceeded through the main street six deep, followed 
by a long train of carriages, to the Middle or Granary Burying-ground, 
where the bodies of the victims were deposited in one grave. 

After the removal of the troops to the Castle, nothing occurred to dis- 
turb the usual quiet of the town. The people waited patiently for the law 
to have its course. In October, Preston's case came on for trial in the 
Superior Court, followed in November by that of the soldiers implicated in 
the massacre. Through the exertions of Samuel Adams and others, the 
best legal talent in the province was secured on both sides. The prosecu- 
tion was conducted by Robert Treat Paine, in the absence of the king's at- 
torney. 1 Auchmuty, the prisoners' counsel, had the valuable assistance of 
John Adams and Josiah Ouincy, the distinguished Patriots, who gener- 
ously consented to take the position, a severe ordeal at such a time, in 
order that the town might be free from any charge of unfairness, and that 
the accused might have the advantage of every legal indulgence. 2 As a 

Charter, as he may be supposed to have ap- : [This was Jonathan Sewall, who, as John 
peared when he confronted Hutchinson and his Adams says, " disappeared." It is probable that 
council on the day after the massacre. Wells, Samuel Quincy a few months later to be made 
Life of Adams, \. 475. The Copley head of Sam solicitor-general assisted Paine, as stated by 
Adams was engraved by J. Norman in An Im- Ward in his edition of Ciinuen's Journal, and 
partial I/istory of the War in America, Boston, by Mr. Morse in Vol. IV. ; though I find no con- 
1781. The journals of the Boston committee of temporary authority for such statement, unless 
correspondence, as well as the papers of Sam what John Adams says (Works, x. 201) in con- 
Adams, are in the possession of Bancroft the nection with the soldiers' trial applies as well to 
historian. Frothingham, Life of Warren, p. vii. Preston's. Quincy is known, however, to have 
Wells, Life of Sam Adams, vol. i. pp. vi. and x., been on the Government side in the soldiers' 
.nives a particular account of the Adams papers, trials. ED.] 

Bancroft's United States, p. vi. preface. See an 2 [See the chapter on "The Bench and Bar," 

estimate of Adams in Mr. Goddard's ch. ED.] by John T. Morse, Jr., in Vol. IV. ED.] 



:?'" -'* "- 
.... ., 

. " 

= ''**.* * N 
t 



THI. BEGINNING OF THE REVOLUTION. 





result of the trial, Preston was acquitted ; six of the soldiers were brought 
in "not guilty; " and two were found guilty of manslaughter, branded in the 



1 [Of this picture there is this account by 
Miss K. S. Quincy in Mason's Life of Giifxrt 
Stuart, p. 244 : " There was an engraving that 
his widow, Mi- Abigail Quincy, considered an 
excellent likeness. This print, Stuart had de- 
clined to copy; but after reading the memoir of 
J. Quincy, Jr., published in iS25, he said: 'I 
must paint the portrait of that man;' and re- 
iiui -led that the print, and the portrait of his 
brother Samui I Onim y, by Copley, should lie 
sent to his studio." Miss Ouincv says in a pri- 



vate letter: "The portrait was entirely satis- 
factory to my father and Mrs. Storcr. The cast 
in his eye was one of his characteristics which 
they would not have allowed to be omitted." 
Jonathan Mason, who studied law in Mr. Quin- 
cy's office, Mr. Gardiner Greene, who saw him 
in London, Dr. Ilolbrook, of Milton, and many 
others testified to the likeness. There is an 
estimate of Quincy in Mr. Goddard's chapter 
in this volume. Quincy lived on the present 
Washington Street, a little south of Milk Stree* 






til 



THE MEMORIAL HISTORY OF BOSTON. 



hand in open court, and then discharged. These trials must ever be re- 
garded as a signal instance of that desire for impartial justice which char- 
acterized the American people throughout the stormy period which ushered 
in the Revolution. 1 



The manuscript of instructions to the represen- 
tatives of the town, in his handwriting (1770), 
is noted in A/ass. Hist. 
Soc. Proc., December, 
1873, p. 216. See also 
Frothingham's War- 
ren, p. 1 56. His family 
relations can be traced 
in Vol. II. p. 547, and Jl&M - a. 
in the accounts of the 
liromfield and Phillips 
family in the same vol- 
ume pp. 543, 548. His 

father-in-law was William Phillips, who was the 
son of the Rev. Samuel Phillips of Andover, and 
who coming to Boston entered into business con- 
nections with Edward Bromfield, a rich mer- 
chant, whose daughter he afterward married, in 
1764, and whose house on Beacon Street, figured 
in Vol. II., p. 521, he bought and lived in till 
his death in 1804. He amassed a large fortune, 
which has been transmitted to our day, though 
now mainly possessed by a collateral branch of 
the family. He took the Patriot side in the Rev- 
olution; and in August, 1774, Josiah Quincy, Jr., 
writes to Samuel Adams, then in Philadelphia : 
" It is very difficult to keep our poor in order. 
Mr. Phillips has done wonders among them. I 
do not know what we should do without him." 
After his daughter (Mrs. Quincy) lost her husband 
in 1775, she with her young son, the future Pres- 
ident Quincy, lived with her father till 1786. 
Mr. Phillips's two younger daughters twins, 
born in 1756, Sarah and Hannah married re- 
spectively Edward Dowse and Major Samuel 
Shaw, who had been an aid to General Knox 



in the Revolution. Both were pioneers in open- 
ing trade with China after the war, and Shaw's 
memoir has been written by President Quincy. 
Shaw lived in Bulfinch Place, in a house built 
for him in 1793 by Charles Bulfinch; and it is 
to-day, shorn of its ample grounds, known as 
Hotel Waterston. An account of Phillips can 
be found in the American Quarterly Register, 
xiii., N'o. i. ED.] 

1 For details see Lives of John Adams and 
Josiah Quincy. The Brief used by the former is 
in the Boston Public Library. [It is a small 
brochure of ten leaves, six by four inches, fast- 
ened by a pin, and four of the leaves are blank. 
The annexed fac-simile is of the opening para- 



graph. Kidder, who formerly owned the docu 
ment, has printed it in his Boston Massacre, p. 10 





Sampson Salter Blowers, who assisted Aclani- 
and Quincy, had graduated at Harvard in 1763, 




and was only made a barrister in 1773; and in 
the next year married a daughter of Benjamin 
Kent, with whom he went to Nova Scotia at the 
time of the loyalist exodus. The presiding 
judge was the younger Lynde, whose portrait is 




given in Vol. II. p. 558. All that remains of his 
charge is given in the appendix of The Diaries 
of Benjamin Lynde, and of Benjamin Lynde, Jr. 
Boston, privately printed, 1880. 

John Adams wrote to J. Morse in 1816 ( Works 
of John Adams, x. 201) that the report of Pres- 
ton's trial " was taken down, and transmitted to 
England, by a Scottish or English stenogra- 
pher, without any known authority but his 
own. The British Government have never 
permitted it to see the light, and probably 
never will." When the trial of William Wemms 
and seven other soldiers came on, Nov. 27, 1770, 
the same short-hand writer, John Hodgson, was 
employed; and the published report, entitled 
The Trial of William Wemms, . . . for the 
Murder of Crispus Attucks. . . . Published by per- 
mission of the Court. . . . Boston : printed by J. 
Fleeming, and sold at his Printing Office, nearly 
opposite the White Horse Tavern in Ncwbury Street. 
M.DCC.LXX., makes a duodecimo of two 
hundred and seventeen pages. It gives the evi- 
dence and pleas of counsel. The last seven 
pages arc occupied with a report, "from the 
minutes of a gentleman who attended," of the 
trial, December 12, of Edward Mamvaring and 



THE BEGINNING OF THE REVOLUTION. 



39 



Previous to 1770 the people of Boston had celebrated the Gunpowdn 
Plot annually with public demonstrations. After the Boston massacre, tin- 



others, who were accused by several persons of 
lirinx on the crowd during the massacre from 
an adjacent window in 
the Custom House; 
lint they were easily 
acquitted. This little 
volume was reprinted in Bos- 
ton in 1807 and 1824, and 
again in Kidder's monograph 
in 1870. The plan of King 
Street, used at the trials, pre- 
pared by Paul Revere, is in 
the collection of Judge Mellen 
Chamberlain, of the lioston 
Public Library. An examina- 
'!' the reports of the trial 
is made in P. W. Chandler's 
American Criminal Y't i<i/.f t i. 
A minute narrative of the 
events was printed between 
black lines in the AW.w dazette 
of March 12, but the papers of the day made few 
references to the event till after the trial, when 
more or less discontent with the verdict was 
manifested. Such particularly marked a series 
of articles in the GiisM-, signed " Vindex " 
is. nn Ail.ims), which reflected upon the argu- 
ments of the counsel for defence. Buckingham, 
/fi'mii: 168. 

Some verse* inscribed upon one of the pict- 
i the massacre closed as follows, referring 
to Boston and Preston : 

" Should venal courts, the scandal of the land, 
Snatch the relentless villain from her 1 
Keen execrations, on this plate inscribed, 
Shall reach a judge who never can be bribed." 

A letter from William Palfrey to John Wilkcs, 
dated Boston, March 13 (1770), is printed in 
Mass. Hist. .Y.V. Prof., March, 1863, p. 480. (See 
also Sparks, American Biography, new series, 
vol. viii.) And on p. 484 is printed one from 
Thomas Hutchinson to Lord Hillsborough on 
the same theme. 

There are some particulars entered upon the 
Town Records i.f the statements made at the 
meeting at F.ininil Hall the next forenoon ; but 
so many were ready to testify, that a committee 
was appointed to gather the evidence. The an- 
iu v .1 autographs are attached to a letter ad- 
dressed to the agent of Massachusetts in London, 
the original of which is in the Lee collection 
of papers in the University of Virginia Library ; 
and with the letter was sent a copy ot 
ratir authorised by the town. A similar letter, 
and other copies, were sent to various important 
people in England, a list of whom, together 
with the letter, is printed at the end of some 
copies of the ffarrati-cc, which was also probably 



drawn up by the same gentlemen, and, as print- 
ed, is called A short Narrative of the Horrid 




Massacre in Boston perpetrated in the evening of 
the Fifth Day of March, 1770, by Soldiers of tht 
XXIX' H Kegiment, with some Observations on the 
State of Things friar to that Catastrofhe. Boston . 
fruited by order of the Town, by Messrs. EJes & 
Gill. MDCCLXX. It had an appendix of depo- 
sitions, including one of Jeremiah Belknap ; but 
another, of Joseph Helkn.ip, is contained in the 
Belknaf l\tffrs, i. 69, in the cabinet of the 
Ma-sachnsetts Historical Society. A large fold- 
ing plate showed the scene in State Street. It 
was immediately reprinted in London, in at least 
three editions, two by W. Bingley, in Newgate 
Street, with the large folding plate re-engraved j 
and the third by E. and C. Dilby, with a smaller 
plate, a fac-simile of which, somewhat reduced, 
is given on the next page. The supplement of 
the Boston Evening Post, June 18, 1770, has news 
from London, May 5, announcing the republica- 
tion of it, and stating that the frontispiece was 
engraved from a copper-plate print sent over 
with the "authenticated narrative." 

Copies of this Short A'arrath-e were sent at 
once to England, but the remainder of the edi- 
tion was not published, for fear of giving "an 
undue bias to the minds of the jury," till after 
the trial, when Additional Observations, of twelve 
pages, were added to it. These were likewise 
published separately. Both of these documents 
were reprinted in New York in 1849, and again 
at Albany in 1870, in Mr. Kidder's History of 
the Boston Massacre. In this supplemental pub- 
lication it was intimated that the friends of 
Government had sent despatches "home" "to 
nt the town in a disadvantageous light." 
It is certain that a tract did appear shortly 
in London, called : A fair Account of the late 



THE MEMORIAL HISTORY OF BOSTON. 



fifth of March was observed until the peace of I783, 1 when the Fourth of 
July celebration was substituted by the town authorities. Unquestionably 
the influence of the Boston massacre upon the growing sentiment of inde- 
pendence throughout the colonies was very great. 2 Public opinion was 
immediately shaped by it, and the remaining ties binding America to 
Britain were everywhere visibly relaxed. " On that night," wrote John 



unhappy Disturbance at Boston in New England ; 
extracted from the Depositions that have been 
made concerning it by persons of all parties ; with 
an AppenJix containing some affidavits and other 
evidences relating to this affair, not mentioned in 
the Narrative of it that has been published at Bos- 
ton. London : printed for B. White, in Fleet 




,., ., ,,. , 

Sum ' Gray- tfamf^tfafeftcfc .Jnmf 



Lane; MDCCLXX. There is a copy in Harvard 
College Library. It is the Government view of 
the massacre, and is duly fortified by counter 
depositions, chiefly by officers and men of the 
garrison. Hutchinson has given his account of 
it in his posthumous third volume, and Gordon 
in his first volume. Stedman's account in his 



American War is also at variance with the 
town's narrative. 

Of the later historians Mr. Frothingham in 
the last of his papers on " The Sam Adams 
Regiments" (Atlantic Monthly, November, 1863), 
and in his Life of Warren, ch. vi., has given a 
very excellent account, " carefully collating the 
evidence that appears, to be 
authentic ; " but he confesses 
it is vain to reconcile all state- 
ments. The events are also 
minutely described in Wells's 
Life of Samuel Adams, i. 308. 
Bancroft, United States, vol. 
vi. ch. xliii., examines the evi- 
dence for provocation, and 
concludes Preston ordered 
the firing. He cites, through 
the chapter, his authorities. 
ED.] 

1 Orations were delivered 
on the successive anniversa- 
ries byThomas Young, Joseph 
Warren, Benjamin Church, 
John Hancock, Joseph War- 
ren, Peter Thacher, Benjamin 
Hichborn, Jonathan W. Aus- 
tin, William Tudor, Jonathan 
Mason, Thomas Dawes, 
George R. Minot, and Thomas 
Welsh. [These, having been 
printed separately, were col- 
lected and issued by Peter 
Edes in 1785, and reissued in 
1807. There are accounts of 
them and their authors in Lor- 
ing's Hundred Boston Orators. 
Paul Revere took the occasion 
of the first anniversary of the 
massacre, in 1771, to rouse the 
sensibilities of the crowd by 

givi " g illuminated P^ures of 
the event, with allegorical ac- 

. . 

compamments, at the windows 
Q{ ^ ^^ .^ ^ Q ^ Square. 

"The spectators," says the account in the 
Gazette, "were struck with solemn silence, and 
their countenances covered with a melancholy 
gloom." ED.] 

2 [See the letter to Franklin in Afass. Hist. Soc. 
Proc., November, 1865. Also Sparks's Franklin, 
vii. 499. ED.] 



. 
Sittucfu 



THE BEGINNING OF THE REVOLUTION. 41 

Adams long afterward, " the formation of American Independence was 
laid." " From that moment," said Mr. Webster on one occasion, "we 
may date the severance of the British empire." 

On the very day of the Boston massacre Lord North brought in a bill 
to repeal the Townshend revenue act, with the exception of the preamble 
and the duty on tea, which were retained to signify the continued suprem- 
acy of Parliament. This proposal met with much opposition, but was 
finally carried, and approved by the king on April 12. 

As the great principle at issue was not relinquished, this new measure 
of the Government gave but little satisfaction to the colonists. Trade, 
however, revived, and before the end of 1770 it was open in everything 
but tea. 1 

In the month of September Hutchinson received a royal order in effect 
introducing martial law into Massachusetts, in so far as to compel him to 
give up the fortress to General Gage, or such officer as he might appoint. 
This order was in direct contravention of the charter of the province, 
which gave the command of the militia and the forts to the civil Governor. 
After a little hesitation Hutchinson decided to obey the order, and, without 
consulting the council, he at once handed over the Castle to Colonel Dal- 
rymple ; and from that hour it remained in the possession of England 
until the evacuation of Boston in March, 1776. The Provincial Assembly, 
meeting at Cambridge for the third time, and keeping a day of fasting, 
humiliation, and prayer, entered a solemn protest against the new and in- 
supportable grievances under which they labored. 2 At this time Franklin, 
Boston's honored son, was elected as the agent of Massachusetts to repre- 
sent her cause before the king. 3 Certainly no better choice could have been 
made. In the fulness of his ripened powers, possessed of rare wisdom and 
integrity, and animated by a spirit of fervent patriotism, he discharged the 
grave duties of his position with conspicuous fidelity and zeal. 

The next year was not marked by any very notable event. Hutchinson, 
who had now received his coveted commission as Governor, maintained a 
controversy with the Assembly upon several matters of legislation, and 

1 The self-imposed restrictions adopted by the filled by Gushing (the Speaker), Hancock, Sam 

colonists in reference to foreign articles had pro- Adams, and John Adams ; and to show their 

duced a great effect in checking extravagance, influence the journals indicate that three, and 

promoting domestic industry and economy, and sometimes all of them, were on every important 

opening to the people new sources of wealth, committee for a session which was much con- 

Hnme-m.ide articles, wlm h at first came into use cerned with political movements. John Adams 

from necessity, soon became fashionable. At was at this period a resident of Boston from 

Harvard College the graduating class of 1770 April, 1768, to April, 1771 ; but he still retained 

took their degrees in homespun, his office in Boston after removing his family to 

3 [John Adams was now a representative Braintree; and again he established a home in 

from Boston, succeeding Bowdoin, who had gone Queen Street, opposite the Court House, in 

into the Council. See John Adams's Il\>rts, ii. 1772. Kr>.| 

233. "Although Sam Adams was now the [The choice of Franklin was made Oct. 24, 

master-mover, John Adams seems to have sin- 1770 ; his appointment, signed by Thomas Cush- 

ccedcd to the post of legal adviser, which had ing, speaker, is among the Lee Papers, Univer- 

been filled by Oxenbridge Thacher and James shy of Virginia. See Mr. Towle's chapter in 

Otis." The four "Boston seats" were thus Vol. II. ED.) 
VOL. III. 6. 



42 THE MEMORIAL HISTORY OF BOSTON. 

arbitrarily insisted upon their meeting in Cambridge, until the opposition 
to it became so strong that lie was obliged to consent to a removal to 
Boston. 1 The House soon after censured the Governor for accepting a 
salary from the king in violation of the charter; and the popular indigna- 
tion was still further aroused when it became known that royal stipends 
were provided for the judges in the province. This led to a town-meeting 
(Oct. 28, 1772), at which an address to his Excellency was prepared, re- 
questing information of the truth of the report. The Governor declined to 
make public any of his official advices. Another petition was drafted at 
an adjourned meeting, requesting the Governor to convene the Assembly 
on the day to which it stood prorogued (December 2) ; and at the same 
time the meeting expressed its horror of the reported judicial establish- 
ment, as contrary not only to the charter but to the fundamental principles 
of common law. This petition also was rejected in a reply which was read 
several times at an adjourned meeting and voted " not satisfactory." It 
was then resolved that the inhabitants of Boston " have ever had and 
ought to have a right to petition the king, or his representative, for a re- 
dress of such grievances as they feel, or for preventing of such as they 
have reason to apprehend ; and to communicate their sentiments to other 
towns." Adams now stood up and made that celebrated motion, which 
gave visible shape to the American Revolution, and endowed it with life 
and strength. The record'' 1 says: 

" It was then moved by Mr. Samuel Adams that a committee of correspondence 3 
be appointed, to consist of twenty-one persons, to state the rights of the colonists, 
and of this province in particular, as men and Christians, and as subjects ; and to 
communicate and publish the same to the several towns, and to the world, as the sense 
of this town, with the infringements and violations thereof that have been or from 
time to time may be made." 

The motion was carried by a nearly unanimous vote ; but some of the 
leading men were not prepared to serve on the committee. It was seen 
that the labors would be arduous, prolonged, and gratuitous ; and although 
they did not oppose, neither did they cordially support a measure which 
was really greater than they imagined. The committee, however, was well 

1 [The instructions of the town, May 25, mittees ; but Bancroft, who has their papers, 

1772, to Gushing and the other representatives, avers positively that Gordon's opinion (i. 312) 

are given in the Afass. /fist. Soc. Proc., January, of the idea originating with James Warren of 

1871, p. 9. The House later prepared an ad- Plymouth is erroneous. Bancroft's United States, 

dress of remonstrance to the king against taxa- vi. 428. See further, Wells's Samuel Adams, \. 

lion without representation, and, July 14, 1772, 509, ii. 62; Frothingham's Rise of the Republic, 

it was despatched, signed by Cashing. Anorigi- pp. 284, 312, 327 ; Barry's Massachusetts, ii. 448, 

nal is among the I>eu Papers, in the University and other references in Winsor's Handbook, p. 

<>f Virginia. Kn.] 20. The town's committee of correspondence 

- Boston Tmcn Records, November, 1772. must not be confounded with the Assembly's 

3 [John Adams said that Sam Adams " invent- committee. See R. Frothingham in Mass. Hist. 

ed " the committee of correspondence. Froth- Soc. Proc., Dec. 16, 1873. See earlier in this 

ingham, Life of Warren, p. 200. There has been chapter for Mayhew's suggestion. See also 

some controversy about the origin of these com- Hutchinson. iii. 361 ; and Gordon, i. 314. ED | 



THE BEGINNING OF THK REVOLUTION. 



43 




UEirr.-GOVERNOR ANDREW OLIVER. 1 



constructed, with Adams and Warren and other citizens of well known 
character and the highest patriotism. Otis, though broken in health, was 
named chairman, as a compliment for his former services. 



1 [This cut follows Copley's portrait of An- 
drew Oliver, owned by Dr. F. E. Oliver, by 
whose kind permission it is copied. Perkins's 
(\'f/i'v, p. 90. For his family connections see 
Mr. Whitmore's chapter in Vol. II. p. 539, and 
his more extended genealogy of the Olivers in 
AT. E. Hist, and Cental. Reg., April, 1865, p. 
101. The two sons of Daniel Oliver (who died 
1732, leaving a bequest to the town; see Vol. 



judge and mandamus councillor), and Chief-Jus- 
tice Peter Oliver. They had close family rela- 






II. p. 539) were Andrew Oliver, the Lieut.-Gov- 
ernor (who died 1774, and was father of Andrew, 



tions with Governor Hutchinson, for Andrew's 
second wife, Mary, was sister of Hutchinson's 
wife, the two being daughters -it William San- 
ford ; and Dr. Peter Oliver, son of the chief- 
justice, married Sarah, daughter of Governor 
Hutchinson. Andrew, the mandamus council- 
lor, married a .-ister of the second Judge I.ynde, 
who presided at the massacre trials. The family 
of the Lieut. -Governor, by his second wife, were 
refugees with their uncle, the chief-justice. ED.) 




44 THE MEMORIAL HISTORY OF BOSTON. 

This committee of correspondence met the next day and chose William 
Cooper as clerk. By a unanimous vote they gave to each other the pledge 

of honor "not to divulge any 
part of the conversation 
at their meetings to 
any person what- 
soever, excepting 
what the committee 
itself should make 
known." 

The work to be 
done was divided 
between them. Adams was appointed to prepare a statement of the rights 
of the colonists ; Warren of the several violations of those rights ; and 
Church was to draft a letter to the other towns. 

On November 2O the report was presented at a legal meeting in Faneuil 
Hall. The statement of rights and of grievances, and the letter to the 
towns, were masterly presentations of the cause, and carried conviction 
throughout the province. Plymouth, Marblehead, Roxbury, and Cam- 
bridge responded at once to the call ; and it was not long before commit- 
tees of correspondence were everywhere established. The other Colonies 
accepted the plan. 1 Virginia saw in it the prospect of union throughout 
the continent. So did South Carolina. " An American Congress," wrote 
Samuel Adams to Arthur Lee (April 9, 1773), " is no longer the fiction of 
a political enthusiast." z 

In the spring of 1773 the East India Company, finding itself embarrassed 
from the excessive accumulation of teas in England, owing to the persistent 
refusal of American merchants to import them, applied to Parliament for 
assistance, and obtained an act empowering the Company to export teas to 
America without paying the ordinary duty in England. This would enable 
the Company to sell at such low rates that it was thought the colonists 
would purchase, even with the tax of threepence on the pound. Accord- 
ingly ships were laden with the article and despatched to Charleston, Phila- 
delphia, New York, and Boston, and persons were selected in each of these 
ports to act as consignees, or "tea commissioners" as they were called. 

1 [The report of the committee of correspond- agency of Franklin, and forwarded to the Patri- 
ence, made Nov. 20, 1772, was, by order of the ots in Boston. The result was a formal petition 
town, printed by Edes & Gill, as The Votes and to the king for the removal of the odious func- 
Proceedings of the Freeholders and other Inhabi- tionaries. These letters were printed in Boston 
tants. Frothingham, Warren, p. 211. etc., has in 1773, and in London in 1774. Mass. Hist. Soc. 
much to show the effect this meeting was having Proe., 1878. [See further on this matter, with a 
throughout the colonies. Er>.] note on the authorities, Vol. II. p. 86 John 

2 Secret letters, written by Governor Hutch- Adams saw them as early as March 22, 1773. 
inson and Lieut. -Governor Oliver to friends in (Works, ii. 318.) The letters were first pub- 
England, favoring military intervention and lished in Boston, June t6, 1773. Thomas 
otherwise injuring the cause of the colonists, Newell's "diary" in Proc., October, 1877, p. 
were discovered about this time through the 339. En.] 



THE BEGINNING OF THE REVOLUTION. 45 

When this news became known, all America was in a flame. The people 
wore not to be duped by any such appeal to their cupidity. They had 
taken their stand upon a principle, and not until that was recognized 
would they withdraw their opposition. It seemed strange that England 
had not discerned that fact long before. 

Nowhere was the feeling more intense on the subject than in Boston. 
The consignees were prominent men and friends of the Governor. 1 On 
the night of November i they were each one summoned to appear on the 
following Wednesday noon, at Liberty Tree, to resign their commissions. 
Handbills were also posted over the town, inviting citizens to meet at the 
same place. 2 On the day appointed, the bells rang from eleven to twelve- 
o'clock, and the town-crier summoned the people to meet at Liberty Tree, 
which was decorated with a large flag. About five hundred assembled, 
including many of the leading Patriots. As the consignees failed to appear, 
a committee was appointed to wait upon them and request their resigna- 
tion ; and, in case they refused, to present a resolve to them declaring them 
to be enemies of their country. The committee, accompanied by many of 
the people, repaired to Clarke's warehouse and had a brief parley with the 
consignees, who refused to resign their trust. 

A legal town-meeting was now called for, and the selectmen issued a war- 
rant for one to be held on the fifth. 3 It was largely attended, and Hancock 4 
was chosen moderator. A series of eight resolves was adopted, similar to 
UK isc which had been recently passed in Philadelphia, and extensively circu- 
lated through the press. The consignees were again, through a committee, 
asked fo resign ; and again they refused, and the meeting adjourned. 

On the seventeenth a vessel arrived, announcing that the tea-ships were 
on the way to Boston and might be hourly expected. Another legal meet- 
ing was immediately notified for the next day, at which Hancock was again 
the moderator. Word was sent to the consignees that it was the desire of 
the town that they would give a final answer whether they would resign their 
appointment. The answer came that they could not comply with the re- 

1 Two of them were his sons, Elisha and 4 [Revere's portrait of Hancock is given in 
Thomas ; the others were Richard Clarke and the text. It appeared in the KoyaJ Amer. Mag., 
MIPS, lienj. Kaneuil, Jr., and Jushua Winslow. March, 1774, which contains also Hancock's 

2 Draper's Gazette of November 3 contained massacre oration of that year. On Nov. H, 1773. 
the following: Hutchinson had directed Hancock, as colonel of 
" To tlu Frtemtn of iki, and tlu ntigUarinf inm, : the cadets, to hold them in readiness for service. 

. II.KMKN, Ymi arc desired to meet at Liberty Frothingham, Life of H'arren, p. 249, mentions 

Tree this day at twelve o'clock at noon ; then and there to the original of this order as being in the hands 

hear the persons. 10 win,,,, the u , sh.pped by the East of , h<; , a , e Co , , w Scver A curjous engrav . 

India Company is consigned, make a public resignation of . ... _, . , .. . . - r. 

their office ,s consignees, upon oath ; and also .swear that '"8 of HlS ElC " J hn ' I"***, late President 

they will reship any teas that may be consigned to them by of the American Congress, J. > ormatl, SC-," ap- 

said Company, by the first vessel sailing for London. peared in An Impartial History of the War in 

"Boston, Nov. 3, 1773. . Stcrttary. America, Boston, 1781, vol. i. On the Hancock 

" \3T Show us the man that dare take down ihi t" papers (n>.o>t of which are printed in the Amtr- 

Several of these handbills are in possession itan Ardinits) see Massachusetts Histarital Sofitty 

of the Mass. Hist. Society. Proceedings, January, iSiS, p. 271 and Decem- 

8 This warrant is now in the possession of ber, 1857; and Vol. IV. of tlii> History, p. 5, 

Judge Mellen Chamberlain, nott. En.] 



4 6 



THE MEMORIAL HISTORY OF BOSTON. 



quest. 1 Upon this the meeting dissolved, without passing any vote or 
expressing any opinion. " This sudden dissolution," says Hutchinson,- 
" struck more terror into the consignees than the most minatory resolves." 

The whole matter was now understood to be in the hands of the com- 
mittee of correspondence, who constituted the virtual government of the 
province. 

On Sunday, November 28, the ship " Dartmouth," Captain Hall, after a 
sixty days' passage, appeared in the harbor, with one hundred and four- 




The HonV'jO HN HANCOCK. Efq r 

teen chests of tea. 8 There was no time to be lost. Sunday though it 
was, the selectmen and the committee of correspondence held meetings 
to take immediate action against the entry of the tea. The consignees 
had gone to the Castle ; but a promise was obtained from Francis Rotch, 
the owner of the vessel, that it should not be entered until Tuesday. 
The towns around Boston 4 were then invited to attend a mass meeting 
in Faneuil Hall the next morning. 6 Thousands were ready to respond to 

1 The answer is given in Frothingham's Life 
of Warren, p. 251. 

^ Historv, iii. 426. 

8 [The next morning, twenty-ninth, the vessel 
came up and anchored off Long Wharf (Massa- 
chusetts Gazette, November 29). The journal of 
the " Dartmouth " is in Traits of the Tea-Party, 
p. 259. ED. 



4 Dorchester, Roxbury, Brookline, Cam- 
bridge, and Charlestown. 

6 The following placard appeared on Monday 
morning : 

" FRIENDS! BRETHREN ! COUNTRYMEN I 
" That worst of plagues, the detested TEA, shipped for 
this port by the East India Company, is now arrived in this 
harbor. The hour of destruction, or manly opposition to 



THE BEGINNING OF THE REVOLUTION. 47 

this summons, and the meeting was obliged to adjourn to the Old South. 
Boston, it was said, had never seen so large a gathering. 1 . It was unani- 
mously resolved, upon the motion of Samuel Adams, that the tea should 
be sent back, and that no duty should be paid on it. " The only way to 
get rid of it," said Young, " is to throw it overboard." At an adjourned 
meeting in the afternoon, Mr. Rotch entered his protest against the pro- 
ceedings ; but the meeting, without a dissenting voice, passed the signifi- 
cant vote that if Mr. Rotch entered the tea he would do so at his peril. 
Captain Hall was also cautioned not to allow any of the tea to be landed. 
To guard the ship during the night, a volunteer watch of twenty-five persons 
was appointed, under Captain Edward Proctor. " Out of great tenderness" 
to the consignees, the meeting adjourned to Tuesday morning, to allow fur- 
ther time for consultation. The answer, which was given jointly, then was 
that it was not in the power of the consignees to send the tea back ; but 
they were ready to store it till they could hear from their constituents. 
Before action could be taken on this reply, Greenleaf, the Sheriff of Suffolk, 
entered with a proclamation from the Governor, charging the inhabitants 
with violating the good and wholesome laws of the province, and " warning, 
exhorting, and requiring them, and each of them there unlawfully assembled, 
forthwith to disperse." 2 This communication was received with hisses -and 
a unanimous vote not to disperse. At this juncture, Copley the artist, son- 
in-law of Clarke, tendered his services as mediator between the people and 
the consignees, and was allowed two hours for the purpose; but after going 
to the Castle he returned with a report which was voted to be " not in the 
least degree satisfactory." In the afternoon, Rotch and Hall, yielding to 
the demands of the hour, agreed that the tea should return, without touching 
land or paying duty. A similar promise was obtained from the owners of 
two other tea-ships, which were daily expected ; and resolutions were passed 
against such merchants as had even " inadvertently " imported tea while 
subject to duty. Armed patrols were appointed for the night ; and six post- 
riders were selected to alarm the neighboring towns, if necessary. A report 
of the proceedings of the meeting was officially transmitted to every seaport 
in Massachusetts ; also to New York and Philadelphia, and to England. 8 

In a short time the other tea-ships, the " Eleanor " and the " Beaver," 
arrived and, by order of the committee, were moored near the " Dartmouth" 
at Griffin's Wharf, 4 that one guard might answer for all. Under the revenue 
laws the ships could not be cleared in Boston with the tea on board, nor 

the machinations of tyranny, stares you in the face. Every 1 Jonathan Williams was chosen moderator ; 

friend in I, is couniry, to himself and posterity, is now called an( j tne business of the meeting was conducted 

nr^W^^tLillLK?^ Ada . Hancoc k, Young, Molineu*. and 

cessful resistance to this last, worst, and most destructive Warren. 

measure of Administration ." - 1 1 titchinson, Afiissiifhitsetts Bay, lii. 432. 

Bostim GateOe, N"v. 29, 1773; Wells's Life " For accounts of this meeting see Bostm 

of S. Adams, ii. 1 10. [The original draft of the /Vr/ViVi', News- Litter, and especially the Gatette 

rail ID the committees of the neighboring town.-. t"i 1'uc. 6, 1773. 

in Warren's hand, is owned by Mr. Bancroft. 4 Now Liverpool Wharf, near the foot of 

Frothingham's Il'i,n, p. 255. ED.] Pearl Street 



48 THE MEMORIAL HISTORY OF BOSTON. 

could they be entered in England ; and, moreover, on the twentieth day from 
their arrival they would be liable to seizure. Whatever was done, therefore, 
must be done soon. The Patriot leaders were all sincerely anxious to have 
the tea returned to London peaceably, and they left nothing undone to 
accomplish this object. On the eleventh of December the owner of the 
" Dartmouth " was summoned before the committee, and asked why he had 
not kept his agreement to send his ship back with the tea. He replied that 
it was out of his power to do so. "The ship must go," was the answer. 
" The people of Boston and the neighboring towns absolutely require and 
expect it." l Hutchinson, in the meantime, had taken measures to prevent 
her sailing. No vessel was allowed to put to sea without his permit ; the 
guns at the Castle were loaded, and Admiral Montagu had sent two war- 
ships to guard the passages out of the harbor. 

The committees of the towns were in session on the thirteenth. On the 
fourteenth, two days before the time would expire, a meeting at the Old 
South again summoned Rotch and enjoined upon him, at his peril, to apply 
for a clearance. He did so, accompanied by several witnesses. The col- 
lector refused to give his answer until the next day, and the meeting 
adjourned to Thursday, the sixteenth, the last day of the twenty before con- 
fiscation would be legal. For two days the Boston committee of corre- 
spondence had been holding consultations of the greatest importance. 

" That little body of stout-hearted men were making history that should endure for 
ages. Their secret deliberations, could they be exhumed from the dust of time, would 
present a curious page in the annals of Boston ; but the seal of silence was upon the 
pen of the secretary, as well as upon the lips of the members." 2 

On Wednesday Rotch was again escorted to the Custom House, where 
both the collector and the comptroller " unequivocally and finally" refused 
to grant the " Dartmouth " a clearance unless her teas were discharged. 

Thursday, December 16, came at last, dies irae, dies ilia ! and Boston 
calmly prepared to meet the issue. At ten o'clock the Old South was filled 
from an outside assemblage that included two thousand people from the sur- 
rounding country. Rotch appeared and reported that a clearance had been 
denied him. He was then directed as a last resort to protest at once against 
the decision of the Custom House, and apply to the Governor for a passport 
to go by the Castle. Hutchinson, evidently anticipating such an emergency, 
had found it convenient to be at his country-seat on Milton Hill, 3 where it 
would require considerable time to reach him. Rotch was instructed to 
make all haste, and report to the meeting in the afternoon. At three o'clock 
the number of people in and around the Old South was estimated at seven 
thousand, by far the largest gathering ever seen in Boston. Addresses 

1 Bancroft, vi. 482. as Hutchinson's country-seat, is not Hutchin- 

" Wells's Life of Samuel Adams, ii. 119. son's house but another on Milton Hill. The 

8 [The mansion which is delineated in Bryant true house was taken down not long since. 

and Gay's History of the United States, iii. 372, ED.) 



THE BEGINNING OF THE REVOLUTION. 



49 



were made by Samuel Adams, Young, Rowe, Quincy, 1 and others. "Who 
knows," said Rowe, " how tea will mingle with salt water ? " a suggestion 
which was received with loud applause. 2 When the question was finally put 
to the vast assembly it was unanimously resolved that the tea should not be 
landed. It was now getting darker and darker, and the meeting-house could 
only be dimly lighted with a few candles ; yet the people all remained, know- 
ing that the great question must soon be decided. About six o'clock Rotch 
appeared and reported that he had waited on the Governor, but could not 
obtain a pass, as his vessel was not duly qualified. No sooner had he con- 
cluded than Samuel Adams arose and said : " This meeting can do nothing 
more to save the country." 8 Instantly a shout was heard at the porch ; the 
war-whoop resounded, and a band of forty or fifty men, disguised as Indians, 
rushed by the door and hurried down toward the harbor, 4 followed by 
a throng of people ; guards were carefully posted, according to previous 
arrangements, around Griffin's wharf to prevent the intrusion of spies. The 
" Mohawks," and some others accompanying them, sprang aboard the three 
tea-ships and emptied the contents of three hundred and forty-two chests of 
tea into the bay, " without the least injury to the vessels or any other prop- 
erty." No one interfered with them ; no person was harmed ; no tea was 
allowed to be carried away. There was no confusion, no noisy riot, no 



1 [The speech which Josiah Quincy, Jr. de- 
livered at this meeting, Dec. 16, 1773, together 
with one of Otis in 1767, are ihe only reports at 
any length of all the speeches made in Boston pub- 
lic meetings from 1768 to 1775. Frothingham's 
Il'iirren, p. 39. Quincy's Life of yosiah Quincy, 
Jr., id cd. p. 124. Mr. Quincy's speech is pre- 
served only in a letter which, after he had gone to 
England, he wrote to his wife from London, Dec. 
i |, 1774, and the words given by Gordon were 
copied from the manuscript still existing. It 
counselled moderation. Miss. Hist. Soc. Proc., 
Dec. 16, 1873, Mr. Waterslon's address. Eu.) 

- Niles, rrinciples and Acts of tht Revolution, 
pp. 485, 486. 

8 Francis Rotch's information before the 
privy council. [The moderator of this meeting 
was William Phillips Savage. His portrait is 
owned by Mr. G. H. Emery. The original min- 
utes, in the hand of William Cooper, of the meet- 
ings from Nov. 29, 1773, are preserved among 
the papers in the Charity Building. They show 
the names of the watch of twenty-five men, under 
Captain Proctor, who were to guard the ships 
th.it night ; and later each successive watch was 
empowered to appoint its successors for the fol- 
lowing night. The final report of Mr. Rotch is 
entered in the minutes for December 16, .is 
follows : 

"Mr. Rotch attended and informed that he 
had demamleil .\ pass for his vessel of the Gov- 
ernor, who answered that he was willing to grant 
anything consistent with the laws and his duty to 

Vdl. III. 7. 



the King, but that he could not give a pass un- 
less the vessel was properly qualified from the 
Custom House ; that he should make no distinc- 
tion between this and any other vessel, provided 
she was properly cleared. 

" Mr. Rotch was then asked whether he would 
send his vessel back with the tea under her pres- 
ent circumstances; he answered that he could 
not possibly comply, as he apprehended it would 
be to his risk. He was further asked whether he 
would land the tea ; he answered he had no busi- 
ness with it unless he was properly called upon 
to do it, when he should attempt a compliance 
for his own security. 

" Voted, that this meeting be dissolved ; and 
it was accordingly dissolved." 

Here the minutes end, the remaining leaves 
of the book being blank. ED.) 

4 [The conclave which had decided upon this 
movement had been held in the back office of 
Edes & Gill's printing house, on the site of the 
present Daily Advertiser building. A room over 
the office was often the meeting place of the Pa- 
triots, and the frequenters got to be known as 
the Long-Room Club. Drake, iMndmarks, p. 
Si. There is some reason to believe that this 
was the office of Josiah Quincy, Jr. A letter 
about the punch-bowl used by the Patriots be- 
fore going to the wharf is given in ^f,lis. Hist. 
Soc. Proc., December, 1871. Lossing, FidJ-Book 
of the Revolution, i. 499, gives the portrait of 
David Kinnison, the last survivor of the "Mo- 
hawks." En. | 



THE MEMORIAL HISTORY OF BOSTON. 



infuriated mob. The multitude stood by and looked on in solemn silence 
while the weird-looking figures, 1 made distinctly visible in the moonlight, 
removed the hatches, tore open the chests, and threw the entire cargo 
overboard. This strange spectacle lasted about three hours, and then 
the people all went home and the town was as quiet as if nothing had 
happened. The next day fragments of the tea were seen strewn along 
the Dorchester shore, carried thither by the wind and tide. 2 A formal 
declaration of the transaction was drawn up by the Boston committee; 
and Paul Revere was sent with despatches to New York and Philadelphia, 
where the news was received with the greatest demonstrations of joy. 3 In 
Boston the feeling was that of intense satisfaction proceeding from the con- 
sciousness of having exhausted every possible -measure of legal redress 
before undertaking this bold and novel mode of asserting the rights of the 
people. 4 " We do console ourselves," said John Scollay, one of the select- 
men, and an actor in the scene, "that we have acted constitutionally." 5 
"This is the most magnificent movement of all," said John Adams. 6 "There 



1 The names of the actors in this scene, as 
well as of those who planned it, were not di- 
vulged till after the Revolutionary War. It is 
supposed that about one hundred and forty per- 
sons were engaged in it. [The " Dartmouth's " 
journal says one thousand people came on the 
wharf. The party actually boarding the ships 
has been estimated from seventeen to thirty, the 
former number being all that have been identi- 
fied. See Frothingham in Mass. Hist. Soc. Proc., 
Dec. 16, 1873, who thinks that the list given in 
Hewes's book is not accurate as respects those 
who boarded the ships. " Several of the party 
have been identified, but the claims presented 
for others are doubtful." John Adams refused 
to have the names given- him. ( Works, ii. 334.) 
Captain Henry Purkitt, who is called the last 
survivor of the party, died March 3, 1846, aged 
ninety-one. As to Hewes, see also Loring's Hun- 
dred Boston Orators, p. 554. ED.] 

2 Barry, ii. 473. [A small quantity of it is 
preserved in a phial in the Mass. Hist. Society's 
cabinet. Thomas Newell records in his diary, 
Jan. i, 1774: "Last evening a number of per- 
sons went over to Dorchester and brought from 
thence part of a chest of tea, and burnt it in our 
Common the same evening." A fourth vessel of 
the tea-fleet was wrecked on the back side of 
Cape Cod. The Boston committee immediately 
sent a message in tliat direction. "The people 
of the Cape will we hope behave with propriety, 
and as becomes men re- _ , 
solved to serve their 

country." We next hear 
of this tea in a letter 
from Samuel Adams to 
James Warren, Jan. 10. 
1774. "The tea which 
was cast on shore at the 



V<<, 



Cape has been brought up, and after much con- 
sultation landed at Castle William, the safe asy- 
lum for our inveterate enemies. ... It is said 
that the Indians this way, if they had suspected 
the Marshpee tribe would have been so sick at 
the knee, would have marched on snow-shoes to 
have done the business for them." It seems 
that Clarke, one of the consignees, had despatched 
a lighter and brought the chests off. Afass. 
Hist. Soc. Proc., Dec 16, 1873. Vessels subse- 
quently arriving were examined ; and in March, 
1774, twenty-eight and a half chests were simi- 
larly disposed of by similar "Indians." ED.] 

3 [Revere returned from this mission Decem- 
ber 27 ; and bringing word that Governor Tryon 
had engaged to send the New York tea-ships 
back, all the Boston bells were rung the next 
morning. Thomas Newell 's Diary. ED.] 

4 " Fast spread the tempest's darkening pall ; 

The mighty realms were troubled ; 
The storm broke loose, but first of all 
The Boston teapot bubbled. 

"The lurid morning shall reveal 

A fire no king can smother, 
When British flint and Boston steel, 

Have clashed against each otlici ! " 

O. \V. HOLMES. 

6 Letter to Arthur Lee, Dec. 23, 1773. 
6 Diary, Dec. 17, 1773. [Two pages of this 
diary, of which the accompanying fac-similf is a 






THE BEGINNING OF THE REVOLUTION. 



is a dignity, a majesty, a sublimity, in this last effort of the Patriots that I 
greatly admire." l 

The blow was now struck ; the deed was done ; and there was no re- 
treat. The enemies of liberty talked of treason, arrests, and executions ; 
but the Patriots almost everywhere rejoiced, and pledged themselves to 
support the common cause. Independence was now openly advocated; 
a congress was called for; and "Union" was the cry from New Eng- 
land to Carolina. 2 

When the news of the destruction of the tea reached England it pro- 
duced a profound sensation, both in Government circles and among the 
people. Coercion was at once resolved upon as the only means of check- 



fragment, are given in the Mats. Hist. Soc. Proc., 
I ' c. 1 6, 1873. ''-"-I 

1 Charles Waterton, the enterprising travel- 
ler and naturalist, of Walton Hall, Wakefield, 
Yorkshire, makes a humorous reference to the 
Tea-Party, in his autobiography, written between 
1812 and 1824 : " It is but some forty years ago 
our western brother had a dispute with his nurse 
about a cup of tea. She wanted to force the boy 
to drink it according to her own receipt. He 
said he did not like it, and that it absolutely 
made him ill. After a good deal of sparring, 
she took u]) the birch rod and began to whip 
him with uncommon severity. He turned upon 
her in self-defence, showed her to the outside 
of the nursery door, and never more allowed her 
to meddle with his affairs." 

- I Aiming the contemporary sources for the 
understand! ng of these transactions may be named 
the following : C, K. T. Hewes, who was one of 
the partirijMiits with the aid of 1!. li. Thacher, 
prepared Traits of the Tea-Party, N. Y. 1835 
(see also Retrospect of the Boston Tea-Party with 
11 Memoir of f/e-.ues, by a citizen of New York, 
V Y. 1834. Hrinlty Catalogue, Nos. 1681 and 
1682) ; and in this book the names of fifty-eight 
actors in the scene are given. The names in- 
scribed on the monument of Captain Peter 
Slater (who was one of the party) in Hope 
Cemetery, New Worcester, are sixty-three in 
number. Both lists include Moses Grant, Wil- 
liam Molincaux, Paul Revere, G. T. R. Hewes, 
Thomas Melville, Samuel Sprague, Jonathan 
Hunnewell, John Prince, John Russell. (Afassa- 
,-/iiisetts Sfy, Dec. 16, 1873.) Sprague was the 
father of Charles Sprague ; Russell was the 
father of Itenjamin Russell. Hewes lived at 
the Hull's Head, an old house on the northeast 
corner of Water and Congress streets. He died 
V'\. 5, 1840, at ninety-eight. There are let- 
ters from Boston in 4 .1/,m. Hist. Coll: iv. 373 ; 
as also the examination of Dr. Williamson be- 
fore the King's council, Feb. 19, 1774. A paper, 
"Information of Hugh Williamson" is in the 
Sparks MSS. Admiral Montagu, writing Dec. 
17, 1773, to the Lords of the Admiralty, says he 



was never called upon for assistance, and he 
could easily have prevented the execution of the 
plan ; and the Evening Post, May 16, 1774, ven- 
tured from the admiral's admission to draw the 
conclusion that Hutchinson and his party con- 
nived at the business. The first accounts received 
in England are given in the Gentleman's Magazine, 
1774, p. 26. An account is in the Boston Gazette, 
Dec. 20, 1773, or Buckingham's Keminisccnces, i. 
169; a contemporary record in Andrews's let- 
ters in Mats. Hist. Soc. Pro,., 1805, p. 325 ; Thomas 
Newcll's Diary in Mass. Hist Soc. Proc., October, 
iSj7; contemporary verses in Mag. of Amer 
History, March, 1880; Hutchinson's narrative is 
in his Massachusetts Bay, iii. 430. Hutchinson'- 
papers in the State House throw much light on 
these disturbed times, and some of his letters arc 
copied by Frothingham in his paper in the Man. 
Hist. Soc. Proc., December, 1873. His interview 
with the king, July I, 1774, after his return to 
England, as reported in his journal, and covering 
these transactions, has only of late years been 
made public. Mass. Hist. Soc Proc., October, 
1877, p. 326. Other contemporary documents 
will be found in Force's American Archives, i. ; 
Niles's Principles and Acts of the Revolution ; 
Franklin's Works, viii. ; John Adams's Works, ii. 
323, 334, and ix. 333. An appeal of " Scxvola " 
to the commissioners appointed for the sale of tea 
in America was printed as a broadside, and a copy 
is in the Sparks MSS. xlix. vol. ii. p. 115. Of 
the eclectic later accounts the fullest is in Froth- 
ngham's Life of Warren, ch. ix. ; and in his paper 
in Mass. Hist. Soc. Proc., Dec. 16, 1873, where will 
be found the contributions of others to that com- 
memorative occasion. See also Bancroft, vi. ch. I. ; 
Barry, Massachusetts, ii. ch. xiv. and xv. ; Wells's 
Sam. Adams, ii. ; Tudor's Otis, ch. xxi. ; Snow's 
Boston ; Niles's Register, 1827, p. 75; Lossing's 
Field-Book; and Harper's Monthly, iv. Also 
James Kimball in Essex frufitiite Proceed: 
The English writers are May's Constitutional 
Historv i'/" England, ii. 5:1 ; \I.i- :nd, 

ii. ch. xviii. ; Fitzmaurice's Shelbume, ii.; Mac- 
knight's Burke, ii ch. xx. ; and the usual genera] 
historians. Elxj 



52 THE MEMORIAL HISTORY OF BOSTON. 

ing the unruly and defiant spirit which had become dominant in Boston. 
On March 7 the King, in addressing Parliament, accused the Americans of 
attempting to injure British commerce and to subvert its constitution. 
The message was accompanied with a mass of papers and letters. 1 Lord 
North demanded additional powers in order to re-establish peace. The 
question at issue, it was said, was whether the colonies were or were not 
the colonies of Great Britain. If they were, they should be held firmly; 
if they were not, they should be released. Upon this question there was, 
just at this time, great unanimity in England. The authority of the Crown, 
it was urged, must be maintained at all hazards. Any act in violation of 
that must be punished. Even the party in opposition yielded much upon 
this point. Thus the ministry were fully prepared to introduce the most 
pronounced penal measures ; and on the eighteenth, Lord North, disre- 
garding constitutional forms, which forbid that any should be condemned 
unheard, brought in the famous Boston Port Bill, a measure for suspend- 
ing the trade and closing the harbor of Boston during the king's pleasure, 
and enforcing the act by the joint operations of an army and a fleet. 2 The 
bill was stoutly opposed by Burke, Barre, Dowdeswell, Pownall, and others; 
but in two weeks it passed through the various stages and was carried 
without a division in the Commons, and unanimously in the Lords, and 
became a law March 3 1 by the royal assent. This act was to go into effect 
on the first day of June. It took away from Boston the privilege of land- 
ing and discharging, as well as of loading and shipping, all goods, wares, 
and merchandise. 3 It constituted Marblehead a port of entry, and Salem 
the seat of government. As if this were not enough, Lord North now 
brought in within a month a series of measures, compared with which all 
that had gone before was mild and legitimate. The ministry seemed de- 
termined to wreak their vengeance upon the devoted head of Massachu- 
setts ; and nothing was too arbitrary, radical, or revolutionary for them to 
recommend. Up to this point there might have been a way of reconcili- 
ation. The cruel and exasperating Port Bill would probably have been 
withdrawn upon certain easy and perhaps reasonable conditions. The tea- 
tax and its preamble, which gave such offence to the colonists, might have 
been repealed; indeed an attempt to do so was made on April 19, when 
Edmund Burke made his ever memorable speech. 4 But when the penal 

1 These letters were from Hutchinson and Court, Temple, is in the Lee Papers, University 

other royal governors, and from Admiral Mon- of Virginia. ED.] 

tagu and the consignees of the tea, accom- ' 2 " The offence of the Americans," it was 

panied by a large number of pamphlets, mani- said in the course of the debate, " is flagitious, 

festoes, handbills, etc., issued in the colonies. The town of Boston ought to be knocked about 

(The king and council had already, Feb. 7, their ears and destroyed. Delenda est Cartltagp. 

1774, considered the petition of the House of You will never meet with proper obedience to 

Representatives for the removal of Hutchinson the laws of this country until you have de- 

and Oliver, and had dismissed the charges " as stroyed that nest of locusts. " ; Mass. Gazette, 

groundless, vexatious, and scandalous, and cal- May 19, 1774. 

ciliated only for the seditious purpose of keep- 8 [See Sargent's Dealings with the Dead, \. 

ing up a spirit of clamour and discontent." The 1 53. ED.] 
nfticial copy sent to Arthur Lee, No. 3 Garden * Works, Boston, 1865, vol. ii. p. I. 



THE BEGINNING OF THE REVOLUTION. 53 

measures, commonly known as the Regulation or Reconstructive Acts, 
were passed, a fatal blow was struck at the American system of local self- 
government, and the conflict was beyond recall. 

These acts, which passed in rapid succession during the month of April, 
were for the purpose of " regulating the government of the Province of 
Massachusetts Bay." 1 The speech of Lord George Germain, on the intro- 
duction of the bill, shows how sadly ignorance concerning America, and 
contempt for her institutions, had pervaded England at this time. Speak- 
ing of North's plan to punish the people of Massachusetts, he said: - 

" Nor can I think he will do a better thing than to put an end to their town- 
meetings. I would not have men of a mercantile cast every day collecting them- 
selves together and debating about political matters. I would have them follow their 
occupations as merchants, and not consider themselves as ministers of that country. 
... I would wish to see the Council in that country similar to the House of Lords 
in this. . . . The whole are the proceedings of a tumultuous and riotous rabble, who 
"ii^ht, if they had the least prudence, to follow their mercantile employments, and not 
trouble themselves with politics and government which they do not understand." 

When he had finished this remarkable speech, Lord North arose and 
said : " I thank the noble lord for every proposition he has held out. They 
are worthy of a great mind, and such as ought to be adopted." 2 

For the purpose of strengthening the executive authority, these Regula- 
tion Acts, without giving any hearing to the Province, provided, 

1. In total violation of the charter, that the councillors who had been 
chosen hitherto by the Legislature should be appointed by the king, and 
hold at his pleasure. The superior judges were to hold at the will of the 
king, and be dependent upon him for their salaries ; and the inferior 
judges were to be removable at the discretion of the royal governor. The 
sheriffs were to be appointed and removed by the executive; and the juries 
were to be selected by the dependent sheriffs. Town-meetings were to be 
abolished, except for the election of officers, or by the special permission of 
the Governor. This bill passed by a vote of more than three to one. 

2. Magistrates, revenue officers, and soldiers, charged with capital of- 
fences, could be tried in England or Nova Scotia. This bill passed by 
a vote of more than four to one. 

3. A military act provided for the quartering of troops upon the 
towns. 3 

These oppressive edicts, said th'e Massachusetts committee in their cir- 
cular, were only what might have been expected from a Parliament claim- 
ing 4 the right to make laws binding the colonies " in all cases whatsoever." 

1 [The debates are Riven in 4 Force's Ameri- don, AmfHfan Revolution, i. 232-235. Mahon, 

can Archn-cs, i. F,I>.| History t>f England, vi. 5,6. Bancroft, vi. 525, 

- l\ir/iantfntiiry Hati<rv, xvii. pp. 1 192-1 195. 526. Frothingham, Rise of the Republic, pp. 345- 
Also Boston newspapers of May 19 and 23, 347. Dana, Oration at Lexington, April 19, 1875. 
1774. In the declaratory act. See earlier in this 

* Boston Post-Boy, June 6 and 13, 1774. Gor- chapter. 



54 THE MEMORIAL HISTORY OF BOSTON. 

The news of the Port Act created, as may well be supposed, the greatest 
indignation in the colonies ; but Boston stood firm, and the other seaports 
refused to profit by her patriotic sufferings. 

In May Hutchinson was recalled, to the great relief of the people of the 
province ; and Thomas Gage, Commander-in-chief of the continent, was 
appointed also Governor of Massachusetts. In all the political agitations 
in the colonies thus far, Gage had behaved so discreetly as an officer that 
he enjoyed a considerable share of public confidence. After a lengthy in- 
terview with his predecessor at Castle William, he landed at Long Wharf, 
on May 17, saluted by the ships and batteries, and received by the civil 
officers of the province. The cadets, under Colonel Hancock, performed 
escort duty, and the council presented a loyal address at the State House. 1 
A public dinner followed at Faneuil Hall.' 2 Undoubtedly this welcome 
given to Gage was owing, in part, to the delight of the people at the re- 
tirement of Hutchinson. 3 But it soon appeared that the new Governor, 
with many excellent traits, was not the man to reconcile or to subdue, if 
indeed any such man could have been found in the whole British service 
at this critical moment. It devolved upon Gage to close the port of Bos- 
ton and to enforce the measures of the odious Regulation Acts. The 
blockade of the harbor began on the first day of June, after which all inter- 
course by water, even among the nearest islands or from pier to pier, was 
rigidly forbidden. Not a ferry could ply to Charlestown, nor a scow to 
Dorchester. Warehouses were at once useless, wharves deserted, and or- 
dinary business prostrated. All classes felt the scourge of the oppressor; 
yet there was no regret at the position which the town had deliberately 
taken in defence of its constitutional rights. These were dearer to the in- 
habitants than property or peace or even life itself, as was shortly to be 
proved. Expressions of sympathy poured in from all quarters. Supplies 
of food and money were generously sent from the other colonies as well 
as from the neighboring towns. 4 Salem and Marblehead scorned to profit 

1 I" The Town House is fitted up in the most * [There are at the City Hall various lists of 
elegant manner, with the whole of the outside donations received at this time, with the records 
painted of a stone color, which gives it a fine of the donation committee. See Vol. I. p. xx. 
appearance." June, 1773, in Mass. Hist. Soc. The correspondence of this committee is in 4 
Proc., July, 1865, p. 324. Hancock had the pre- Mass. Hist. Coll., iv. Colonel A. H. Hoyt has 
vious March, 1774, delivered the usual Massacre given an account of these gifts in the N. E. Hist. 
oration, which in the opinion of some was writ- and Cental. Keg., July, 1876. A subscription- 
ten by Samuel Adams. John Adams's Works, lisU of contributions raised in Virginia in 1774, 
ii. 332; Wells's 5. Attams. ED.) for the "distressed inhabitants of Boston," is 

2 [Gage at this " elegant entertainment gave printed in the Mass. Hist. Soc. Proc., Decem- 
' Governor Hutchinson ' as a toast, which was re- her, 1857. When the Marbleheaders sent in 
ceived by a general hiss." Mass. Hist. Soc. provisions for the Boston poor, they were re- 
frof., 1865, p. 328. ED.] fused passage for them by water, and an expensive 

3 [The friends of Hutchinson and the pre- land-carriage of twenty-eight miles was rendered 
rogative made themselves conspicuous by an ad- necessary, as even a ferry passage was refused, 
dress on his leaving the province, and a list of Mass. Hist. Soc. Proc., 1865, p. 336. Benefactors 
the " addressers " is given in Mass. Hist. Soc. in South Carolina and Connecticut were equally 
Proc., October, 1870. ED.] compelled to pay for a land passage. Eu.] 



THE BEGINNING OF THE REVOLUTION. 55 

by the sufferings of Boston, and offered the free use of their wharves and 
stores. 1 

The committee of correspondence assumed with much ability the ar- 
duous and responsible task of guiding public affairs at this crisis. " A 
solemn league and covenant " to suspend all commercial intercourse with 
England, and forego the use of all British merchandise, was forwarded to 
every town in the province ; and the names of those who refused to sign it 
were to be published. The first act of the Legislature at Salem was to 
protest against the illegal order for its removal. The House of Represen- 
tatives was the fullest ever known in the country, one hundred and twenty- 
nine being present. It was for them to fix the time and place for the 
proposed meeting of the Continental Congress, for which Samuel Adams 
and his coadjutors were diligently laboring. 2 While they were sitting with 
closed doors a message came from the Governor dissolving the Assembly, 
but not until its important work had been done. 8 Baffled in his purposes 
and chagrined at the success of the Patriots, Gage, without consulting the 
council, issued his foolish and malignant proclamation against the com- 
bination not to purchase British goods. He denounced it as " unwarrant- 
able, hostile, and traitorous ; " its subscribers as " open and declared enemies 
of the King and Parliament ; " and he " enjoined and commanded all ma- 
gistrates and other officers ... to apprehend and secure for trial all 
persons \\lu> might publish or sign, or invite others to sign, the covenant." 
It was known that the Governor was endeavoring to fasten charges of 
rebellion upon several of the popular leaders, in order to secure their ar- 
rest; but his plans did not succeed. 

In August the Regulation Acts were officially received by Gage and 
immediately put into effect, sweeping away the long cherished Charter of 
Massachusetts, and precipitating the irreversible choice between submis- 
sion and resistance. Samuel Adams wrote : * 

" Boston suffers with dignity. If Britain by her multiplied oppressions accelerates 
the independency of her colonies, whom will she have to blame but herself? It is 

1 [In 1774 John Kneeland printed at Boston of the prevailing feeling is found in Andrews's 

a part of Thomas Prince's sermon on the de- letters. Mass, ffist. Soc. Proe^ 1865^.327. 

slruction of D'Anville's fleet in I746, ll with a view ED.] 

IM encourage and animate the people of God to * |C. M. Endicott's Leslie's Retreat, p. c> 

put their trust in him, under the severe and El).] 

keen distrusts now taking place, by the rigor- * The Congress was appointed to meet in 
<>iis execution of the Port Hill." Ellis Gray, September, at Philadelphia, and the Massachu- 
writini; from Boston at this time to a friend in setts delegates were Bowdoin (who, however, 
Jamaica, somewhat drolly apologizes for his could not attend), Samuel Adams, John Adams, 
slack correspondence on the ground that he Gushing, and Robert Treat Paine. (This Con- 
lived "seventeen miles from a sea-port," re- gress sat in Philadelphia from September 5 to 
ferring to Salem and Marblehcad. Sec .!/,;>. <>ctol>er 26. The idea of it is said to have 
///.>/. .S'<v. /'r,', , M.nch, 1876, p. 315. The Royal originated with Franklin. Its proceedinc.- 
.-/,/-. .I/,;,., [uiie, 1774. ' Revcrc's sued in Philadelphia, were at once reprinted in 
satires on the I'ort I'.ill, in "The Able Doctor, or Uo-ton. Numerous references are given in 
America swallowing the 1'itt r Diaught." The \Vin>or's Handbook, pp. 16-19, V.\>.\ 
same maga/inc foi May contains the act for * Letters to William Chcckley and Charles 
blockading the port of Boston An expression Thomson, June I and 2, 1774. 



56 THE MEMORIAL HISTORY OF BOSTON. 

a consolatory thought that an empire is rising in America. . . . Our people think 
they should pursue the line of the Constitution as far as they can ; and if they are 
driven from it they can with propriety and justice appeal to God and to the world. 
. . . Nothing is more foreign to our hearts than a spirit of rebellion. Would to God 
they all, even our enemies, knew the warm attachment we have for Great Britain, 
notwithstanding we have been contending these ten years with them for our rights ! " 

That attachment was ruthlessly severed by the operation of the new acts. 
"We were not the revolutionists," says Mr. Dana. 1 "The King and Parlia- 
ment were the revolutionists. They were the radical innovators. We were 
the conservators of existing institutions. They were seeking to overthrow 
and reconstruct on a theory of parliamentary omnipotence. . . . We broke 
no chain." 

Boston was now occupied by a large military force. The Fourth, Fifth, 
Thirty-eighth, and Forty-third regiments, together with twenty-two pieces 
of cannon and three companies of artillery, were encamped on the Common. 2 
The Welsh Fusileers were encamped on Fort Hill, and several companies 
of the Sixty-fourth were at Castle William, where most of the powder and 
other stores had been removed from New York. The Fifty-ninth was en- 
camped at Salem, to protect the meetings of the new mandamus council ; 
and two companies of the Sixty-fourth were at Danvers, to cover the Govern- 
or's residence. 3 The camp at Boston was, in the absence of Gage, under 
command of Earl Percy, who had recently arrived with Colonels Pigott and 
Jones. Lord Percy describes the situation with some minuteness in his 
letters written to friends in England at this time: 4 

"The people, by all accounts, are extremely violent and wrong-headed ; so much 
so that I fear we shall be obliged to come to extremities." " One thing I will be bold 

1 Oration at Lejcinelott, April 19,1875. "And over all the open green 

., r ,. r ,. f ., v ... , Where grazed of late the harmless kine, 

- [We get a glimpse of the British camp at The ,, s deepening ruis art- seen, 

this lime in the privately printed Memoir and The war horse stamps, ihe bayonets shine." 

Let/crs of Captain W. Glanvilte Evelyn of the John Andrews, writing of the delegation to 

Fourth Regiment ("A'/yy'.t Own"), which was the Congress of September, 1774, says: "Robert 

printed in 1879 at Oxford, edited by G. D. Scull. Treat Paine set out with the committee this 

This officer joined his regiment in June, 1774, and morning [Aug. 10]. They made a very respect 

wrote home sundry letters here preserved, in able parade in sight of five of the regiments 

which the provincials appear as "rascals and encamped on the Common; being in a coach 

poltroons." In December he was quartered in a and four, preceded by two white servants well 

house, and, having "laid in a good stock of Port mounted and armed, with four blacks behind in 

and Madeira, hoped to spend the winter as well livery, two on horseback and two footmen." - 

as our neighbors." He speaks of Sam Adams Mass. Hist. Soc. Pro,., July, 1865, p 339. En.| 
" as moving and directing this immense conti- 3 [Here, at the country residence of Robert 

nent, a man of ordinary birth and desperate Hooper, " King Hooper "of Marblehead, Gage 

fortune, who, by his abilities and talent for fac- had his headquarters for a while, Salem being 

tious intrigue, has made himself of some conse- then, under the Port Bill, the capital. On Aug. 

quence ; whose political existence depends upon 27, 1774, Gage left Danvers and moved his 

the continuance of the present dispute, and who headquarters to Boston, and the Fifty-ninth 

must sink into insignificancy and beggary the and Sixty-fourth regiments soon followed him, 

moment it ceases " (p. 46). " Hancock is a poor the former taking post on Boston Neck to 

contemptible fool, led about by Adams." Dr. throw up entrenchments there. ED.] 
Holmes draws the picture of the Common at * Private letters in possession of his Grace 

this time: the Duke of Northumberland, and copied, by 



THE BEGINNING OF THE REVOLUTION. 57 

to say, which is, that till you make their committees of correspondence and con- 
gresses with the other colonies high treason, and try them for it in England, you never 
must expect perfect obedience from this to the mother country." ' This is the most 
beautiful country I ever saw in my life, and if the people were only like it we should 
do very well. Everything, however, is as yet quiet, but they threaten much. Not 
that I believe they dare act." " We have at last got the new acts, and twenty-six of 
the new council have accepted and are sworn in ; but for my own part, I doubt 
whether they will be more active than the old ones. Such a set of timid creatures I 
never did see. Those of the new council that live at any distance from town have 
remained here ever since they took the oaths, and are, I am told, afraid to go home 
again. As for the opposite party, they are arming and exercising all over the country. 
. . . Their method of eluding that part of the act which relates to the town-meetings 
is strongly characteristic of the people. They say that since the town-meetings are 
forbid by the act, they shall not hold them ; but as they do not see any mention made 
of county meetings, they shall hold them for the future. They therefore go a mile out 
of town, do just the same business there they formerly did in Boston, call k a county 
meeting, and so elude the act. 1 In short, I am certain that it will require a great 
length of time, much steadiness, and many troops, to re-establish good order and gov- 
ernment. I plainly foresee that there is not a new councillor or magistrate who will 
dare to act without at least a regiment at his heels ; and it is not quite clear to me 
that he will even act then as he ought to do." " The delegates from this province are 
set out (August 21) to meet the General Congress at Philadelphia. They talk much 
of non-importation, and an agreement between the colonies. ... I flatter myself, 
however, that instead of agreeing to anything, they will all go by the ears together at 
this Congress. If they don't, there will be more work cut out for administration in 
America than perhaps they are aware of." 

It soon appeared that the new acts were powerless to accomplish the end 
contemplated by the Government. With all the support furnished by a royal 
governor, royal judges, and a royal army, the courts could not sit, jurors would 
not serve, and the people would not obey. Sheriffs were timid, councillors 
resigned their places and soldiers deserted. Meanwhile the colonists were 
busy, maturing their plans in clubs, caucuses, and conventions. Whether 
these were legal or illegal under the new act, they did not stop to inquire. 

permission, by the present writer. Hugh Earl ment until the year 1786, when he succeeded his 

Percy was born August 25, 1742. In early life father as Duke of Northumberland. For many 

he adopted the military profession, and served years his time was chiefly employed in improving 

under Prince Ferdinand of Brunswick in the his princely estates. During the war with France, 

Seven Years' War. He arrived in Boston July 5, he raised from among his tenantry a corps of 

1774, with the Fifth Regiment of foot, and re- fifteen hundred men, called the "Percy Yeo- 

mained in tin- service in this country until May manry." the whole corps being paid, clothed, and 

3, 1777, when he returned to England with the maintained by himself. He was a Knight of the 

rank of licut.-general in North America. He Garter, a member of several learned societies, 

was especially prominent .it Lexington, and in and the recipient of many i>f tiie highest hon- 

the attack mi Foil Washington, at King's Bridge, ors of the realm. He died at Northumberland 

Soon after his return to Kngl.md. he wa- selected House, London, July 10, 1817, in the seventy- 

to head a commission to offer term-* ot i oncilia- fifth year of his age, and was buried in St. 

tion to Congress ; but, owing to a division in the Nicholas Chapel, Westminster Abbey. 
British Cabinet, Lord Percy declined the offer, ' [This explains the somewhat strange appel- 

and the project was abandoned. After this, he lation of the " Suffolk Resolves," mentioned 

represented the city of Westminster in Parlia- later in the text. Eu.j 
VOL. III. 8. 



THE MEMORIAL HISTORY OF BOSTON. 




No act of Parliament, they maintained, could impose restrictions upon those 
ancient and chartered rights which they had always enjoyed. With this 

1 This cut follows an engraving by V Green, portrait presented by the Duke of Northumber- 
executed in London, in 1777, and measuring 18 land, July 30, 1776, to the magistrates of West- 
X 12<4 inches. The plate was engraved from a minster, and placed In the council chamber of 



THE BEGINNING OF THE REVOLUTION. 



59 



conviction they had resisted the injustice of the Stamp Act and the Tea 
Act, and they were not the men to yield now to a tyranny far greater than 

cither. 




THE WARREN HOUSE IN ROXBURY. 



The Regulating Act had not been long in operation before the popular 
resistance which it encountered found appropriate expression in the famous 
Suffolk Resolves drawn up by Warren, who acted as a kind of director-gen- 
eral during the absence of Samuel Adams at Philadelphia. These resolves, 



their Guild Hall in commemoration of Lord Per- 
ry's public services. The portrait was evidently 
a dupli< .ue .'I the one by Pompeio Battoni, now 
at Alnwi.-k t .istle, a copy of which was made in 
1879 by order of the present Duke and presented, 
through the writer of this chapter, to the Town 
of Lexington. Another likeness of Karl Percy, 
taken later in life, mav l>e seen with a brief ac- 
count in Captain Kv. Kn's .]/ moir and Letters, 
p. 12- 

1 [This cut follows a painting now owned by 
the wife- of I)r I'.uckminstcr llrown. of Ko-ton. a 
descendant of General Warren. The house w.i- 
built in 1720 by Joseph Warren, the Gtm-i.il'> 
grandfather. It was use.l as quarter* fat Colonel 
David Brewer's regiment during the summer of 



1775. The late Dr. John C. Warren acquired 
the estate in 1805; and selling off all but the 
house in 1833, he built, in 1846, the present stone 
cottage on the site. (Life of f>>: John Warren, 
ch. i.) In the old house (of which another view, 
as well as one of the present cottage, is given 
in Drake's Tmvn of Roxb,,ry, p. 213) Joseph 
Warren was txirn, in 1741 ; but .11 this time he 
lived on Hanover Street, where the American 
House n. I iriiiR the mansion hou 

ph Green, which stood thi ffi't- 

, 1875, p. 101. Ellis Ames, Esq., has 
pans of Warren's day-book between January, 
1771, and January, 1775, showing the extent of 
his medical practice. Frothingham, Lift of 
Warren, p. 167. ED.] 



60 



THE MEMORIAL HISTORY OF BOSTON. 



nineteen i.i number, 1 were adopted in September by the Suffolk convention, 
which nut successively at Stoiighton ( Canton), Dedham, 2 and Milton. 3 They 




declared that the sovereign who breaks his compact with his subjects forfeits 
their allegiance. They arraigned the unconstitutional acts of Parliament, 



1 Given in Frothingham's Warren, pp. 365- 
367, and Appendix i. 

2 At the house of Richard Woodward. 
8 At the house of Daniel Vose. 

* [This cut follows a painting by Copley, now 



in the possession of Dr. Buckminster Brown, of 
Boston, who kindly allowed it to be photographed 
for the engraver's use. Perkins, in his Copley's 
Life and Paintings, p. 1 1 5, says : " The canvas is 
about five feet long by four wide, and the color- 



THE BEGINNING OF THE REVOLUTION. 



6l 



and rejected all officers appointed under their authority. They directed 
collectors of taxes to pay over no money to the royal treasurer. They 
advised the towns to choose their officers of militia from the friends of the 
people. They favored a Provincial Congress, and promised respect and 
submission to the Continental Congress. They determined to act upon the 
defensive as long as reason and self-preservation would permit, " but no 
longer." They threatened to seize every Crown officer in the province as 
hostages if the Governor should arrest any one for political reasons. They 



ing is very beautiful. It was one of Copley's 

portraits before he left Boston for Europe 
in 1774, and as a piece of artistic skill, as well 

r its historic interest, has been pronounced 
by good judges to be one of the most valuable 
of Copley's portraits in this country. It was 
painted while General Warren was the presiding 
officer of the Massachusetts Congress." The 
sitter and the artist wore intimate friends, and 
the portrait was painted for General Warren's 
children, and has always been in the possession 
of some branch of the family. This portrait, with 
that of Mrs. Warren, by the same artist, was 
loaned to Mr. W. W. Corcoran for exhibition in 
his gallery at Washington, D. C. There is ex- 
tant a letter from Lord Lyndhurst in which he 
makes inquiries respecting it, in reference, it is 
supposed, lo the possibility of securing it for an 

liah i ollcction. These paintings have been in 
lloston since the spring of iS-n, and have never 
before been reproduced. That of Mrs Warren, 
nf the s.une sue, was probably painted three or 
four years previously. She died in 1773,31 the 
age of twi ntv-sis. 

The familiar engraved likeness of General 
Warren, lo low ing another Copley. 29 x 24 inches, 
in citi/cn's dress, showing one hand, was origi- 
nally owned In funeral Arnold Welles who mar- 
ried Wan en's daughter, from whom it passed to 
the late Dr John C. Warren, and is now owned 
by his grandson of the same name. Another half- 
length by Copley, belonging to the city, is now in 
the Art Museum. Early engravings of Warren 
are to be found in the Impartial History of the 
//'/;-, Boston edition (engraved by J. Norman, 
full-length, and showing the battle of Bunker 
Hill in the background), and in the Boston Afaga- 
:inf. May, 1784, following Copley's picture and 
engraved by J. Norman. A colored engraving 
resembling Copley's likeness was also frequently 
Men, and a copv is now preserved in the pavilion 
on ] Junker Hill. A portrait statue, based on 

t v's likeness, and executed by I lenry Dexter, 
was erected in this pavilion in 1857, when dedica- 
torv son ices took place on the anniversary of 
the battle, with an address bv Kdward Everett. 
An engraving of the statue is given in the com- 
memorative volume which was issued at the time 
by the Bunker Hill Monument Association. See 



also George Washington Warren's History of 
the Bunker /fill Monument Association. 

General Warren left four children, two sons 
and two daughters. The sons died in early 
manhood. One daughter married General Ar- 
nold Welles, of Boston, and died without chil- 
dren. The second daughter was twice married : 
first to Mr. I.vman, of Northampton, and sec- 
ond to Judge Newcomb, of Greenfield, Mass. 
This daughter died in 1826, leaving one son, 
Joseph Warren Newcomb, who had two chil- 
dren, a son and daughter. The descendants of 
General Warren now living are a great-grand- 
daughter, who is married and lives in Boston, 
and a great-great-grandson, who is a cadet at 
West Point. 

A sumptuous volume, Genealo/y of Warren, 
by Dr. John C. Warren, was printed in Boston, 
in 1854, to show the connections of the Patriot 
both in this country and presumably and pos- 
sibly in England. For an account of the papers 
of General Warren, see Lift nf John C. ll\irrtit, 
[.217. One of Pendleton's earliest lithographs 
was of Warren's portrait, which appeared with 
a memoir in the Boston Monthly Magazine, June, 
1826. 

Abigail Adams repeats a story of an intended 
indignity to the body of Warren after his fall at 
Hunker Hill, from which he was saved by his 
Freemasonry affiliations. (Familiar Letters, p. 
91.) On the repossession of Boston after the 
siege, the body was exhumed from the spot where 
he fell ; and after an oration pronounced over it 
by Perez Morton (which was printed and is 
quoted in Loring's Hundred Boston Orators, p. 
127*), it was deposited in the Minot tomb in the 
Granary Burying-ground; and in 1825 was re- 
moved to a tomb beneath St. Paul's, whence, 
at a later day, the remains were again removed 
to Forest Hills cemetery. Shurtleffs Description 
'.>/<>, p. 251. See an account of some relics 
of Warren by T- S. I.oring in the /////. Mag., De- 
cember, 1857. His sword is in the possession of 
I >r John Collins Warren. Mass. Hist. Sx. /Vw, 
September, 1866, p. 348. ED.) 

Also reprinted in a Biographical Skttck of Central 
Joxfli H 'amn'tmtra^itig hit Bottom Orations 0/1:^2 
and 1775 : togither wit* Iki Eulofy frowmcid fy Ptm 
Marlon, in 1776 By a Boslonian. Bottom : 1857. 



62 



THE MEMORIAL HISTORY OF BOSTON. 



also arranged a system of couriers to carry messages to town officers and 
corresponding committees. They earnestly advocated the well known Amer- 
ican principles of social order as the basis of all political action ; exhorted 
all persons to abstain from riots and all attacks upon the property of any 
person whatsoever; and urged their countrymen to convince their " enemies 
that in a contest so important, in a cause so solemn, their conduct should 
be such as to merit the approbation of the wise, and the admiration of the 
brave and free of every age and of every country." For boldness and prac- 
tical utility these resolves surpassed anything that had been promulgated 
in America. They were sent by Paul Revere as a memorial to the Congress 
at Philadelphia, where they were received with great applause, and recom- 
mended to the whole country. 

Gage, perceiving that the time for reasoning had passed, applied 1 for 
more troops, seized the powder belonging to the Province, 2 and began the 
construction of fortifications on the Neck, near the Roxbury line, command- 
ing the only land entrance which Boston had. 3 Beyond the limits of Boston 



1 [Correspondence of Gage at this time with 
Lord Dartmouth is in the Mass. Hist. Soc. Proc., 
1876, p. 347. See also Life of Lord Harrington. 
ED.] 

2 [On September i, 1774, Gage sent 260 sol- 
diers, who embarked in boats at Long Wharf, to 
seize the Province's store of powder, which was 
kept in the old mill on the road from Winter Hill 
to Arlington. William Brattle, at that time 
commanding the Province militia, had instigated 
the movement. It was successful, and the troops 
returned bringing not only the powder, but two 
field-pieces which they had seized in Cambridge. 
This theft was soon avenged. An artillery com- 
pany had been organized by Capt. David Mason 
in 1 763, and was known commonly as " the train," 
and attached to the Boston regiment. Its com- 
mand had passed in 1768 to Lieutenant Adino 
Paddock, who was a good drill master, and who 




derived instruction himself from members of a 
company of royal artillery stationed at the Castle ; 
and the train became the school of many good offi- 
cers of the Revolution Paddock received two 
light brass field-pieces, and uniformed a number 
of German emigrants in white frocks, hair caps, 
and broadswords, to drag the cannon. These 
pieces had, it is supposed, been cast in London for 
the Province from some old cannon sent over for 
the purpose, and they bore the Province arms. 
They seem to have been first used when the king's 
birthday was celebrated, June 4, 1768, in firing a 
salute, when the train paraded with Colonel 



Phips's governor's troop and Colonel Jackson's 
regiment. At the outbreak of the war these 
pieces were kept in a gun-house at the corner of 
West Street ; and as Paddock adhered to the royal 
cause, and might surrender them to Gage, they 
were stealthily removed by some young Patriots 
and, on a good opportunity, conveyed by boat to 
the American camp, where they did good service 
then and through the war ; and in 1788 Knox, 
then secretary of war, had them inscribed with 
the names of Hancock and Adams, and they now 
may be seen in the summit-chamber of Bunker 
Hill Monument. (Drake's Knox, p. 127.) The 
young men who accomplished their removal were, 
among others, Abraham Holbrook, Nathaniel 
Balch, Samuel Gore, Moses Grant, and Jeremy 
Gridley. (Tudor's Life of Otis, p. 452.) Judge 
Story's father was another. (Life and Letters of 
Judge Story, i. 9. See also N. E. Hist, and Geneal. 
Reg. vii. 139.) The commit- 
tee of safety, Feb. 23, 1775, 
instructed Dr. Warren to 
ascertain what number of 
Paddock's men could be de- 
pended on. Drake, Cincin- 
nati Society, p. 543, gives a 
partial list of the train-mem- 
bers, designating such as subsequently served in 
the Patriot army. Paddock left Boston with 
Gage, and died in the Isle of Jersey in 1804, 
aged seventy-six. Mills and Hicks's Register, 
'775' gives a statement of the Boston military 
at this time. See Frothingham's Siege of Boston, 
p. 49. ED.] 

3 (Andrews records, Sept. 5, 1774, that Gage 
began to build block-houses and otherwise repair 
the fortifications at the Neck, but he could get 
none of the artisans of the town to help him. 
Three days later Gage, "with a large parade of 



THE BEGINNING OF THE REVOLUTION. 63 

and Salem the Governor had scarcely any power. The people of the inte- 
rior counties recognized only the authority of the committees of correspon- 
dence, and of the congresses composed of their own representatives. 

On the fifth of October, the members of the Massachusetts Assembly 
appeared at the court-house in Salem, but were refused recognition by 




MRS. JOSEPH WARREN. 1 



Gage ; thereupon they resolved themselves into a Provincial Congress and 
adjourned to Concord, where, on the eleventh, two hundred and sixty mem- 
bers, representing over two hundred towns, took their seats, and elected 



attendants," surveyed the skirts of the town op- 
posite the country shore, supposably for determin- 
ing on sites of batterie*. See an editorial noie 
to the chapter following this. In \-vemliev. 1771. 
\.itluniel Appletiin writes to Jo-i.ih niiincy. Jr. : 
"The main guard is kept .it Ci-orije I 
warehouse in Kint; Street The new-erected for- 
tifications on the Xeck are laughed at by our old 



LouNburg soldiers as mud walls." Life of 
Josiah Quincy, Jr., p. 175. Eli.] 

1 [She died in 1773, aged 26. The Boston 
t M.iv 3 published some commemo- 
rative verses on her Frothingham's H'.irren, 
p. 22.S. This painting is the ]>endant of that nt 
General Warren, and the two have always been 
owned together. ED.) 



64 THE MEMORIAL HISTORY OF BOSTON. 

John Hancock president, and Benjamin Lincoln secretary. They sent a 
message to the Governor, remonstrating against his hostile attitude. He 
answered by making recriminations; and shortly after issued a proclamation 
denouncing them as " an unlawful assembly whose proceedings tended to 
ensnare the inhabitants of the Province, and draw them into perjuries, riots, 
sedition, treason, and rebellion." The Congress, having adjourned to Cam- 
bridge, adopted a series of resolves providing for the creation of a " com- 
mittee of public safety," l a sort of directory empowered to organize the 
militia and to procure military stores. 2 A committee of supplies was also 

appointed, and three general officers 
Preble ' Ward ' and Pomeroy were 





/f ~^\ chosen by ballot. Thus the people of 

(s Massachusetts proceeded in a calm and 

statesmanlike manner to organize themselves into an independent existence, 
and to make suitable provision for their own po- 
litical, financial, and military necessities. They 
had no intention of attacking the British troops, 
but took measures to defend themselves in case 

of necessity. 3 Hitherto they had carefully avoided being the aggressors, 
and they were determined to adhere to this policy ; but they considered it 
the part of wisdom to be prepared for any emergency which might arise in 
the present complicated state of affairs. Consequently, all the towns were 
advised to enroll companies of Minute Men, who should be thoroughly 
drilled and equipped. 4 

Gage also on his part was actively employed in strengthening the gar- 
rison, and by the end of the year he had no less than eleven regiments, 
with artillery and marines, quartered in Boston, besides a large number of 
ships of war at anchor in the harbor. During all this time the Tory party 
was endeavoring, without much success, to secure adherents to the royal 
cause. 6 Most of their leaders, finding their position uncomfortable in the 

1 Hancock, Warren, and Church were the Lodge of Masons, who had their quarters here. 
Boston members. Paul Revere records how he was one of upwards 

2 [Mr. C. C. Smith contributed a valuable of thirty men, chiefly mechanics, who banded 
paper on "The Manufacture of Gunpowder in together to keep watch on the British designs 
America," to A/ir^f. ///rf. Soc. Proc., March, 1876. in 1774-75, an ^ me ' here. The old building 
ED.] disappeared in October, 1828, when the street 

8 fit was at the Green Dragon Tavern, which was widened to accommodate the travel to 

stood on what now makes Union Street, near Charlestown. Shurtleff, Description of Boston, 

where it runs into Haymarket Square (there is a p. 605. ED.] 

doubt whether the building now marked with * [The last monthly meeting of the Friends 

a dragon on a tablet gives correctly the site), and was held in Boston in the eleventh month of 

whose earlier history is noted in Vol. II , Intro- 1774. "The record speaks of its being a time 

duction, p. v, that the leading Patriots held their of difficulty in Boston on account of the present 

conclaves. It was in front a two-story brick calamity [the war] ; and the same likely to attend 

building with a pitch roof, but of greater eleva- them through the winter, Boston monthly meet- 

tion in the rear; and over the entrance an iron ing is dropped." An Historical Account of the 

rod projected, and upon it was crouched the various Meeting-houses of the Society of Friends in 

copper dragon which was the tavern's sign. It Boston, published by direction of the Yearly 

was probably selected as a meeting place because Meeting, Boston, 1874. ED.] 
Warren was the Grand Master of the Grand 5 See Sabine's Loyalists. 



THE BEGINNING OF THE REVOLUTION. 




country towns, took refuge in Boston as a kind of asylum. Their organs de- 
nounced the Patriots as rebels, rioters, republicans, and sowers of sedition. 

At the beginning of the year 1775 the American question was brought 
forward in the House of Lords by the Earl of Chatham, who, in one of his 
most eloquent speeches, urged the immediate 
removal of the king's troops from Boston. He 
eulogized the American people, their union, 
their spirit of liberty, and the wisdom which 
marked the proceedings of their Congress. 1 He charged the ministry with 
misleading the king and alienating the affections of his subjects. Chatham 
was ably supported by Shelburne, Camden, and Rockingham ; but all their 
appeals " availed no more than the whistling of the wind." The motion 
was rejected by nearly four to one. This result, following as it did the re- 
jection by the Cabinet of the petition of Congress which Franklin had just 
presented, was sufficient proof that nothing was to be hoped for from that 
quarter. If any further evidence was wanted, it was soon found in the in- 
structions which were sent to Gage to act offensively, and in the Restraining 
Act, which excluded New England from the fisheries. 2 

While England was thus forcing on the issue, America was preparing to 
meet it. The new Congress convened at Cambridge in February, and ap- 
pointed its committee of safety and the delegates to the next Continental 
Congress. Provision was also made for the militia ; and Colonels Thomas 





and Heath were commissioned additional general officers. " Resistance to 
tyranny ! " was now the watchword for Massachusetts. " Life and liberty 
shall go together ! Continue steadfast ! " said the Patriots ; " and with a 
proper sense of your dependence on God, nobly defend those rights which 
Heaven gave and no man ought to take from us." 8 



1 [See the History of Lord North's Adminis- 
tration, p. 187; Hugh Boyd's Miscellaneous 
Works, \. 196; Annual Register, 1775, p. 47; 
Belsham's Great Britain, vi. 91 ; Life of Josiah, 
Quincy, Jr., p. 318. ED.] 

- [Sec various references for political move- 
ments in England at this time in Winsor's 
//iiititlwt, p. 23, etc. ED.] 

8 [In March came the anniversary of the 
massacre, and Warren's most famous address in 
commemoration. See Mr. Goddard's chapter. 
The diary of Joshua Green, making note of it, 
speaks of the attempts of Hi itish ott'u ITS present 
at the town-meeting which followed, to break it up 
by unseemly disturbances. (Mass. Hist. Sot. Proc., 
VOL. III. 9. 



1875, p. lot.) About this time (March 22, 1775), 
according to statements printed in a Boston 
letter in the New York yournai, a number of 
drunken liritish officers set to hacking the fence 
before Hancock's house ; and on a repetition of 
such annoyances, Hancock applied for a guard. 
While the congregation of the West Church 
were observing a fast, drums and fifes were 
played by another party close under the win- 
dows. Something of the feeling of the time can 
be gathered from letters of Quincy, Cooper, 
Winthiop, and Warren, printed in .^fassachu- 
sftts Historical Society's Proceedings. June, 1863, 
all addressed to Benjamin Franklin in Lon- 
don. ED.] 



66 



THE MEMORIAL HISTORY OF BOSTON. 



Gage did his utmost to disarm and disperse the militia and seize their 
military stores. He sent expeditions to Marshfield and Jamaica Plain and 
Salem ; i but the judicious and spirited conduct of the inhabitants defeated 
his object, and the peace was not then disturbed. For a time it was quiet, 
but it was only the lull before the storm ; and the hour of the American 
Revolution, which had been so long in coming, was near at hand. The 
War of Independence on this continent began 2 at last on that memorable 
morning, enshrined forever in the annals of freedom, when 

" The troops were hastening from the town 
To hold the country for the Crown ; 
But through the land the ready thrill 
Of patriot hearts ran swifter still. 

" The winter's wheat was in the ground, 
Waiting the April zephyr's sound ; 
But other growth these fields should bear 
When war's wild summons rent the air." 




1 [The expedition to Salem was sent by Gage 
in transport from the Castle, and its three hun- 
dred troops, landing at Marblehead, marched to 
Salem to seize some cannon. Their failure and 
retreat is described in Charles M. Endicott's 
Leslie's Retreat at the North Bridge, Feb. 26, 177 5, 
printed separately for vol. i. of the Essex Institute 
Proceedings. See also Life of Timothy Pickering. 
i., and George B. Loring's Address on the centen- 
nial observance of the event. The contemporary 
accounts of the Marshfield expedition are in 
Force's American Archives. Of another and 
more secret expedition just now, that of Captain 
Brown and his companion De Berniere, sent by 
Gage inland toward Worcester to pick up infor- 
mation, we have their own account, printed in 
the American Archives, i. Gage's instructions 



to these emissaries, Feb. 22, 1775, were printed 
in Boston in a pamphlet in 1779, which also con- 
tains "The Transactions of the British troops 
previous to and at the Battle of Lexington," as 
reported to Gage. En.] 

2 [Various claims have been made for earlier 
shedding of blood and resistance in arms, like 
the capture of the fort at Great Island, near 
Portsmouth, Dec. 13, 1774, see American Ar- 
chives, Belknap's Nna Hampshire, Amory's Gen- 
eral Sullivan and Gmiernor Sullivan, Muss. Hist. 
Soc. Proc., March, 1875 i or tne Golden Hill 
affair, Jan. 19, 1770, near New York, see Hist. 
Mag., iv. 233, and again January, 1869 ; or the 
Westminster massacre, March, 1775, in Ver- 
mont, see Hist. Mag., May, 1859; see also 
Potter's American Monthly, April, 1875. ED.] 



ADDENDA. 



[Dr. John C. Warren has given to the Editor 
the following extract from his grandfather's diary 
(the elder Dr. John C. Warren) : 

"Feb. 12, 1851. . . . That picture [of Gen- 
eral Warren, then in Faneuil Hall] was copied 
from one belonging to me, painted by Copley for 
Governor Hancock, and which I bought when 
some of the relics of Governor Hancock's family 
were sold at the stone house in Beacon Street by 
the widow of Governor Hancock. This picture 
was copied by request of Hon. John Welles, who 
felt an interest from the fact that his brother, 



General Arnold Welles, married the elder daugh- 
ter of General Warren. He (Mr. Welles) pre- 
sented this copy to the city [in 1827]. . . . 
Another picture painted by Copley for General 
Warren . . . was in the possession of my father, 
who had charge of the relics of the family of 
General Warren ; and when Mrs. Newcomb, the 
younger daughter of General Warren, was mar- 
ried, he allowed her to take this picture, which is 
now [1851] in the possession of her son, Mr. 
Newcomb." ED.] 



CHAPTER II. 

THE SIEGE OF BOSTON. 

BY THE REV. EDWARD E. HALE, D.D. 

\ FTER dark on the 1 8th of April, 1775, eight hundred British troops, 
^*- being the grenadiers and light infantry of Gage's army, were with- 
drawn as quietly as might be from their barracks and marched to the bay 
at the foot of the Common. The spot is near where the station of the 
Providence Railroad now stands. 1 Boats from the squadron had been or- 
dered to the same point to meet them. The troops were under the com- 
mand of Lieut-Colonel Francis Smith, of the Tenth regiment. Directly 
northward, crossing by about the line of Arlington Street what are now 
the Commonwealth Avenue and Beacon Street, the little army came to 
Phips's Farm, now East Cambridge, and after two hours took up its silent 
march through Cambridge to Lexington and Concord. The column con- 
sisted of men drawn from the Fifth regiment, the Tenth, Thirty-eighth, 
Forty-third, Fifty-second, Fifty-ninth, and Sixty-fifth. Officers and men 
from each of these corps appeared in the list of killed and wounded after 
the next day. In some instances they may have been detached on separate 
service ; in which case no large number of the regiment was present on the 
march. - 

What happened at Concord, and on the way thither and back, has worked 
its way into the world's history. "On the nineteenth of April," says the me- 
morial of the Provincial Congress, " a day to be remembered by all Amer- 
icans of the present generation, and which ought and doubtless will be 
handed down to ages yet unborn, the troops of Britain, unprovoked, shed 
the blood of sundry of the loyal American subjects of the British King in 
the field of Lexington." 

The Common and the Back Bay were so far apart from the familiar 
haunts of men in those days, that General Gage had some hope, perhaps, 
of sending his men away without an immediate alarm. 8 But this hope was 

1 [Here was water enough for the boats (see * [Donkin, Military Collections, p. 170, says 

map at beginning of Vol. I.), but Gage's account they carried "72 rounds of ball-cartridges per 

says simply " from the Common." Smith says man." ED.] 

nothing. The usual story runs simply "from the * [See the Editorial notes following this 

foot of the Common." ED.] chapter. En.] 



68 THE MEMORIAL HISTORY OF BOSTON. 

disappointed. Thirty men of the Patriot party, mostly mechanics, had 
bound themselves into a club, to observe the movements of the Tories and 
the army. They took turns as patrols, two and two, to watch the streets at 
night. Some one, who was perhaps one of these men, told Dr. Warren 
that the soldiers were moving to the Back Bay. Warren immediately sent 
William Dawes to Lexington, whither John Hancock and Samuel Adams 
had retired to escape arrest, supposing that one object of the expedition 
was to seize them. Dawes started on horseback, crossing the Neck to 
Roxbury. At ten o'clock Warren sent to Paul Revere, who was one of the 
club of patrolmen, and begged him to go to Lexington and tell Hancock 
and Adams of the movement, " and that it was thought they were the 
objects." Paul Revere went to a friend who had a boat in readiness, and 
crossed at once to Charlestown. So early was Gage's secret known. Sted- 
man, in his history of the war, says that Gage told Percy of the movement 
as a profound secret;, that Colonel Smith knew he was to go, but not where. 
As Lord Percy returned to his own quarters, he fell in with eight or ten 
men talking on the Common. One of them said : " The troops have 
marched, but will miss their aim." " What aim? " said Lord Percy. 
" Why," the man replied, " the cannon at Concord." Lord Percy, ac- 
cording to the story, returned to General Gage and told him, with surprise 
and disapprobation, what he had heard. The General said that his con- 
fidence had been betrayed, for that he had communicated his design to 
only one person beside Lord Percy. This is one of the flings of the time 
upon Mrs. Gage, 1 who was American-born. The English officers who dis- 
liked Gage were fond of saying that she betrayed his secrets. But in this 
case, after eight hundred men were embarked for Cambridge, ten Boston men 
on the Common might well have known it; and " the cannon at Concord " 
were a very natural aim. Warren, as has been said, thought of Hancock 
and Adams as the object. 2 

Paul Revere had already concerted with his friends on the Charlestown 
side, that, in the event of any movement by night on the part of the Eng- 

1 [Adams had learned of the movement to be at the house, an order was left for him to 
Concord from "a daughter of liberty, une- report himself at eight o'clock at the bottom 
qually yoked in point of politics," as Gordon of the Common, equipped for an expedition, 
says. ED.] Mrs. Stcdmnn hastened to inform her husband of 

2 The following narrative, kindly communi- this alarming summons, and he at once carried 
cated by a granddaughter of Dr. Stedman, the the intelligence to Dr. Benjamin Church, who 
great-granddaughter of Henry Quincy, shows lived near by on Washington Street. Gibson 
exactly how the news travelled from house to soon came in and took leave of his wife, pale 
house without treachery. Mrs. Stedman lived with anxiety at the doubtful issue of this sudden 
in the Salter homestead, at the corner of Winter and secret enterprise. 'Oh, Gibson ! ' said my 
and Washington streets, where is now Tuttle's mother, 'what are you going to do?' 'All, 
shoe-store: madam!" he replied, 'I know as little as you 

" It was difficult at that time to obtain ser- do. I only know that I must go.' He went, 
vants, and Mrs. Stedman had been glad to sc- never to return. He fell on the retreat from 
cure the services of a woman whose husband Lexington. A few minutes before receiving 
was a British soldier named Gibson. On the the fatal shot he remarked to one of his corn- 
evening of the eighteenth of April a grenadier in rades that he had never seen so hot a day, 
full regimentals knocked at the door and inquired though he had served in many campaigns 
for Gibson. On being told that he would soon in Europe." 



THE SIEGE OF BOSTON. 



69 




lish army, a lantern should be displayed in the tower of Christ Church. 
This signal had announced the news to the Charlestown people before 



1 [Of the likenesses of Revere, Mr. 1 1 tin- 
toon, in an address at Canton in 1875, says: 
" Two pictures have been preserved of him ; one, 
taken in the full prime of manhood, by Copley, 
which, after having lain neglected for many vi-ars 
in an attic in this town, has been finally rc^torid. 
The other, by Stuart, brings up a venerable face 
and stately form." Perkins, Ci'pley's Lift anJ 
Paintings, ]). i>S. .-..ivs the earlier picture is now 
owned by John Revere, of Boston. Il shnw* 



him at a table, in shirt -sleeves, holding a silver 
cup, with engraver's tools at hand. The Stuart 
is followed in the present cut. 

Revere's agreement for engraving and print- 
ing the paper money of the Provincial Congress 
is dated Watertown, Dec. 8, 1775, an d ' s '" tnc 
.VassiifAmctts Archi- . . \\\viii. 271. A cut of 
treasury-note of 1775 is given 
ing's field-Boot of the Revolution, i. 534. 
En.] 



70 THE MEMORIAL HISTORY OF BOSTON. 

Revere arrived. He mounted his horse, and the famous " Midnight Ride " 
of Longfellow's ballad began. The night was clear and frosty. 

With the exceptions of the patrolmen, of such leading Patriots as 
Warren and others, to whom they reported, and the families in which 
officers on duty were quartered, most of the people of Boston probably 
slept without knowing that the first step had been taken toward war. But 
before daylight on the nineteenth, General Gage had received word from 
Colonel Smith that the country was alarmed, and he at once ordered a de- 
tachment under arms to march out to reinforce that officer, and show the 
king's strength. This detachment was to be commanded by Earl Percy, 
who had led the five regiments which made the " promenade " of March 
30 through Jamaica Plain and Dorchester. Percy was at this time a fine 
young officer of about thirty years of age. 1 

Percy's command consisted of the First Brigade, formed of the Fourth, 
Twenty-third, and Forty-seventh regiments, to which a detail of the Royal 
Marines .was joined. To summon the marines, the order was sent to Major 
Pitcairn, their commander. In the precision of the red-tape of Gage's 
office, yet new to war, it was forgotten that Pitcairn had already gone as a 
volunteer with Colonel Smith. The letter therefore, with the orders to the 
marines, waited on his table unopened, while the rest of the detachment 
paraded. The venerable Harrison Gray Otis in his old age left the fol- 
lowing account of this parade: 

"On the i Qth April, 1775, I went to school for the last time. In the morning, 
about seven, Percy's brigade was drawn up, extending from Scollay's Buildings, through 
Tremont Street, and nearly to the bottom of the Mall, preparing to take up their 
march for Lexington. A corporal came up to me as I was going to school, and turned 
me off to pass down Court Street ; which I did, and came up School Street to the 
school-house. It may well be imagined that great agitation prevailed, the British 
line being drawn up a few yards only from the school-house door. As I entered the 
school, I heard the announcement of deponite libros, and ran home for fear of the 
Regulars. Here ended my connection with Mr. Lovell's administration of the school. 
Soon afterward I left town, and did not return until after the evacuation by the 
British in March, I776." 2 

Why does not the column move? Percy is ready. The infantry are here, 
and the light artillery; where are the marines? It is discovered at this late 
moment that the order for the marines is lying unopened at Major Pitcairn's 
quarters. Three or four hours before this, had anybody in Boston known 
it, Major Pitcairn had uttered on Lexington Common that famous appeal, 

1 He was afterward Duke of Northumber- that Master Lovell, with prophetic sagacity, said : 

land. His letters, copied by the Rev. E. G. "War's begun, and school's done; liefoiiile lib- 

Porter on a recent visit at the castle of the roi." He knew that this was war, though the 

present duke, give us some of our most vivid news of bloodshed did not reach Boston till noon, 

contemporary accounts of the Boston of that [ Lori ng, Hundred Boston Orators, p. 193, makes 

time. the young Otis just afterward a witness of the 

- MS. letter of Otis to the writer, E. E. H. troops' march by a house which stood where the 

A tradition, which we have at first-hand, says Revere House now is. ED.) 



THE SIEGE OF BOSTON. 71 

familiar to any school-boy in America for half a century after: "Yc vil- 
lains, ye rebels, disperse! Lay down your arms. Why don't ye lay down 
your arms? " 

Hut as yet no man knows where he is, and the orders for his marines are 
waiting. This is only an early instance of a sort of imbecility which hangs 
over the English army administration, revealed in many of the early anec- 
dotes of the war. 1 

So soon as the marines were ready Percy marched, at nine o'clock. 
He moved south, through what is now Washington Street, to Roxbury, up 
the hill by the Roxbury meeting-house, to the right, where the Parting- 
Stone was then and is now ; and so to the Brighton Hridge, where he was to 
cross Charles River to Cambridge. The distance from the head of School 
Street to that bridge by that road is about eight miles. Hut even if Gage 
was eager to save time, the boats were at Phips's Farm. Probably he 
and Percy both wished to make a military display. School -boys will be in- 
terested to know, that, as Percy's column approached Roxbury, Williams, the 
master of the grammar school, dismissed his school also, probably an hour 
later than Lovell dismissed his. He turned the key in the lock, joined his 
company, and served for the seven following years in the army. The Rox- 
bury company of Minute Men had paraded in the mean time, summoned 
by the alarm from Lexington. When Percy passed, on the old road to 
Cambridge, they appear to have been at Jamaica Plain, whither the com- 
mander had marched them, and where Dr. Gordon was leading them in 
prayer. It is fair to suppose that no commander in his senses chose to 
have them in the line of Earl Percy's advance. 

As Percy rode on, his band was playing Yankee Doodle. He observed 
a Roxbury boy who was uttering shouts of derision, jumping and dancing, 
so as to attract Percy's attention. Percy sent for the boy and asked him at 
what he was 4aughing. " You go out to Yankee Doodle," said the lad, 
" but you will dance by and by to Chevy Chase." It was a happy allu- 
sion to the traditions of the Percys; and Gordon, who records the anec- 
dote, says the repartee stuck to Lord Percy all day. 2 

The day was already hot, when, after three or four hours' marching, 
Lord Percy and his army came to the bridge over Charles River, between 
Brighton and Cambridge. The bridge was a simple affair, and by General 

1 If anybody happens to care, Major Pitcairn 

is the nephew of the naval officer who discovered This fight did last from break of day 

Pitcairn's Isl.in.l. Observe " Marines." Ti " ""'"* of lhe * un ' 

* As the boy and Lord Percy remembered the '&ZSZZS2H %* *" 



ballad, these are some of the telling verses : 

God prosper long our noble King, wi ' h "> Erie Percy, lliere was laux 

Our lives and safetye* all : 
A woefull hunting once there did sir Robert Rcliff, nd Sir John, 

In Oievv-i hM befall. Sir James, thai bold barron. 

Horace \Valpole in one of his letters of the 

To drive the decre with hound and horne. tjmc makcs ^ s . (m( , a , lusioll , .. thc hunting 

t,rle rCTcy took DIB '.\.i\ , _. 

The child ,,,,v rue, ihai i. ,,nl,.me, f that da y- Wolf* ' Letttr, to H*ra Ma**, 

The hunting of that day. June 5, 1775. 



72 THE MEMORIAL HISTORY OF BOSTON. 

Heath's orders the boards had been so far removed that it was impassa- 
ble ; but the frugal committee of safety who had done this, not knowing 
yet what war was, had piled the boards on the Cambridge side, instead 
of boldly committing them to the water. Percy sent soldiers across on the 
string-pieces of the bridge, who relaid the boards so far that his troops 
could cross. He left his baggage-train for the better completion of the 
bridge, and pressed on, knowing indeed that the country was growing hot in 
more senses than one. When he came upon Cambridge Common, where 
were then no fences, but many roadways leading in different directions, Lord 
Percy was confused, and needed instructions as to his route. Cambridge was 
shut up. No man, woman, or child could be found to give him information, 
except a tutor of the college, Isaac Smith, afterward preceptor of Dummer 
Academy. Smith, being asked the road to Lexington, " could not tell a 
lie." Instead of sending Lord Percy down to Phips's Point, as the Pa- 
triots of the time thought he should have done, he directed him to 
Menotomy, now Arlington, on the right road. 1 Percy followed it, and 
arrived in Lexington at two or three in the afternoon, 2 in time to receive 
Smith's scattered and worried men ; but his baggage-train, delayed at the 
bridge, was cut off at Menotomy. 3 It appears from Percy's own letters that 
he did not know till he arrived at Menotomy, about one in the afternoon, 
that there had been any fighting beyond. 

Meanwhile Dr. Warren had heard in Boston, early in the day, by a spe- 
cial messenger, this news which Percy did not receive till one in the after- 
noon. Warren left his patients in the care of Eustis. 4 He crossed to Charles- 
town, and never returned to his home. As he left the ferry-boat he said to 
the last person with whom he spoke : " Keep up a brave heart ! They have be- 
gun it, that either party can do; and we '11 end it, that only one can do." 
This was at eight in the morning. He mounted his horse at Charlestown. 
As he rode through the town he met Dr. Welch, who said, "Well, they are 
gone out." " Yes, and we will be up with them before night." 5 Dr. Welch 
seems to have joined him. He says : " Tried to pass Percy's column ; 
stopped by bayonets. Two British officers rode up to Dr. Warren, in the 
rear of the British, inquiring, ' Where are the troops? ' The doctor did not 
know ; they were greatly alarmed." These were probably the commanders 
of Percy's baggage-train ; and this incident places Warren at Cambridge as 
late as twelve or one o'clock of that day. 

1 Smith was sent to Coventry by his neigh- church in Arlington marks the spot where the 
bors for giving this information, and was obliged, "old men" captured this train. See Vol. II. p. 
or thought he was, to embark for England a 382. ED.] 

few weeks later (May 27), where he preached to 4 Who was afterward Lieut.-Governor and 

a Dissenting chapel in Sidmouth for a while; but later Governor of the State, 
returning in 1784, he became librarian of Har- 6 Another diary dates this as late as ten in 

vard, and later chaplain of the Boston Alms- the morning. [See Richard Frothingham's Lift 

house. See Evacuation Memorial, p. 190. of Joseph Warren, p. 457, (who quotes the state- 

2 This is his own naming of an hour which is ments'in the text from a manuscript of Dr. 
sometimes stated rather later in the day. Welch) and his Siege of Boston, p. 77, for further 

8 [A stone beside the road and opposite the accounts. ED.] 



AClRCUMSTANTTAL ACCOUNT 



Of an Attack that happened on the i9rh of April 1775. on h" 

MAJLSTYV Troops, 



By a Number of the People of the Province of MASSACHUSETTS- 



ON T.jefriv the itth of April, about Silf pjft to 
Night. Lvurenam Colonel Sm"h ct rhr icih 
Rci4ititmr, rmbi'krd (com i hf Common at Boflo". 
with the G'en-itlterj and L>gh* Infantry <f the 
Tmc.p therr, and lad-d on tl oppuhte *u1e. l'u-i 
henc^ he _begn h Mirth towards Concurd, whwe t-c 
* *vde eri 10 drflrot a Mjg9tie uf Militaiy Srorrt, de 
poOtrd i her* tor in*- Uic vt 411 Army to be jflcmbtal, in 
l>urr tu art ga-ift h>* Majeftv, and htsCtnvemmfni. The 
C i Jon l< tir< 1 nisOOicen r<igett>e| and t^ave Orders, trwtiKe 
1 rot>ii flumki ncr hrf. vulrh h<rd upoo . tnd i>ct march- 
llt* * frw M'les, Oe'*r!tetl ft t ottDinm ofl.ight Infanti f . 
Untie- iltf Cotiuna<v1 ol M*]f>. Ptfir", I" take Polfcfliou 
(if tu B'idijes on 'he other Side ot Cuncord : boon alter 
I JIM heard many Styjl Gum, and the noting of AUnn 
brill (rpcjieiiU, which convinced them that the Ccunuv 
VA rlfiog to opix.fr them, arkl that k u a preconcerted 
fcttiftwe to oppofr ihe King's Iruupa, whenever ihrre 
ftuHild.be* iv , r oip Oppo-tunrty for ii. About j unlock 
ll'.r nnt Mo'in^, hc 1 rm|ii being advanced w.ffun t*o 
Nl1c of LfK-.^n, InrrhhfrfKC ws rr<n.eil tlU rwul 
I''VB IHunOird M^n i>. v,ti, were flVmhler1, *d Ortcr- 
lieU in op^.tle ihe K>ng'a fioft^* . 'and 9ft Mjnr Pic- 
fltrn'i ^l(n V 'p>ng up IP UK Head of the/ advanced Ci-npa- 
rwi, to CfTifm lolormed him rha> A MJO Adviiurd (>om 
Ihute ihar vcrc Ormbled) hail prrlenr-d his Mulq'oi j^l 
itrtnpud t fliour them, but ilie Piece fltfheJ m Hie p -n 
Oi this thcM*j.jf gave rtire/>ion to the Troopi t nie 
fc ( -**rd, tut on no Account 10 Bee, no* even to mtntpt t 
%"ihnut Oder* Whn thn arrived a( the trw iK tl-r 

Village, they olilervnj ^bour ioo armrd Men, dn*r. up OP 
G'trn, and *>hen die Ttrx.pi came within Hundred 
Y'rdl of then), ihry brgin in hie ort to*ird< lo^r Monc 
VValli, on thtir r^si FU.k The Lijthi l,.Unir nhvr.mg 
1'iii, ran after ihrm k the Maior mflant'h called lu UK- Sul 
iJi^tHOt to fire, hue tu1urrHi->H nwl diUm* ih^n* . "i-v.iT 
Ihefp ho rud jumped -><r a Wall, tnc.i lied ("' -v li^e 
Phot ttjhe Troop?, wmmdcd a Man of the io<li Hr A i- 
Wif, and the Major s Ho-i' m twn PUcr*. j - .1 t ' 
timt Tume fe-cul Skm Weie Cired iiotn a M^ecg i l.iuie 
Oil the lefV' Up^n t*Mi. v/i*thu< Jn Odd or Rr^U'uy. 
*hr Lighl Infantry he^an * fcjicecetl F.rr. imi killed Irrr4 
*f til* Country People ; Uit wet* fiicfKtJ at frop a* tlif 
AltUiurujr t Uwir ORV Cfl could n^t: them. 

"t After (hia, Colonel Smith marclted up with the R;mm 
dfruf the Derachmem, and the whole B>dr procrcdc.1 r 
Concord, where I'-ry arnv^d about 9 o'Cl'-ck ^if^ul 
<A ThmR Further Kipprntng ; bot aft numbcrt "rf arme* 
l*f(p'e were frcn Afcmblmg on i>!l t'>c Hei^St* **>. 
Colonel Smitli wuh ihf Grenadier!, a*x' Part ol the *j^ 
Inflntpy r?mnntd 4 Concord. 10 fc*K*i ( i" C tim^n. .\ 
dleie i he dethed Obtain Parfons *n v fix Liwh; Cn>(,*- 
fl (0 fircU'c a Bridge at for.r OJUncr ttcxn C.i.iwl, *<1 
*0 procrcd from thence 10 tcitam rtouf^. *heic *t 
fuppolal there w* Cinnon, and AtnmuAt.i . (ap*<"i 
1'arlbns in pjifuancc o( th:f Oidcn, pofted three Cnmpa- 



K'". f.-Vf 't" *^*i>c 4 I ;(!,! f tir.fir-n '"tJt'' b*' 'W 
T.-.in1.itjni9 iHe r-i r f-M'o 'ht MM***"- tlnui'- ^^* 1 



^d on fSffir FVftghcl nnr ir, undtr HM 
M Lau> ic of tnr 4jd 8egi-nent 4 imd 
its chc Renvumlcr vmt axJ de'rroyrrl kwre Contwn 
Wticcli, fancier, and Bill i tlie t*rp Cil! civKiiued 
ncre*Gng on rh Hetgtiti t od ukcteut arf Hour aftef^ 
1irge Boilf ol them be. -.an to move wwardi 'he Bridge^ 
i rtc Light Co*ni>anmot 'be 4th and iotH iVn tkfcenderf, 
4tirt joined Caj-ijiii Ijunc, ihe People C'liKinued w d 
*a"Cr in great Number* t anj &red upon thf Km^ll roopS, 
k.lW fhrrc Men. wounird <o* mficers OIK Serjeant. 
md tour pnvc Men, U;XK> *hxh (^<iei 'rtvrnmg tt>tfi>l 
Ldurte aM hi) Omccr*. thought It ptudeot td 
i<i-rl* the Mam Body t Co-iCtnJ, and were /ooo 
** Comp*niet of Orcn*;i j . when Cap'itd 
returned wfi tftc .t.'se C'ompaniti over too 
Bridge, tt-ev ublcrved tliiee SoUiirr* on ihc G'ourd une of 
theT f^iprd, luv Head oiitc+i inuigled, and hrt t^ri cut 
off. tho^pAi quite dcd , a Si^hf wrurli flrutk the SuUl*ert 
with Ho'rr->r , Opratu Pirfoni tna>(i<rdon and joined the 
Mam Pod i. *h< wcrt or!y vaitio^ lor ha comi- g up, to 
match back 10 Bofln t Colonel Smuh had exrfyird h'n> 
O'drrs, wiJhov 1 Upv"Ctw, by *JelUoy>jjf all the Mtliinry 
Store* be coW bno i t>..'h trie CoUiod, aoo Major 
r rcairn, twvng ukcn au p^flihte Ptiia ti> connrcc the 
tfw w. Uu,> wu *.iten'ird tlicas lad uu( rf 
opened i(.<"" !'<-"' brn requarec 1 , i i-.f" tot <ttd 
x r*ot me I' :','"rt Mifcli-el f)iCH.IJ b<- ifcme .-either 

bari anv of thr Pruple the lufl OcctfiAn to tomoUin, but 
OVv *r luikr, *.d one nl iliem een tiiutk Major 
Purairn. F icep" fpoA Captain Laurie, at ,rht Bndgc, 
An rlofuUica bapprned hum the Affi.r LextfgroA, 
iinul the Troop* began chrtr Mvch back. A* fowi u 
ihc Troops had pot out o* tKe I own t Coacnrt*, tfcej 
receivfO a heavy Kire frt-m *li Sides, from Walla, frncct* 
H->-lr, Tree*, Bains, flee, which continued without Inter? 
n>.H"*n, itHibey met t:w firrt Bi^jdr, with two field Piecei, 
ne*r Letint^iun t ordered out under tbt Conim^nd J lrd 
Perc^ ro fupport them t (advice bavin; beta recti*cd 
atxHu 7 o'clock next Morning, that Signal! hid beta 
nude, and EvpKftet gone out tt> alarm ihe Count/*, tnd 
r.u the People *e'e nfing ro attack the Troops under 
Colonel Smith ) Upon- the Firing of the Field f>ee*. the 
PeopJ-* F-T w tor while ftlrncrd, bur '*ty ftifl cov 
i- 1. .,f] i> p.K-rcsfr f'f*ly In Nutnbeft, they fired a^,*.'ia 
uptrtre. fit'.u Il i'U'ri wrff they cooM fttjd f""rf. upoa 

the whole Bodv, od concuwwd fo done lot the Space of 

Fifteen Miles : Not wkhfl a reding their Number they dtdoot 
uiKk openly dutinj the Wbolc Dsy, but kfpt under Cuet 
On all Ocrfu.n T^e Troops weie very uuicti fatigued, 
Ifte greater Part ol trvn hm\ ..ig wrm wntfer Arnn all 
Nrghi. .:"d nude a M>cl. ol upwaiua ot Fortv M 
before they anivrd at Ch<iUUo*n, (too: wheocc tb*/ 
over to BoAwtt. 



( .r*.[' (.-Hi ' 



The Troops had aboe FUfy killed. *nd irwnf vo* 
woundi-d Kepn*U vjj,^,* abuut the, LoA 
b? UK CoteAhr Prjplt, fern? m*kc it vet; 
O4bc't not to osucTt. 



,efj .-.ml 
u.1 til. I . '!-.' ai I 



GAGE'S ACXOUNT OF THE MXHH;MH UK AI-RII., i;75- 

VOL. III. 10. 



74 



THE MEMORIAL HISTORY OF BOSTON. 



The anxiety of Boston that day is easily imagined. 1 Gage had sent out 
a considerable part of his army, eighteen hundred men, from a force not four 
thousand. His communication with his force in the field was by no means 
as good as that of the Patriots. The sun had gone down when, to anxious 
eyes watching from Beacon Hill, the flashes of muskets on Milk Row 2 
the road from Cambridge to Charlestown revealed the line of the retreat. 
Percy was now in command. He did not mean to risk an embarkation at 
Phips's Point, where the boats were still lying. Pickering's Essex regiment 
was on his flank at Winter Hill, and he chose to put Charlestown Neck 
between himself and pursuit. 3 He arrived there after eight o'clock. Heath, 
who during the afternoon had been exercising a general command, called 
off the Patriot forces. Percy bivouacked on Bunker Hill ; and thus was 
the war begun. 4 The selectmen sent word to Percy that if he would not 
attack Charlestown they would take care that his troops should not be mo- 
lested, and would do all in their power to get them over the ferry. The 
" Somerset " man-of-war sent her boats first for the wounded, then for the 
rest of the troops. The pickets of the Tenth regiment were sent from Bos- 
ton to keep all quiet. The Americans put sentinels at Charlestown Neck, 
and made prisoner of an officer of the Sixty-fourth, who was going to join 
his regiment at Castle William. 

From that time till the next March, what is popularly called " the siege 
of Boston " continued. Civil government stopped in the town. The select- 
men's record ends with a typical blank : " At a meeting of the selectmen, this 
19 th Apl., 1775, present, Mesrs. Newhall, Austin, Marshall, - ," and this 
is all ! The civil magistracy did no more as matter of formal record till 
March 5, 1776, when they appear again. Martial law came in, of which a 
contemporary definition says : " A provost-marshal is a man who does as he 
chooses ; and martial law is permission to him to do so." 

All the night of the battle-day minute-men were marching and riding 
from all parts of New England to Cambridge. Before daybreak of the 

1 [The various rumors which reached IJoston, are some interesting relics of Lexington, two 
during the progress of events that day, are noted firelocks bequeathed to the State by Theodore 
in Andrews's letters. Mass. Hist. Soc. Proc., Parker : one, the first firearm captured in the 
July, 1865. p. 404 ED.] war; and the other carried by the testator's 

2 Now, alas! "Washington Street," in Som- grandfather, Captain John Parker, on that day. 
erville. See Hist. Afnt,'., July, 1860, by J. S. Luring. An 

3 ["Had Earl Percy returned to Boston by official report of the selectmen of the losses to 
the same road he marched out, . . . probably his property sustained at Lexington, and made Jan. 
brigade might have been cut off." So says Percy's 24, 1782, is in Massachusetts Archives, cxxxviii. 
eulogist, Major R Donkin in his Military Col- 410. Numerous relics of the fight have been 

,>,/s : New York, 1777, p. 87. This book, collected in the Town Hall at Lexington, and 
which is rare, is in Harvard College Library. 
It is dedicated to Percy, and ostensibly pub- 
lished for the benefit of the families of the 
victims "of the bloody massacre committed on 
his Majesty's troops peaceably marching to and 
from Concord, the igth April, 1775, begun and various houses are still standing there which 
instigated by the Massachusetians." ED ] bear marks of the fray. Statues of Hancock 

< [In the senate-chamber at the State House and Adams are also in the hall. ED.] 




THE SIEGE OF BOSTON. 75 

morning of the twentieth, little towns in the western part of Worcester 
County were awakened by the tramp of men pressing eastward, or by the 
rumble of the wagons which bore them. Before night a considerable army 
was in Cambridge. And Gage never again sent an armed man out by land 
from Boston, a% Boston is now constituted. Indeed, no man of his other 
than deserters, of which there were many, after this moment set foot in 
Roxbury or in Brighton except as a prisoner ; nor in Dorchester, excepting 
Dorchester Neck, which is now South Boston. 

In describing the siege, we shall speak of Boston as it was then under- 
stood ; meaning the peninsula. A considerable part of the American army 
was in Roxbury and in Brighton. These places, and Charlestown where 
the great battle of the siege was fought, and Dorchester Heights where the 
end came, are now all included within the city. But we shall speak of these 
places by their old names. 

General Clinton, who afterward commanded the British army, was not 
here on the day of the battle of Lexington ; but he says of Percy's move- 
ment: " He gave them every reason to suppose that he would return by the 
route he came, but fell back on Charlestown ; thus securing his retreat un- 
molested, and a place which ought never to have been given up, and which 
cost us half the force engaged to recover." : This means that at North 
Cambridge Percy took the more direct route to Charlestown, instead of 
making the angle at Cambridge Common. 2 But if he had attempted to add 
nine miles to the march of men, many of whom had already marched thirty, 
he would have found at Charles River the bridge again removed, and barri- 
cades erected from the materials. He had his train of wounded in carriages 
which he had seized for their conveyance. In point of fact, he did not se- 
cure his retreat; for he received at Prospect Hill the hottest fire of the way. 
His own account is distinct: " In this manner we retired for fifteen miles, 
under incessant fire all around us, till we arrived at Charlestown, which road 
I chose to take, lest the rebels should have taken up the bridge at Cam- 
bridge (which I find was actually the case), and also as the country was 
more open and the road shorter." 8 Stragglers had given the alarm of their 
approach in Charlestown. As the tired army filed in on the Neck it met 
streams of people pouring out. The Regulars, no longer pursued, vented 
: their rage in frightening women and children as they emptied their pieces. 
The soldiers called for drink at taverns and houses, and " encamped on a 
place called Bunker's Hill." 4 

When, on the night of the nineteenth and on the morning of the 
twentieth, wounded and dying men were brought into Boston from Charles- 

1 Clinton's MS. notes to Stcdman's History, across the water from Boston. Sec note to 

[This copy of Sk-dm.in is in the Carter-Brown Mansfield's sermon in the Roxbury Camp, Nov. 

Library at Providence. See Winsor's Hand- 2$, 1775, ** quoted >' Thornton, Fulfil of the 

book, p. 130. ED.] Revolution, p. 236. I'.i>.) 

'-' [ Tlurr \v.i- .1 story current at the time that * PercV- M > letter to his father, from a 

IVrcy in it-turning from Concord had intended copy in the hands of the Rev. E. G. Porter. 
to stop at Cambridge and fortify, after destroy 4 For the origin of this name see Vol. I. 

ing the college buildings, being reinforced p. 390. 




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II 111 



THE SIEGE OF BOSTON. 77 

town and carried to their quarters and to hospitals, people began to see 
what war was. That part of the towns-people who did not favor the Eng- 
lish began to move into the country with such stores as they could carry. 
( i.iije insisted that they should not take their arms, and made a sort of con- 
vention, which caused much discussion afterward, by which he promised t<> 
give permits for departure to all who would deliver their arms. In fact 
" 1,778 firearms, 973 bayonets, 634 pistols, and 38 blunderbusses" were de- 
livered. The number shows the military habit of the people. The tradition 
of the next generation said that they were in very poor order for use. 

Gage attempted to limit the number of wagoners, who should enter daily 
from the country, to thirty a day. In regard to this lie received sharp re- 
monstrances from Dr. Warren, 1 who on the twenty-third began to act as 
chairman of the provincial committee of safety. Before long the English 
generals were glad to diminish the number of mouths they had to feed. 
Additional parties were sent out after the hot weather of summer came on. 
Some of them carried small-pox with them. The last was a party of three 
hundred poor people sent out on November 25. Many families left Boston 
in this emigration which have never returned. To this day, in many of the 
inland towns of New England, the family tradition takes in the hurried de- 
parture from Boston " when the siege began." On the other hand, some 
royalist families moved in from the country. There is a good deal of cor- 
respondence about Lady Krankland, the same who saved her husband 2 
at the earthquake at Lisbon, and the quantity of live stock and furniture 
which she might bring into town from Hopkinton, where was her home. 3 

On the very day of the battle of Lexington a corps of Loyalists was 
formed in Boston. Two hundred tradesmen and merchants offered their 
services to Gage, and were accepted. Their corps was placed under the 
command of Timothy Ruggles, of Hard- 
wick, the same who presided at Phila- 
delphia at the first Continental Congress, . 
ten years before. They are spoken of as * 
" the gentlemen volunteers." It was said 
that Ruggles was the best soldier in the colonies, and that he would have 
been in high command among the Americans had he taken the right side. 4 

1 In a letter dated the twenty-sixth or twenty- them ; all the boxes and crates ; a basket of 

ninth, not the twentieth, as erroneously printed chickens, and a bag of corn ; two barrels and a 

in Korce and later writers. hamper ; two horses and two chaises, and all the 

I Oliver Cromwell's great-great gnwboo. articles in the chaise, excepting arms and am- 

8 " tfofkiittwi. May 15, 1775. I^ady Frank- munition ; one phaeton ; some tongues, ham, and 

lamd begs .she may have her pass for Tluu- veal; and sundry small bundle--." |SeeVol. II. 

day. A list of things for I,ady Frankland : six p. 526. En.} 

trunks, oncthe-t, three beds and bedding, six [As the winter wore on, the Loyalists in Bos- 
wethers, two pigs, one small keg of pickled ton were formed into military organizations fur 
tongues, some hay, three bags of corn." The guard duty and the like : the I-oyal American 
answer .>f the Provincial Congress is Homeric: Associators, Hrinadier-C.cnernl Timothy KiiRgles, 
"AVWr <</, that L.ulv Kiankland be permitted to commandant: I.oval Irish Voluntei 
go to lioston with the following articles, viz., Forrest, captain: Kova! Fencible Ameri, 
seven trunks ; all the beds with the furniture to Colonel Gorham. ED.] 





78 THE MEMORIAL HISTORY OK BOSTON. 

The Tory party gradually acquired more and more ascendancy with Gage. 
They were afraid that when the town was emptied of Whigs the American 
army would burn it. At last they threatened Gage that they would lay 
down their arms and leave themselves, if 'he permitted further departure. 
It was under the pressure of this threat that Gage at last gave way, and, 
as the Patriots said, violated the engagements he made when they delivered 
up their arms as already mentioned. 

The time had now come, and it was the first time, when men and house- 
holds had to make known, by a visible and final act, whether they stood by 
the court of England or by the country. Households were often divided 
against themselves. The following lines from one of the many comedies 
and tragedies of the time, of which most of the comedies are tragic, and 
the-tragedies comic, expresses the situation : 

" What wretch like me 
Sees misery in each alternative ? 
Defeat is death ; and even victory, ruin. 
Here my father, dearest, best of parents, 
Whose heart, exhaustless as a mountain stream, 
Pours one continued flood of kindness on me. 
There is my brother ; there, too, is Rossiter, 
One of the number, all perhaps may fall ; 
Fall by each other's arm inhuman thought ! 
O madness, madness ! Sure the arm of death 
O'er such a field may grow fatigued with conquest, 
Nor need new trophies to adorn his car 
With deeper deeds of honor." 

Meanwhile the minute-men, who had assembled so promptly, were for 
some days under no central command. On the outside the Patriots were 
afraid Gage would march out, as, on the inside, he probably was afraid 
that they would march in. Colonel Robinson, of Dorchester, who with six 
or seven hundred men only was watching Boston Neck in those days, spent 
nine days and nights without " shifting his clothes," or lying down to sleep. 
Without an adjutant or officer of the day, he patrolled his own lines every 
night, a march of nine miles. But Gage had no thought of another 
" promenade." 1 

His own subordinates accuse him of inaction. Lord Percy writes to 
his father in May: "The rebels have lately amused themselves with burn- 
ing the houses on an island just under the admiral's nose; and a schooner, 
with four carriage-guns and some swivels, which he sent to drive them off, 
unfortunately got ashore, and the rebels burned her." This was at Hog 
Island. Putnam led in the affair, and won in it the reputation which 
helped him in the assignment of commissions the next month. 2 

1 [Thomas, a little later, deceived the British 2 [See Frothingham's Siege of Boston, p. 109; 
General by marching and remarching his troops Sumner's East Boston, p. 351 ; N. E. Hist, and 
along a course which could be observed by the Geneal. Reg., April, 1857, p. 137 ; Lives of Put- 
British outposts, to give the appearance of a nam ; Force's Archives, etc. The affair happened 
larger force than he had. ED.] May 27, 1775. It was during this month that 









r ~- 




'.- A.*./, fc 







l'\\()K\MK- YlI.NV 1 KOM I'.I.A^dN IIlI.I.. 



THE SIEGE OF BOSTON. 79 

The truth is that until May 25 Gage's force was less than four thousand 
men. Of the columns engaged on the nineteenth lie had lost two hundred 
and four, one in nine, a very large proportion. He had nothing t<> 
march out for, for the best success would be to come back again. II 
withdrew from Marshfield his one outlying detachment, and acted in the 
spirit of this despatch, which he had already sent home: - 

" The Regiments are now composed of small numbers, and Irregulars will l>e 
necessary in this country, many of which, of one sort or other, I conceive may be 
raised here. Nothing that is said at present can palliate. Conciliating 1 , moderation, 
reasoning, is over ; nothing can be done but by forcible means. Tho' the people are 
not held in high estimation by the Troops, yet they are numerous, worked up to a 
Fury, and not a Boston rabble, but the Farmers and the Freeholders of the country. A 
(heck anywhere will be fatal, and the first stroke will decide a great deal. We should 
therefore be strong, and proceed on a good foundation before anything decisive is 
tried." > 

As the summer advanced, Gage and Howe fortified the town carefully. 
In the Charles River they had a floating battery of six cannon ; and on 
Fox Hill (now levelled), within the present Public Garden, at the bottom of 
the Common, cannon were mounted, which commanded the passes of the 
Nrck. There was an entrenchment where the monument now stands on the 
Common. Upon the hill toward Cambridge, now partly levelled and known 
as Louisburg Square and Mount Vernon, a mortar battery played upon 
Cambridge. This position was considered so safe that boys and other 
idlers, even women, stood by the gunners to mark the shots. 2 On Copp's 

Gage's boats patrolled the mouth of the Charles breastworks being thrown up between them on 

to give notice of " fire-stages " which the Pro- the edge of the marsh. 

vlmi.ils were preparing to send down to burn These were the provisions which the British 

his >hips. ED.) General had made to resist any attempt by Wash- 

1 MS. in English State-Papers. ington to attack with boats. They are shown in 

- | The works occupied by the besieged on Page's map, as are also the earthworks along 

the Common may be more particularly described the ridge to the north of Beacon Street. First, 

"lluws ; but some of them were not built till an oblong redoubt on the summit, back of the 

after the battle at Charlestown : State House, which is shown in the panoramic 

A small zigzag earthwork, for infantry de- view given. in this chapter, in heliotype. Second, 

fence, opposite a point on Beacon Street, half- a redoubt facing the Common, not far from 

\\.iv between Spruce and Charles streets, then the junction of Walnut and Chestnut streets 

the npl.iml margin. Third, a larger redoubt, crossing Chestnut Street 

A small redoubt on Fox Hill, as in the text. near Spruce and Willow, facing the water. 

An earthwork where Charles and Boylston Fourth, an open breastwork by the shore, he- 
's now meet, then at the marsh-edge, tween Pinckney and Mount Vernon Streets, just 
probably for infantry defence. above Charles Up to Christmas, notwith- 

A long redoubt, occupying the space between standing the severe cannonade which the Brit- 
Pleasant Street, on its curve, and the water, and ish had often maintained, only twelve persons 
commanding a wharf, which was just south of had been killed in Roxbury, and seven on the 
the spot where now the Emancipation Group Cambridge 
stands. The accompanying hdiotype shows the four 

Crowning the bluff above the marsh, and at sections of . water-color panoramic view from 
the point of the present junction of Boylston Beacon Hill, thus inscribed : 
and Carver streets, there was a bastinned re- " A view of the country round Boston, taken 
doubt ; and another of a squ.ue shape on the hill 1'iom IV.uon hill, shewing the lines. Intrench- 
where the monument now stands, some light mcnts, Keilouts. etc. of the Rebels; also the 



8o 



THE MEMORIAL HISTORY OF BOSTON. 



Hill, at the North End, was a battery of six pieces of cannon, which com- 
manded the river and Charlestown shore. There were two fitches where 
Blackstone Square and Franklin Square are, from each of which a piece of 
artillery commanded the road. 1 Nor could there now be a better memorial 
of the war than to restore them in those pretty grounds, and mount there 
two old cannon from the many trophies of the war. Nearer Boston more 
extensive works protected the Neck ; and near Dover Street was a gate- 
way and other defences, of which the only memorial now is in the name of 
Fort Avenue, an insignificant alley-way. 2 

On May 8, on an alarm that Gage was going to march out, the minute- 
men from the towns around Boston rallied at command, and the British 
^y General could see what he would meet 

if he needed any lesson. On the 
thirteenth, General Putnam marched 
a little army of two thousand three 
hundred men through Charlestown to the ferry and back, " which very much 
astonished them." The affair at Hog Island, already referred to, was one of 
several raids, following an order of the provincial executive that all live 
stock should be removed from the islands. And in two only of these affairs 
Gage lost two thousand sheep, " from under the admiral's nose," as Percy 
says. He little foresaw how much he would be needing- fresh provisions. 8 
Before a year was over, his government was shipping from England to Bos- 
ton living oxen, pigs, and sheep to feed the army, only one cargo of which 




Lines and Redouts .of his Majesties Troops. 
N. B. These views were taken by L' Wil- 
liams of the R. W. Fuziliers,* and copied from 
a Scetch of the original drawn by L' Woodd 
of the same Regiment. The original drawings 
are now in the possession of the King." 

Mr. J. Carson Brevoort, of Brooklyn, who 
gave this view to the Historical Society, in De- 
cember, 1859, says he purchased it of Charles 
Welford, about 1858. Mr. Brevoort says, in a 
letter to the Editor : " It was the custom to send 
from the foreign and plantation office all that 
might be of interest to the map-makers, and I 
suppose that it found its way there among such 
matter." ED.] Faden was the King's engraver. 
At a sale of his effects about forty years since, 
many such maps and drawings came to light. A 
collection of one hundred, once belonging to 
Nathan Hale, is now in the Congressional Li- 
brary at Washington. 

* The Welsh Fusiliers were one of the most famous 
regiments in the garrison Donkin, in his Military Collec- 
tions, p. 133, tells of the " privilegeous honor' 1 enjoyed by 
them "of passing in review preceded byaGont with gilded 
horns : " and on Murch i (St. David's Day), in Boston, in 
1775, "the animal gave such a spring from the floor that 
he dropped his rider upon the table " of the banqueting 
officers, " and then, bouncing over their heads, ran to the 
barracks with all his trappings, to the no small joy of the 
garrison and populace." 



1 ^Brown's house, which figures largely in 
the accounts, stood on the westerly side of 
Washington Street, a little south of Blackstone 
Square ; and was occupied by the British as an 
advanced post, when Majors Tupper and Crane, 
with a party of volunteers, attacked it, July 8, 
and, driving off the occupants, burned the build- 
ings. ED.] 

- MS. notes of Hon. James T. Austin. [In 
March, 1860, workmen in digging for a drain 
opposite Williams Market laid bare a consider- 
able section of the foundations of the old de- 
fences. The plan of the Neck lines bv Mifflin, 
and of the Peninsula, by Trnmbull, which are 
shown in the accompanying heliotype, are de- 
scribed with other plans in the Introduction to 
the present volume. The views of the liritish 
lines on the Neck, looking out and in, given 
also in heliotype in this chapter, follow some 
engraved representations published to accom- 
pany a series of coast charts by DesBarres. 
-Hi). | 

ge in his despatches was always blaming 
Graves, the admiral, who was at length removed 
before the end of the year. In King George's 
note to North, ordering the removal, he said 
he thought the admiral's removal as necessary 
as that of "the mild general," his name for 
Gage. 




Co i,. TRI-.MIII-M.'S PLAN. 1775. 






















MIKI LIN'S I'I.AN OF -nil-: HKITISII FouTiru \TIN- ON lii-ni\ X; 



N. 177; 







'',>/* tt /r>'< //if 
' 



THE SIEGE OK BOSTON. 



8l 



ever arrived. " The English channel is white with sheep which have been 
thrown overboard," says a contemporary account. 

The narratives of the time show the exuberant enthusiasm of recruits, to 
whom war is a novelty. A party at Noddle's Island captured a barge be- 



v 






longing to a man-of-war. They carried it to Cambridge in triumph ; and 
on June 5 took it to Roxbury in a cart, with the sails up and three men in 
it. " It was marched round the meeting-house while the engineer fired the 
cannon for joy." On the next day Generals Thomas and Heath went to lay 
out a place at Dorchester Point, with a view to entrenchments. 

Through these sixty days, between the battles of Lexington and Bunker 
Hill, there appear to have been occasional passages in and out of the town ; 
but care was in all cases taken that no military or other 
stores should pass. On May 25 Gage received large 
reinforcements. The Government also sent him three 
generals, Howe, Clinton, and Burgoyne, 1 who all came in the "Cerberus." 

The wags called them the three 
" bow-wows." Gage was now bet- 
ter fitted for aggressive movements. 
On June 12, he issued his celebrated 
proclamation, greatly ridiculed at 
the time, in which he offered pardon to all but Samuel Adams and John 
Hancock. 

Of course he saw the importance of securing Dorchester Heights and 
Charlestown, quite as distinctly as did the Patriot leaders. Burgoyne says 

that it was agreed that 
they should land at the 
Point and occupy Dor- 
chester Heights on Sun- 



day, June 1 8. Before that 

time the American troops had 

more than once been called 

out by alarms in this direction. The provincial executive \\vrc apprised of 

this plan, and in consequence selected the night of June 16, to fortify Bunker 

1 [There is a contemporary engraving of Burgoyne in the Political Magatiitt, December, 
1780. ED.] 

VOL. III. II. 





82 



THE MEMORIAL HISTORY OF BOSTON. 



Hill on the northern side of the harbor. At their order General Ward sent 
a detachment from Cambridge, which reached Bunker Hill about ten at 

night. It consisted of Prescott's, F rye's, and 

>o Xf- // ' /f Bridge's regiments, under Colonel Prescott, 1 

I Jf/ "* //f -f^4-<) &&&C;, and a party of Connecticut men under Cap- 

tain Knowlton. It was a moonlight night, 

and clear. On the top of Bunker Hill they were only a mile from the Eng- 
lish battery on Copp's Hill. Prescott called the field-officers together and 
showed them his orders. At that 
late moment they were in doubt 
whether to fortify the summit 
where they were, or to proceed 
less than half a mile nearer Bos- 
ton to Breed's Farm, where the 
hill fell off suddenly toward the south, and where they could better annoy 
the English shipping, and more readily command the town. The consulta- 
tion took much time, but at last the bolder course was adopted, under pres- 
sure of Gridley, 2 the engineer officer, who said he must work somewhere. 
The determination is now justified by the highest military authority. 3 Had 




1 [Here is a token of preparation: 
" MAJOR BARBER, PJease to deliver to Cap- 
tain Densmore 350 rounds and 30 flints. 

" WM. PRESCOTT, COL';!- 
"June 16, 1775." 

The original is in Mellen Chamberlain's man- 
uscript collection. The tradition is that the lead 
pipes of Christ Church, Cambridge, were melted 
or pounded into slugs at this time. ED.] 

- [The best account of Richard Gridley, of 
Louisburg fame, is contained in an oration by D. 
T. V. Huntoon delivered at Canton, Massachu- 
setts, in 1877. He was the son of Richard Grid- 
ley, a brother of Jeremy Gridley (see Mr. Morse's 



chapter on the " Bench and Bar " in Vol. IV.), 
and was born Jan. 3, 1710-11. Gridley played a 
distinguished part at Louisburg, and in the later 
campaigns against the French. He had removed 
from Boston to Canton about 1773 ED.] 

3 [Various contemporary maps- of the battle 
are noted in the Introduction to this volume. 
The annexed plan indicates the position of the 
redoubt and the breastwork in relation to the 
present Monument Square and the monument, 
following a plan given by T. W. Davis in the 
Bunker Hill Monument Asso. Proc. 1875 ED.J 




Mo n u m on t 







M 










3 








m 







Square 



Leringtou 



THE SIEGE OF BOSTON. 



tin higher hill only been fortified, the English troops, to attack it, could 
have been formed without molestation under cover of the lower hill. Short- 
time shells, such as would now be dropped on such a party, were not then 
used. 

Fairly at work on Breed's farm, Gridley laid out his redoubt skilfully. 
It measured eight rods on the longest side, which fronted Charlestown; the 
other sides were shorter. A breastwork ran about a hundred yards toward 
the north, to a marshy spot which was relied on as a sufficient check against 
troops. From midnight till eleven o'clock in the morning the men worked- 
steadily, and the intrenching-tools were then sent back to Putnam, who per- 
severed through the day in the true military policy of fortifying the upper 
summit also. Once and again through the night men went down to the 
water's edge, and could hear the "All's well" of the watch on the English 
vessels. It was after daybreak when Linzee, the commander of the " Falcon " 
which lay in the stream, opened his fire on it, and waked the sleeping town. 1 
Gridley returned Linzee's fire from his wretched field-pieces. Gage soon 
ordered Linzee to cease firing, and, having conferred with his associates, 
determined to attack the works before they should be strengthened. 2 
With a bold resolution, of which there is more than one instance among 
British commanders in the beginning of wars, Gage made the fatal de- 
cision, in spite of Clinton's remonstrance, to attack these works in front. 3 
With his naval force, by which he could have commanded Charlestown 
\< i k, he could, perhaps, have cut off the American party without the 
loss of a man. 



1 Captain Linzee was the grandfather of 
the wife of William H. Prescott the historian, 
who was the grandson of Colonel Prescott. The 
two swords uorn by these two officers on that 
morning were bequeathed by Mr. Prescott to 
the Massachusetts Historical Society, and have 
I'MiH been peacefully crossed in its Library, as 
they were earlier in his. [They are represented 
in the frontispiece of this volume. See Tick- 
nor's Life of W. H. Prescott, and Dr. William 
I'rescott's Prescott Memorial, iS;o. ED.) 

-' (Colonel Prescott, observing Gage's dispo- 
sition, despatched Major John Krooks to head- 
quarters for reinforcements, and he reached 
General Ward about ten o'clock. 




There is a portrait of Governor lirooks, with 
a sketch of his life, in Drake's Cincinnati .S 
See also V / Hist, and Cental. Key. July, 1865. 
ED.] 

3 [Gage having overruled the decision of a 
majority of his council to attack in the rear, and 



bound to hazard an attack in front, which he 
deemed more military and prudent, issued the 
order, a fat-simile of which may be found on 
the next page. This fac-simile follows the entry 
in an orderly book, preserved in the cabinet of 
the Mass. Historical Society, entitled Lieutenant 
and Adjutant Waller's orderly-book, commencing 
at Boston, the 22d May, and ending the twenty-sixth 
day of January, 1776; a folio parchment-bound 
MS. which really begins "Plymouth [England], 
March 25, 1775, on board the 'Betsy' transport," 
with "rules and directions to be observed on 
board the transport for Boston." Then follow 
"General Gage's and Major Pitcairn's orders, 
Boston Camp." A new section begins: "June 
18 ['7751- Charles Town Hill, Gen 1 Howe's or- 
ders;" and the next day the following : "General 
orders. Head Quarters, Boston, June 19, 1775. 
The Commander-in-chief returns his most grate- 
ful thanks to Major Gen' Howe for the extraordi- 
nary exertion of his military alvlitii s on the 17th 
in-;. He returns his thanks also to M.ij.-Gi-n. 
Clinton and Brig.-Gcn the share they 

took in the success of the day; as well as to Lieut. - 
Nisbet, Abercrombie, Gunning, and Clark ; 
Butler, Williams, liruce, Tupper, Spend- 
love, Smelt, and Mitchcl ; and the rest of the 
officers and soldiers who, by remarkable cf- 



THE MEMORIAL HISTORY OF BOSTON. 



General Howe was entrusted with the enterprise. With two thousand 
men he crossed at noon to Moulton's Point, embraced within the present 
Navy Yard. 1 As soon as the boats could cross a second time, General 
Pigot, his second in command, moved slowly to the left, throwing out 
strong flanking parties upon the redoubt Up to this time his men had 
been under the cover of the bold hill at Moulton's Point While Howe 
waited for his second party, he had reconnoitred the position so far as to 

forts of courage and gallantry, overcame every doubt and strong-hold on the Heights of Charles 
disadvantage and drove the rebels from their re- Town and gained a complete victory." The same 



JK. fl (Jl. .(&$ <& 




VJfr*^'*"^ Xt-'f^AfV'^ TTU^C' 



day a general order read : " A return of the 
killed, wounded, and missing of the different 
Corps in the late action of the iyth to be given 
in as soon as possible. The officers to be men- 
tioned nomanly |? nominally] in these returns." 
The orderly-books of Generals Gage and Howe 
are preserved among the Carleton papers in the 
Royal Institution in London ; and extracts from 
them, made in 1840, are in the Sparks MSS., 
vol. xlv. En.| 



1 [The lower ship-house marks the beach 
where these troops left their boats. The rein- 
forcements landed in front of the present marine 
barracks. The " Falcon " ship of war covered 
the landing at the points; and the "Lively," of 
twenty guns and one hundred and thirty men, was 
anchored in front of the present Navy Yard, and 
covered the landings of the reinforcements. 
Many of the slain were buried within the dock- 
yard enclosure. ED.) 










'" 

i * 



Sll.iil- MI 




. 





THE S1EGK OF BOSTON. 85 

see that it might be possible to move along the shore of the Mystic River, 

and thus attack the .American entrenchments <>n the rear. From the marshy 

point already spoken of, northward to the river, 

the only line of defence was what has long been 

popularly called the " rail-fence," erected by 

Knowlton and his men, who had been sent out 

by Prescott to cover his left flank. They had 

protected themselves, in farmer fashion, by putting 

up a line of rail-fence parallel with one already standing, and packing the 

space between with new-mown hay. Howe's contempt for this unmilitary 

breastwork cost him dear in the end. So soon as .he was reinforced he 

moved westward with his right wing along the river-side, while Figot, with 

the left wing, attempted the breastwork and redoubt. 

All along the American lines the order had been given which the officers 
remembered in the memoirs of Frederick's wars: "Wait till you can see 
the whites of their eyes." 1 They were bidden, in the redoubt, to hold their 
fire till the Knglish came within eight rods. Pigot's men advanced slowly, 
firing as they marched. Their shot passed over the heads of the Amer- 
icans. It must be remembered that most of the Englishmen were as new 
to battle as their enemies. Some eager soldiers in the American lines were 
disposed to reply ; but their officers even ran along the parapet and kicked 
up their guns. Prescott told those who could hear him, that the " red-coats " 
would never reach the redoubt if they would obey him. Sure enough, 
when the order to fire came, the issue was terrible. For a few minutes the 
fire was returned, but for only a few. Pigot was obliged to order a retreat. 
" He was staggered," says an English account at the time, " and retreated 
by orders." Some of his men ran even to the landing. Burgoyne's letter, 
written for publication, 2 also says " he was staggered ; " and reinforcements 
were sent to him. 

Howe's fate with the right wing was similar ; but probably his com- 
panies suffered more severely. They could not advance by any road, and 
were obliged to climb the rail-fences which parted the fields, or to break 
them down. Knowlton and Putnam were begging and commanding their 
men not to fire. A single shot, intended to draw the enemy's fire, obtained 
its end. Howe's companies fired like troops on parade, and fired too high. 
\Vhen the word was given to the Connecticut men, the well aimed shots 
from the rail-fence made terrible havoc ; the English wavered, broke, and 
retreated. Many of the exultant American soldiers leaped over the fence 
to follow them, and had to be held back by their officers. 

Prescott praised and encouraged his men. Putnam rode back to Charles- 
town Neck to urge on reinforcements. Men had been sent from Cam- 

1 Prince Charles, when he cut through the was rememl>ered twelve years after at the battle 

Au-.tri.in arniv. in retiring from J;igeiulcn I. g*VC <>i Pngae, when the general Prussian order was. 

this order to his infantry : " Silent, till you see " I'.v |>"sli i luvnneN ; no firing till you see the 

the whites of their eyes." This was on May whites of their . 
22, 1745; and this order, so successful that day, " Addressed to Lord Stanley. 



86 



THE MEMORIAL HISTORY OF BOSTON. 





bridge, who dared not cross the Neck, raked as it 
was by the fire of English vessels in the river. 2 
At Howe's command, meanwhile, Burgoync, who 
was in the English battery on Copp's Hill, 3 set fire 
to Charlestown with red-hot shot. 4 Howe prob- 
ably supposed that the houses were cover for 
American soldiers. But, in fact, Prescott had few 
if any men to spare outside of his works. 

Howe re-formed his broken lines after some 
pause ; sent to Boston for proper balls for his 
field-pieces; 5 and, under the smoke and fire of 

1 [This bit of writing represents, perhaps, the only relic like it 
of the battle-field. It was seemingly written hastily, with whatever 
might serve for a pen, on a slip of paper torn from tin margin if .1 
book, and was not long ago found among some loose papers at the 
State House. Joseph Ward was of Newton, was made an aid by 
General Heath on the day following Lexington, and at this time 




was aid to General Ward; and so distinguished himself at Bunker 
Hill that when his conduct was .-ul.sequently reported to Wa>li- 
ington, he gave him a pair of pistols, which are now owned by Mr. 
D. Ward A portrait of him is in the possession of R. R Bishop ; 
and a miniature by Dunkelery, 1789, is owned by Mrs. Osgood of 
Cohasset. (Drake's Landmarks <>/ .1/i<i,t/,'scx, p. 349.) He con- 
tinued to be General Ward's aid when this General commanded 
later in Boston, and his signatures to official documents, written 
under less exciting circumstances, indicate a good penman. Dr. 
Smith in his Hist, of Newton, p. 343, says that Ward was, in 177^, 
a master in one of the Boston schools, and, seeing the troops in 
motion on April 19, left the town for Newton, where lie got a gun 
and hastened to Concord. On June 17 he "rode ovei Ch::rYs- 
town Neck, through a cross-fire of the enemy's batteries, to exe- 
cute an order for General Ward." ED.| 

- |Gage was afterward blamed for not putting his gun-boats 
on the Mystic also. ED.] 

3 [The defence on Copp's Hill, at the time of the battle, was 
an earthwork made in part of barrels filled with sand, and mounted 
six heavy guns and howitzers. ED.) 

4 (Dr. John C. Warren owns a small oil-painting which is su]>- 
posed to represent the burning of the town. An officer is direct- 
ing an incendiary. Women are flying with affright. The story 
usually goes that some men landed from the war-ships to assist in 
starting the conflagration. The painting is thought to resemble 
Trumbull's style. Dr. H. J. Bigelow found it many years ago, 
labelled as a Trumbull and called " The Burning of Charlestown," 
in a dealer's shop in Boston, and gave it to Dr. J. Mason War- 
ren. ED.] 

5 But never got them. The master of ordnance was "making 
love to the school-master's daughter." The guns were served 
with grape. 



THE SIEGE OF BOSTON. S; 

the burning town, moved to the attack a second time. The result in both 
attacks was the same as before. Colonel Prescott thought it even more 
destructive than at first. The officers remonstrated ; even goaded the men 
with their swords. The dead in some cases lay within a few yards of the 
works. Putnam said : " I never saw such carnage." Howe, who had pro- 
mised his men to march at their head, held his promise. He bore a 
charmed life. Three times he was left alone. In the several attacks made 
by his column, one company of the Fifty-second lost every man as killed 
or wounded. The English broke so completely that the fugitives filled 
the boats. For a considerable time no further attack was made. Many of 
the American officers thought the day was their own ; but the regiments 
ordered from Cambridge, to reinforce them, did not arrive. After the battle 
several officers were tried for cowardice on account of their slowness in 
bringing relief at this time. Howe sent for reinforcements. Four hundred 
marines, under Small, were sent to him ; and with them came General 
Clinton. But for this help he would have lost the battle. 1 

Howe now, for the first time, bade his men lay aside their knapsacks, 
move in columns, and trust to the bayonets. More important was the 
discovery which he had made, with a soldier's eye, that the north end of 
the breastwork was uncovered, and his resolution to advance his field-pieces 
far enough to rake it. He made this his object now, only demonstrating 
against the terrible fence on the American left, without approaching it; 
and, with these skilful dispositions, moved forward on both attacks for the 
third time. They were wholly successful. Howe himself led the attack 
on the breastwork. Prescott recognized him, and was soldier enough to 
know it would succeed; but he held and encouraged his men. Few of 
them had three rounds of powder left, but he instructed them to hold 
their fire till the British were within twenty yards. This they did, and 
the enemy faltered under the volley, 2 but reached the ramparts and 
were sheltered by them. Pitcairn, commanding the marines, was here 
mortally wound id. As, man by man, the Englishmen struggled over the 
redoubt, 3 Howe's artillery swept the breastwork- which ran from it. His 

1 [Dr. John Jeffries crossed with the rein- The Regulars heard it, turned about, charged 
forcements of four hundred men that Gage sent their bayonets, and forced the entrenchment;-." 

ED.] 

* Lord Rawdon, who was one of them, 
and was afterward popularly and probably 
incorrectly said to have carried the colors, 
was afterward Earl of Moira, governor of 
India from 1812 to 1818, and a favorite of 
George IV. 

over. See N. E. Hist, and Cental. Reg., Jan. [The reader is referred to the frontispiece 

iNi'i, p. 15. ED.] for what is considered a contemporary view of 

2 [General Greene, writing from the Roxtary the battle, as seen from Beacon Hill. The 
Camp the next day I lime iS), speaks of the re- original sketch is in the possession of Dr. Tho- 
pulse the third time, and adds a bit of camp mas Addis Emmet, of N\ York, and was first 
gossip : " It is thought they would have gone off. bimijjht to ihe attention of the public in Harper's 
but some of the I'roviiu i.ds imprudently called Monthly, in 1875. 

out to their officers that their powder was gone. The designer for the cut followed a careful 




88 



THE MEMORIAL HISTORY OF BOSTON. 



leading companies soon passed round its northern end. Prescott, to avoid 
being shut in, gave the order to retreat. Most of his men had fired every 
round of powder. 

The retreating men passed between two successful English columns, 
which hardly dared fire, however, as their own friends were mingled with 
their enemies. Yet Warren was killed at this juncture, Gridley wounded, 
as was Bridge, also, for the second time. 

The rail-fence, where Stark commanded, had not been attacked seri- 
ously. The men here held their ground, and covered the retreat of their 

Frothingham, Siege of Boston, p. 121, gives a 
profile view of the Charlestown peninsula at this 



tracing of it which was kindly lent by Mr. 
Benson J. Lossing. 



The spectator is supposed to be on Beacon time, copied from a contemporary drawing. It 

Hill, one hundred and thirty-eight feet above the is reproduced by Lossing in his Fuld-Boojt, and 

sea, and the higher hill, Bunker Hill, beyond in Bryant and Gay's United States, iii. 377. The 

which the while smoke rises, is one hundred Pennsylvania Magazine, September, 1775, has a 

and ten feet high, and a little less than a mile folding " very elegant engraving of the late battle 

and a half distant. Breed's Hill, where the re- at Charlestown, June 17, 1775," as the title-page 

doubt is, is sixty-two feet above the sea. The describes it. Barnard's New Complete and Au- 

two summits were one hundred and thirty rods t/ientie History of England has a " view of the 



apart. 



attack on Bunker's Hill, with the burning of 




AFTER THE BATTLE. 



The annexed cut is from the same source. 
The redoubt is seen on the top of the hill ; and 
of the broken fences a British account says: 
" These posts and rails were too strong for the 
columns to push down, and the march was so 
retarded by getting over them, that the next 
morning they were found studded with bullets, 
not a hand's breadth from each other." 

These sketches were taken for Lord Rawdon, 
then on Gage's staff, and remained in the pos- 
session of his descendants till the dispersion of 
the late Marquis of Hastings's library, when 
they were bought by Dr. Emmet. 



Charlestown, June 17, 1775;" drawn by Mr. 
Millar; engraved by Lodge (n X 8 inches). 
There is a view of the hill-top, with the monu- 
ment erected on Bunker Hill by the Freemasons 
to the memory of Warren in 1794, in the Analytic 
Magazine, March, 1818; and it is reproduced in 
the A/ass. Hist. Soc. Prof., 1875, p. 65. A vii of 
the monument only is given in Snow's History 
of Bos/on, p 309 ; and one is also given in the 
frontispiece of the present volume. Other early 
views of the battle are described in Winsor's 
Reader? Handbook of the American Kii'oliitioa, 
p. 58. ED. | 




THE SIEGE OF BOSTON. 89 

less successful comrades. They were withdrawn in regular order, after the 
fugitives from the redoubt passed them. At the summit of Bunker Hill, 
Putnam attempted to rally the army behind the works he had been building. 
He stood by a cannon till the bayonets 
were almost upon him ; but the retreat 
could not be checked, and the English 
troops in triumph took possession of the 
hill about five o'clock in the afternoon. 

Clinton advised Howe to push on to 
Cambridge. Ward, on his part, dreaded such an attack ; but Howe satis- 
fied himself with turning two field-pieces on the retiring enemy. 

Prescott was mad with disappointment. He reported to Ward, and told 
him that with three fresh regiments, with bayonets and powder, he would 
take the hill again ; but Ward was only too well pleased if he were left 
without attack. 1 Ward knew, what he would not tell to any man "even to 
save his reputation, that he had in store that day only sixty-nine hundred 
pounds of powder, not half a pound for every soldier in his command. 

It was hardly an hour and a half between the first attack and the victo- 
rious capture of the summit of Bunker Hill. In that period the attacking 
force had lost two hundred and twenty-four killed, and eight hundred and 
thirty wounded. If, as Gage said, he had about two thousand men in the 
attack, this would have been a loss of more than one half the force ; but in fact 
his full force was somewhat larger than this. Of the killed and wounded, 
one hundred and fifty-seven were officers. The American loss was one 
hundred and fifty killed, two hundred and seventy wounded, and thirty taken 
prisoners. 2 

The impression then made on Howe and Clinton governed them through 
the war. They never again led troops against intrenched men. It will be 
found thus that this first battle, in the terrible lesson it taught, was really 
the battle decisive of the seven years which followed. 8 We now know that 
the English officers thought their privates misbehaved. It is certain that 
in many instances they ran, even to their boats. But when one reads that 
every man was killed or wounded in one company, he does not ask many 
questions as to the courage of the survivors. Burgoyne says in a private 
letter to Lord Rochford : " All the wounds of the officers were not received 

1 [The apprehension that the result of the care of their wounds, or any resting place but 
battle would instigate Gage to send a force to the pavements, until the next day, when they ex- 
disperse the Provincial Congress, is shown by changed it for the jail, since which we hear they 
an order passed at Watertown, June 1 8, direct- are civilly treated." Abigail Adams to John 
ing the secretary to look after the records and Adams, July 5, 1775. The Congress at Water- 
papers of that body, and to have a horse ready town, June 27, 1775, requested General Thomas 
"lr that purpose in any emergency." (.\fiissa- "to supply our wounded friends in Boston, pris- 
chitsetts Archives, cxxxviii. p. 159.) "It is ex- oners, with fresh meat, in case he can convey 
pected they will come out over the Neck to-night, it to them and to them only." Massachusetts 
and a dreadful battle must ensue." Abigail Archives, cxxxviii. p. [74. KM.] 
Adams to John Adams, June iS, 1775. ED.] ' [Creasy, Decisive Battles of the ffV/i/,give 

- |" Our prisoners were brought over to the Saratoga that pre-eminence; but Washington at 

Long \Vh.ut, ami there lay all night, without any once recognized the importance of I'unkcr Hill. 
VOL. Ill 12. 



THE MEMORIAL HISTORY OF BOSTON. 



from the enemy ; " but he begs that this shall not pass, even in a whisper, 
to any but the king. 

All that night and all the next day, carts, wagons, and chaises, bearing 
wounded men, were passing from the wharves to hospitals, barracks, and 
lodging-houses. The tradition of the next generation told ghastly stories 
of blood trickling on the pavement from the wagons which bore wounded 
men. 

A hot summer followed upon this battle-day, which was the hottest of all. 
Washington, on July 3, beneath the now historic elm, took the command of 
the American army, and made his headquarters for a few days in the house 
belonging to the president of the college ; he then moved them to the famous 
mansion now the home of Longfellow. The blockade by land became closer 
than ever. Privateers audaciously cut off vessels approaching with stores. 1 
While few of those events passed which work their way into general history, 
or even light up historical novels, the diaries and letters of the time show 
that there was not a week without its subject for excitement or, at least, 
conversation. 2 

On July 12, Major Greaton, of Roxbury, burned the hay which the 
English had made on Long Island. On the twentieth, Major Vose of 
Heath's regiment dismantled and burned the light-house, and made a raid 
on Point Shirley. Another party, under Major Tupper, afterward drove off 
the force which tried to rebuild it. 8 On July 1 1, Lee, in Cambridge, began a 
correspondence with Burgoyne ; the first in a series of flirtations with old 
loves, which ripened into treason. Desertions from Gage's army, which on 
October 10 became Howe's, were not frequent. Howe says that they lost 



1 [Washington early commissioned (October, 
1775) John Manly as captain, who sailing from 
Marbleheacl in the schooner "Lee," in No- 
vember, 1775, captured military stores, which 
soon were in the Cambridge Camp. Washing- 
ton had not long before written to Congress 
that the "fortunate capture of an ordnance ship 
would give new life to the camp." Manly died 
in 1793, in his house at the North End. There 




is a portrait of him in Preble's History of the 
fluff. ED.) The earliest commission to priva- 
teers is dated September 2. 

- " They carry off cattle under the guns of 
the fleet." Earl Percv to his father. 

' [The light-house, at this time standing at the 
harbor's entrance, was the original structure of 
1716, modified somewhat by repairs in 1757, 
when it had been injured by fire. It became, 
early in the siege, an object of concern for both 
sides; and more than one expedition, conducted 



by the Provincials, destroyed the destructible 
parts of it. Washington, in general orders, 
Aug. t, 1775, thanked Major Tupper and his 
men "for gallant and soldier-like behavior in 
possessing themselves of the enemy's posts at 
the light-house." 

Details of various exploits in the harbor will 
be found in Frothingham's Siege of Boston, \*. 1 10; 
Evacuation Memorial, p 142; Pattee's History 
of Braintree and Quincy. In the Massachu- 
setts Archives, cxxxviii., are various state- 
ments of depredations of the Regulars upon 
stock and other property upon the islands. 
Such a schedule of property thus lost, by 
Joshua Henshaw of Boston, is at p. 415 of 
that volume. Major John Phillips, who 
was commander of the Castle from 1759, had 
surrendered the charge on Hutchinson's order, 
which in the summer of 1770 took it from the 
care of the Province and placed it in the keep- 
ing of the troops. The same officer was later 
made fort-major of the fortress. Mass, /fist. 
Sac. Proc., February, 1872, p. 207. After the 
evacuation, Sept. I, 1776, Lieut.-Colonel Revere 
was directed by General Heath to take command 
of Castle Island. N. E. Hist, and Gencal. Keg., 
July, 1876. ED.] 



THE SIEGE OF BOSTON. 91 

but thirty-three men by desertion through the seven months after April 19. 
Of every one of these desertions the American accounts give some detail. 
Each deserter had his romance with which to gild his reception. One of 
them, in July, said that Gage had but nine hundred men well enough to be 
under arms. 1 

A private note from Putnam to Moncrieffe, an old fellow-soldier, accom- 
panies a present of fresh meat, which Moncrieffe loyally sent to the hos- 
pitals. Before August was over, Gage was glad to renew the treaty for 
sending out the poor civilians from Boston ; and he and Howe sent out 
several parties after this time. It will be remembered, however, that Boston 
was still a town of gardens, and that the people were not unused to pro- 
viding their own summer vegetables from their own land. Gage made the 
admiral send marauding expeditions up and down the coast for sheep and 
other provisions ; but even a raid of a thousand sheep went but little way 
in feeding twenty thousand hungry people. 2 

Dr. Andrew Eliot, who remained in town, in a letter of July 31, thanks 
his parishioner, Daniel Parker, for two quarters of fresh mutton which he 
had sent from Salem. He distributed broth from it to thirty or forty sick 
people. The writer of these lines, at this late day, expresses the thanks of 
his great-great-grandmother for her share. At an auction sale of oxen and 
sheep, picked up on the coast by the marauding navy, cattle brought from 
fifteen to thirty-four pounds, and sheep thirty shillings and upwards. To the 
Patriots these prices seemed enormous. As early as July the English had 
begun to kill their milch cows, and the beef was sold at forty or fifty cents 
the pound. In the winter a camp-follower named Winifred McOwen re- 
ceived one hundred lashes for killing the town bull and selling the beef. 3 

So soon as the Government received Gage's account of Bunker Hill he 
was recalled. It was under the pretence that he was to be sent back in 
the next spring ; but really he was disgraced, and he was never appointed 
to command again. 4 Howe took the command. He and Gage had both 
recommended that Boston should be abandoned and New York taken in- 
stead. Lord Dartmouth, for the Government, expressed the same idea as 

1 [We have no estimate of the desertions J "And what have you got, by all your 

from the American camp, but the British orderly- designing, 

book notes their occurrence. This from Adju- But a town, without dinner, to sit down 

tant Waller's : and dine in ? " Ballad of the Time. 

* [Foraee became scarce by midsummer in 

"8 July, 1775. The advanced sentries not to sufler . 

those of the rebels during the night to come forward from "77S- We *** "> Waller S orderly-book : - 

their day posts; if they see them advance, they must call < , 9 j u |y t I775 xhe officers of the army are desired to 

and order them to return to their former station, which if Ka & ,!.;, horse* to grass at Charlestown, a they cannot 

they disobey, the sentries are immediately to inform the at present be supplied with forage." 
corporal of the guard of their having come forward ; but 

they are not to fire unless they see occasion in their own Major Donkm, in his Mihtary Collections, 
defence, or to alarm the guard. The advanced guards and p. 113, says : " Caesar, in the African war, fed his 
sauries are to fire on any of the rebels they perceive en- cavalry with sea-wrack, or jingle, washed well in 
deavoring to prevent deserters coming in." fresh w;lter> This might have been a good sub- 
Lists of deserters from Massachusetts regi- stirute for hay at Boston, which was very scarce 
ments for the later period, i;;;-.So, are in Mass, in 1775." In. 1 

Revolutionary Rolls, ix. But those im-n did not, 4 [Gage sailed for England, Oct. 10, 1775, 

like the English, pass over to the enemy. ED.] Mass. Hist. Soc. froe., 1876, p. 316. General W. 



92 THE MEMORIAL HISTORY OF BOSTON. 

early as September. When Howe was afterward asked why he did not then 
abandon Boston, he said he had no transports ; but he had as many in Octo- 
ber as he had in the next March, when the evacuation came. 1 

A census, taken by Gage's order in July, showed a civilian population of 
6,573. The army was then 13,500 strong. The privates were a wretched 
set. The sternest discipline did not keep them in order. Irish in large 
numbers, Scotch, German, and English were cooped up together. Thefts, 
robberies, and nameless insults were daily perpetrated. As early as the sixth 
of June, Waller's orderly-book contains this order: " The commanding offi- 
cer [Percy] observes such profligacy and dissipation and want of subordi- 
nation, that he orders a roll to be called four times a day." In a week, 
" he is sorry to take notice that the tents and camp furniture are in the 
most shameful and filthy condition." Drunkenness and licentiousness were 
not checked by such punishments as eight hundred and a thousand lashes, 
inflicted by order of courts-martial. Five hundred lashes were very frequent. 
Indeed, the cat was in use daily. Winifred McOwen, the woman spoken of 
above as killing the bull, was sentenced to receive her hundred lashes on 
the bare back, in the most public places of the town. 

The civilian population was steadily decreasing by death, and the occa- 
sional parties sent out by the English generals. 2 On September 27 news 
came of a change of the admiral, and of more reinforcements. In October, 
so anxious was the dread of attack, that for several nights the army was held 
in readiness to resist it. As winter came on, many houses before exempted 
were seized for barracks. As late as November 9, some of the regiments 
were under canvas. On November 19 a ship arrived with fowls, sheep, etc., 
probably the only arrival of the large stores of this kind .shipped from 
England. Late in November, Manly, in an American privateer, took the 
" Nancy," an ordnance ship, with large stores of ammunition. Howe wrote 
home that now the rebels had the means to burn the town he was afraid 
they would do so, and the contemporary correspondence is full of propo- 
sals " to smoke out the pirates." 

The " pirates " made themselves as comfortable as they could. Some of 
the old historical buildings were burned for firewood, Winthrop's house, 
alas ! among them, and no one, in a hundred and fifty years, had made a 
picture of it. Some of the grenadiers were quartered in the West Church. 
Two regiments of infantry were in Brattle Street meeting-house, 3 and in 

H. Sumner married a niece of Gage, and came 1775, forbidding specie, beyond five pounds, to 

into possession of an original portrait of him, be carried out of Boston by any one departing, 

which he had engraved for his History of East ED.] 

Boston, and bequeathed to the State. It is now 3 [It is but a few years since this old land- 
in the State Library. ED.] mark disappeared, which 

1 [Howe kept up an occasional cannonading : 

, . / , , . . " Wore on its bosom, as a bride might do, 

but he made no threatening movement for a The iron breaslpin which the rebels lhrew> ,, 

month, till, November 9, he sent a raiding party 

to Lechmere point to steal cattle, which failed as Holmes phrases it. The ball, thrown from the 

of its purpose. Moore's Diary of the American Cambridge shore, hit the front and fell to the 

Revolution, \. 166. ED.] pavement, and was subsequently picked up and 

2 [Howe issued a proclamation, October 28, lodged in the place where it struck. A model 



THE SIEGE OF BOSTON. 93 

the sugar-house adjoining it. " The pillars saved " the church from being 
a riding school, as the record says with reference to the " Pillar of fire." 
The Old South meeting-house was used for a riding school by the Seven- 
teenth Dragoons. The officers still had their horses, and they got up 
sleighing parties within the narrow limits of the town, as winter closed in. 1 
The king's birthday was celebrated with enthusiasm. Even Patriots still 
pretended that it was the ministry they were fighting, and drank the health 
of the king, who was really their most bigoted enemy. The Patriot gentle- 
men made a point of maintaining the most sedulous outward courtesy to 
the officers of their king. Faneuil Hall was at first used as a storehouse 
for furniture and other property ; but it was cleaned out for a theatre when 
General Burgoyne, and his friends among the officers, needed it for that 
purpose. In September they performed Zara, a tragedy translated from 
Voltaire, and not yet wholly forgotten, thanks to Miss Edgcworth's Helen. 
Burgoyne wrote the prologue and epilogue. The female parts were taken 
by Boston young ladies, whose names have not come down to us. The play 
was repeated several times, the profits being devoted to the widows and 
children of the soldiers. Burgoyne has the credit of writing another play, 
The Blockade of Boston, which was performed after he had sailed for home. 
It was on January 8, when this play was in full progress, and an actor 
ridiculing General Washington was on the stage, that a sergeant rushed 
in, crying: "The Yankees are attacking the works on Bunker Hill." This 
seemed a part of the play, till the highest officer present, an aide-de-camp,* 
ordered, "Officers to their posts! " The play was at an end. Major Knowl- 
ton, who had commanded at the rail-fence on the day of the battle, had 
renewed his visit to Bunker Hill, burned a bakehouse and some other 
buildings, and carried off several prisoners. 8 The Patriot ladies, who had 
refused to go to the play, made merry over the misadventures of their less 
squeamish sisters, who had to come home, frightened, without their gallant 
escorts. 

General Sullivan had attempted this raid the week before, but had been 
disappointed because the ice was not strong enough to bear his men. The 
mildness of the winter caused constant annoyance to Washington, who was 
now provided with ammunition, and was eager to cross the ice on the Back 
Bay and attack the town. He had insulted it by floating batteries once or 
twice, but with no serious attack. 4 Why Howe, fairly crowded as he was, 
had never renewed his own plan for taking Dorchester I Feights, does not 
appear; but in February, 1776, he writes to Lord Dartmouth: 8 

of the old meeting-house, showing the ball in * [Abigail Adams writes, Oct. 21, 1775: "A 

place, is now in the gallery of the Historical So- floating battery of oui two nights ago, 

cicty. Ki>. | and moved near the town, and then discharged 

1 I Inn. J. T. Austin's MS. notes. their guns. Some of the balls went into the 

a Not General Howe, as an exaggerated tra- Workhouse; some through the tents in theCom- 

dition has it. mon ; and one through the sign of the Lamb 

8 [See contemporary accounts given in Tavern." Ki>.] 

Moore's Diary of the Amcri,,ui R,ivlutiou, i. MS. despatch, preserved in the state-paper 

193, 199. ED.] office, London. 



94 THE MEMORIAL HISTORY OF BOSTON. 

" It being ascertained that the enemy intended to take possession of Dorchester 
Height or Neck, a detachment was ordered from Castle William on the ijth of Feb- 
ruary under the command of Lieut.-Colonel Leslie, and another of grenadiers and light 
infantry commanded by Major Musgrave, with directions to pass on ice, and destroy 
every house and every kind of cover on that peninsula, which was executed, and six 
of the enemy's guard taken prisoners." 

From this despatch it appears that the ice had at last formed, for which 
Washington had been waiting. He at once called a council of war, and 
urged an assault on the town by crossing over the ice from Cambridge and 
Roxbury; but his field-officers generally were unfavorable to the enter- 
prise, much to Washington's disgust and hardly concealed indignation, and 
he therefore reluctantly abandoned it. In its place he made immediate 
dispositions to seize Dorchester Heights and to take Noddle's Island, now 
known as East Boston. He asked the government of Massachusetts to call 
out the militia of the neighborhood. This was done, and ten regiments 
were called in. Washington himself says: " These men came in at the ap- 
pointed time, and manifested the greatest alertness and determined resolu- 
tion to act like men engaged in the cause of freedom." 

Preparations were at once made by General Ward, at Roxbury, in col- 
lecting fascines, and what in the military language of that day were called 
" chandeliers," a kind of foundation for the fascines, with which were to be 
built the works on Dorchester Heights. The ground was supposed to be 
frozen too hard for entrenching. On Saturday, Sunday, and Monday nights, 
March 2, 3, and 4, 1776, a cannonading was kept up from Cobble Hill, 
Lechmere's Point, and Lamb's Dam in Roxbury, to divert the attention of 
the English troops and drown the noise of carts crossing the frozen ground. 
As soon as the firing began on Monday evening, General Thomas moved 
from Roxbury to South Boston with twelve hundred men. To deaden the 
noise of the wagons the men strewed the road with straw, and wound 
wisps about the wheels. Before morning they had thrown up formidable 
works. The English of the fleet and of the army were entirely surprised 
when that morning broke, for a dense fog had favored the Americans at their 
work. On Tuesday evening, intending to storm the newly built works, 
Howe sent down three thousand men under Percy to the Castle, to attack 
on that side; but while his troops were embarking from the island a violent 
storm came up, which lasted till eight o'clock the next day and wholly 
broke up the design. Before night of the sixth, evacuation was determined 
on. Percy's letter to his father, of that date, says : " It is determined to 
evacuate this town. I believe Halifax is to be our destination." He then 
knew, and Howe had determined, that the works on Dorchester Heights 
were not to be stormed. "An officer of distinction," in Almon's Remem- 
brancer at the same date, says : " We are evacuating the town with the 
utmost expedition, and are leaving behind half our worldly goods. Adieu ! 
I hope to embark in a few hours." 

From hour to hour, however, Thomas was strengthening his works, which 



THE SIEGE Of UOS1U.V 



95 




GENERAL HENRY KNOX. 1 

were now much stronger and better provided than were Prescott's works at 
Bunker Hill. Knox's Ticonderoga cannon were likely to be in good service. 



1 [A likeness of Knox is prefixed to the Life 
of him In Samuel A. Drake. A photogravure 

of what is c.illed the panel likeness of Knox, l>y 
Stuart, is given in Mason's Stii,irt, p. 211. The 
Knox papeis, left to the New England Historic 
('cnealogH-.il Society hv the late Admiral 
Thatcher, grandson of the general, arc now ar- 
>'d in fifty-live folio volumes, lo which an 
index is preparing. A brief ftCCOTOt of the] i 
(i 1,464 in all I, pu-pareil In the Rev. K. F. Shifter, 
lias been printed by the society. 



Knox played an important part in the siege 
by conducting the expedition from Cambridge to 
Ticonderoga to get some of the cannon which 
had fallen into Ethan Allen's and Arnold's hands 
by the capture of that post, and which Washing- 
ton needed to put in his batteries, and which were 
opportunely at hand when the heights at Dor- 
N'eck were to be fortified. Knox's diary 
of thjs expedition is in the X. /'.. Itiit. and 
July, 1876. An inventory of the 
cannon, made Pec. 10, 1775, is given in Drake's 



96 THE MEMORIAL HISTORY OF BOSTON. 

Had the attack been made, Washington relied upon Thomas to hold the 
Heights, and he would himself have assaulted Boston on the western side as 
soon as the English troops were engaged at South Boston. He had, at the 
mouth of the Charles River, two divisions of troops in readiness, numbering 
four thousand men, under the command of Greene and of Sullivan. Greene's 
division was to have landed near where the Massachusetts General Hospital 
grounds now are, and Sullivan's further south at the powder house, and to 
seize the hill on the Common. If they were successful, these divisions were 
to unite, march upon the English works at the Neck, and let in the troops 
from Roxbury. Three floating batteries were to clear the way in advance 
for their landing. 

Washington thought well of this enterprise, and the troops would 
have certainly been well led ; but it will never be known how far this 
attack of four thousand men, who were to row two miles and land under 
fire from the English batteries, would have succeeded. 

It was only twelve months after Warren's last address in the Old South. 
Washington, in his general orders, alludes to the anniversary of the Massacre. 1 
But as the English did not attack on their side, the American attack did 
not take place. Thomas kept on strengthening his works. Washington 
regarded this fortification as only preliminary to taking Nook's Hill. This 
hill was the extreme northwest part of South Boston, and commanded the 
south end of Boston proper. It is now wholly dug away. 2 

The details were made for the occupation of this lesser hill on the night 
of the ninth. It was, so to speak, the Breed's Hill of Dorchester, the 
eminence nearer to the town. But on the eighth Howe sent out a flag of 
truce, with a letter signed by John Scollay, Timothy Newell, Thomas Mar- 
shall, and Samuel Austin, the selectmen of the town. It was addressed 
to nobody, for Howe had made a point that these gentlemen should not 
address " His Excellency George Washington," as they wished to do. The 
letter stated officially that Howe had assured them that he was making his 
preparations to withdraw, and that he would not injure the town unless he 
was molested in withdrawing. Washington would not answer. Colonel 
Learned, who received the paper, sent back a message that Washington 
would take no notice of it; that it was an unauthenticatcd paper, not obli- 
gatory upon General Howe. This was all the communication which passed ; 
but it was enough. The Patriots were only too glad to have the "pyrates" 

Cincinnati Society, p. 544. See also Drake's Life ! [While this fortifying was going on at Dor- 
of Knox, p. 175; his Landmarks of Middlesex, Chester Neck, a scene of solemnity, not unmixed 
p. 154; Frothingham's Siege of Boston, p. 295. with ludicrous associations, took place at Water- 
After the war Knox became a resident, for a town. A meeting of the citizens of Boston had 
time, of Boston, and occupied the Copley house been legally warned to listen there to an anniver- 
on Beacon Hill. The mansion which he built, sary oration on the Massacre. The Rev. Peter 
later, at Thomaston, Me., is figured in Scribner's Thacher delivered it, and the audience of sup- 
.I/o////r, ix. 616. A brother of General Knox posable Bostonians applauded it. En.] 
(Thomas Knox) was the first keeper of Boston - [It is shown on Pelham's map, of which a 
Light, when it was rebuilt after the war. Car- heliotype is given in the Introduction to this 
ter's Summer Cruise, p. 24. ED.] volume, there called " Foster's Hill." 



THK SIEGE OF BOSTON. 



97 



embark ; and nothing would have justified any loss of life or of property in 
hurrying them. 1 On the ;th Manly took two more provision ships in the 
bay, and carried them into 
the harbor of Cape Ann. BY HIS EXCELLENCY 

On Saturday night, the 



I 

three men who had made 
a fire on Nook's Hill. 
Sunday and Monday the 
bombardment continued. 
On the next Sunday 
morning, the ijth, Howe, 



WILLI A M H O W E, 



MAJOR GENERAL, 



S Lmnen and Woolen Goods arc Articles 



and six. 

who accompanied 

were nine hundred 



A! 
much wanted by the Rebels, and would 
with his whole army, aid and aflift them in their Rebellion, the Com- 
sailed in seventy-eight mandcr in Chief experts that all good Subjrfts 
vessels. The total num- will ufc their utmoft Endeavors to have all Ivuh 
ber of officers and men, Articles convey 'd from this Place: Any who have 
on his returns, was eight notOpportunity toconvey jheirGoods under th- 11 

thousand nine hundred own Care ' m X ^" ^ cm n Boa T d J C *}!' 

nerva at Hubbard's Wharf, to Creaa Brufi, Lkj; 

' mark'd with their Namts. who will give a Cert*- 
1 catc of the Delivery, and will oblige himklffi 
and Teturnthem to the Owners, all unavoidable Ac- 
twenty-four more, who c idents accepted. 

registered their names at If after thk Notice any Perfonfccretcs or kcrpj 

Halifax, and some two in his Poflcflion fuch Articles, he will be treated 

hundred who made no as a Favourer of Rebels. 

registry there. In more fiofton, Mch lOtb. 1776- 

than one case, after the 

., ..!_. HOWE'S PROCLAMATION. 1 

fleet had come out into 

the bay, a sea-sick Tory's wife begged her husband to put back ; and, by 
this chance, her family landed on the' shore of Massachusetts, to be pro- 
genitors of sturdy Republicans, and not, as might have been, of Nova 
Scotians, loyal to Victoria. 

binding from General Howe, he should pay no 
regard to his promises to them." 

2 (This is a reduced fac-simile of an original 
broadside in the Massachusetts Historical So- 
ciety's Library, and indicates the measures in 
preparation for the evacuation. Crean Brush 
was an Irishman who had gained notoriety in 
New York politics. Under cover of this procla- 
mation, he broke open stores and dwellings, and 
conveyed the plunder to the " Minerva." He 
was captured on board his vessel after the evacu- 
ation, and lodged in Boston jail, where, in 1777, 
he was joined by his wife; and, in a disguise 
which her garments furnished, he escaped, ^ 
5, 1777, and fled to New York. See 
tion Memorial, p. 164. ED.] 



1 "Last Friday," writes Major Judah Alden 
to his father, " the selectmen of Boston sent out a 
letter to General Washington, to desire him not to 
molest General Howe when he quit the town, as 
they had assurance from him that he would leave 
the town standing, and all private property. By 
their [the enemy's] motions, it looks as if they 
were determined to quit. They have loaded every 
vessel in the harbor, but what their design is 
we do not know. It is generally thought that 
they are not determined to go, but to make us 
think so until they can get reinforcements. We 
are making all preparations against them that we 
possibly can, and keep a better lookout than 
usual. Genera] Washington's answer to the 
selectmen of Boston was, as there was nothing 
VOL. in. 13. 



9 8 



THE MEMORIAL HISTORY OF BOSTON. 




WASHINGTON AT DORCHESTF.R HEIGHTS. 1 



1 [This portrait of " Washington at Dorches- 
ter Heights," as it is called, was painted by Stu- 
art in nine days, in 1806, following the so-called 
Athenaeum head, which was depicted twenty 
years later than the event it is here made to com- 
memorate. The story of this larger picture, told 
in Mason's Stuart, p. 103, is as follows : Win- 
stanley, the painter, brought to Boston a copy 



which he had made in London of the Lansdmvnc 
likeness of Washington, painted just before the 
Athenaeum head. Mr. Samuel Parkman ad- 
vanced the copyist some money on this canvas, 
which, not being redeemed, was offered by him 
to the town for its acceptance. At the meeting 
when this offer was made, a blacksmith objected 
to the town's receiving a copy after Stuart, when 



THE SIEGE OF BOSTON. 



99 




the artist lived among them and could give an 
original This seemed a pertinent objection, and 
Mi- I'arkman commissioned Stuart to paint the 
larger picture, which was then accepted by the 
town, and trmaim -d fur manv vrars in Kancuil 
Hall. It is now in the Art Museum. Before 
painting it, Stuart worked out the design on 
a smaller canvas -oi it is to !. timed; and a 
"small full-length." given by Stuart to Naac P. 
Davis, and now owned by Mi. Ign.ttiu- 
gent, of Iliookline, is called this sketch. Ma- 
son's Stuart, p 105. !'.[>.] 

1 | The annexed fae-similc i- nd-ink 

sketch made by Kosciusko at Valley Forge in 



1777. Alden was born in Duxbury, Oct. 3, 1750; 
-ign in Cotton's regiment in 1775; lieu- 
tenant in Bailey's in 1776; later, captain and 
brevetted major, after scmce throughout the 
war. Francis S Mr.tke's Mfmi>rinli of tkt So- 
//if Cincinnati <>f .Viissachusttti, p. 2IO, 
of which Major Aldcn was president from 1829 
till his death, in 18.45. " c was w ' ln ms regiment 
at Roxbury during the siege. 

After I he ru < came of the defeat of Mont- 
gomcrv at <,' 'nel Learned, accompa- 

nied hv Alden, was sent to the British liiv 
a flag ot truce. Alden at another time an ornpa- 
nied Colonel Tupper, under orders from Gen- 



100 



THE MEMORIAL HISTORY OF BOSTON. 



The siege was ended; and Congress, March 25, 1776, ordered and had 
struck a beautiful gold medal as a gift to Washington. It bears the mot- 
toes: " Hostibus primo Fugatis," and " Bostonium Recuperatum." l 

General Artemas Ward commanded the right wing of the American 
army, and directed the work of fortifying Dorchester Heights. General 
John Thomas carried out his orders with such resource and promptness 
as made the work the wonder of the time. And yet to-day, if you should 
ask ten Boston men, "Who was Artemas Ward?" nine would say he was 
an amusing showman. If you asked, "Who was John Thomas?" nine 
would say he was a flunky commemorated by Thackeray. On the site 
of the fortification ordered by Washington, directed by Ward, and built 
by Thomas is a memorial-stone which bears, not their names, but that 
of the mayor of Boston who erected it. Such is fame ! z 



eral Thomas, in whale-boats, to dislodge some 
British who had seized an island in Quincy Bay. 
The enemy fled on their approach. There are 
particulars about the Grape Island affair, and 
the general alarm along the southern shores of 
the harbor, in The Familiar Letters of John 
and Abigail Adams. ED.] 

1 [A heliotype fac-simile is given herewith. 
Washington's reply to the letter of presentation 
is given mfac-simile in Force's American Archives, 
fourth series, v. 977. The die, made in France, 
is still preserved, and coppers struck with it are 
not uncommon ; but impressions taken since it 
has been repaired can be distinguished by one 
less leg of the horses being discernible, and by 
other marks. See Loubat's Medallic History 
of the United States, and Snowden's Medals of 
Washington; and particularly the description by 
Mr. William S. Appleton in the Mass. Hist. Soc. 
Proc., April, 1874, p. 289. The original gold 
medal had come down through the descendants 
of Washington's elder brother ; and, after hav- 
ing been buried, to escape capture during the 
late civil war, in the cellar of an old mansion in 
the Shenandoah Valley, a representative of the 
family sold it in the spring of 1876 to fifty gen- 
tlemen of Boston, headed by the Hon. Robert C. 
Winthrop, who presented it, during the Centen- 
nial ceremonies of March 17 of that year, to the 
city, to be preserved in the Public"Library, where, 
with all the papers of attestation, it now is. See 
Public Library Kcf>orl of that year ; the Evacua- 
tion Memorial, p. 25, where a steel outline- 
engraving of it is given, from the plate used in 
Sparks 's Washington ; and Mass. Hist. Soc. Proc., 
1876, p. 230. The heliotype here given is from 



G 




an early silver copy, belonging to Dr. Samuel 
A. Green. 

There were eleven different medals struck in 
Paris, between 17763110! 1786, commemorative of 
events of the Revolution, and by order of Con- 
gress. The French Government, acting, it is 
said, under the prompting of Lafayette, pre- 
sented the entire series, in silver, to Washington, 
and the collection is known as " the Washington 
medals; "and the same finally coming into the 
hands of Daniel Webster, passed, after Webster's 
decease, to the Hon. Peter Harvey, who pre- 
sented them to the Massachusetts Historical 
Society, where they now are. See the Proceed- 
ings, April, 1874. ED.] " Bostonium " in later 
Latin has given way to " Bostonia." The cari- 
catures of the times speak of the people as 
" Bostoneers." 

2 The admirable Centennial Address of Dr. 
Ellis, and its full appendix, give very full mem- 
oranda of the details of the siege and its re- 
sults. [It may be worth while to note the sub- 
sequent careers of the leading British generals. 
Gage, after his return to England, became in- 
conspicuous, and died April 2, 1787. Howe's 
subsequent career further south only gained for 
him criticism and inquiry, till he returned to 
England in 1777 (where he died in 1814); to be 
succeeded by Clinton, who held the command 
till 1782, when he in turn returned to England, 
and died in 1795. Burgoyne's surrender at Sar- 
atoga led to his detention in Boston and Cam- 
bridge, from which he also returned to England, 
to enter Parliament and advise a cessation of 
hostilities, dying finally in 1792. Siege of Boston, 
P- 334- ED.] 



THE SIEGE OF BOSTON. 



101 



SUPPLEMENTARY NOTES BY THE EDITOR. 



PAUL REVERE'S LANTERNS. The story of 
the lanterns has of late years attracted a good 
deal of attention. Richard Devens, the friend 
with whom it is claimed Paul Revere had agreed 
upon this method of notice, made record of il 




some time after in some minutes, which were not 
brought to light till Mr. Frothingham printed 
them in 1849 (Sitge of Boston, p. 57). The De- 
vens memorandum is also given in Wheildon's 
Rrvtre's Signal Lanterns, p. 13, who discredits it 
and disputes some of Frothingham's statements. 
In 1798, a letter from Revere to Dr. Belknap, 
detailing the events just before Lexington, was 
printed in Mass, ffist. Coll., v. j it may possibly 
have been written a few, but probably not many, 
years earlier. It has since been reprinted more 
accurately in the same society's Proceedings, No- 
vember, 1878, p. 371, from Revere's own man- 
uscript, preserved in its cabinet. The story 
entered into all the histories ; but first acquired 
wide popularity when Mr. Longfellow, in 1863, 
made it one of his Tales of a Wayside Inn, 
ill 'parting, however, in his spirited verse, some- 
what from the historical record, since Revere 
did not watch for the lanterns, and never reached 
Concord. Meanwhile no particular discrimina- 
tion had been made in the printed accounts as 
to the edifice from which the lights were dis- 
played. Both Devens and Revere had called it 
the North Church. Dr. Eaton, in his Historical 
Discourse of Christ Church, had made no men- 
tion of the story in 1824 as associated with that 
church; and though a tradition remained to fix 
upon th.it building the place of the signal's dis- 
play, il was not publicly bruited till 1873, when 
tin' Rev. Dr. Henry Burroughs, its rector, in an 
historical di-nuiiM'. claimed the connection of 
the incident with this church, and that Robert 
Newman, who was then its sexton, was the one 
who hung out the lanterns at Revere's instiga- 
tion. Drake'.-. l.iinJm.uks, |i. 214. about (lie same 
time also gave the incident to Christ Church. 
A movement next on the part of the city au- 
thorities to commemorate the warning, by an in- 



scription on this church, led to a protest, dated 
Dec. 28, 1876, from Richard Krothingham, The 
Alarm on the Night of April 18, 1775, in which 
he showed, as indeed Devens's account makes 
clear, that other warnings had been given before 
the lanterns were hung out, and which 
they only confirmed. Mr. Frothingham 
also claimed that the old North Meet- 
ing-house in North Square was the true 
place of their display, a building 
which had been pulled down for fuel 
during the siege. This position was 
controverted by the Rev. John Lee Wat- 
son in a letter in the Daily Advertiser, 
July 20, 1876, which was subsequently 
printed, with comments by Charles 
Deane, in the Mass. Hist. Soc. Proe., No- 
vember, 1876; and separately, with a 
later letter dated March, 1879, in Paul Revere's 
Signals, New York, 1880. In these, both writer 
and commentator show conclusively that Christ 
Church was known popularly as the North 
Church, and they contend that it was from its 
spire the lights were shown. Mr. Watson also 
contends that the "friend " of Revere was a 
Boston merchant, Mr. John Pulling, a warden of 
the church ; and that it was he who carried out 
Revere's plan. Mr. W. W. Wheildon, in his 
Paul Revere's Signal Lanterns, 1878, on the other 
hand, reiterates the claims of Newman, and, as 
well as Drake, Middlesex County, p. 117, and 
Landmarks of Middlesex, p. 214, supports the 
Christ Church view. 

The present appearance of Christ Church is 
shown in Vol. II. p. 509. A tablet was placed 
on its front Oct. 17, 1878, with this inscription: 
" The signal lanterns of Paul Revere displayed 
in the steeple of this Church, April 18, 1775, 
warned the country of the march of the British 
troops to Lexington and Concord." The orig- 
inal spire was overthrown in the great gale of 
1804, but a new one, built by Charles Bulfinch, 
preserved the proportions of the old one ; this, 
however, has been somewhat changed by the 
placing of the clock, as will be seen by com- 
paring the cut in Shaw's Description of Boston, 
p. 257. Mr. H. W. Holland's William Domes 
and his Ride with Paul Revere, Boston, 1878, 
sets forth the particular services, at the same 
time, of Dawes. 

LEXINGTON AND CONCORD. Percy wrote 
3 private letter the day after the fight, dated 
Huston, April 20, 1775, in which he says, speak- 
ing of his march : " I advanced to a town about 
twelve miles distant from Boston, before I could 
get the least intelligence, as all the houses \\ 



IO2 



THE MEMORIAL HISTORY OF BOSTON. 



shut up, and not the least appearance of an in- 
habitant to be seen." Then, speaking of his 
reaching Lexington, and training his cannon 
upon the Provincials, to gain " time for the gren- 
adiers and light companies to form and retire in 
order," he says he " stopped the rebels for a 
little time, who dispersed directly and endeav- 
ored to surround us, for they were in great num- 
bers, the whole country having been collected 
for above twenty miles round." " When the re- 
treat began," he adds, " I ordered the grenadiers 
and light infantry to move off, covering them 
with my brigade, and detaching strong flanking 
parties, which was absolutely necessary, as 
the whole country we had to retire through was 
covered with stone walls, and extended a very 
hilly strong country." He reports that they had 
" expended almost every cartridge " when they 
reached Charlestown, and had lost "65 killed, 
157 wounded, and 21 missing, beside one officer 
killed, 15 wounded, and two wounded and taken 
prisoners. . . . This, however, was nothing like 
the number of which, from many circumstances, 
I have reason to believe were killed of the 
rebels." Of his adversaries he says : " Whoever 
looks upon them merely as an irregular mob 
will find himself much mistaken. They have 
men among them who know very well what they 
are about, having been employed as rangers 
against the Indians and Acadians ; and this 
country, being much covered with wood and 
hilly, is very advantageous for their method of 
fighting. Nor are several of their' men void of 
a spirit of enthusiasm, as we experienced yester- 
day ; for many of them concealed themselves in 
houses, and advanced within ten yards to fire at 
me and other officers, though they were morally 
certain of being put to death. . . . You may de- 
pend upon it that as the rebels have now had 
time to prepare, they are determined to go 
through with it ; nor will the insurrection here 
turn out so despicable as it is perhaps imagined 
at home. For my part I never believed, I con- 
fess, that they would have attacked the King's 
troops, or have had the perseverance I found in 
them yesterday." These extracts are from a 
fac-simile of the letter kindly lent by the Rev. 
E. G. Porter, of Lexington, supplied to him by 
the Duke of Northumberland, the grand-nephew 
of the Earl. The letter is more interesting than 
Percy's official report to Gage of the same date, 
which is printed in Mass. Hist. Soc. Proc., May, 
1876, p. 349. 

The late Hon. Charles Hudson furnished to 
the Mass. Hist. Sot. Proc., January, 1880, p. 315, 
a paper on Pitcairn, whose name, because of his 
alleged beginning of the contest at Lexington, 
has been usually shrouded with obloquy; but he 
is said to have been a fair-minded officer, much 
esteemed by all. (Sargent's Dealings with the 
Dead, No. 17.) The first shot, whether fired by 



Pitcairn or not, seems to have been from a 
pistol, perhaps accidentally, not with any 
execution so far as appears ; but it was soon fol- 
lowed by a few muskets, and then by a volley of 
the British vanguard. Pitcairn and his officers 
aver that the first shot came from the Provin- 
cials. (See Stiles's Diary, quoted in Frothing- 
ham's Siege of Boston, p. 62 ; and Irving's 
Washington.) The Provincials, scores of them, 
report that it came from the Regulars. Nei- 
ther side intended to fire first, and it is not 
easy to determine to whose door what was 
probably an accidental discharge is to be laid. 
There has been some discussion as to the per- 
son who first shed British blood. (Magazine of 
American History, April, 1880, p. 308.) At all 
events, it may be worth while in passing to note 
that these " embattled farmers " stood where 
the parallel lines are marked on the annexed 
plan of the triangular Lexington Green ; which 
also shows where Percy planted his cannon to 
keep the Provincials at bay, while Smith's re- 
tiring force sought shelter in the opened ranks 




of Percy's detachment. The royal side pro- 
fessed not to look upon the affair as we are ac- 
customed to now-a-days. " Each side is ready 
to swear the other fired first," says a letter of 
the time, describing the after effects in Boston. 
" The country-people call this a victory, and 
the retreat of the troops a precipitate flight. 
They don't consider that when the King's troops 
had effected what they went for, they had only 



THE SIEGE OF BOSTON. 



103 



to come home again." Man. /fist. Sac. Proc., 

i873. P; 57- 

.Major Pitcairn, a few weeks later at Bunker 
Hill, fell back into his son's arms as he was 
scaling the redoubt, shot by a negro, Peter 
S.ilein. (See George Livermore's "Historical 
Research " in Mass. Hist. Soc. Proc., August, 
1862, |>. 176.) He was brought over the ferry to 
Mr. Stoddard's, near the landing, and here bled 
to death. 1 1 is remains were placed under Christ 
Church ; and the story goes that when, some 
years after, they were sought to be sent to his 
relatives in England, another body, through the 
difficulties of identification, was sent instead. 
Drake's Landmarks, p 217. 

The reader must seek detailed accounts of 
this eventful day in Frothingham's Siege of Bos- 
tun, and in the smaller monographs and in- 
cidental accounts, of which full enumeration is 
given in Winsor's Readers' Handbook of the Rev- 
olution, pp. 26-33; al) d in J. L. Whitney's Lit- 
erature of the Nineteenth April, 1775. Gage's 
public statement is given in \hzfac-simile of his 
"Circumstantial Account" in the present chap- 
ter, which is not, by the way, accurately nor 
wholly reprinted in Mass. Hist. Coll., ii. ; nor in 
The Cambridge of 1776, p. 103. Percy's account 
and Smith's report are in Mass. Hist. Soc. Prof., 
May, 1876; and Smith's is also in Mahon's Eng- 
land, vi. app. ; and in Mass. Hist. Soc. Prac., May, 
1876, p. 350. It is interesting to compare the 
account given 

in the Memoir / , 

and Letters of 
Captain W. G. 
Evelyn, Ox- 
ford, 1879, pp. 

53- '2'- 

The Provincial Congress, on its side, issued 
a Narrative of the Incursions, etc., which was 
printed in its journal, also separately by Isaiah 
Thomas, and often since, and took numerous 
depositions of participants in the fight, the princi- 
pal men, like Colonel Barrett, deposing separate- 



April, i8t; Sieg* of Boston, p. 86. What are 
called the Lexington alarm rolls, or the lists of 
minute-men who turned out as the news spread, 
arc contained in Massachusetts Revolutionary 
Rolls, xi.-xvi., with indexes. 

THE LITERATURE OF BUNKER HILL. This 
is voluminous, and is set forth on different plans 
in Winsor's Readers' Handbook of the American 
Revolution, pp. 35-59; and in J. K. Hunncwell's 
Bibliography of Charlestmon and Banter //ill, 
pp. 13-29. It is enough to mention here, of the 
more extended accounts, that in Krothingham's 
Siege of Boston, Dawson 's in an extra number 
of the Historical Magazine, June, 1868, and that 
of Dr. George E. Ellis. Colonel Prescott wrote 
a brief and unsatisfactory account in the follow- 
ing August, addressed to John Adams, which is 
printed by Frothingham and Dawson; and his 
son, Judge Prescott, wrote a narrative, which rep- 
resents presumably the views of Prescott, and 
which Frothingham printed in his centennial ac- 
count of the battle, and in the Mass. /fist. Sac. 
Proc., 1875. Two contemporary accounts are 
preserved from eye-witnesses on opposing sides, 
and from opposite points of view. Burgoyne 
saw the battle from Copp's Hill and described 
it in a letter to Lord Stanley, which is printed 
in Fonblanque's Burgoyne and in other places. 
The Rev. Peter Thacher, of Maiden, saw it from 
the farther side of the Mystic, and wrote an ac- 








ly, the originals of which, or those sent to 
England, arc preserved in the libraries of Har- 
vard College and the University of Virginia. 
They have been often printed. These, with other 
papers, were entrusted to Richard Derby, of Sa- 
lem, and he despatched 
dfp C\ < .7 Captain John Derby 

/*- JL/4s*ld/<s w ' tr| tnem n a sw 'ft 

vessel, so that the pro- 
vincial accounts of the 
day's work reached Lon- 
don and the Government eleven days in advance 
of Gage's despatches, .\fas-s. Hist. Soc. Proc., 




count which is preserved in the American Anti- 
quarian Society's Library, and is printed by 
Dawson. This was the basis of the narrative 
set forth by the Provincial Congress, which is 
printed by Frothingham and others. Gage's 
official report was printed in Almon's Re- 
membrancer. 

The earliest anniversary oration was Josiah 
Bartlett's, in 1794, which was printed the next 
year in Boston by B. Edes. 

The bibliographical history of a somewhat 
needless controversy, which at one time was 
mixed with political recriminations, as to the 
command in a battle which was too unexpected 
and unorganized for any individual and regular 
management of the whole extent of it, is traced 
in Winsor's Handbook, p. 48. There can be no 
question of Prescott's military superiority at the 
redoubt ; all else was supplementary, contingent 
certainly, but mainly independent, though a par- 



104 



THE MEMORIAL HISTORY OF BOSTON. 



tial concert of action obtained throughout the 
day, rather by mutual apprehension of the ne- 
cessities of the case than by fixed direction. 

In the parade at the time of laying the corner- 
stone of the monument in 1825 one hundred and 
ninety Revolutionary soldiers appeared ; and of 
these, forty professed to have been in the battle. 
Under the fervor of the hour, some of these were 
appealed to to revive their recollections, and a 
mass of depositions were taken by William Sul- 
livan and others ; but those instrumental in pro- 
curing them soon became satisfied that such "old 
men's tales" drew more on the imagination than 
was fit for historical evidence. Colonel Swett, 
however, used them to some degree in the addi- 
tions which he made to his account of the battle. 
These papers, in 1842, were for a while in the 
hands of a committee of the Historical Society, 
who saw no reason to value them differently ; 
and being returned to the Sullivan family, it is 
supposed that they were destroyed. (Mass. Hist. 
Soc. Proc., ii. 224-231.) Some papers, presum- 
ably of the same character, were offered at auc- 
tion in New York in 1877 ; but without finding a 
purchaser. There is an amusing account of one 
of the so-called veterans of Bunker Hill 
in No. I of the "Recollections of Amer- 
ican Society," in Scribner's Monthly, 
January, 1881, p. 420. Numerous pa- 
pers relating to individual losses at 
Bunker Hill are in Massachusetts Ar- 
chives, cxxxix. ; and papers relating to the official 
return of the damage done by the burning of 
Charlestown, communicated to the Governor 
Jan. II, 1783, are in Massachusetts Archives, 
cxxxviii. 393. So late as 1834 memorials were 
presented to the Legislature, asking satisfac- 
tion for losses suffered on June 17, 1775. See 
House Document of that year, No. 55. 

THE AMERICAN LINES. These can be 
traced in Pelham's Boston and Vicinity, and 
Trumbull's Boston and the Surrounding Country; 
both of which are given in reduced fac-simile in 
this volume, and are noted in the Introduction, 
together with various eclectic maps of a later day, 
useful in fixing the localities. 



There were four points of attack which 
the besieging force guarded against: first, by 
Charlestown Neck, where the left wing, under 
Lee, would have to bear the brunt of the onset; 
second, by boats across the Back Bay, where the 
British would have to effect a landing in the face 
of the centre under Putnam ; third, by a sortie 
from the Neck lines toward Roxbury; fourth, 
by Dorchester Neck, where, by landing on that 
peninsula, the enemy might attempt to turn the 
extreme right of the right wing. This part of 
the lines, both at Roxbury and Dorchester, was 
held by the right wing, which was commanded by 
Ward after Washington took the general com- 
mand. 

The fortified positions and associated land- 
marks along this line of circumvallation may 
perhaps be traced with interest. 

Going out over Charlestown Neck the road 
forked at the Common, just west of the narrowest 
part. The right hand fork came soon to Ploughed 
Hill, the modern Mount Benedict; and it was 
here that the Americans took an advanced post 
August 26, bringing them within range of the Brit- 
ish guns on Bunker Hill. It was an act intended 




to invite an attack, which was, however, declined. 
General Sullivan fortified it under a heavy fire, 
and pushed out his picket line till it confronted 
the enemy's within ear-shot ; and the place be- 
came the scene of much sharpshooting, chiefly 
conducted by Morgan's Virginia riflemen, who 



<7 



had reached the camp during the summer. There 
were redoubts also at Ten Hills Farm, which 
Sullivan had erected to protect his post at 
Ploughed Hill from assault on the Mystic side ; 
and some traces of them are still left. 




THE SIEGE OK BOSTON. 



The road by Ploughed Hill led on to Winter 
Hill, which was fortified immediately after the 
battle of Hunker Hill, and garrisoned chiefly by 
New Hampshire troops. The main defence was 
on the summit, where the road to Medford now 
diverges. Much of the proficiency of Sullivan's 
camp was due to his brigade-major, Alexander 
Scammell. (See Historical Magazine, September, 



valley toward Winter Hill, and on the other 
toward the Cambridge lines. Putnam had be- 
gun work here immediately after the retreat 
from Charlestown. When Washington arrived 




1870.) A good deal of the military spirit of the 
camp was derived from a veteran of the French 





wars, John Nixon, who had been very busy on 
the Lexington day, been wounded at Bunker Hill, 



and the army was brigaded, Greene was sta- 
tioned here under Lee, assuming commaifd on 
July 26, with a force of three or four thou- 
sand men, including his Rhode Islanders, who 
had been earlier encamped at Jamaica Plain. 
It was on Prospect Hill that Putnam hoisted 
his Connecticut flag, "An appeal to Heaven," 
on July 18; and again on Jan. i, 1776, what 




and was made a brigadier in August. Henry 
Dearborn and John Brooks, both later known in 
Boston history, were also officers of this camp. 

From this Winter Hill fort, one road leading 
to Medford passed the old Royall mansion, where 
Lee and Sullivan each at one time made their 
quarters, and where Stark held his command. 
The story of the famous old mansion is told in 
Drake's Landmarks of Middlesex, ch. vi. About 
equally distant on the road to Concord was the 
old Powder Tower, whose remains are to-day one 
of the most characteristic relics of the past near 
Boston. Drake's Landmarks of Middlesex, ch. v. 
It was to this magazine that Gage sent the expe- 
dition in September, 1774, to seize the powder, 
as told in the preceding chapter. 

The uneven valley between Winter and Pros- 
pect hills was guarded by more than one re- 
doubt ; and in the rear of one of them, in an old 
farm-house still standing on Sycamore Street, 
known as the Tufts house, Lee had his head- 
quarters. 

Pelham's map shows the extensive works ami 
out-works which crowned the summit of I'n>- 
pect Hill, and extended on the one hand into the 
VOL. III. 14. 



they called the Union flag of the Confederated 
Colonies, a banner with thirteen stripes. 

The road which ran from Charlestown Com- 
mon to Cambridge Common passed just below 
Prospect Hill (the present Washington Street 
in Somerville, and Kirkland Street in Cam- 
bridge), and between it and the lesser eminence, 
called then Cobble or Miller's Hill, now the 
site of the Insane Asylum, where Putnam and 
Knox on the night of November 22, with the 
regiments of Bond and Bridge as a supporting 
force, threw up breastworks which afterward 




became one of the strongest points of the Amer- 
ican lines, and when mounted with 18 and 24 
pounders served effectually to keep the enemy's 

from moving too near. 

Just South of Cobble Hill, the marshy land 
intersected by Willis's Creek made an island of 
tliL region now known as East Cambridge, but 



io6 



THE MEMORIAL HISTORY OF BOSTON. 



which was then called Phips's farm, or Lech- 
mere's Point, the old farm-house standing near 
where the modern court house is. Richard Lech- 




* l%#y#f- 



mere, who owned it, had acquired it by marrying 
the daughter of Spencer Phips, the royal Lieut- 
Governor, whence the two names. He was now 
a Tory, and the upland was soon put to 
good use. Gage had found it convenient 
to land his detachment here, which marched 
to Lexington; and how Boston looked 
from this point may be seen from one of 
the heliotypes in the preceding chapter. 
There was already one causeway, connecting 
by a bridge over Willis's Creek the neigh- 
borhood of Prospect Hill, when Washington 
determined to fortify the point, and then to 
extend the road now called Cambridge Street 
over the marsh, so as to bring the new fort into 
more direct communication with his centre. 
Having protected these two approaches by small 
works on the main land, and Manly's capture 
of an ordnance ship supplying him with a 13-inch 
mortar, he began to extend a covered way there 
on the night of November 29, and broke ground 
for his main work on December n, which he 
was obliged to complete under heavy fire from 
the Boston side. This, and the frozen ground, 
delayed the completion till the latter part of 
February, 1776. Knox's cannon from Ticonder- 
oga played here a good part in the bombard- 
ment of March 2, when one of the shot struck 
the tower of the Brattle Street Church, and was 
to be seen there to our day. 

Thus the advanced posts of the besieging 
army from their extreme left at Ploughed Hill 
were continued through Cobble Hill and Phips's 
farm ; while, to protect the centre front, in No- 
vember two small redoubts were thrown up, 
bordering on the marshes, further on toward the 
Charles. One of these, which was intended to 
repel boats, was found in complete preservation 
by Finch, in 1822. The further waste by time 
was repaired by the Cambridge city authorities, 
in 1858, who enclosed the earthwork, and named 
it Fort Washington. Pelham's map, and so does 
Marshall's, places the other battery nearer the 
Charles; but Finch could find no trace of it. 
It probably occupied the knoll in the marsh to 
which Magazine Street now conducts. Paige's 
History of Cambridge, p. 422. 

The 'nterior line of defence, which was con- 



structed earlier by Gridley, consisted of detached 
works, extending from a point on the Charles, 
where now the Riverside Press is, over Butler 
(or Dana) Hill, in the direction 
of Prospect Hill, and ending 
near Union Square in Somer- 
ville. They can be traced on 
Pelham's map, and are de- 
scribed in Drake's Landmarks 
of Middlesex, p. 186. Finch, 
in 1822, could find little trace 
of them. 

Just in advance of this line, 
in the house of the Tory Ralph Inman, Putnam 
had his head-quarters. He left his son, Colonel 
Putnam, here to guard the ladies during the action 




/& / / 

//) /7-ffj /? 



on Bunker Hill. Drake reports the house in 1873 
as being cut asunder and wheeled off. It stood 
on Inman Street, where the road from the college 
to Phips's farm made a sharp turn to join the 
Charlestown road. It is shown in Pelham's 
map. The house before the war was a centre of 
attraction for the royalist officers in Boston ; for 
Inman kept good cheer, and had pretty daugh- 
ters. One of them married John Linzee, who 
commanded the " Falcon " on Bunker-Hill day. 

Putnam, on reaching Cambridge, had occu- 
pied the Borland house, popularly known as the 
Bishop's Palace, directly opposite Gore Hall, 
on Harvard Street. It had been built about 
fifteen years before by the Rev. East Apthorp of 
Christ Church, Cambridge, a son of Charles 
Apthorp, a Boston merchant. John Adams says 
it was " thought to be a splendid palace, and 
was supposed to be intended for the residence 
of the first royal bishop." Another Boston 
merchant, John Borland, occupied it up to the 
outbreak; and it was he who added the third 
story, to give more accommodation for his 
household slaves, as the tale goes. The true 
front is toward Mount Auburn Street. 

A little further west, and within the college 
yard, is the present Wadsworth House, the for- 
mer home of the presidents of the college. 

The cut on the next page follows a drawing 
made by Miss E. S. Quincy during the presi- 
dency of her father. 

The house in 1776 was fifty years old, having 
been built in 1726 for the occupancy of Presi- 
dent Wadsworth ; and it did not have the late- 
ral projections, which were put on in Treasurer 
Storer's time to enlarge the dining and drawing 
rooms. It was in this house that quarters were 
assigned to Washington, by provision of the 
Congress at Watertown, on his coming to Cam- 



THE SIEGE OF BOSTON. 



107 



bridge; as Mr. Dcane has conclusively shown in 
a paper in the A fast. Hist. Xoc. /'roc., September, 
1872, p. 257. See also llantirtl Book ; Cum- 
bridge of \n$\ Drake's I. ,iniimarks of Middlesex, 
p. 206; Quincy's History of Harvard University. 
Miss Quincy thinks that a British shell, which 
passed over the house and fell in Harvard 
Square, probably showed that a remoter head- 
quarters were safer for the General. See Dr. 
Holbrook's account in Memoirs of Mrs. . S. M. 
(liuncy, p. 223. 



Hist. Soc. Proc. for 1881. The old Stoughton was 
ID disappear, however, before the war ended. 
Hollis Hall was also then standing ; but hardly 
a dozen years old. Holden Chapel was thirty 
years old, and became the place for courts-mar- 
tial to be held. In May, 1775, the Provincial Con- 
gtes-. had taken possession of these buildings, 
and on the day before Bunker Hill the College 
library had been removed to a place of safely. 
The original records of this Provincial Congress 
are in Mass. Archives, ex).; they have been 




THE WADSWORTH HOUSE. 



It was in the old meeting-house shown in the 
engraving, which stood where now the Law 
School stands, that the Provincial Congress of 
1774 held its sessions. Washington attended 
Sunday services here, occupying a wall pew on 
the left of the pulpit. 

The principal college buildings at this time 
were Harvard Hall, which, after the fire of 
1764, had been rebuilt; Massachusetts Hall; 
and the Stoughton of that day (seen in the por- 
trait of Wm. Stoughton in Vol. II. 166), which, 
with the highway opposite, formed a quad 
raugle of the space now lying between 
Harvard and Massachusetts, as shown in 
the old " Prospect of the Colledges in ( "am- 
bridge in New England," of which there 
are two conditions of the plate: one in Lieut. - 
(Inv. \\illiam Hummer's time, as issued liv \V. 
Hingis, and the other in the days of Lieut. -Gov. 
Spencer Phipps, when William Price issued it. A 
heliotype, considerably reduced, is given in .!/.;..>. 



printed. In the winter of 1775-76, nearly two 
thousand men were sheltered in these and the 
lesser college buildings, and they made use of all 
the college property. On May 3, 1777, the col- 
lege steward, Jonathan Hastings, made a return 
of " the utensils left in the college kitchen, which 
[words carefully erased, evidently "the colony") 
of the Massachusetts Bay have not replaced." 
(Mass. Archives, cxlii. 57.) 

It is probable that the earliest works raised 
after Lexington day were some breastworks 




thrown up i is now the college yard, 

and it is probable also that they were raised early 
in May by Colonel Doolittle and his men ; and 
1 >rake says, Landmarks of Middlesex, p. 243, that 
they extended to the right as far as Holyoke 



io8 



THE MEMORIAL HISTORY OF BOSTON. 



Place. North of the college buildings and front- 
ing on the Common was the house still standing, 
now owned by the University and occupied by 
Professor James 13. Thayer, by whose permission 
the view of the old hall, given in the annexed 
cut, was taken. The door to the right opens 
into the room in which General Ward held 



the night before the battle; that President Lang- 
don went forth from the western door and 
prayed for God's blessing on the men just set- 
ting forth on their bloody expedition, all 
these things have been told and perhaps none 
of them need be doubted." (Poet at the Break- 
fast Table. Also see Harvard Book, 11.424; Still- 




his council of war, when it 

was resolved to occupy the 

heights in Charlestown. In 

the exterior view, the lower 

windows to the right of the 

entrance belong to this 

room. Dr. Holmes says in 

his "Cambrel-roofed House 

and its Outlook :" "I retain 

my doubts about those dents 

on the floor of the right-hand 

room, the ' study ' of the suc- 

ix-ssive occupants, said to 

have been made by the butts 

of the Continental militia's firelocks; but this 

was the cause the story told me in childhood laid 

them to. That military consultations were held 

in that room when the house was General Ward's 

headquarters; that the Provincial generals and 

colonels, and other men of war, there planned 

the movement which ended in the fortifying of 

Bunker Hill; that Warren slept in the house 



man's Poetic Localities of Cambridge ; Drake's 
Landmarks of Middlesex, p. 255; and Middlesex 
County, i. 337; McKenzie's History of First 
Clui-rcli in Cambritiff.) It is well known that the 
house was the birthplace of Dr. Holmes. At the 
outbreak of the war it was occupied by Jonathan 
Hastings, the college steward who, in July, 1775, 
became the postmaster of Cambridge ; and it was 



THE SIEGE OF BOSTON. 



IO9 



his son Jonathan who was later postmaster of Bos- 
ton, .ifter Lexington the Committee of 
Safety took possession, and the original minutes 
of their doings here are now preserved in the 
Mass. Archives, cxl. It was to this committee 
that Henedict Arnold, with his Connecticut com- 
pany, reported, April 29; and from them, May 3, 



relating to his subsequent resignation, are in the 
Mass. Hist. Soc. froc., July, 1871. Colonel Car- 
rington, in his Battles of the American Revolu- 
tion, speaks of Ward, then less than fit 
advanced in years and feeble in body." Drake 
gives the same false impression in speaking of 
" his age and infirmity " two years later. 




lonel's commission; and here 

upon receiving his rnmiuUsion from the 
I'roviin c In he tht- ranking general of the Massa- 

i Husrtt-. (': 

This i,,niinix-.ion w.is il.itnl M.iv n), 177$! 
and that from tin Continrn! .; inakini; 

U'.ml the >cc:Mti(l m.ii.ii.;;, neral in the 
l)i-4i s datr Juno 22. Those, with other papers 



Almost directly west from this house, and on 
the other side of the Common, still stands the 
old elm under which Washington, Julv 

k command of the unorgani/cd army of 

soldiers then laying siege to lid-ton. (I'unbridsp 

:ni,il, 1875.) The arr: 

:iixidii-lv waited, and hi- assuming 

coniniand w.i to "'K- attended with a 



no 



THE MEMORIAL HISTORY OF BOSTON. 



great deal of grandeur. There are," writes Lieu- 
tenant Hodgkins, that morning, " one and twenty 
drummers. and as many fifers a beating and play- 
ing round the parade." Ipswich Antiquarian 
Papers, 1881. 

The annexed cut follows a painting which 
represents this historic tree before it had begun 
to show many signs of age. The house in the 
background occupied the site of the present 
Shepard Memorial Church, and was standing 
during the Revolution. It was known as the 
Moore House, the home of a certain Deacon 
Moore, whose wraith was said to haunt it. When 
it was destroyed some years since, two skele- 
tons were found beneath it, walled up in a cavity. 



Press is all there is left of the old Brattle Estate. 
The beautiful and extensive gardens with mall 
and grotto, and stretching to the river, have all 
disappeared. William Brattle, who occupied it 
at this time, deserted it, and fled to his friends 
in Boston. He was the universal genius of his 
time, and of course was called superficial. A 
graduate of Harvard, he served by turns as a 
theologian and preacher, a physician and blood- 
letter, a lawyer and attorney-general, a politician 
and counsellor; and then, to make a Tory of 
him, the place of brigadier in the militia was 
conveniently found empty. When he went off 
to Halifax with Gage, they called him "commis- 
sary and cook." The place had been vastly im- 




THE WASHINGTON ELM. 



(Drake's Landmarks of Middlesex, p. 268.) There 
are accounts of the tree in Harvard Book, ii. and 
in the paper on "American Historical Trees" in 
Harper's Monthly, May, 1862. Christ Church 
stood then as now, and, except being lengthened, 
is not greatly changed in outward appearance. 
A subscription, mainly effected in Boston, had 
built it about fifteen years earlier, and its parish- 
ioners were now mostly Tories and absentees. It 
was accordingly converted into barracks, and 
some of the Southern riflemen found quarters 
there, though occasional church services were 
held in it, a member of Washington's staff con- 
ducting them. .See Dr. Hoppin's Historical Dis- 
course. 

Proceeding into Brattle Street from Harvard 
Square, the first house beyond the University 



proved under the superintendence of a son, 
Major Thomas Brattle, who had gone to England 
early in the war, signifying his neutrality, but 
exerting himself the mean while to alleviate the 
trials of American prisoners in that country. At 
the end of the war his return was allowed by the 
Legislature only on the strong presentation by 
Judge Sullivan of his claims to consideration. 
(Amory's James Sullivan, \. 139.) The mansion 
was early appropriated to the uses of Colonel 
MifHin, 1 who acted as the quartermaster-general 

1 John Adams describes dining at this house Jan. 24, 
1776, with General Washington and his lady and other 
company, among whom were " six or seven sachems and 
warriors of the French Caghnawaga Indians with several of 
their wives and children," then visiting che camp. " I was 
introduced to them by the General,'' says Adams, "as one 



THE SIEGE OF BOSTON. 



Ill 



of the army, and whose memoranda can be seen 
on the corner of the plan of the British lines on 
Boston Neck, in a heliotype given in this chapter. 
The grounds of the Brattles extended to those 
of the Vassalls, whose old mansion is still stand- 
ing, much shorn of its ancient splendor, and lately 
the residence of Mr. Samuel Batchelder. The 
house was at this time a passably old one, seventy- 
five years or even more having passed since its 
erection, and its history can be read as written 
by Mrs. James, Mr. Batchelder's daughter, in Tht 
Cambridge of 1775, p. 93, showing how many 
changes have been made in its appearance. The 
Vassalls had owned it since 1736, when Colonel 
John Vassal! was in possession. He had mar- 
ried a daughter of Lieut.-Governor Spencer Phips, 
and in years to come she and others who bore 
the name of the bluff, illiterate sailor, William 
Phips, were foremost figures in the old Tory 
aristocracy of Cambridge ; for her three sisU TS 
married Judge Richard Lechmere, Judge Joseph 
Lee, and Andrew Boardman. In 1741 Henry 
Vassal!, the colonel's brother, bought it. He 
was then living in Boston, but had lately been a 
planter in Jamaica, though of a Boston family. 
(See Vol. II. p. 544.) This Henry married a 
daughter of Isaac Royall, whose fine mansion on 
the Medford road we have seen in the occupancy 



ton's arrival. The story of Church's defection 
need not be told here. Its growth has been 
traced in Krothingham's Life ofJosepH /.' 
p. 225. (Also see Siege of Boston, p. 258 ; Gordon's 
American Kei'dlution, ii. 134; Loring's Hundred 
Boston Orators, p. 39; Sabine's American Loyal- 
ists; and Mr. Goddard's chapter in the present 
volume.) The letter which he addressed to his 
brother in Boston, and which was intercepted, 
was written in cipher; and in the .MassacHustlli 
Arc/lives, cxxxviii. 326, is a copy of it as " de- 
ciphered by the Rev. Mr West, and acknowl- 
edged by the doctor to be truly deciphered." It 
is attested by Joseph Reed, secretary. The trans- 
lation was printed in the New England ChronUle 
and Essex Gazette of Jan. 4, 1776, at that time 
printed in one of the college buildings; and is 
reprinted in N. E. Hist, and Cental. Reg., April, 
1857, p. 123. Church was brought before a coun- 
cil of officers September 13, when he did not at- 
tempt to vindicate himself. He was now confined 
in a front chamber of this house, and the name, 
" B. Church, Jr.," cut by himself in the panel of a 
closet door in that chamber, can be traced to-day. 
The court remanded him to the Provincial Con- 
gress at Watcrtown, whither he was taken in a 
chaise with a guard under General Gates, and 
the trial took place in the meeting-house, Church 




*^t -W^^y: 



of Lee and Sullivan. The husband died in 1769, 
and was buried under Christ Church; but the 
widow survived here till the war began, when she 
suddenly emigrated to Antigua, leaving the old 



^*^ afa^y 

<^ ^ 



making a plausible speech. It is well known that 
the result was confinement, which was changed 
for exile; but the vessel which bore him toward 
the West Indies was never heard of. The an- 





stripy ./L<rt^&?~ 



house to be occupied by the medical staff of the 
army, under the director-general, Dr. Benjamin 
Church, who took this position after Washing- 

of the grand council-fire at Philadelphia, which made them 
prick up their ears." Familiar Lttttrs, p. 131. John 
Adams's Works, ii. 431. 




ncxed autograph is from a letter which he ad- 

from this house to the president of the 

Congress. An early copy of his statement, " From 



112 



THE MEMORIAL HISTORY OF BOSTON. 



my prison in Cambridge, Nov. I, 1775," is pre- 
served in the Sfarks MSS xlix. i. I. 




There is no doubt that the wounded from 
Bunker Hill were brought here, and were placed 



General Joseph Warren, was put in charge of 
the Cambridge Hospital, June 26, 1775. William 
Gamage, Jr., was also in attendance 
on the wounded, both after Lexing- 
ton and Bunker Hill, from April 19 
to Aug. 17, 1775. 

Beyond the Vassall house, and 
on the opposite side of the street, 
is another, known as the Craigie House, and 
perhaps the most famous dwelling in America, 
at that time the military home of Washington, 
now the home of Longfellow. 




had 



cinnati Society. Eustis 
Joseph Warren, who 
procured for him the 
appointment of surgeon 
to the artillery regiment 
at Cambridge, and later 
he became the senior surgeon 
of the camp hospital (Life of 
John Warren, pp. 24, 50 ) It ap- 
pears from a paper in the Massa- 
chusetts Archives, cxxxviii., that 
Dr. John Warren, the brother of 



under the spe- 
cial care of 
Dr. Eustis and 
the other sur- 
geons. There 
is an engrav- 
ing of Eustis, 
after Stuart's 
likeness, in 
Drake's Cin- 
been a pupil of 



The annexed cut follows a water-color made 
by Fenn some years since. When Washington 
occupied it as his headquarters, his offui was 
the room on the right of the front door, now 
Longfellow's study. The chamber over it was 
his bedroom". The present library-room is be- 
hind the study, and was used as a staff-room 
by the commander -in -chief, and is doubtless 
the apartment in which his secretary, Joseph 
Reed, made the fair draughts of many of the 
letters dated at these headquarters. Miss E. 




THE SIEGE OF BOSTON. 



S. Ouincy writes to me : "The late Daniel Green- 
leal, oi Ouincy, tol'd me that his father was em- 
il believe) to furnish the Vassal! House; 
and calling on Washington, his son accompany- 




ing him, the two were invited to dine, the meal 
was taken in the room to the right of the front 
door, and consisted of four dishes of meat, etc., 
which the aids carved." 

\\ '< have a pleasant picture of life at the old 
house in Horace K. Scudder's " Guests at Head- 
quarters "in The Cambridge 0^1775. The house 
has been often depicted, by photography in 
Stillman's Poetic Localities, and in the Harvard 
Book, \. ; and on steel in Drake's Middlesex, p. 
338 ; etc. The estate at that time was much more 
extensive than it is at present, and extended 
northward to include the present Observatory 
Hill, which at one time bore a summer-house ; 
and from a spring in its neighborhood water was 
conducted to the mansion through an aqueduct, 
whose inlet in the foundations of the house is 
still visible. It is thought that the house was 
erected by Colonel John Vassall in 1759, and when 
Washington occupied it was comparatively a new 
structure. The colonel had but lately abandoned 
it and joined his Tory associate! in Boston, where 
he occupied the Faneuil house (depicted in Vol 
II. p. 523) till he went to England, where he died 
in 1797. His estate in Cambridge was early con- 
fiscated. Immediately upon Vassall's leaving, a 
Marblehead regiment under Colonel (later Gen- 
eral) Glover, took possession. a band of fisher- 




men commanded by .1 fisherman, who had re- 
ported to General Ward, June ;;, and they ap- 
pear to have occupied the house till July 7, when 
they received orders to encamp, the 1'nnim ial 
Congress having diinhil tin- furnishing of the 
mansion for Washington's occupancy. The com- 
mander-in-chief records an expense for cleansing 
the quarters, July 15, so that not far from that 
VOL. III. 15. 



time he probably first took possession, and re- 
mained in it eight months. 

Mrs. Washington did not join her husband 
in this house till December n. Mrs. Goodwin, 
the mother of the late Ozias Goodwin, was the 
housekeeper of the establishment. In the stable, 
still standing, were the light phaeton and pair 
with which General Washington had come to 
Cambridge, beside the saddle-horses of himself 
and staff. 

Later, the house became successively the 
property of Nathaniel Tracy of Newburyport, 
who had fitted out the first privateer in the 
war; of Thomas Russell, the Boston merchant ; 
and, in 1791, of Dr. Andrew Craigie, late apoth- 
ecary-general of the Revolutionary army, who 
had served the wounded at Bunker Hill. The 
annexed autograph is from a paper dated May 




14, 177$, at the hospital in Cambridge. From 
him the house acquired its name, as did the 
bridge now connecting Boston and East Cam- 
bridge, Craigie being prominent in that enter- 
prise. Later it was the home of Sparks (while 
editing Washington's Writings), Everett, and 
Worcester the lexicographer; and became that 
of Longfellow in 1837. Drake's Landmarks of 
Middlesex, ch. xiii. 

We must pass hastily by two or three other 
old Tory houses which marked Brattle Street in 
the Revolutionary days, and which still stand. 
First, on the corner of Sparks Street, though now 
elevated on a new basement story, is the house 
(owned by John Brewster, a Boston banker) 
which Richard Lechmere, and, later, Jonathan 
Sewall, occupied, till he was mobbed and fled to 
Boston in September, 1774. See Mr. Goddard's 
chapter in this volume, and Mr. Morse's in Vol. 
IV., for some account of Sewall. Further on, 
the residence of Mr. George Nichols was the 
house of Judge Joseph Lee, a Loyalist of care- 
ful utterance, who, after wintering in Boston with 
the British during the siege, was permitted to 
return to his home, and died here in 1802. And 
still beyond, hidden by large trees, is the old 
mansion of the Tory George Ruggles, who lived 
here up to 1774, when the house passed into the 
hands of Thomas Fayerwether, who gave it 
the name by which it is best known. It is at 
present the residence of Henry Van Brunt, the 
well known Boston architect. 

Further on, the road to Watertown made a 
turn to the left and passed in front of another 
old mansion, now known as " Elmwood," and 
the home of James Russell Lowell. The room 
on the left of the front door is the reception 



THE MEMORIAL HISTORY OF BOSTON. 



room, and behind it is his library, though his 
study is in the third story. At the outbreak of 
the Revolution, the last of the lieut.-governors, 
Thomas Oliver, lived here; and it was in this 
house, " being surrounded by four thousand 
people," that in September, 1774, " in compliance 
with their commands," he signed his resignation 
and fled to the protection of the soldiers in Bos- 
ton. When Benedict Arnold, with his Connecti- 



bridge has recently put up tablets to mark its 
interesting historical sites. Harvard Kegister, 
February, 1881. 

South of the Charles, with the defences on the 
Brookline shore, began the extreme left of the 
lines of the right wing. The fort at Sew.ill's 
farm was partly on the estate of Mr. Amos A. 
Lawrence, where traces of it remained till a few 
years ago, and partly across the track of the 




cut Company, arrived in Cambridge just after 
the Lexington fight, they were quartered in this 
house, but the company remained only three 
weeks in camp, having been selected in the 
mean while, as the best equipped company in the 
army, to deliver within the British lines the body 
of a royal officer who died of wounds received 
on April 19. After Bunker Hill the house be- 
came a hospital, and the dead were buried in the 
opposite field. There are other views of this 
house in Drake's Landmarks of Middlesex, p. 
317; Stillman's Poetic Localities of Cambridge; 
and, with a notice by John Holmes, in the Har- 
vard Register, June, 1881. The city of Cam- 



ELMWOOD. 



Boston and Albany Railroad. It was 
built by Colonel Prescott's regiment, 
assisted by Rhode Island troops, just 
after the battle of Bunker Hill. Pres- 
cott had his headquarters in a house half a mile 
west on Beacon Street, now distinguished by the 
large elms about it. Miss. /fist. Sac. Proc., Octo- 
ber, 1869, p. 151 ; Woods's Brookline, p. 69. 

The centre of this wing at Roxbury guarded 
the only land entrance to Boston. The first de- 
fence which the Americans threw up was a re- 
doubt across the main street, where Eustis Street 
now branches from Washington Street ; and 
it became known later, when it was strength- 
ened, as the Burying-ground Redoubt. When, 
on August 23, they began an advanced line, they 
first fortified Lamb's Dam, which was a dike 
built for keeping out the tide, and extending 
from near the lead-works, south of Northampton 
Street, toward the Neck road ; and here, on the 



THE SIEGE OF BOSTON. 




upland, they built a breastwork, and extended 
entrenchments to the water on the westerly 
completing them September 10. 

A redoubt on the corner of Mall Street in 
Roxbury defended the road to Dorchester, which 
was pretty much the present Dudley Street. 



A regular work was on the estate of Mr. N. 
J. Bradlee, called the Lower Kort, of which a 
plan is given in Drake's Town of Koxbury, p. 
372. It was planned by Knox. 

The strong fort which General Thomas 
erected on the higher land, where now the Co- 



'nuliiui 

_. F .".r- 




THE OLD PARSONAGE IN ROXBURY. 



A few days after the fight at Bunker Hill, the 
old house of Governor Dudley (where now the 
Universalist Church stands) was taken down, 
and its foundation stones formed part of the de- 
fence here built. Smelt Brook crossed the street 
in front of it. 

There was a battery on rising ground above 
the marsh, where Sumner Place enters Cabot 
Street. 

Where 1'arkcr Street conducts to the site of 
the old landing place, a battery was held by 
Colonel Joseph Read's regiment to defend the 
landing. 

A square redoubt on the Kbcnezer 1 
estate, near Appleton Place, commanding Muddy 
River, was the most northerly of the Roxbury 
forts. 



chituate stand-pipe is, was known as the Up- 
per Fort. It was begun between July II and 
14. Drake, Life of 
A'rtox, p. 18, says 
that the Roxbury 
fort was built by 
that officer, then 
attracting Washing- 
ton's attention. 
This earth-work, 
perhaps the best 
tl of all the 
Revolutionary de- 
fences, was unfortu- 
nately, and it would seem needlessly, levelled, in 
1869, when the water-tower was built. A small 
memorial structure near by now points out the 




THE MEMORIAL HISTORY OF BOSTON. 



spot, and is inscribed : " On this eminence stood 
Roxbury High Fort, a strong earthwork planned 
by Henry Knox and Josiah Waters, and erected 
by the American army, June, 1775, crowning the 
famous Roxbury lines of in- 
vestment at the siege of Bos- 
ton." It has been said that 
the first shot fired from its 
cannon was on July I. See 
Lossing's Field-Book of the 
Revolution, ii. 24. 

The meeting-house of the 
First Parish, shown in the 
cut in Mr. Drake's chapter 
in this volume, was a con- 
spicuous mark for the royal 
cannon, and its steeple was 
the signal-station of this wing of the besieging 
army. Drake's Town of Roxbury, p. 287. 

Close by was the house, now the residence 
of Mr. Charles K. Dillaway, which is also shown 
in the view given in Mr. Drake's chapter on 
Roxbury in the present volume. At the out- 
break of the war it was occupied by the Rev. 
Amos Adams of the First Church. It after- 
ward became the headquarters of General John 



Heath's regiment. He commanded gome of the 
raids in the harbor. He served through the war, 
and returned at the end of it to die very soon 
after, Dec. 16, 1783. He is buried in the Rox- 




*^ S f / 

* 



bury burying-ground, but his gra /e is without 
a stone. Drake's Town of Roxbury , p. 156. 

General Ward, while commanding the right 
wing after Washington had reorganized the 
army, had his headquarters in the Datchet or 
Brinley house, which stood near the present 
church of the Redemptorists, and of which there 





Thomas, of Kings- 
ton, who, having 
led hither a regi- 
ment from Ply- 
mouth at the first 
summons, was made a 
provincial brigadier, 
Feb. 9, 1775, a ra 'ik con- 
firmed June 22, by Con- 
gress, which also made him a 
major-general, March 6, 1776. 
Thomas was a physician by occupation, and was 
born in 1725, of the old Marshfield stock, and 
had served in the French war. He did not sur- 
vive long enough to gain much distinction, dving 
on the Sorcl River, in Canada, in the following 
June, having taken command of the army which 
had been repulsed before Quebec. His portrait 
has been engraved in the illustrated edition of 
Irving's Washington. There was a short ac- 
count of The Life and Semices of Major-General 
John Thomas, by Charles Coffin, published at 
New York in 1844. Of Thomas's camp James 
Warren wrote to Samuel Adams, June 21, 1775: 
" It is always in good order, and things are 
conducted with dignity and spirit, in the military 
style." 

General Greaton was a Roxbury man ; had 
been an active Son of Liberty; was at Lexington ; 
and July i. 1775, was commissioned colonel of 



are views in Lossing's FieM-Rook of the War of 
iSi2, p. 250, and in Drake's Toivn cf Roxbury, p. 
327, but which hardly represent the magnificence 
said to have belonged to it in its palmy days, 
and which is rather extravagantly set forth in 
Mrs. Lesdernier's Fannie St. John. The Dear- 
borns, both generals, father and son, later oc- 
cupied this house. A journal of Captain Henry 
Dearborn, kept during Arnold's Kenncbec expe- 
dition, is preserved in the Public Library. The 
Connecticut regiments of Spencer, Huntington, 
and Parsons were encamped on Parker Hill. 

1 The order to which this signature is attached is in- 
dicative of the resorts to which the forces were put to 
make up for the want of bayonets, the absence of which 
had been of such signal disaster to them, a month earlier, 
at Bunker Hill. It is addressed to Ezekiel Cheever, at 
Cambridge, and calls for two hundred and fifteen spears 
for the use of the camp. See Life of Nathanael Greene, 
i. 115. 



THE SIEGE OF BOSTON. 



General Greene, when with the right wing, had 
his headquarters in the Loring-Grecnough house, 




(near the Soldiers' Monument), of which a view 
is given in Vol. II. p. 345. 

The headquarters of Colonel Learned's regi- 
ment were in the Auchmuty house, of which a 




view is given in Vol. II. p. 343 The mansion 
of Governor Bernard on Jamaica Pond, later oc- 
cupied by the younger Sir William Pepperell, 
was the quarters of the Rhode Island Colonel 
Miller for a while, and later it was used as a 
camp hospital. The Hallowell house, which is 
shown in Vol. II. p. 344, was also used as a 
hospital. The Peacock, a famous tavern, stood 
on the westerly corner of Centre and Allandale 
streets, in West Roxbury, and was the resort of 
British officers from town before the siege. 
Me ire than once it was the resting place of 
Washington during the siege ; and finally it 
became the residence of Sam Adams during his 
term as Governor. Drake's Town of Roxbury, 

P- 435- 

The extreme right was protected by the line 
of breastworks which guarded the entrance to 
Dorchester Neck. These are shown on Trum- 
hull's and Pelham's maps. 

The extension of the American lines within 
Dorchester Neck had been long contemplated 
when, on February 26, Washington wrote : " I 
am preparing to take a post on Dorchester 
Heights, to try if the enemy will be so kind as 
to come out to us." On Saturday everting, 
March 2, 17/6, Washington notified General 
\\ inl "I hi- lit termination to occupy Dorchester 
Heights on Monday. At eight o'clock on the 
night of March 4, the intrenchments were begun 
there. On that night the Americans fired one 
hundred and forty-four shot and thirteen shells 
into Boston from their various defences, chiefly 
from Lamb's Dam. The rapidity with which 
the defence was formed on the Heights was 
owing to the employment of fascines, which had 
been prepared during the winter in Milton and 
vicinity. They were first carted to Hrookline, to 
ive the enemy in regard to the point where 
they were to be used; and from this deposit a 
train of wagons, under the charge of Mr. James 
r>"ii -. conveyed them after dark to the hill. See 
the statement of Mr. Jeremiah Smith ISoics 
who died in 1851, aged eighty-nine, and who was 
with his father, riding behind his saddle, that 



night, printed in the Boston Daily Advertiser, 
March 17, 1876. 

One of the devices for defence had been a 
row of casks in front of the works, and these, 
filled with earth and stones, were to be rolled 
down the declivity as the enemy approached. 
General Heath records that this device was sug- 
gested by a Boston merchant, Mr. William 
Davis ; and Stedman admits that it was a curious 
provision, which would have swept off whole 
columns at once. " It was therefore," he adds 
as if a consequence, " determined to 
evacuate the town." A monument on 
Dorchester Heights bears this legend : 
" Location of the American redoubt 
on Dorchester Heights which com- 
pelled the evacuation of Boston by the 
British army, March 17, 1776." 

Beside the maps already referred to as useful 
in tracing the positions of the different works on 
this extensive line of circumvallation, the ear- 
liest account which we have of them, after they 
had begun to disappear, is that of J. Finch, pub- 
lished in Silliman's Journal in 1822, and re- 
printed in Frothingham's Siege of Boston, p. 409. 
Various later writers have attempted to trace 
them in detail. Chief among such are Lossing, 
in his Field-Book of the Revolution ; S. A. Drake, 
in his Landmarks of Middlesex ; and F.S.Drake, 
in his Town of Roxbury. Some aid will be de- 
rived from Woods's Broakline, and the histories 
of Dorchester and South Boston. 

THE LITERATURE OF THE SIEGE. This 
has been enumerated in Winsor's Readers' Hand- 
book of the American Revolution. The most ex- 
tensive accounts, apart from the general his- 
tories, are Richard Frothingham's Siege of Boston, 
and Dr. Ellis's, in the Evacuation Memorial. 
Of contemporary material, the most important 
sources are Sparks's Washington's Writings; 
Life of Joseph Reed; Life of General Greene; 
Gordon's American Revolution ; Colonel John 
Trumbull's Autobiography; Thacher's Military 
Journal ; Heath's Memoirs ; with additional mat- 
ter in Mass. Hist. Soc. Proc., May, 1859; and 
papers in Almon's Remembrancer, and Force's 
American Archives. There are letters in the Life 
of Dr. John Warren ; in the Life of George 
/',-.;,/ . in Abigail Adams's Letters ; etc. Various 
camp diaries are in existence: David How's, 
New York, 1865 ; McCurtin's, published by the 
Seventy-six Society; Dr. Belknap's, in Mass. 
, . Proc., June, 1858 ; E.-ekicl Price's, in 
Ibid., Nov., 1863; Paul Lunt's in Ibid., Feb., 
- imuel Bixby, in Ibid., March, 1876; Sam- 
uel Sweat's litiii-. Hi!.!.. I ' rmbcr, 1879 ; diary 
in Hist. Mag., October, 1864 ; Aaron Wright's 
ili.uv in Boston Transcript, April II, 1862; 
iijrnal in Essex Institute Collections, vol. 
iii. ; letters in A". . Hut. and Geneal. Reg., April. 



u8 



THE MEMORIAL HISTORY OF BOSTON. 



1857, etc. Also, a number of orderly-books, 
William Henshaw's, April 20 to Sept. 26, 1775, 
in Mass. Hist. Sac. Proc., October, 1876, and 
printed separately, 1881, with additional matter 
(there are later ones of Henshaw in the Amer. 
Antiq. Soc.) ; Israel Hutchinson's, in Ibid., Oc- 
tober, 1878; Glover's, in Essex Institute Col- 
lections^: and among those not printed, that 
of John Fenno, secretary to the commander-in- 
chief, April 20 to Sept. 6, 1775, ' n Massachusetts 
Historical Library; one kept at Cambridge, in 
the Pennsylvania Hist. Soc. Library ; Jeremiah 
Fogg's, in Harvard College Library; and Wil- 
liam Lee's, in the Historical Society's Library. 
An order-book of the Continental army, June 21, 
'775-Oct. 9 '775> the property then of Asahel 
Clark, of Woodstock, Conn , is noticed in Daily 
Advertiser, Nov. n, 1880. 

The Massachusetts Archives are rich in illus- 
trative documents, and Force's American Ar- 
chive* give many of the orders. References to 
sources of information regarding the daily life 
within the British lines are made in a note to 
Mr. Scudder's chapter in this volume. 

Three well-known novels in some degree 
depict the events in and about Boston during 
these Revolutionary days : Cooper's Lionel Lin- 
coln, Mrs. Child's Rebels, and Hawthorne's Sep- 
timins Felton. 

Material for determining the rank and file of 
this Patriot army is at the State House, in what 
are called the Massachusetts Revolutionary Rolls. 
A return of the main guard at Cambridge, 1775, 
is in vol. xxxvi. p. 267. Rolls of the army at 
Cambridge, in 1775, are contained in vol. xiv. 
Lists of the field, staff, and company officers of 
the Massachusetts regiments in 1775 (sixty-six 
colonels, sixty-one lieut.-colonels, one hundred 
and thirty-two majors), are in vol. xxvii. p. 197, 
etc. Other lists of the field and company offi- 
cers of Massachusetts regiments, 1775-76, and 
of officers of sea-coast companies, are in vol. 
xxviii. Full lists of the colonels of Massachu- 
setts regiments, from 1767 to 1775, are in vol. 
xxviii. p. 84. Pay-rolls of companies for sea- 
coast defence, 1775-80, are in vols. xxxvi. and 
xxxvii. Company rolls of various dates, 1776- 
81, are in the vols. xvii. to xxiv. As a rule, the 
rolls at the State House, before 1774, are in- 
cluded in the series called Massachusetts Ar- 
fhivcs ; but from 1775 to the end of the war 
they are arranged in what is called the Massa- 
chusetts Revolutionary Rolls. Various rosters of 
the regimental officers are printed in 4 Force's 
American Archives, ii., iii.; and in Colonel Wil- 
liam Hcnshaitfs Orderly-Book. 

THE NAVAL SERVICE. The Massachusetts 
Archives, vols. clxiv. to clxxii., contain docu- 
ments relating to privateers commissioned from 



1775 to 1783. They have been indexed by Dr. 
Strong, first chronologically and then alphabeti- 
cally, by the names of the vessels. The earliest 
Boston vessel named was the " Lady Washing- 
ton," of thirty tons, April 22, 1776. Then come 
for the same year the following: "Yankee," 
" Adam," " Hannah and Molly," " Warren," " In- 
dependence," " Boston," " Langdon," " Wolfe," 
" Speedwell," " Viper," " Phoenix," " Washing- 
ton," "Eagle," "General Mifflin," " Hawke," 
"Satisfaction," "Reprisal," "American Tartar," 
" Hancock." 

In 1777: "Buckram," "General Mercer," 
" Revenge," " American," " Freedom," " Mars," 
" Fancy," " Cleora," " Charming Sally," " Union," 
" Betsy," " Sturdy Beggar," " Bunker Hill," "Har- 
lequin," " Friend," " Cumberland," " Srarkes," 
" Lizard," " Active," " Resolution," " Congress," 
"America," "Washington," "Pallas," "True 
Blue," "General Arnold," "General Lincoln," 
" George," " Lydia," " Lively," " America." 

After 1777 the number increases, and the in- 
dex shows three hundred and sixty-five vessels 
in all, as commissioned and belonging to Boston. 
In the Revolutionary Rolls, vols. v.-vii., are 
many of the bonds given by the owners of 'these 
vessels. There are also numerous bonds in the 
Massachusetts Archives, cxxxix. 93, etc. Clark's 
Naval History of the United States gives the names 
of three hundred and forty-two English vessels 
captured by the Continental privateers in 1776. 
See also The Remembrancer and Cooper's A'arnl 
History. More or less account of the beginnings 
of the navy, and of naval successes, will be 
found in Fi othingham's Siege of Boston, pp. 260, 
269, 308, and in the Lives of Manly, Tucker, and 
the other commanders. An abridgment of Shep- 
pard's Life of Tucker is in the N. E Hist, and 
Geneal. Keg., April, 1872. Admiral Prcble (,\". 
E. Hist, and Geneal. Reg., 1871, p. 363; 1872, 
p. 21) gives a list of armed vessels built or fitted 
out in Massachusetts, 1776-83, which is com- 
piled chiefly from Emmons's Statistical History 
of the United States Navy. Lists of Massachusetts 
war vessels, 1775, are in Massachusetts Rei'olution- 
ary Rolls, xxvii. Volume xxxix. of the Revolu- 
tionary Rolls contains the rolls of various State 
vessels, namely, Brig "Massachusetts," 1776, 
1777; brig "Tyrannicide," 1777-1779; brig 
"Freedom," 1775-1778; ship " Protector," 1779- 
1782; ship "Tartar," 1781; brig "Hazard," 
l777-l78o; ship "Ranger " 1777; ship " Mars," 
1780, 1781 ; sloop "Defence," 1781, 1782. Other 
navy rolls, largely of privateers, are in vol. xl. 
Officers of armed vessels, 1775, 1776, are in Mas- 
sachusetts Revolutionary Rolls, xxvi i i . 1 30. Massa- 
chusetts Archives, vol. clvii., so far as it relates to 
maritime affairs, consists largely of accounts of 
supplies and ordnance furnished armed vessels. 
There is much also in the Pickering Papers. 



CHAPTER III. 

THE PULPIT, PRESS, AND LITERATURE OF THE 

REVOLUTION. 

BY DELANO A. GODDARD, 

Editor of tkt Boston Daify Advtrtiur. 

r I "'HE famous discourse of Jonathan Mayhew, in the West Church, in 
- 1750, on the Sunday following the anniversary of Charles the Martyr, 
has been fitly called the " morning gun of the Revolution." ' Since the 
restoration of the monarchy this anniversary had been observed in Eng- 
land as a national fast, when the clergy were required to read the service, 
or preach a sermon against disobedience to authority. Many intelligent 
persons were at this time apprehensive lest the prelacy should be in- 
troduced into New England ; and they suspected that even the missions 
of the church were a cover under which religious liberty was to be sac- 
rificed. Mr. Mayhew, then in his thirtieth year, and in the full vigor of 
his ripe and manly powers, took this occasion to preach three discourses 
against the pretension of unlimited submission and non-resistance to au- 
thority ; in which, with ingenious audacity, he " unriddled " the mysterious 
doctrine of the prince's saintship and martyrdom, and set forth with singu- 
lar boldness and eloquence the principles of free civil government. The 
last of these discourses, 2 with portions of the two preceding it, were at 
once printed in England and America, and excited profound emotion in 
both countries. 

There were at this time eighteen churches and religious societies in 
Boston. 3 The intolerance of opinion and the severity of pulpit manners 
prevailing during the greater part of the first century had in a measure 
passed away. Prince, Colman, Mayhew, Chauncy, Sewall, Eliot, and less 
conspicuous ministers introduced more generous views of faith and life, 
and at the same time set the example of a style in preaching comparatively 
simple ami pure, formed upon good models, and tempered by good sense 
and unaffected sincerity. The higher departments of learning were pur- 
sued by the clergy with steadily increasing spirit. The classics, philosophy, 

1 J. \Vini;au Thornton, The 1'nlpii </ the and Non- Resistance to the Higher Powers; wM 

American /'<v, >///<>, p. 43. [The West Chord) somt Refections on the Resistance made to King 
is shown in the frontispiece of this volume. <V< /.,./</> the Anniversary of kis Death. 

Kn.] lioston, 1750. 
2 A Discourse Concerning I 'nlimit,;! Su fonission * Mass. Hist. Col., iii. 256-266. 



120 THE MEMORIAL HISTORY OF BOSTON. 

dialectics, science, and the best literature were studied next to the Bible, as 
aids to the presentation of its precepts and doctrines. The " five points of 
Calvinism," long insisted upon with strenuous energy, were yielding before 
original and independent study of the sources of all truth. Faithful and 
devout ministers, while holding fast to the essentials of the Orthodox faith, 
questioned the extreme interpretations thereof till then prevailing, or re- 
jected them altogether. They were at the same time devoted lovers of civil 
liberty. The general and artillery Election sermons, the first given the 
last Wednesday in May, at the meeting of the General Court, when coun- 
sellors were chosen ; l the second at the annual election of officers of the 
Ancient and Honorable Artillery, greatly contributed to the Revolutionary 
spirit. Copies of the sermons were given to the members of the General 
Court for distribution; and during the year the country pulpits resounded 
with the sentiments of these state discourses. The whole church-going 
people were thus enlightened in speculative and practical politics to a de- 
gree unknown anywhere else in the world. 2 

Mr. Mayhew was one of the most outspoken of these preachers, and 
came to be recognized as a prophet of the new dispensation. He began his 
career with an eager thirst for learning, united with a deep religious spirit. 
He formed for himself habits of methodical reading and systematic reflec- 
tion, thus early laying upon a rock 3 the foundations of his faith. His 
ministry was a prolonged conflict. The clergy of the town for a time stood 
aloof from him ; and when he was at last admitted to ministerial fellowship, 
the Episcopal controversy renewed the strife in another form. His first 
printed discourses on the right of private judgment, and of freedom of in- 
quiry for moral and religious truth, gained for him the degree of Doctor of 

1 [The earliest of these election sermons is one by Samuel Langdon, before the Provincial 

that for 1634, and from that time to the present Congress, at Watcrtown, May 21 ; the other by 

the roll of the preachers' names is complete, ex- William Gordon, before the House of Repre- 

cept for fifteen years. The latest list of such sentatives, July 19. In 1780, Simeon Howard 

is that prepared by H. H. Edes, and appended delivered the usual one ; and Samuel Cooper 

to the Rev. C. E. Grinnell's sermon, printed in another, at the beginning of the State Consti- 

1871. The earliest of the sermons preserved tution, October, 25. Ed.] 

is that of Thomas Shepard, delivered in 1638, 2 [See Gordon, History of the American Rev- 

and printed, from the original MS., in the N. E. olution. ED.] 

Hist, and Geneal. Reg., October, 1870, p. 361. It 3 "Having been initiated in youth in the 

is not known that any was ordered to be printed doctrines of civil liberty, as they were taught by 

before Richard Mather's, in 1644; and it is not such men as Plato, Demosthenes, Cicero, and 

known that this was printed (Records of Massa- other renowned persons among the ancients ; 

chusetts Ray, May 29, 1644) ; and the same state- and such as Sydney and Milton, Locke and 

ment can be made regarding Thomas Cobbett's, Hoadley, among the moderns, I liked them : 

in 1649. The earliest known to have been print- they seemed rational. And having learnt from 

ed was John Norton's, in 1661 ; Imt this was not the Holy Scriptures that wise, brave, and virtuous 

issued from the press till 1664. In the mean men were always friends to liberty; that God 

while John Higginson's had been delivered and gave the Israelites a king in his anger, because 

printed in 1663. The Boston Public Library they had not sense and virtue enough to like a 

Bulletin, January, i.SSi, contains a list of those free country; and that where the spirit of the 

known to have been printed. During the period Lord is there is liberty, this made me conclude 

covered by this chapter, sermons were delivered that freedom was a grea,t blessing." Dr. May- 

every year except 1764, when the small-pox pre- hew's Sermon on the Repeal of the Stump Aft, 

vailed in Boston. In 1775 there were two, 1766. 



THE PULPIT OF THE REVOLUTION. 121 

Divinity from one of the Scotch universities, always prompt and generous 
in recognizing eminent talent in the New World. These were followed by 
the celebrated sermons already mentioned, as well as by other discourses on 
the nature of government and the principles of civrl liberty, through which 
he became identified with the able men then building, better than they 
knew, for the independence of the colonies. 

In the Episcopal controversy, which greatly stimulated the literary 
activity of the colony and created the liveliest interest among the learned 
men of the country, Dr. Mayhew was a conspicuous figure. 1 In this dis- 
cussion it was maintained, on the part of the advocates of Episcopacy, that 
the Church of England was the established and legal system here as in 
Great Britain, and that other forms of Christianity only existed through 
tolerance or permission. Dr. Mayhew, in behalf of the Congregational 
churches and the dissenting interest, denied this ; and maintained that the 
charters, especially that of Massachusetts, gave absolute authority to the 
colonial government in matters of religion, and that there was no power in 
Church, Crown, or Parliament to control or interfere with it. The dispute 
thus begun was carried on for many months with deep feeling on both sides, 
and by distinguished contestants in England and America. Grave political 
questions, growing out of the efforts of the Crown to enforce oppressive- 
acts of trade, at the same time commanded attention. To these Dr. May- 
hew gave the last expiring energies of his noble life. He died in 1766, at 
the age of forty-six years ; being then, in learning, courage, and eloquence, 
the first preacher in America. His printed discourses during the twenty 
years of his ministry, nearly seventy in number, display remarkable origi- 
nality and maturity of thought united with great earnestness and directness 
of expression, a lively imagination, familiarity with books, and comprehen- 
sive knowledge of the affairs of the world. His genius and accomplish- 
ments were worthy of any age. The cause of liberty in the eighteenth 
century had no worthier advocate. 2 

Dr. Mayhew's successor, the Rev. Simeon Howard, was also an Arian 
in religion and a decided Whig in politics, though not of an aggressive or 
controversial temper. The memorable event of his ministry was the seizure 
of the church to be used as a barrack for the British troops during their 
occupancy of the town. Many of his parishioners went with him to Halifax, 
where he had warm friends, and where a pulpit was ready to receive him. 

1 This famous controversy was begun by the fulness and distinction at the age of eighty-four 

Rev. East Apthorp, an Episcopal clergyman, re- years. He was a sound scholar, amd a learned 

presenting in Cambridge the "Society for Propa- and ingenious writer. Sprague, Annalt of Iht 

gating tin- ( Mispel in Korean I'aits." He was a American Fulpit,^. 179. 

.mi of Charles Apthorp. innvhant of Boston, '' liradford, Memoir of the Life and Writings oj 

and was educated at Cambridge, England. He Dr. Mayhem; Or. Charles \Mwt\\, Historical Dis- 
returned to this country upon his admission tn ! >i. Charles Chauncy, Funeral Strmem ; 

holy orders, filled with zeal for his calling; but Dr. Bartol, Wtst Church and its Ministers. [See 

the time was not favorable, and, after a checkered also I'r. MeKenzie's chapter, in Vol. II., p. 244, 

ministry of six years, he went again to England, where a portrait is given; and Dr. Peabody's in 

where he died in 1816, closing a life of great use- the present volume. ED.) 
VOL. III. 16. 



122 THE MEMORIAL HISTORY OF BOSTON. 

Returning to Boston the following year, Dr. Howard devoted his energies 
to restoring his scattered society, and succeeded, through many personal 
sacrifices. He was not eminent as a preacher, though his style is described 
as perspicuous and flowing, and his method as exact and luminous. His 
simplicity of character, his modest and gentle manners, and the unfailing 
charity of his disposition under trying circumstances won for him the love 
of his people and the respectful homage of the community. He received 
the degree of Doctor of Divinity from the University of Edinburgh ; was 
an overseer of Harvard College, and a zealous member of many societies 
for the promotion of charity, literature, and religion. 1 

The ministry of the Rev. Thomas Foxcroft of the First Church was 
closed by his death in 1769. Educated in the Episcopal church he early 
changed his views, and for half a century had been a consistent adherent 
of the New England faith and order of church government. He was a 
stanch Calvinist, and in his earlier ministry was a persuasive and popular 
preacher; but through prolonged illness his powers had lost their fresh- 
ness and vitality before the crisis came. 2 

Next to Dr. Mayhew in the group of eminent pre-Revolutionary divines, 
though his senior by fifteen years, was Mr. Foxcroft's distinguished col- 
league and successor, Dr. Charles Chauncy. When the great debates, theo- 
logical and political, were coming on, he was just passing middle life, and 
he gave to them all the powers of his highly gifted nature. During this 
exciting period the interests of Christianity and of civil government were 
inseparably bound together. The Rev. John Wise's masterly plea, De- 
mocracy, Christ s Government in Church and State, written for the time of 
Andros, was reproduced in form and spirit by the clergymen and Patriots 
of the time of Hutchinson. From 1750 to 1776 this principle had no more 
watchful and determined champion than Dr. Chauncy. Side by side with 
Mayhew he fought the good fight for ecclesiastical freedom ; and when 
that gallant warrior fell, he continued the fight with redoubled spirit. For 
ten years he pursued the Episcopal controversy with unsparing energy, as 
well as with great learning and strength of reasoning. The contest began 
with his Dudleian lecture on the " Validity of Presbyterian Ordination 
Asserted and Maintained," and closed with " A Complete view of Episco- 
pacy," a work of deep interest at the time, and regarded as the ablest of 
his controversial writings. 

Dr. Chauncy was equally confident and alert in the advocacy of his 
political principles. 3 He knew the Colonies were right. He knew they 

1 The Rev. John Pierce, D.D., in Sprague's Sprague, Annals of the American Pulpit, i. 310, 
Annals of the American Fulfil, viii. 65-67. [See 311. 

also Dr. Peabody's chapter in the present vol- 3 Mr. Thornton, in the Pulpit of the American 

ume. ED.] Revolution, p. 114, prints Dr. Chauncy's Thanks- 

2 He was critically skilled in the Greek Ian- giving sermon, preached July, 1766, on the oc- 
guage, a theologian of some excellence, and the casion of the repeal of the Stamp Act, entitled 
author of many sermons in print. Emerson, " A Discourse on the Good News from a far 
Historical Sketch of the First Church. See also Country," with the comment : " This sermon, 



THE PULPIT OF THE REVOLUTION. 123 

would triumph. If human strength were wanting, angels would fight in 
their behalf. When his friends, familiar with the extreme literalness of his 
usual discourse, suggested the imprudence of trusting to active recruitment 
from that quarter, he persisted in saying that such would be the fact. In- 
deed his style of writing and preaching was severely, not to say defiantly, 
plain. He had no comprehension of poetry, and he despised rhetoric. It 
is said that he prayed he might never be an orator. His enemies replied, 
with more wit than truth, that his prayer was undoubtedly granted. Ex- 
pediency had no place in his view of divine or human economy. Duplicity 
and affectation he ranked with the basest vices. His ministry with the First 
Church continued sixty years, from the time of his ordination until his 
death in 1787. His printed works include sixty sermons and controversial 
tracts, and some volumes of theology. 1 

Of like political principles, but in every other respect a striking con- 
trast to Dr. Chauncy, was the accomplished minister of Brattle Street 
Church, the Rev. Samuel Cooper. He was an elegant rather than a pro- 
found scholar, and a most attractive and popular preacher. He is described 
as of a fine and commanding presence, 2 with a voice of great sweetness 
and power, uniting with remarkable fluency, as well as grace and force of 
expression, appropriateness and energy of thought, which never failed to 
arrest and hold attention. In his religious opinions he was moderately 
liberal. From the beginning of his ministry he was deeply interested in 
public affairs, and every occasion for service found him ready to take his 
full share in them, with Mayhew and Chauncy among the clergy and with 
Otis and Samuel Adams among the popular leaders. He resisted the min- 
isterial plan of taxation, through the pulpit as well as through the news- 
papers, to which he was also a frequent contributor. 3 His zeal won for 
him great influence, and his counsel was sought by all the leading Patriots 

an admirable historical picture, drawn by a mas- * "Of the writings which alternately stimula- 

ter, himself a leader of the hosts, abounds in ted and checked the public mind in that season 

facts, discusses the great principles involved of stormy excitement, there were perhaps none 

with energy and power, and with the calmness of greater .efficiency than those of Dr. Cooper. 

and precision of the statesman." If other hands launched the lightning, his guided 

1 Dr. John Eliot writes : " Dr. Chauncy was the cloud." Palfrey, Sermon preached to the 

one of the greatest divines in New England. No Chunk in Brattle Square, July, 1824, pp. 16, 

one, except President Edwards and the late Dr. 17. Dr. Allen (Am. Kiog. Did.) says : " His ser- 

Mayhew, had been so much known among the mons were unequalled in America for elegance 

///<;-,!// of Europe, or printed more works on and taste." [The somewhat famous verses on 

ilunln^iral lubjects." See also W. C. Fowler, the "Boston Ministers," written in 1774, thus 

Cli nin,v .Vi'H/i'i-ifi.'x : Tudor, Life of Jamts Otii, characterize him : 
p. 147; and Sprague, Annals of the American " There's Cooper, too, i doctor true. 

I'nl frit. | A portrait of Dr Chauncy is given in Is sterling in his way : 

Vol. II p. __<>. \\itli a characterization of him by To Jerry Seed, all are agreed. 

........ c- i He well be likened may. 

Dr. .\K:K,n,,e in the same chap- In politic* h all the trick, 

Dr. lV;ili.>d\'s chapter in the present volume. Doth wonderously ken ; 

ED. | I" * a country's cause and for her laws, 

* [See his likeness in Vol. II. p. 242. Thetfw- Above mo.t mortal men." 

ton M.i^n :;';;<, i;S.|. p, 191, has a portrait of him These verses, by "a lover of jingle," are 

engraved by J. Norman. See William Sullivan's printed in the JV. E. /fist, and Cental. AVy, 

account of Cooper in his Public Men. ED.] April, 1859, ED.) 



124 THE MEMORIAL HISTORY OF BOSTON. 

of the time. He was the confidential friend and correspondent of Dr. 
Franklin and of many men of eminent learning in the colony and in Eu- 
rope ; while his personal attractions and knowledge of the world won the 
intimate regard and friendship of all cultivated persons, except of the 
officers and supporters of the Crown, by whom he was cordially hated, 
and for whom he showed no mercy. He was careless about his perma- 
nent reputation, was publicly identified with no great historical incidents, 
and left little printed material to explain his undoubted influence and 
popularity. He was always a good friend to literature, and a useful 
patron to Harvard College, of which he was once elected president; 
and was one of the founders of the American Academy. 1 

The largest congregation in Boston, during the few years preceding the 
Revolution, was that of the New North Church, under the ministry of the 
Rev. Andrew Eliot. He was in his religious views a moderate Calvinist, a 
direct, forcible, and practical preacher, rarely indulging in controversy. He 
opposed the establishment of Episcopacy by law, and the introduction of 
bishops ; but it was the principle only, and not the practice, to which his 
conscience objected. When at the close of the siege the troops and the 
Loyalist inhabitants thought proper to leave the town, it was through his 
persuasion that Mr. Parker of Trinity was induced to remain, in order that 
Episcopalians might not be left wholly without a shepherd. During the 
siege, when his family and many of his friends had departed, he was himself 
induced to stay and continue the services of his church. 2 His only com- 
panions of the same faith were Samuel Mather and Mather Byles, with 
whom, it may well be supposed, his relations were not intimate. He con- 
tinued to preach regularly, but with the circumspection which had always 
distinguished him, and which his present situation especially required. 
Even in times of the highest excitement Dr. Eliot had resolutely closed 
his pulpit against political discussions, to the serious displeasure of many 
persons who never thought of doubting his fidelity. Though sometimes 
taunted for his scruples, he was a warm friend of America, and was early 
and constant in his advocacy of the claims of the Colonies ; but he never 
allowed political feeling to interfere with his literary zeal any more than 
with what he regarded as his religious duty. When Hutchinson's house 
was mobbed, many valuable books and manuscripts, including that of the 
second volume of the History of Massachusetts Bay, were rescued from de- 
struction through the efforts of Dr. Eliot. He was frequently urged to 
accept the presidency of the college, and, upon the death of Dr. Hoi- 
yoke, was chosen to that office, which he declined. His unusual natural 
gifts were cultivated in many directions. " He sought and intermeddled 
with all knowledge." Some of his occasional discourses were printed as 
they were delivered ; but, like Dr. Cooper, he was careless of his own 

1 Tudor, Life of James Otis, p. 155; Sprague, 2 [His letters from Boston during the siege 

Annals of American Pu/fit, i. 440; Lothrop, are printed in Mass. Hist. Soc. Proc., 1878, p. 
History of the Church in Brattle Square. 281. ED.] 



THE PULPIT OF THE REVOLUTION. 125 

fame, and was only induced after much persuasion to print a single 
volume of his sermons. 1 

The Rev. Samuel Checkley, Jr., minister of the Second or Old North 
Church, passed away in 1768, at the close of a pastorate of twenty-one years. 
He was a zealous preacher, rising at times to a certain sort of eloquence, and 
is said to have been gifted with uncommon felicity in the devotional exer- 
cises of public worship. He printed very little, and appears to have taken 
no part in public controversies. 2 His successor, the Rev. John Lathrop, 
preached acceptably until the occupation of Boston by the British, when 
he left the town, and his church was destroyed. Returning to Boston the 
following year, his ministry was transferred to the New Brick Church, with 
which the society of the Old North was a little later united. From a strict 
Calvinist, Mr. Lathrop came to adopt the views of Mayhew and Chauncy, 
taking his church with him. He was an ardent Patriot, and mingled in the 
scenes of the Revolution with great zeal and untiring industry. 3 

The Rev. Ebcnezer Pemberton had come to the New Brick Church in 
I/54, 4 but his ministry was not fortunate. The North End was the centre 
and hot-bed of the Patriot movement. The residents and church-going 
people generally were stanch Whigs, with whom Mr. Pemberton had little 
sympathy. Governor Hutchinson was a member of his congregation, and 
the minister shared the unpopularity of his august parishioner. When, in 
1771, Mr. Pemberton, "almost alone among the Boston ministers, attempted 
to read the Governor's proclamation for the annual Thanksgiving, the 
Whigs, constituting the greater part of the congregation, indignantly walked 
out of meeting. From that time the attendance fell away. The minister's 
health perceptibly failed, and in 1775 the house was closed. Dr. Pember- 
ton he had been made a Doctor of Divinity by the College of New 
Jersey in 1770 retired to Andover during the siege and died in 1779, 
his connection with the society never having been formally dissolved. 6 

Though the Old South Church was the centre of many of the most ex- 
citing events of the Revolution, its ministers took a less conspicuous part in 
them than those of the neighboring churches. The Rev. Joseph Sewall, 6 
" father of the clergy," died in 1769, after a pastorate of fifty-six years. He 

I Eliot, Historical Notice of the New North of the American Pulpit,vm. 68-72. [See also Dr. 
Church ; Spiague, Annuls of the American Pul- Peabody's chapter in the present volume. ED.] 
fit, i. 417-4.'!. [See Vol. II. p. 243. ED | 4 [See Vol. II. p. 244. ED.] 

- The Rev. Henry Ware, Jr., Ifis/ttrical Dis- * "His piety was of that fervent kind for 

course, p. 2*,. [See Vol. II. p. 240. ED.] which his father was remarkable. He had not 

II " Dr. l.ullirps preaching was rather prac- his superior power* of mind, and in his old age 
tical than doctrinal ; r.itliei sensible than ornate, gicw unpopular in his delivery, though in for- 
His sermons were short, not ordinarily exceeding mcr times he drew crowded assemblies by his 
twenty-five minutes in delivery. There was little manner Misreading, however, was extensive, 
of the appearance of labor about them ; and the and his sermons correct in diction and style. 
thoughts which ' nl, though judicious He was .1 ( alvinist according to the principles 
and pertinent, were generally obvious to ordinary of om fathers." Dr. John Eliot. See also 
minds, and partook, like the character of his Dr. Robbins's History of the Second Church, pp. 
own mind, more of convictions than originality." 189-193. 

The Rev. John Pierce, D.D., in Sprague's Annals [See his portrait in Vol. II. p. 24' Kn | 



126 THE MEMORIAL HISTORY OF BOSTON. 

was a minister of the old school, preaching the " faith of the fathers " in 
its strength and purity. Dr. Eliot speaks of him as more remarkable for 
piety than for learning ; yet he was a good classical scholar and familiar 
with general literature. He possessed a large estate, which he used with 
great liberality and public spirit. 1 Dr. Sewall had two colleagues during the 
later years of his ministry, 2 and his pulpit after his death remained vacant 
for nearly two years, when John Hunt and John Bacon, young men of talent 
and promise, were settled together. Hunt was of a sensitive and delicate 
nature, of affectionate and winning manners, and a persuasive preacher. 
Bacon was of a disputatious and somewhat overbearing temper, and fell into 
difficulties with his congregation over the doctrines of atonement and im- 
putation. The ministry of both came to an end in 1775, that of the former 
by his early death, the latter by dismissal. 3 Soon after, the congregation 
was broken up, and the church was converted into a riding-school for the 
troops then occupying the town. 

The New South Church passed, in 1773, to the pastoral care of the Rev. 
Joseph Howe. 4 The storm was gathering rapidly when Mr. Howe began 
his ministry. " In the harbor," he wrote to an absent friend, " nothing is 
seen but armed ships ; in the town, but armed men." He was not daunted 
by them. He performed the duties of his office with zeal and fidelity till 
the storm broke in 1775, when he returned to Connecticut and died the 
same year. He was a preacher of remarkable promise, and his death was 
lamented as a genuine calamity. 5 

Of the Congregational clergy, Dr. Mather Byles stood alone against the 
Revolution. He tried, with undoubted sincerity, to avoid politics in his 
pulpit; but his opinions were too notorious, and his sharp tongue was too 
free, to make his position long an agreeable one either to his people or to 
himself. He leTt his congregation in 1776, and in the following year was 
denounced in town-meeting, and tried by a special court for remaining in 
Boston during the siege and praying for the king. He was sentenced to be 
confined on board a guard-ship with his family, and sent to England, but 
the sentence was not enforced. The last twelve years of his life were spent 
in retirement ; and the favor of the community was never restored to him. 
In the prime of his life he was blessed with a wonderful flow of spirits, with 
great skill and command of language, and had some claims to be regarded 
as a pulpit orator. 6 

The Rev. Samuel Mather continued his ministry, without marked inci- 
dent, over an independent congregation in North Bennett Street, during the 

1 Wisner, History of the Old South Church, portrait, and some characterization of him, is 
p. 33. given in Vol. II. 227, 228. A small oval engrav- 

2 [See Vol. II. p. 240. ED.] ing of him exists, S. Harris, sc. Pelham's en- 

3 [Ibid., p. 241. Kn.] graving is inscribed: "Mather Hyles, A. M. et 

4 [Ibid., p. 243. ED.| V. D. M. Ecclesiae apud Bostonum, Nov. An- 

5 Allen, Biographical Dictionary; Sprague, glorum, pastor. P. Pelham, ad vivum pinx. et 
Annals ef the American Pulpit, fecit." There is some mention of his Revolu- 

6 Sprague, Annals of the American Pulpit, tionary tribulations in Mr. Scudder's chapter in 
pp. 376, 382; Tudor, Life of James Otis. [His the present volume. ED. | 




THE PULPIT OF THE REVOLUTION. 127 

siege and until his death in 1785, when his congregation returned to the 
Second Church, from which he had taken their fathers forty-three years 
before. He was on the side of the Col- . - ~, 

onies during the whole struggle, but ^^^Z^tiM^C^c/fl cL?r& / r- -\ 

took no active part in the discussions **~~^ 

attending it. He had an inherited taste 

for collecting and preserving books, 

part of which were destroyed at the burning of Charlestown, and the 

were widely scattered after his death. 1 He contributed little to the literature 

of the time, except a youthful life of his father, and a work now rarely seen, 

designed to show that America was known to the ancients, beside occasional 

sermons and theological tracts. 

The piety and talent of the Rev. Samuel Stillman gave dignity to the 
Baptist church at this time of its low estate. He was called to the pastorate 
of the First Baptist Church in 1765, and came to be recognized as one of 
the most powerful preachers of the Revolution. The unattached crowd 
thronged his obscure little church at the North End upon the report of his 
homely and effective eloquence; and distinguished strangers, as well as 
sailors just home from their voyages, met every Sunday morning in its 
narrow aisles. His piety is described as of the type of Hervey, Watts, 
Doddridge, and Payson. 2 Nothing stirred him to deeper feeling or more 
moving eloquence, sometimes scathing, sometimes pathetic, than the 
prevailing inattention to religion. Yet he and his church were as deeply 
interested as any in the state of the country, and no more potent voice was 
raised in its behalf than that of Mr. Stillman. He was an early patron of, 
and most liberal contributor to, Brown University, and was devoted to lit- 
erature and all good causes. The Second Baptist Church had regular 
services under the ministration of the Rev. John Davis and the Rev. Isaac 
Skillman, neither of whom left any special mark. Mr. Davis, during his 
brief ministry, won much respect by his ability and zeal. Backus speaks 
of him as " the pious and learned Mr. Davis," and the contemporary no- 
tices of his death eulogized him as a man " of fine parts, an excellent 
scholar, and a pretty speaker." 

"Refined his language, and his reasoning true, 
He pleasdd only the discerning few." 3 

The Episcopal clergy of Boston, in common with their friends in the 
other colonies, espoused the cause of the Crown. They derived their eccle- 
siastical authority from the Church of England, and loyalty to the king was 
a part of their worship. Whatever their individual inclinations might have 
been, they felt bound in a double sense to resist a sentiment and policy 

1 [See Vol. I., Introduction, p. xviii. For Dr. chapter in the present volume, where a portrait of 

McKenzie's mention of him, sir Vol. II. p. --29. Stillman is given. ED.) 

ED.] ' Backus, History of Ikt Baptist Church in 

3 The Rev. Dr. Jenks in Spra^ne's Annals ,/ Nfiv England: Sprague, Annals of 'ifu Amtritait 

tAe American Pulpit. [See also Dr. II. M. King's Pulpit. 



128 THE MEMORIAL HISTORY OF BOSTON. 

which must end in open rebellion ; and they resisted at the risk of prop- 
erty, reputation, and life itself. Most of them were sent into exile after 
fighting a losing battle, and the few who remained were subjected to great 
losses. 

King's Chapel, the first Episcopal church in New England, was at this 
time in a flourishing state. The Rev. Henry Caner, who had been called to 
the rectorship in 1747, was highly educated and endowed with many popu- 
lar qualities. Early in his ministry, and largely through his efforts, the first 
chapel was built. The university of Oxford conferred upon him the degree 
of Doctor of Divinity. While British ships were in the harbor and British 
troops in the town, many of their officers regularly worshipped at the chapel. 
Dr. Caner's ministrations were in every way acceptable to them. There is 
no trace of his printed discourses later than 1765 ; but the traditions of his 
preaching give him a high rank as a man of learning and fine intellectual 
endowments. He was a devoted Loyalist, and with the departure of the 
troops in '1776, when it was evident he could no longer be useful in this 
field, he went with them to Halifax, and soon after returned to England, 
where he died at a great age in I792. 1 

The ministry of the learned and venerable rector of Christ Church, Dr. 
Timothy Cutler, was nearly ended. The grand figure and commanding 
presence, described by Dr. Stiles, was bowed by infirmity when the crisis 
began, and in 1765 he passed away at the age of eighty-two years. He was 
a sincere and consistent Episcopalian, but took no part in the controversy. 2 
His assistant, the Rev. James Greaton, continued the services a year or 
two, when he was succeeded by the Rev. Mather Byles, Jr. This litigious 
minister had just " dismissed himself," according to the church record, from 
the church and congregation in New London over which he had been some- 
time settled, and became a zealous convert to Episcopacy. He was called 
to the vacant rectorship of Christ Church, and discharged his duties there 
without marked distinction until the siege, when he again deserted his flock, 
and left the colony. He was a fierce Loyalist, and was afterward proscribed 
and banished. 

Trinity Church was, at the time of the Episcopal controversy, under the 
partial care of the Rev. William Hooper. 3 Sabine classes him among the 
Loyalists, but there is no evidence of his having taken any active share in 
the contest, even in its earliest stages. He died in 1767. He is described 
as a man of native nobility of spirit and vigor of mind, uniting with a fine 
eloquence great clearness of thought and earnestness of purpose. 4 His 
assistant, 6 the Rev. William Walter, succeeded to the rectorship until 1776, 
when he also resigned his charge, and accompanied General Howe to Yar- 

1 Sprague, Annals of the American Pulpit, v. 8 [See Vol. II. p. 229. Kn.] 

61, 63; Greenwood, History of Kinifs Chapel. * The Rev. Dr. Bartol, in Spraguc's Annals 

[Sec also Ur. Brooks's chapter on "The Epis- of the American Pulpit, v. 123. 
copal Church." ED.] 6 [See Dr. Brooks's chapter on "The Epis- 

- [An account of the Rev. Timothy Cutler's copal Church," in the present volume, and Dr. 

ministry is given in the Historical Magazine, sup- McKenzic's chapter in Vol. II. p. 346. ED.] 
plement of 1866, p. 124. ED.] 



THE PULPIT OF THE REVOLUTION. 129 

mouth in the Province of Nova Scotia. He was a zealous supporter of the 
Church and the Crown, and vindicated his sincerity by the sacrifices he made 
for them. He returned to Boston in 1791, became rector of Christ Church, 
and remained in that relation till his death. His discourses are described 
as rational and judicious, " recommended by an elocution graceful and 
majestical." He was no knight-errant; but, while adhering to his own con- 
victions with quiet persistency, he exercised a large charity toward all forms 
of faith and Christian worship. 1 The Rev. Samuel Parker became assistant 
rector of Trinity at the death of Dr. Hooper. He came to the post at a 
crisis, and stood by it through many and great trials. He conducted the 
services during the siege with remarkable discretion, meeting as well as he 
could the conflicting claims of his church and of his country. He read the 
service without interruption, including the prayers for the king, until the 
Sunday following the Declaration of Independence, when he was publicly 
warned of the peril of repeating them. The vestry authorized the omission 
of the offending portions, and the services continued as before. Mr. Parker 
became rector soon after the war, and received from his congregation many 
marks of favor for the prudence, patience, and zeal with which, under dis- 
tressing circumstances, he had kept the holy fire burning on the altar of 
Trinity. 3 He became the second bishop of the Eastern Diocese in 1803, 
but died a few months after his consecration. 

The Rev. John Moorhead, born at Belfast and educated at one of 
the Scotch universities, came to Boston with a number of Scotch-Irish 
families in 1727-28, and established public worship, according to the rites 
of the Scottish Kirk, under the name of the Church of the Presbyterian 
Strangers. In 1744 the meeting-house in Long Lane, afterward Federal 
Street, was built for them, 8 and Mr. Moorhead continued his services here 
until after the Revolution. He published nothing, and his papers were lost 
or destroyed at the evacuation ; but tradition represents him as a forcible 
preacher, administering the law and the gospel with zeal and fervency. He 
and his people were warm friends of liberty. During the same period the 
Rev. Andrew Croswell conducted the worship of an independent society, 
with some success, in the church of the French Protestants in School 
Street. He was a stalwart Calvinist, a deadly foe of Arminianism and 
" new lights " of every kind, always disputing with the ministers, and 
usually with those who came nearest to his own way of thinking. He 
published several occasional sermons, including a narrative of the found- 
ing and settling of his own new-gathered church. A little later Robert 
Sandeman. the Scotchman, after holding meetings at the Green Dragon 
Tavern and other places, expounding his new doctrines, had a house of 
worship built for him near the Mill Pond in 1765. He rejected belief in 
the necessity of spiritual conversion, representing faith as an operation of 

1 Sprague, Annalt of the American Fulfil, v. v. 296. His publications were limited to a few 

2zd, 233. occasional 

- Sprague, Annals of Ou AmcrUan Fulfil, * [See a view of it in Vol. II. p. 513. Eft] 

VOL. III. 17. 



130 THE MEMORIAL HISTORY OF BOSTON. 

the intellect, and speculative belief as quite sufficient to insure final justi- 
fication. He was the founder of the sect of Sandemanians, which survived 
from the time of his coming to these shores until 1823, when the last light 
was extinguished. 1 

The Press, like the Pulpit, reflected all the varying phases of current 
opinion ; but its prevailing force was on the side of the freedom of the 
Colonies. It had conspicuous faults and great virtues; it was personal and 
partisan to a degree only tolerable in times of conflict; but it was frank, 
honest, impulsive, and sincere. Of the ebb and flow of events from 1760 
to 1 775, and the corresponding revulsions of popular feeling, the newspapers 
give the only satisfactory record. Slow and meagre, for the most part, in 
presenting the general news of the world, they teemed with resolves, pro- 
tests, instructions, appeals, sermons, satires, and arguments of every kind, 
some addressed to the reason and conscience, some to the strong pas- 
sions, and all of them written with remarkable force and energy. 

Of the pre-Revolutionary journals, 2 the News-Letter and the Weekly 
Advertiser remained on the side of the Crown. Richard Draper, who con- 
ducted the News-Letter, with its numerous combinations, 3 from 1762 to 
1774, was an uncompromising Loyalist. The crown officers and their friends 
had free access to his paper at all times, and defended their cause often 
with marked spirit and ability. During the occupation the News-Letter 
had no competitor. The few numbers preserved show that the military au- 
authorities of the town found it a most serviceable instrument, and that they 
and their friends used it without scruple and without decency. Upon the 
death of Richard Draper in 1774, the News-Letter was conducted by his 
widow, with the assistance already indicated, until the departure of the 
troops compelled its suspension. 

The Weekly Advertiser, in its later years, had limited influence and com- 
paratively few readers, but was never wanting in zeal for the Government. 
During the last two or three years (i773~7S) the authorities, seeing that 
the tide was now setting strongly against them, secured new and able 
writers for its columns. Thomas, who remembered the paper well, says 
that in 1774 it was the chief organ of the Government party. It was pat- 
ronized by the officers of the Crown, and attracted much notice from the 
Whigs. The Clironicle, 1768-70, published by Mein & Fleming, the lead- 
ing booksellers, was neutral at first, afterward independent ; but from the 
beginning there was in it an undertone of depreciation of the leading Whigs, 

1 Drake, History of Boston, pp. 618, 619; 1768-69 the News-Letter and the Post-Boy and 

Allen, Biographical Dictionary. Advertiser entered into a quasi partnership, one 

' 2 See the chapter on the " Press and Litera- half of each paper being official, and called the 

ture of the Provincial Period," in Vol. II. Massachusetts Gazette, "published by authority ;" 

5 The title in 1762 was the Boston Weekly the other half of each bearing its own separate 

News-Letter and New England Chronicle. The title, and published independently. The Weekly 

year following, the title was changed to the Advertiser also took for a time the name and 

Massachusetts Gazette and Boston News-Letter, decorations of the Post-Boy. Thomas, History 

and was decorated with the king's arms. In of Printing, ii. 25, 59. 



THE 1'RESS OF THE REVOLUTION. 131 

which soon developed into open hostility. Its literary pretensions, exceed- 
ing those of any other journal in the colony, did not save it from becoming 
the vehicle of gross calumnies. The people 
resented its attacks upon their leaders as in- 
suiting to themselves; and John Mein, the 
editor, was forced to seek in his own country a refuge from their indignation. 
I U went to Scotland in 1770, and never returned. 

Thomas and John Fleet, who succeeded to the estate of their father, the 
founder of the Evening Post, just before the storm arose, tried hard to 
follow his example and to publish a strictly independent journal. Whigs 
and Tories fought their wordy battles in its pages with great vigor, and the 
young publishers for a time kept their balance well. But neither party 
was long disposed to be tolerant of such neutrality. The issues of life and 
death were too serious to be trifled with in that way ; and the proprietors, 
after unavailing protests against what they regarded as encroachments 
upon their rights, discontinued the publication in 1775, the last number 
mentioning, but not attempting to describe, the " unlucky transactions " of 
the preceding week, meaning the battles of Lexington and Concord. 
One incident of many illustrates the difficulty of maintaining its neutral 
position among the heady currents of this excited community. The Lib- 
erty Song, 1 written by John Dickinson, of Philadelphia, and first printed in 
the Pennsylvania Chronicle, July 4, 1768, afterward in the Boston Gazette, 
was reproduced by request in the Evening Post a month later, " for the 

' This song was much in vogue in North The travesties were promptly answered by 
America for several years, and was written under Whig verse-writers, their last song closing, 
circumstances related in the following letter. in freedom we 're born, and like tons of the brare 
The time was immediately after the refusal of We'll never surrender, 
,h, ttroadnuett, UgtaUture to rescind the ^ J^^f^.^.. 
circular-letter addressed by the House of Rep- 
resentatives to the speakers of the several [The song seems to have been first publicly 
Colonies. sung in Boston, Aug. 14, 1768, on one of the an- 
Dickinson to Otis. niversaries of the Stamp Act disturbance ; the 
PHILADELPHIA, July , 1768. Massachusetts Gazette of August 18 recording the 

DEAR SIR. I enclose you a song for American free- assembling of a great number of "persons of 

dom. I have long since renounced poetry : but as indjffer- dit ^ Ljbert HaU) where thc much admired 

r^zrrt ssnJ: ^"srs A.***. s 0ng mc ^ ^ y , , -where. 

good intentions will procure pardon, with those I wish to upon "the gentlemen SCt OUt I 

|!l,..ise, for -.lie badness of my numbers. My worthy friend, an( | cna ises for the Greyhound Tavern in Rox- 

Dr. Arthur Lee, a gentleman of distinguished family corn- elegant entertainment was pro- 

^S^lonsb^grtrra^^ vided. After dinner the , 

be useful. . . sung, and forty-five toasts drunk. After conse- 

Yuur most affectionate, most obedient, servant, crating a tree to Liberty in Roxbury, they made 

JOHN DtcKtNsoN. an agreeab , e excursion roun d Jamaica Pond ; 

The song was to thc tune " Hearts of Oak," a nd f, j s allowed that this cavalcade surpassed 

and began as follows : all that has ever been seen in America." This 

i ome, join hand in hand brave Americans all, famous Greyhound Tavern stood on the present 

And rouse yom hold hMrU .it fair Liberty's call : ^ i-hinKton Street in Roxbury, opposite Vernon 

7;.: SERS?" 

In freedom we 're barn and in freedom we 'II live. (Drake, Town of Roxbury. p. 166.) A le 

Our purses are ready ; Dickinson, in answer to a vote of thanks from 

Steady, friends, steady, - Boston, is among the old papers (1768) in the 

Not as slaves, l.ut I r money we II give. 

Tudor. Lift f 7""" Otis. pp. JM, so' Chanty Building. - 



132 



THE MEMORIAL HISTORY OF BOSTON. 



benefit of the whole continent of America." Parodies upon parodies fol- 
lowed in subsequent numbers to the great indignation of one or the other 
of the parties. 

The most noted contributors to these journals were Joseph Green (mer- 
chant, poet, and wit, though he took no part in the later political discussions), 




OSEPH GREEN. 1 



Samuel Waterhouse (of the customs service, a notorious libeller), Licut.- 
Governor Oliver, Daniel Leonard, 2 and Jonathan Sewall. 3 

Twenty years before the battle of Lexington, the Rostov Gazette and 
Country Journal was established in Queen Street by Benjamin Kcles and 
John Gill. It was printed on a half-sheet crown folio, afterward enlarged to 



1 [This cut follows a crayon portrait by Cop- 
ley, belonging to the heirs of the late Rev. W. T. 
Snow. Perkins, Copley's Life and Paintings, p. 62. 
A larger likeness, by Blackburn, is owned by 
Miss Andrews of Boston. See Vol. II. of this 
History, p. 429. Green was born in 1706, and 
graduated at Harvard College in 1726. He was 
a merchant of large fortune, and is said to have 
had the largest private library in New England. 
He died in England in 1780. ED.] 

- [See the paper on Leonard, by Ellis Ames, 



in Mass. Hist. Soc. Proc., June, 1873; an ^ & zr - 
gent's Dealings with the Dead. ED.] 

3 " Did not our grave Judge Sewall sit, 
The summit of newspaper wit ? 
Filled every leaf of every paper 
Of Mills and Hicks and'Mother Draper ? 
Drew proclamations, works of toil, 
In true sublime of scare-crow style ; 
With forces, too, 'gainst Sons of Freedom, 
All for your good, and none would read 



Trumbull, 



THE PRESS OF THE REVOLUTION. 



'33 



a whole sheet, the title decorated with rude cuts of an Indian with bow and 
arrow, and Britannia freeing a bird bound to the arms of France. A little 
later Minerva appeared in the place of Britannia, holding a spear sur- 
mounted by the cap of liberty, and just giving flight to a caged bird 
toward the tree of liberty. 1 Kdes and Gill were both " men of bold and 
fearless hearts," and welcomed the co-operation of the wisest and ablest 
counsellors enlisted in the popular movement. Samuel Adams, Jonathan 
Mayhew, Thomas Gushing, Samuel Dexter, and others, who had spent their 
first emotions in writing for the Independent Advertiser, transferred their 
eager talents to the new Gazette. James Otis, John Hancock, Samuel 
Cooper, Josiah Quincy, Jr., John Adams, and Joseph Warren joined them a 
few years later, and resisted through its pages the successive invasions of the 
chartered rights of the colonies, with rich and varied learning, with argu- 
ments drawn from the early conflicts of English liberty, and with fiery and 
indignant eloquence inspired by a deep sense of injury and lively con- 
tempt for the instruments employed to inflict it. 

The publication of the " Novanglus" essays in 1774-75 was the most in- 
teresting single event in the annals of this journal. The letters of " Massa- 
chusettensis," reviewing the questions at issue, in the interest of the Crown, 
had been printed in the Massachusetts Gazette, one of the names of the 
\Vcekly Adiertiser, addressed "to the inhabitants of the province." The 
authorship was long a secret. From the skill with which the letters were 
written, their singular moderation and breadth of view, they were attributed 
to Jonathan Sewall, then attorney-general, a man of learning and talents. 
It was more than a generation before the true authorship was assigned 
to Daniel Leonard, of Taunton.' 2 They re- ^* * _ 

viewed the progress of the popular discon- ^7/3 /*/ Q 

f 



tent with much ingenuity, with the purpose O (^t 

of showing that the course of the English Government was founded in law 
and reason; that the Colonies had no substantial grievance; that they were 
a part of the British Empire, and properly subject to its authority. They 
also urged that resistance was useless; that the English nation had power to 
enforce its right, and would exercise it. 

John Adams returned from the Congress in Philadelphia while these and 
other ministerial letters were filling the newspapers in Boston, and were 
topics of conversation in all circles. He at once devoted himself to the 
task of answering them in a series of letters to the Boston Gazette, with 
the signature of " Novanglus." They were written with characteristic ve- 
hemence of manner, but at the same time with remarkable clearness and 
method, enforced with abundant illustration, and enlivened with original 
humor. Mr. Adams showed that the Colonies in resisting taxation by au- 

1 Hui-kingh.nn, Kcminiseentis, i. 166, I2O. Dr. fuse of her favors, and pregnant with blessings 

Kliot, in Miss. Hist. Coll., vi. 69, suggests another for future t 

interpretation. The woman with the spear, he '-' [See Kdmund Quincy's Life of Josiak 

s.ivs, "may as well represent America in the Qti: . r. K. Adam-'- edition of John 

character of a female active in doing good, pro- Adams's Works, iv. 70. ED.) 



134 THE MEMORIAL HISTORY OF BOSTON. 

thority of Parliament avowed no new doctrine, but were consistent with the 
course marked out for themselves since the first settlement of the country. 
He declared with emphasis and fervor that the Colonies were no part of 
Great Britain, and that the supremacy of Parliament was limited to the 
dominions represented in it. He scornfully rejected the assumption that 
America would not maintain her right, or that submission was to be thought 
of because resistance was perilous. The last of these letters was dated 
April 17, 1775. Two days later came the fight at Lexington, and the 
debate was adjourned to the field of battle. 

These revolutionary letters, written on the threshold of the war, illustrate 
on both sides the ascendancy of reason over passion ; while they disclose 
also the impassable breadth and fathomless depth of the gulf which sepa- 
rated the contestants. Mr. Leonard's letters were reprinted in various forms 
during the two years following. Nothing else of his composition compares 
with them in brilliancy and force of statement, in variety of illustration, or 
in the plausible manner with which he anticipated and parried the argu- 
ments of his adversary. He was a gentleman of fortune, fond of display, 
and was the original of Beau Trumps in Mrs. Mercy Warren's Groups. 
Mr. Adams's letters were also reprinted and widely read during and after 
the war. Together " they form a masterly commentary on the whole his- 
tory of American taxation and the rise of the Revolution." l 

Other luminous and fervent writers contributed to the Gazette during 
these interesting years, whose signatures, " Candidus," " Fervidus," and the 
like, are all that is now left of them. With such co-operation the Gazette 
became a great power in the community. Rarely in our history has a sin- 
gle newspaper, with the ruling powers steadily against it, met a difficult 
crisis with greater courage, maintained its principles with more splendid 
ability, or exercised so powerful an influence over the minds of men. 

During the occupation of Boston by the British troops the Gazette was 
printed in Watertown, whither Edes had secretly conveyed an old press and 
types sufficient for the purpose. He returned to town after the evacuation, 
and with his two sons Benjamin and Peter, Gill retiring from the partner- 
ship, continued the service with unabated zeal ; promptly collecting and 
publishing intelligence during the war, and, through occasional contributions 
of especial force and urgency, reviving the drooping hopes or stimulating 
the flagging courage of the sorely tried Patriots. The great writers, how- 
ever, who had strengthened the hands of the young printer in the beginning, 
were drawn into the public service, or had fallen as early martyrs to the cause. 
In losing them the Gazette lost also the power and influence of its earlier 
days. 

Isaiah Thomas began the publication of the Massachusetts Spy in July, 
1770, in partnership with Zachariah Fowle. It was to be printed three times 
a week, once on a half-sheet, twice on a quarter-sheet, and was designed 
for mechanics rather than for commercial or professional readers. The 

1 jf. Adams's Life and Works, by C. F. Adams. Tudor, Life of James Otis, p. xvii. 




A Weekly, Political, and Commercial PAPER ; open to ALL Parties, but influenced by 



OL. I.] 



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l hn ft*' 
and leM-con 



l*.t all men iadi<r 
ihc pfovd. gnmarx, 



n iW &ral mi 

n| ptricnd lu< ihe (poett fdcil and rr ^i 
OM l.brny. *n.'c ai ihe (tm< <.**. then bu 
(MM hw) wMh .ndtfAaKv jfi.nl m r *MT 
ha en ukc the licerfom to (K on? ol 
ihm fj.oume notion* MH q<fl.'>n Th. 



ntotftJ wound. hh (KM pwl 
ih lift, >bh ONE only h>i 
tkc **>y The ( 



1 e L. 



m end in abhort fuch ICICXKMM bigoi'y 

I tight 10 Chjr l* MDO^g whole tlvrAv /** * * 

idem Bit lound * T*, */ **-wn.' a-'to prob.b> 



had fair tnai a(rccaW< te ifcr nod !* 
jf IJK land, kndbcca fuwnd GUILT.Y) 
not yet pwniftwd . Md flilt 

' ' ' 



Oi/f, JuAKC, JuAiCC -M^r /Ar 

Sotm ttrn* ate (o Tfijfcei dow t^tf- 



J tlutb lN> tclljn ld cr>il pot- i i> fc 
r*o*e<y conneArd thirho>*cr iiicmp< u 
fepcrMc ihe ihfal)>bK dcfttoM botb. *r< 
he Huw1wt> wo*lddfciiMi. decent M 



.he dly* -Ah fnrh, U)d 
0tcaUnicft pUc 1 ri ! 
ibc ytar n 



IP m> life . 



n much plci/uitCf now ibc 4*/i we 



jntf into the foundation, Mivra t*4 ten 
dent* of ekhet w,0 mike *Vr tod. becaut. 

^Tod "Wit jwtit ttjijn Man > icilbn nTW 
form h>m of ihe nr^m. and ikugn H ku be 



iinrH ,~,*trf 
Thai ihu J*y. th f ihh of Mirth, 
iKe An,, e ,r.y of PrrnWi Maf 
te, tn King flfcrt. Bwfton, N<*. 
tngland, 1770 i m which Fire of 
hii M<jcnY* h*b}ec* we'e fliir*. ar* 
Six woorvle,]. b* ihr Difcturj* <J * 
Number of Mbflttn from Pny ol 
SoUttfi wndei ihc CommiadofCaix 
1 ttomu Prrflrx,. 

GOD Seethe PEOPLE! 

s . 



H U X. S U A Y. .. 

B OS T O N. 

On *rurlit.y lift ,be omveriVy of the 
Bcfle^ MJLcre, u noon, ard ftet nine in 
the eitking. i'| ihc bclki in town tolled ; and 

'WW liirjpa>rnt paintingi, rpr(icii!i"c. 
'h ufindow a monumrnt^l cbelifn, 
B 'toot the bufl nf yocrvg Scidei , 

n(twv mu'dcred by ihc Wdicry on 
ot Miirb, aivt all , t t --r t J , o th* 
Tw^hb,^ OntbebKk S rmi<4 



A ftw<k of an Eirthqsikc wai fell in th 

ion. MxbVhcad, fcc. lift SMtd^y moi 
t he fhkmg wu but joft pcicepttbk. 



FM ihc MASSACHUSETTS SPY 

4* Acioinc. 

A iNc**tndl tt w jwlftiMiM pec 1 
N o wondet ihji *kc with bcf Ml* it fo lie* 1 
D ev.ce and low CUOAIO( do commonly fond ' 
R e!H in fitendlhip and join lUMd tn hand 1 
E ipcrvnct d.h tuctt m ibu paw bbcl 

nd wh,t< 1 
W hen blended tefccnef. u one.wiH * ' 



W 




nd irJetwf ) ard the 4wtt*whMh eialut*! 



l->w horn tnd xcowpony ihetc irtmona 

ThM DCWg llM fOMdMMM Md toce of >' 

and fioed. the TrAcm immcdiHe 
d (lorn ihewconMeiatiom Ntcall 
d UH f t >>i uf natanl few, of M:WTI! ith 
MM. BMM ibc Uw and ieh|KNi whtth 
force ibemfeNca upoa the mndt of eei ( 
r a*** wk> leruwly fco fc-m 
(elf ibout a cadid wuJ tMiotul Ofcuir, o 
the nature, reife* wd icUtKO of tht*M, 



The dm* ftill fall 



man itve fco of Lbrtty M 
icndn htm a 
re^baer upon 



wh>h rcwdco 




I THOU T fcto:n o/ thought, fiji 
Mr. Gordon, Ibrre can bt no (utb 
thing U wifJom ( uid no ruch thing at pub- 
lic LJLXIIY tihoui freedom of Ipeeth. Th 
it th tight of c*ett ntaa, which oeght to 
know no noundi hut the injury nf when. 
l.tc*n:ioutnc** in (precb CNtend* to ihe oVoia 
of ihe being of God, hit juOtoe or w 
dencc. end out accourMab^enefc to htm fm 
'ton.'Miinihe 
and promote iWeWrti,., f . 

mben , to do unto t*ery otc, ti by <rn 

fe of condition we cWd icaftwWf - 1- 
peel thrmtodountaut. To make l^h* ol 
ihffc fundanvntal ptinctptei of ibc Uw and 
religion of natutr, >* public injury, lemlipg 
to dfiltity iht tewieocf for *ifue. and ab- 
rtorrrncc to *>ce and immoraUiy, which a" 
indeed ihc pfinopil lecutilin ( hi*/ l-.t 
ih* good beha*>o*r of mankind Betwera 
ihc fierdcm of fpeechherftcontenoW for and 
(he irjurm.u bfkttriition, there fcmtob evi- 
dent miiki of di(:tim.ntlof:, the formci 
meaning no itiofc th* iht moorft ad fen 

termj i ihe Uttet n c,n.r-a"^f j--Bt.fm 
01 domiocuiRg iJ>u.tr. tflu<ni| g'**i ' 



urrnt ***f:fl<t 
with whKh he 

rer, he warm people to 
nJ mt.'-re i/tct h.m(eW U KM then 
g.ril ffi T , for none c*n*M whM> God 
m.i ike away ihe wxJI MWfortwM Ei-j.h 
and much will wh one W aaVW M bw 
orpanu't, if he r*efli ihat wy p*rt of ho 
mirVirowncd hhttkMi hKk few* the 
fa.ihM lorn Of ihc pi oyhett he k.r, beh^ 
The perfon who could lce tr 
peouk i de<*M wbftat M*. or M 
vi-hout cowpM%, would afl ttaflly ibe pw 
of the pmcnord owt-oi, who woM wJI ng 
ly forego ay e>pporliMMr * w^rufl.f g ! 
the wmbeiiol iHccomwMwWeafihi* which 
be htUngW in t ry mttit* *rtta of oj 
ff-vi,,,, know'edge. 

An a-W- MMhefiwy. llifa^iillMc 



contcft mu.l o* pefBttk*). To wftufWK thi* 
i.,h".^ trpofed . any bcw>|[ taoytfl *o ct 
ror or l^.ftet deugn, WO hfcd f iW (u 
prifttiion of p.fJI he ihmfcte cbwtbi 
hi. fupieiM MjrWwTww* i prHedMn W wh*> 



the f.tv.*t J<ho*a towt- worthy, ll 
ihctefo>e * the Mtwn ad coaivio ol 




erfAeM^Ae^i, 




M . 

Una i 

< ll . d > W ifcMt ik. 
Ukn W WM. , ~. tfUJM J 
'. M<X *i Mlinn .< ikra t 



to WCCMM* k(t> W 



k> . 
o* fprtck, ftp * 



kif i MM c 

k*. <. kvcr cal My 



ikM( f'fa kii .*. 
.. A.I*. n<,M 
lia*. M^t twi ky 4dlif| in. fc 



. 10 rf Ik, rllll =1 nnl W 



=1 nnl W .llil 

LCUrHUIUL 



Ai tbc lntclIi*enc^Officr. 

o^' t,, .m .mi,.,, bujgii^.iii^ 

Kepi by GRANT WEIfoTEft, 

7 here in be bid, 

pHiladclphia Hour md Iron. 

m. New-L^gioftd RMK, .*>. LlT 
"-,B.JWbe,,.rwa^ 




N*BL" GCxSDfie/MtfcMMwtt.MiB 
a*rf hdj, IM. of *--*"gi IIMJ. i ll. a*4 



MUSICK. .i>d Mu(xalkftru- 
enn. ^. HM f fc aM aX S^-wm, 



P . UkU 17 M. Floriir. 
II M,l Hlfcl.f. ^ lt> fl.U' 



AFE'^aflu of Ctoicrt 
tlCE, ~4 fcwkl bmk ol S^k. 



MR JOAN . Coomt. wtecfa 
.. k. Ik. tM^t. M'l '"' 




136 THE MEMORIAL HISTORY OF BOSTON. 

second number appeared early in August, and regularly thenceforward for 
six months, meeting with good success. Thomas, however, was ambitious 
to undertake a larger paper than had yet been printed in New England ; and 
on March 7, 1771, the Sfywa.s issued on a whole sheet, royal folio, as a new 
weekly publication. The title of the first number was as given in the ac- 
companying fac-simile ; but it appeared later between two rude cuts, the 
Goddess of Liberty on the left; and on the right, two children with a basket 
of flowers, and this was followed by the lines from Addison's Cato : 

" Do thou, Great Liberty! ipspire our souls, 
And make our lives in thy possession happy, 
Or our deaths glorious in thy just defence." 

Thomas was then in his twenty-second year. His paper was at first open 
to Whigs and Tories alike, but his own partialities were so pronounced that 
the friends of the Government one by one withdrew from him. The au- 
thorities, failing to win him to their service, used all their powers to cripple 
and discourage him ; but their threats and blandishments were alike un- 
availing. 1 His group of writers grew steadily bolder and more defiant. 
One of them, whose name has never been known, in a series of forty letters 
with the signature of " Centinel," discussed the issues between Parliament 
and the people with learning and spirit, taking for his motto the warning 
lines from the ballad of Chevy Chase : 

" The child that is unborn 
Will rue the hunting of that day." 

He startled even the Whigs, and alarmed not a few of them, by the bold- 
ness with which he challenged all rulers whose authority did not rest upon 
the natural rights of man. Other writers of like spirit poured oil, not upon 
the troubled waters, but upon the angry flames. Joseph Greenleaf, over the 
signature of " Mucius Scaevola," denounced the Governor and Lieut. -Gov- 
ernor by name as usurpers, and invoked resistance to their authority. His 
letter was pronounced " the most daring production ever published in 
America." Thomas was prosecuted for libel, but the grand jury refused an 
indictment. Greenleaf was summoned to answer before the Governor and 
Council, but he ignored the summons, and his commission as justice of the 
peace was publicly cancelled. Meanwhile the Spy grew more bitterly hos- 
tile to the Crown and its agents, and its defiance of all restraint attracted 
the attention of the continent. 2 Thomas was hung in effigy in many places, 

1 "The Government hoped to buy the young his wife, July, 1774, quotes Mr. Winthrop, his 

printer: he was not in the market. It tried companion on the eastern circuit, as complaining 

to drive him : he could not be driven. It tried to of the Boston press for printing accounts of every 

alarm him: he was without fear. It tried to popular commotion or disturbance, while in other 

suppress him ; but he baffled and defeated every provinces such occurrences wen very properly 

attempt to this end, and gained new strength concealed. "Our presses in Boston, Salem, and 

and influence by every conflict." B. F. Thomas, Newburyport," he says, " are under no regula- 

Metnoir of Isaiah Thomas, p. 31. tion, nor any judicious, prudent care. . . . The 

- This excessive zeal was not wholly ap- printers are hot, indiscreet men; and they are 

proved by the elders. John Adams, writing to under the influence of others as hot, rash, and in- 



THE PRESS OF THE REVOLUTION. 137 

and his paper was burned by the hangman. Letters scattered among the 
prnpk and the soldiers in the early autumn of 1774, mentioning Adam-. 
Uowdoin, Hancock, and others as marked for speedy destruction in the 
event of an outbreak, also named " those trumpeters of sedition, the 
printers Kdes and Gill and Thomas," as not to be forgotten. 

The writers for the Spy were more abusive and exasperating than those 
in the Gazette, but both were pursuing the same end. Thomas took his 
ground not merely upon the rights of the Colonies under the Charter, but 
upon the rights of human nature. Hancock, writing to him April 4, 1775, 
from the Provincial Congress, then sitting at Concord, superscribed his 
letter: " To Isaiah Thomas, Supporter of the Rights and Liberties of Man- 
kind." From the time the Spy took its position it was resolute and un- 
compromising. With abstract discussions of the questions of law and right 
involved in the struggle, its writers mingled unsparing denunciations of 
Crown and Parliament, until the country was made familiar with the pur- 
pose of resistance, and in the fulness of time was eager to accept the appeal 
to force. The writers for the Gazette were more deliberate, more elaborate, 
and, as a rule, more highly cultivated. Their illustrations were more 
learned and copious. Many of them hesitated before declaring openly for 
independence, toward which their logic compelled them. Others, filled 
with fiery zeal, blazed with equal fervor. 

The temper of the Spy, and its incessant activity, made Thomas a marked 
man ; and he prosecuted his work at great personal peril. Just before the 
battle of Lexington the town became too hot even for his ardent spirit. 
He sent his family to Watertown early in April, and prepared to follow 
them. He packed his presses and types, with such movable effects as could 
be hastily gathered together, and on April 16 " stole them out of town in 
the dead of night." They were sent to Worcester, where the Spy reap- 
peared on May 3 following, with the title again changed to the Massachu- 
setts Spy, or American Oracle of Liberty. In its new field, separated from 
tlie great spirits who gathered round it in Boston, the -Spy lost something 
of its early fire ; but its influence was to the nd of the contest undimi- 
nished. 1 

judicious as themselves, very often." Familiar the fair fields of Europe." Man. Hist. Coll. vi. 

I alters i if John AJamj and kit Wife, p. n. 64, 79. 

Dr. Kliot, in his .Varratnv of Newspapers, is ' "The press was used by the Patriots with 

still more censorious: "The writers [for the great activity and effect. The Rmton Gauttt 

.S/r| were most of them young men of genius, and the Massachusetts Spy were the principal 

without < v|>. in-nee in business or knowledge of Whig journals printed this year (1773) in Bos- 

the world ; some of whom, perhaps, had no prin- ton. The Gautte had for a long time been the 

ciplcs to actuate I lum, or were enthusiasts if main organ of the (wpular party; and it was 

thev had principles, and wanted judgment where through its columns that ( Mis, the Adan 

their virtue did not fail. . . . The same spirit ar.d Ouincy, and Warren addressed the public. In 

principles lead to a dissolution of all society, fact no paper on the continent took a more ac- 

aml, like more modem puMii .uions on equality live part in politics, or more ably supported the 

and the rights of nun. aie direct att.uk> .it all rights of the Colonies. Its tone was generally 

authority and law; am i ried into effect, dignified, and its articles were often elaborate. 

would have made confusion here, as they have The JKuMr4aUMMl Sty wa> more spicv, more in 

since dissolved the government and desolated the partisan spirit, less scrupulous in matter ; 
\ "i . in 18. 



138 THE MEMORIAL HISTORY OF BOSTON. 

In the summer of 1775, the printers of the Essex Gazette, Ebenezer and 
Samuel Hall, moved from Salem to Cambridge, established their printing 
office in Stoughton Hall, and continued the publication under the name 
of the New England Chronicle, or tlie Weekly Gazette, It was intensely 
Whig in its sympathies, and had several accomplished contributors. Early 
the following year, Boston being no longer in a state of siege, the Chronicle 
was moved across the river to School Street, " next door to Oliver Crom- 
well's Tavern ; " was bought by Edward Eveleth Powars and Nathaniel 
Willis, who changed the name to the Independent Chronicle and Universal 
Advertiser, and consecrated it anew to " the glorious cause of America." 
Samuel Adams gave his never resting pen to its service, and John Hancock 
was among its occasional contributors. It was ably and earnestly on the 
side of liberty through all the vicissitudes of the Revolution. 1 

It will be observed that the Revolutionary Press derived its chief influ- 
ence from the constant use which able writers and statesmen made of it. 
Their spirited arguments, exhortations, and appeals were carried through 
its agency over every threshold, and, being copied from journal to journal 
in all the colonies, gave cumulative force and energy to the popular feel- 
ing. With such assistance the press, in spite of its limitations, was made 
to represent in a peculiar sense the form and body of the time. It was 
a period of prevailing intellectual as well as moral exaltation. Dreams of 
liberty and self-government, under new conditions, seemed at last about 
to be realized. The sense of national life was becoming intense and vivid. 
The terms America, Country, Commonwealth, Nation, came into common 
use, or acquired new meanings. Phrases implying or asserting a new distri- 
bution of public powers, became familiar: all men are by nature equal; 
kings have only delegated authority ; the people may resume supreme power 
at their pleasure ; judges are servants not of the king but of the common- 
wealth, and are bound by the charter. Franklin's warning before leaving 
England, transmitted through Lord Howe to Lord North, " They who 
can give up essential liberty to obtain a little temporary safety deserve 
neither liberty nor safety," - became a standard maxim, and was often used 
in calls for public meetings and appeals to public sympathy. Books on 
personal and public rights, treatises on government, standard writings on 
canon and public law, were more and more sought for. Milton, Harrington, 
Sydney, Marvell, and Locke were favorite authors. Bacon and Bolingbroke 
were often quoted. Montesquieu and Priestley had many disciples ; cheap 
reprints of their works were extant before and during the Revolution. 2 

aimed less at elegance of composition than at seller that in no branch of his business, after 

clear, direct, and efficient appeal." Frothing- tracts of popular devotion, were so many bunks 

ham, Rise of the Republic, p. 51. as those on the law exported to the plantations. 

1 [For some account of magazines and other The colonists have now fallen into the way of 
periodical publications of this time, see "The printing them for their own use. I hear that 
Press and Literature of the Provincial Period," they have sold nearly as many of Blackstone's 
in Vol. II. p. 387. See also S. F. Haven, Am. Commentaries in America as in England." Ed- 
Anti,/. Sac. Proc., October, iSyt. ED.] mund Burke, in the House of Commons, March 

2 " I have been told by an eminent book- 22, 1775. 



[Vol., EtJ T 

INDEPENDENT 

AND 

UNIVERSAL 

THURSDAY, 



MASSACHUSETTS- STATE; 
POWARS AND WILLIS, 



T H E 



tnm tb PI 



, Odo. 9. 



, CONSTITUTION.*/ fie COM 

WtLTN c/riMB-ITLVAvi*. *ttf*U' 

rfcGttNfiKAL CONVENTION. 



77 4 ' "*" nmnmrnt^ *> mJj**nmni 
6. 

WHEREAS kit govtrancfit 
oj^hi lo be taftitvtcd Aid lup. 
poiitd tor the letunty tad pro 
tecUj.i of the (omm uiu if it 
Cue*. ADd 10 CIMDI ihe. I 
iduAli who compote it to 

|0f IbCII A4IU'4j 'IghU 

tbe tithe- bltlTingi which ibc 4uU.o* ol eiifcAce hu 
beftoutd upon o.c ( ud heoe.cr mclc jr,*i end* 



. 

r.te.t. lotkAiigeii. A..O .Akr.ft.ch 
ioj> *^fw> oevttU.f 10 proaioii 



iheu 



ruo* 01 p.utc..o- o|y, ke.e.olore Atkeo.Kd 

llJegllCC, iO ike HlbgOl tjftAl a-liwn uU (At UMt 

King hi* AIM oal* nhdf**-i tflAi p*..tbon. ui 
caaiic<uej oil riillcoaum.tiiouM) on, *uh 
baled .eageMtc. cnoit iriicj e..d mjuil *' AgAjAll 

ihtnvt tmptOHUg IDetcl*. ou> u> ( uuupt u( t>rt*i 

BniAia, but foreign BWitoAiitt. !*AgCi. tnd Uiti, 
for tk i*c.wctl pu-pjte of iduuog tac 10 touJ 
tad akjea (ubm.ftoo CD UM dcipout doauAAtiOA o/ 
the Buu(h Kwliwneoi, wtih BAM; oiaer *tti 01 ty- 
two 7. (taut* fall| fct for.h IB the decUriUOa o/ 
Coogrtto) whereby all allegihoer ud faaJry 10 the 
Uio Jting ud bii (ucceflort t;e diikUed aad M * 
tad, ud *er and Authority dcnved doai turn 
mteaui iti. . Coloaiet. AMD *H*IA it >t t> 
(oiuulr uetcCuy fut ibe wcllmrt ud !!*(/ of ib< >- 
Wbiuan of Uid CbloaM*. di( ine| 6c Uacelarth 
tree ud ladepCBdcniSiaici, ud iJui juft, piuei, 
Ud propei Foraw of ljovraeni citlt m every p*H 
Bf (beta, derived Iron, ud found tti on the utMritjr 
f (M people oolj , tgrt4bt* to the ducdMM* O/ toe 
buno>4Ulc Aintricu Coag'ed Wfi, ihe reprclatt* 
Uumot the Freenca ol I'cBnfjUuii, u Oner*l 
CoavcBtKM , 'or the tiprclc fu'pofe ot timuig 
fuck* GtiveiBincoi, cookliug me goodaei* ol (u 
frcat Governor Ot Uie(Ju*.rle (*no alooe kaowi 
to wbM degree of etnblf kApymcl* mukiad */ 
utMfi by pe/leOiBg the AII* ui GovctnntCRi) in pet 
g the people ul ttui SIACC. by com*oa conical. 
ce, dehtxmely 10 tor for ifetn- 



* u they (lull ihiek beft for go- 



ud wiLhout 
Urn fuck jurt 

veremg then tutui* fuociy j Afld bt*g fully (on 
*utic4 tbAi it u or iQdifpcaf*ale duty to iMtaiilh 
lucb original principle* 01 Uo*ren( A* will bed 
promote ihe geaeiu bippia<(* of the people of uu* 
3iir 4nd ihtu polciuji, tiid provide lor luiure UD- 
piovcncud, * about pAriulit)> for, or pieiudice 
gmiul Aay pArucwlf di, Ittt, or de*i>Aii>AUOa o/ 
ui wkA4C*r, DO, by *uie uf DM ^lAoruy MrUO 
U <u by au/ uMILtiMai*, ordu, detlA/e. And eJub- 
Uih ifc followuig L>ecUruofi of Riga i* uid r'noic 
> Ltove-flmeiu, to to THb CONi 1 11 U11UN ol 
ttui Common -WtAtdi, ud M reiuu u tore* Uwn- 
10 lrc*er, uaAltercil, except IN (nek imclc* A* iBAll 
beieAJUr un C^^CIICHO bn lOuAd u> teqgin improve 
MAI, Add wUKi tOAli by tM !*> AtltBOniy ul tBC 
people, ruilf dc'c^AMd A* U)n r>ua< OtGoxraoKM 
dircfti, be kinCDiMj ix up<wed lot tae no^c etfcc- 
tulobuuiuig ud MciMiug THE CKtAf tNO 
AND Otai^N ur <tt,L 
kua be.>M i 



C H A r I K K L 

A DKCLAJLAT1ON of tbt k.gti* of iW Ulubi. 

OAU of tke &MM wf PfcNNjVLVA.Si,, 

*Tp H A T All me. .r, bora rqutll, fr*. ,. J 

X i&depeadeai, M d be>* cer^-r. n.ml i* 

Wtni uul uuhUMbk ngbu, AmoiiA wkijt AIC ifce 




TNOMI ,1,) 

CHRONICLE. 

THE 

ADVERTISER. 

NOVEMBER 7, 1776. 

BOSTON: rue-tea IT 

Oppcfitc the NEW Court Houfc. 



>g ffe *Ad l.bert 
ig p-operiy. ud p-f.,eg aad 
obtAJAiAg bApptecfi ud Ufcty. 

II. Tb All nw k4vc A AAiuril ud ii)ieatbU 
riglu to worfbjp Alengkty Go, * cording 10 [he 
dioatn of tkev ocra oootoeoce* Aad u*dct duding 
Aad ibw no eu ongkt or ol ri|kt CAM be tOBpaUei 
to iitead uy relig o wotOup. or orofi or >tffot 

ir*O to, or AftwJ, kio*i dot --II ud coufaat 
Nor u uy u. -ho Acknowledge* dw boag of . 
Coo. be ]H Jtly depri.ed or Abtdfod of uy cinlVgh 
ai A ctni*4. oo Account of kit religw>H4 Jean meat 
or pacniw mode of icligtoe* orfup . And ihet < 
authority CAB o* ought 10 be vcftcJ i. or Afunrri 
it, uy powar *bA.cr. tlui dull IA My CA!B toirr 
hue wtib. or to My eAAonct coatrl, the 'i*>i ol 
coafcieare IB tke frm cnrcife of rebgicM 

III. Tkat ibe people of iYi Stan h*v tot We, 
exelufm wd tahei>t ngki of govcrAtog aad rrga 
lacing the internal poltce *l tke UCM 

IV TbAi All powet being onginAlly iootroai in, 
Ad confcqucAiiy dcpr-vrd fruel. tke People . ll** 
fore All omtri ui Oo*crriaKBi. <vbrth*r kgifUtm or 
t creative. Arc tkci/ trytleo* a*4 fe*MU. aod At All 
aoe> ACccMatkolc to tMai 

V. Tkat Oo>cn*ir.ii U. Or Cyght W bt, iA*il- 

iJ lor ike toee*o> bc*thi, B/otn&oa udl (ocoruy 
or the people. BAUOO or cooteae-atty . AM not for the 
pArticuUr <mt>UtucAt or ad*uiA|e of My unglc 
An.fAavry or bt of atca vko are A part oalp af taai 
coamaity Aod uh*i ibe coa>aiaitf back AA m 
Aod lodrfcABbct right to re 



, 
form. lter or aboliA Goverrt 



at Ik ill be by tkat b 

to the puulK aeJ 

VI. rhAi t 



ai.Miy judged 



ofho an cmployad IB tbe kgdj 
bnaael'i Of toe State ay t r 
!d froei oopreftoa. tae Maple ho* A ng*t, 
(uch pcrioot *> <k<y CMI tbiak prooer, to r*4e. 
tbeir public oftceri to e private IAIMM. Md fwpplp 
toe vAcaPuoi by cartaia and r*g*la> akAtoni 

VU. TkM aU eWboa. ogbi to be free ; aod 

IBAt til free CMB hAHAg A (uAcieat (OCAt COBU 

toterefl wKk. ud (iiicnoicni ie ihc coaiBiMniiy. ka* 
a right to ehrd odicm, or oa elcclad tato oft .c 

v til TkAi every ateoiber of lonotp hA.k A ngk* 

be pnMKctad ta tae cnjwyoicai of In*, liberty and 

pn>peny. And therefore u bound to contribvi, hit 

proporuoa towArdi the eapemcc. of <h4i protection, 

Aad ytdd AM pt'ioAAl fftrvKe. hn aeccfAry, or u 

jujvakat i hereto ; Bui no part ol A m*ri i p.opctt r 
Cha be jolly takea from him, or Appltcd iu public 
lot, without bu owa oaottAi, or IBM of hit legeJ 
reprefuiAUf** Nor CAB Mf BAA OIM u eoofctAeu. 
oolly itrufiulou* of beaiiag /. be jftly coopelled 
thereto, it ke oill pay Cu* cquivAlcAt Nor Arc tkt 
people bouod by UT u-t. ou, ie<k A* t*i k4ve ID 

'[c tnuBfr afcniad 10, tw> tkcir coaa^oa good. 

IX Tkai IB All pfuhrtuuoat for <ruia4J woVn- 
cet, a o4J) kAlh A ogbt 10 be bCATd bf n.mH.f 4nd 

*aJ iM caaai Aod eaiwfr. of kit 
accttuuoa. to be confronted emh tao 'toeCtt, w 
II for evidence in ai* ravovr. ac<d A 'prody pwblK 
al, by AB un t 'i'UA! |-, ot iM txnair^, uho.r <he 
Animoui content he CAAOOI be fownd |e*Jty Nor 
CA* be be coc&pcllad IK give evidence 4g*iA< hia>kil 
Nor (to Aey BAB be jutUf depnvrd at bu libert*, 
by tae |w ol i&C land or tot rod|OUai ol 
IB) MM 

X Tut tke paopk kM A ngkt to fc*kl tfcoia 
<, their houiei. papc" ud pmlefcoat bve iraoi 

oetAi or AaSfaianoni ntl Adc. *tfoiJio K A UaWt 
4ion lor UMM. d *n*>ebr trj o4i h o m mtf 
ot4f kc cooiNiudAd or rrqvKtd to iiank Ixi- 
MCI-- J ptACb. or to leiic Aay ptrfen o* pt'fo**, t>*t 
t the*' p'Opertr. not p4>u^wlA. <* JcKnbro, an ooa 
A>r 10 ih4i r.gnt, * J o-f k. not t be |'nit(f 

XI ThAi .A AlKoerr..tb.rJHd f p"'pert F 

rifH( IB tftAl bj Jv'/i *"i.ft OJjhllJ t<4 hclJ Uired. 



XII Tk4i the people b..e a rMbt to frccdovft of 

teart . tkc*e*ora ike l7coBO of JM are* wgki oat 
to ot rtftre>aW 

XIII Thw the people bi-a nghi War ana* 
for tha dcfute of ikcefal>i ud tke StaM , 4*4 a* 
Audtag AfBtori, t*. u ax of paooi, a*e JAagaraat it> 
liberty, tkoy On|k AM a> be kept B : And taat tko 
Bxliurr kWUd be koft ooder tnfl UkordiaAOM a* ( 
ui jomraod by. toe ti-il power. 

XIV TbAi A (rro,.c*< 'Ocoriwa <O tW fooao. 
BMntal preftaokn. aod * k> o> Adherence a> jafbot, o. 
dcTAdo*. ueapcrwicc. irdnBry, oad) fr-gJ.(. AM 
Abtol.idt oarefcWr toa*t4TC .be keaftogi Of uaor. 
ty. u4 keep G*t<aa>eat f roe ( 1 ke peiki oogkl 
tkctelo> w pay parucwlar Aneouoa to iteai patate, 
IA tar ck<ce ol oaken tod KfofpHHn^. aod < 
A right 10 ntA de and rooui rvg^d ikeeB. 
f-ooi tWu legifbion tad eu r B'ue. M U akir 
t>4 cMiuung fwtB Ui AI an BOBofary lor the goal 
Gra*. oftteSue* 

XV Thai all BMO kaa Mtrl lAkowt njta 
n tmifi Ate froai ooe S>A to uaiker tkal onH* ft> 
ce>ve tkaei. ot to forai a t SIAIC in VACAAI coaa- 
iriei. or IB fock cVoBtm* AJ ikey caa pwckafc, **- 
ever [key ihiak ikit toorcby I kef auy praaMW 
tkM oa kapowrfA. 

XVI Tkat tke prof le kAW a rifkt W aeWkb) 

re.eeiut^^%*jM^d 



CHAPTER O. 

PLAN a, VR AMBe/GOVtaNMl.fT. 

XeoSeo i. Tp HE CoaiM Weakfc or Suit of 

[ Peanfylvaaia full IM 

or M AaVe>W T of ibe ~ 

of ike UOM. Ad 



JM TM fareo> hfieUim power fkafl bo 

of tae Cmo>oa WcAkkwltaAtarfrvoaryUaau. 

Jff. 9. Tba faproBM exanaj* oOMt aVal U 
veiled IA A Preai* 



. 
Coon, of J-fbct fetf W all i III J 

i W ewy of PkUaottpotA ud to oe/f ooonfj of ta 



. 

* , TkeProtoM of e 
ud .orw foa* Bull be traiaoa- ud ArajaJ for in fe- 

te* , Of fork rcg.Lkt.oa*. rotnAtOOA Ud tMBOj. 

ioi at ike G<ae.nJ AaViy fttll bj U.eVri. 
prtfcf*g 4l. T t tke people the tight of cbiaf 
.ken Cc4eel tod A!! coeoenaUood oft.cn adriaM 
Ak ,a fock aiuaar aod at ofw* at by tke i*4 IBM 
li*U be eveaVd 



. 

o> one bok pear oei before tbe dy ' ahftun for 
ftrpttfc* uim. **d pJ pofcltc cutt oViog hat 
IMM. BMll c.joy ike r^kl of M eWW. ProndHol 
' ton* of fuMildtn of ike oge of toear*. 
cauilad M *w Jtbo^h tbey kA* 



iee'of ik.. CoaVcaW. Wnlra oWt^oT* of pc>. 

oni aiofl aoted for *rtMo cod) vtrtwc. to be cbofam 

the Frevoxn of evet * < rty aod <oaty af tlu* Ceea- 

_.j-Vt*lrh refpottrwly Aad) ao peraaa tull ao 

doftcd Mleft he BA* rrftooi the o.. > roty for 

-OKk he (k4il.be cfc. fa*. '- ynre imaitdiair-ly be- 

lore the fud cMbon . nO> flull j BM*ABe> *kJe M 

!* MCI Mtk. hv-d .A/ c-.ket eaVe eawft la tko 

com 



d A eeibc' te.vc ,n M Heai of Re, 



t ol Rcp*fc*u<i*e 
*Vc4kk tMN taaoi 



. 

. 9.. Ikeaieoibf'iofiW Ho.d*rcprfe. 
., be tkrfe* AOA.*'t r > 



140 THE MEMORIAL HISTORY OF BOSTON. 

Of the group of writers brought to the front at this time, partly by the 
force of events and partly by their own genius, Samuel Adams was the 
master spirit. From his youth he was deeply interested in public affairs. 
He read with avidity all attainable books on politics and government, and 
early made himself familiar with Roman law and political history. He 
formed a club in 1/48 for the purpose of writing and debate on the great 
interests of the country. Inspired by his example the members gave to 
these discussions the enthusiasm of youthful ambition, and were stimulated 
by them to the attainment of broader views and the pursuit of profounder 
studies. Every invasion of chartered rights, committed or threatened, 
found Adams and his companions at their posts. The habit of enlisting 
young men of talent and spirit in the support of principles dear to him 
continued during his active life. " To my certain knowledge," said John 
Adams, 1 " from 1758 to 1775 he made it his constant rule to watch the rise 
of every brilliant genius; to seek his -acquaintance, to court his friendship, 
to cultivate his natural feelings in favor of his native country, to warn him 
against the hostile designs of Great Britain, and to fix his affections and 
reflections on the side of his native country." Besides his contributions to 
the newspapers, already spoken of, the vigorous pen of Samuel Adams was 
always at the public service. He drafted the instructions to the Boston rep- 
resentatives for 1764 and 1765, containing the first public challenge of the 
right of Parliament to tax the Colonies without their consent, and the first 
public suggestion of the union of the Colonies for the redress of grievances. 
In his representative capacity he suggested or prepared many of the state 
papers of that period, and made many public addresses. With the single 
exception of a reply to Thomas Paine, in defence of Christianity, his writings 
were called forth in the regular course of public service, and were addressed 
to the pressing political exigencies of the time. The generation following 
named him "The Father of the Revolution." His blameless life, his unfail- 
ing intelligence, his persuasive address, his enthusiasm, always controlled 
by reason and a religious sense of responsibility, combined to make him a 
born leader of men. 2 

The impetuous genius of James Otis supplied what was wanting in 
Adams's well poised temperament. He was an accomplished scholar, a 
charming speaker, and richly endowed with dashing and brilliant qualities. 
His first published work (1760) was a treatise on The Rudiments of Latin 
Prosody, with a dissertation on the principles of harmony in composition. 
He prepared a similar work on Greek prosody, which was never published. 
The following year, 1761, he was called to take the leading part in the 
great trial of the Writs of Assistance. 3 Here his remarkable gifts had a fair 
and adequate field for their exercise. The trial involved not only great 
pecuniary interests, but the political and civil rights of a continent, and 

1 John Adams's Correspondence, in Works, Bay. [See portrait and references in chapter i. 
x. 364. of the present volume. ED.] 

2 Wells, f.ife and Public Services of Samuel 3 [See Mr. Porter's chapter in the present 
Adams; llutchinson, History of Massachusetts volume. El>.] 



THE LITERATURE OF THE REVOLUTION. 141 

gave ample opportunity for the display of his varied learning, masterly 
reasoning, and captivating eloquence. From this time forward he knew 
neither rest nor peace. In 1762, after a sharp controversy with Governor 
Bernard on a question of his right to authorize expenditures without the 
knowledge of the House of Representatives, in which Otis was sustaiiu-d 
by the House, he published a spirited vindication of its action, which 
still further stimulated the spirit of resistance to executive power. 1 This 
fugitive pamphlet contained the fundamental argument on which constitu- 
tional liberty rests, and presented in clear array the whole armory of rea- 
soning with which the statesmen of the Revolution fought their later battles. 
This was followed two years later by The Rights of the Colonies Asserted 
and Vindicated, written with ability and spirit, but making apparent con- 
cessions to the authority of Parliament, which excited great distrust and 
caused a loss of confidence in the steadiness of his judgment which was 
never fully recovered. His last work appeared in I765, 2 an eminently pa- 
triotic and useful contribution to the discussion ; but presenting views con- 
cerning a consolidated empire and parliamentary representation of the 
colonies, not shared by many persons on either side of the contest. In 
his profession Mr. Otis was pre-eminent, and until his reason failed was 
distinguished among many accomplished and able men. 8 

The fruitful pen of John Adams, like that of his illustrious kinsman, 
was given to the same absorbing cause. While reading law in Worcester 
he had access to most of the standard books with which educated men were 
expected to be familiar. Frequent references to them in his letters and diary 
indicate much proficiency in both the ancient and recent classics. The 
argument of James Otis against the Writs of Assistance, to which he was a 
listener, was a fresh revelation to his wonderfully receptive and fertile mind. 4 
Thenceforward, till the crisis culminated in 1776, he was engaged, with 
occasional interruptions, in writing for the newspapers, in preparing in- 
structions for representatives, in addressing public meetings or represent- 
ative bodies, wherever, indeed, the cause of the colonies needed an able, 
learned, and fearless defender. In 1765 he was one of a sodality! consisting 
of two young lawyers besides himself, formed under the patronage of Mr. 

1 The title was, A Vindication of the Conduct " Tudor, Life of James Otis ; Lift and Works 

of the //. of Kef-, ,'f t/u Pnx-ince of the Afass. Bay, of John Adams ; Hutchinson, History of Massa- 

printed l>y Kdes & Cill, 1762. J. Adams, writing chusttts Ray. Mercy Warren, History of tlu 

of it many years after, said: "Look over the American Kevolution ; Monthly Anthology, v. 

Declaration of Rights and Wrongs, issued by [Sec a portrait and references in chapter i. 

Congress in 1774; look into the Declaration of ED.) 

Independence, in 1776; look into the writings ' " Krom early life the bent of his mind was 

of Dr. I'rii-t and Dr. 1'ricstlcy; look into all the toward politics, a propensity which the state of 

French constitutions ot H,.M niment ; and, to cap the times, if it did not create, doubtless very 

the climax, look into Thomas Taint's Common much strengthened. Public subjects must have 

Senst, Crisis, and Rights of .Wan, what can you occupied the thoughts and filled up the conver 

find that is not to In- toiind in soliil Mihst.uue in sati.Mi in the circles in which he then moved; 

this vindication of the Mouse..! |<q>re-eiit.iti\i's " ami the interesting quest ions at that time arising 

':sideralii>ns ,'n I'fhalf of the Colonists, in could not but sci/e on a mind like hi-, ardent, 

a Letter to a \i'Uf l.fl'J. London: printed for sanguine, and patriotic." \V.l -non 

}. Almon, 1765. Adams and Je/erson, Huston, At: 



142 THE MEMORIAL HISTORY OF BOSTON. 

Gridley, then advanced in years, for the purpose of studying the leading 
writers on oratory and civil law. His first published work, a treatise on the 
canon and feudal law, was the result of their discussions in 1765, and was 
printed after the mob of that year. In the Gazette he wrote under many 
signatures on all the leading questions ; and though his attachment to his 
profession made him resolve again and again to forswear politics, he re- 
turned to the public arena as often as an excuse was offered. From this 
time Mr. Adams was fully embarked in public life, and his work and ser- 
vice belong to the general history of the country. His writings of the pe- 
riod preceding and during the Revolution were very carefully preserved, 
and have been published, with his own later commentaries upon the events 
which inspired them. 1 

The appearance of British soldiers in Boston, in 1768, was the signal for 
a fresh appeal to the patriotism of the inhabitants, the boldness and bril- 
liancy of which startled friends and foes. Josiah Quincy, Jr., then just ad- 
mitted to the bar, published in the Gazette of that year the remarkable series 
of essays bearing the signature of " Hyperion," which at once inspired 
admiration for his genius and the affectionate interest of all friends of 
liberty. His defence of the soldiers of the Boston massacre, against the 
current of popular feeling which he had himself been active in creating, 
gave further proof of his personal courage and his deep sense of justice. 
His contributions to the newspapers, and his correspondence with leading 
statesmen, continued after he was smitten with the signs of fatal illness ; and 
his persuasive and eloquent voice was often heard in public gatherings. His 
chief work, Observations on the Boston Port Bill, with reflections on civil 
society and standing armies, published in 1774, increased his reputation and 
influence. But the great promise of his youth and early manhood was not 
to be realized. He fell on the threshold of the conflict, leaving a pure and 
noble memory. 2 

Joseph Warren, like most of his eminent contemporaries, also cultivated 
literature as a patriotic diversion. With every social grace and virtue he 
united uncommon literary gifts and a passionate love of country. Indeed, 
they were never long separated. His letters were luminous and prophetic, 
and his newspaper writings, from the time of the Stamp Act to the close of 
his life, were noted for purity and force of style, excellent judgment, and a 
manly spirit. His oration on the anniversary of the Massacre, in 1772, gave 
fresh lustre to his reputation. He was then in his thirty-first year, in active 
practice of his profession, and the trusted friend and confidant of all the 
Whig statesmen. His style was fervent and rhetorical, somewhat over- 

1 C. F. Adams, Life and Works of John Algernon Sydney's works, in a large quarto; 
Adams. [A portrait of John Adams in his old John Locke's works, in three volumes, folio ; 
age is given in Mr. Lodge's chapter in the pres- Lord Bacon's works, in four volumes, folio ; 
ent volume. ED.] Gordon's Tacitus, in four volumes; Cato's Let- 

2 J. Quincy, Life of Josiah Quincy, Jr. In his ters, by Gordon ; and Trenchard's and Mrs. Ma- 
will was the following provision : " I give to my caulay's History of England. May the Spirit of 
son Josiah [afterward President Quincy], when Liberty rest upon him I " [See his portrait and 
he shall have arrived at the age of fifteen years, references in chapter i. ED.] 



THE LITERATURE OF THE KKVoUJTION. 



143 



weighted with metaphor and imagery, but frank and sincere in thought, 
logical and direct in statement, and impressive in delivery. The oration of 




WARREN'S 1775 MA^fuscRIPt. I 

1775 was given under circumstances much more singular and distressing. 
The town was occupied by hostile troops. Warning had been given that 

likeness mentioned in another note, a contem- 
porary colored mezzotint portrait, following evi- 
dently the likents- in (jiu-Mion ; and in hisdining- 
room, above the portrait, hang two swords 
crossed, one a slender blade sheathed in black, 
which is l>elieved to have been the one worn at 
Hunker I till; the other was worn for many years 
by his grandfather as an officer of the Cadets. Dr. 
\Yancn p rious papers of the General 

and some of his books, which have a printed 
Ixiok-plate: "Joseph Warren. Thcw : 
roweth and returneth not." See the portrait 
and references in chapter i. Ki> ] 



1 [The manuscript of this second oration of 
\\ ".iiu-n IMS descended to Dr. John C. Warren, 
the second of that name, and by his kind per- 
mission the first page of it is here reproduced, 

The script is of iimoninmn legibility, contained 
in a quarto book with black or dark covers, and 
nccn;>ii-s t \\rnt\-rii; lit puurs, with one paragraph 
at least inserted on an attached bit of paper, 
The oration was printed in the />W<> <;,::,.'/,. 
March 17, 1775, and in the same year in a pam- 
phlet by Kdes ,V Cill, and probably the same 
year in New Yoik. ( l-'rothingham's ll',irr,-H. 
428-456.) I >r. Warren also pn-.Ms-<O>cside the 



144 THE MEMORIAL HISTORY OF BOSTON. 

the citizens would commemorate the day at their peril. Warren, with char- 
acteristic spirit, sought the post of danger. To avoid the crowd, he reached 
the pulpit through a window in the rear of it. On the steps of the pulpit 
and in the pews before him were the military representatives of an empire 
whose power he met with audacious defiance. The chivalry of his nature 
had full play in this remarkable presence. Poetry and history have at- 
tempted to describe the scene ; but no description can give adequate ex- 
pression to its impressiveness and significance. 

In the intervals of these periods of special exaltation, Warren wrote 
stirring verses for the newspapers, of which "A Song for Liberty," be- 
ginning 

"That seat of science, Athens, and earth's proud mistress, Rome, 
Where now are all their glories ? We scarce can find their tomb," 

is perhaps the best known. 1 

With these Patriots, who are most eminent in the literary annals of the 
Revolution, were many others whose names are not wholly foreign to them. 
James Bowdoin published little aside from his contributions to the state 
papers ; but he cultivated letters during his whole life, and his reputation 
for science and learning extended over both continents. 2 John Hancock, 
eloquent, graceful, and accomplished, and " formed by nature to act a bril- 
liant part in the affairs of the world," contributed much to the correspond- 
ence of the time, and gave an oration in 1774, on the anniversary of the 
Massacre, in which he rose to the occasion with boldness and dignity. 3 
Robert Treat Paine, the learned and eminent judge, had refined literary 

tastes, and cultivated the society of learned 
men. He was wise in theology as well as in 
law, but the tradition of his great acquirements 
is all that is left concerning them. 4 Oxenbridge 
Thacher, the associate of Otis in the trial of the Writs of Assistance, an 
ingenious lawyer, a cultivated scholar, and of a most amiable character, 
died early in the strife, just as his fine spirit and rich gifts were beginning 
to be appreciated. William Tudor, who attained eminence at the bar, 
served with distinction in the army, and 
delivered the spirited Massacre oration 
of I779- 6 Thomas Gushing was a dili- 
gent promoter of learning and litera- ^ 
ttire; but his position, as Speaker of the c 

1 Massachusetts Spy, May 26, 1774. Reprint- Funeral Sermon; Loring's Hundred Boston 

ed in Frothingham's Life and Times of Joseph Orators. 

Warren, p. 405. Duyckinck, Cyclopedia of * Washburn, Judicial History of Massachu- 

American Literature, i. 466, gives a different setts; Tudor, Life of James Otis. [See the chap- 

version. ters by Mr. Porter and Mr. Lodge in the present 

' 2 Judge Lowell, quoted by R. C. Winthrop, volume, and by Mr. Quincy in Vol. IV. ED.] 
Orations and Addresses, \. 131. [See Mr. Lodge's s [There is a portrait of Colonel Tudor in 

chapter. ED.] Mass. Hist. Soc. Proc.,\. 282, and an extended 

3 Sparks's Biographies; Lives of the Signers memoir of him by his son in 2 Mass. Hist. Coll. 

of the Declaration of Independence; Thacher's viii. 285. ED.] 





THE LITERATURE OF THE REVOLUTION. 



'45 




House for many years, in which he was required to sign all public docu- 
ments, gave his name a celebrity quite out of proportion to his real influence, 
which, indeed, was not slight. 1 Benjamin Church, the accomplished physi- 
cian, poet, scholar, and a writer of undoubted genius, gave his talents to 
the Whig cause, and was a trusted associate of the Whig leaders until the 
war began, for a considerable time, 
indeed, after he had secretly resolved 
to betray them. 2 His writings were 
much celebrated. His poems, some- 
times satirical, sometimes serious and 
pathetic, were always correct and elegant. His orations were polished, 
scholarly, and eloquent. 3 His prose writings, scattered through the publi- 
cations of the time, were often witty and philosophical, but never especially 
profound. 

Foremost among the writers on the royalist side was Thomas Hutch- 
inson. Many of his state papers were written with singular moderation and 
dignity. 4 The royal prerogative had no more able and learned defender 
than it found in this favored son of the province. Had he fallen upon more 
peaceful times, he would easily have attained the fame to which his varied 
accomplishments and his blameless character entitled him ; but his over- 
estimate of power, his want of sympathy with popular rights, and his great 
ambition led him to the losing -side of the controversy which had to be 
decided in his time. The storm of obloquy falling upon all who shared his 
faith in the power of the Crown quite overshadowed his undoubted claims 
to respect as a citizen, a magistrate, and an historian. In various public 
capacities he had rendered useful service to the Province. He was a capa- 
ble and upright judge. His charges to the jury were models of clear and 
methodical statement, and his decisions were founded upon principles of jus- 
tice and reason. His historical labors do not display original or profound 
thought, and have few graces of style ; but he was conscientiously pains- 
taking and thorough in his investigations, and to the relation of events in- 
volving strong partisan feeling he brought a spirit of candor which disarms 
criticism. The impartiality of his narrative, even in relating incidents of 
which he was himself a great part, and by whose interpretations he must 
stand or fall, is one of the striking features of his History of Massachusetts 

1 This circumstance led Dr. Johnson, in his * Thacher's Medical Biography; Loring's 

pamphlet on Taxation no Tyranny, to say : " One Hundred Boston Orators. 

object of the Americans is said to be to adorn 4 The more important of these papers are 

the brows of Mr. Gushing with a diadem." preserved in the volume of Massachusetts State 

[Thomas dishing was Lieut.-Governor, under the Papers, compiled by Alden Bradford, and printed 

new constitution of 1780, till his death in 1788. in Boston in 1818. The volume includes the 

He was tin l;i-t to add to his pay as one of the speeches of the Cover nsettsfrom 

council the salary of that sinecure office, the 1765 to 1775, and the an.-wer* to them by the 

raptaincy of the Castle. See his likeness, etc., House of Representatives, with the resolutions 

in Mr. Porter's chapter. ED.] and addresses for that period, and other public 

3 Hutchinson, Lettfers to Bernard, January, papers. 
1772. 

VOL. III. IQ. 



146 THE MEMORIAL HISTORY OF BOSTON. 

Bay. His greed of office, his exaggerated ambition, his persistent misjudg- 
ment of the nature of the forces contending for the mastery of this conti- 
nent, were followed by quick and bitter retribution ; but no record of his 
time is complete which fails to recognize him as one of the very few Ameri- 
cans who, outside of the absorbing interests of the time, made permanent 
and useful contributions to the history of the country. 1 

Jonathan Sewall, Attorney-General of Massachusetts, was reputed to be 
one of the best writers of his time in New England. The Royalist journals 
were indebted to him for many of the ingenious essays in defence of the 
Crown and Parliament, which enabled them to maintain their ground against 
great odds from 1768 to 1775. John Adams, his early friend and com- 
panion, credits him with a lively wit, a pleasing humor, a brilliant imagina- 
tion, great subtilty of reasoning, and an insinuating eloquence. Andrew 
Oliver, 2 Lieut.-Governor, was a temperate and judicious writer in support of 
the prerogative, and against the extreme pretensions of the Patriots. His 
son, Andrew Oliver, Jr., more of a scholar than a politician, found time, in 
the midst of political distractions, to publish treatises on comets, storms, and 
other natural phenomena ; and he was a member of many learned societies. 

The names of two women, from very different walks in life, are entitled 
to a place in the literary annals of this time. " It was fashionable to ridi- 
cule female learning," Mrs. Adams wrote in one of her letters. " In the best 
families it went no further than writing and arithmetic ; in some few and 
rare instances, music and dancing." 3 But Mercy Warren was no slave to 
the social code. Urged by her own intrepid spirit, and stimulated by the 
example of her brother, James Otis, and her husband, James Warren of Ply- 
mouth, she became no indifferent part of the Revolution. Her house was 
the resort of all its great teaders, and she was a welcome companion in their 
most secret counsels. Her first publications were T/ie Adulator, issued in 
Boston in 1773, and The Group in 1775, both political dramas satirizing the 
prominent Royalists. These were followed by poems, less elaborate and of 
a more serious cast ; not remarkable as poetry, but charged with patriotic 
feeling and closely reflecting the spirit of the times. The Squabble of the 
Sea Nymphs, celebrating the tea adventure ; A Political Reverie, written 
while the Colony was hesitating between its ancient loyalty and its passion 
for freedom ; To the Hon. John Winthrop, Esq., who had requested her to 
give him a poetical list of the articles which a lady would require under the 
head of " real necessaries of life," while trade with Great Britain was sus- 
pended ; and later than any of these, The Sack of Rome, and The Ladies 
of Castile, all won great praise in their day and were widely read. 4 Mrs. 
Warren kept at the same time a careful record of public events, and main- 
tained an active correspondence with many Whig statesmen, which at a 

1 [See his likeness and an estimate of him 8 Familiar Letters of John Adams and his 

in Dr. Ellis's chapter in Vol. II. p. 68; also Mr. Wife, x. xi. 
Porter's chapter in the present volume. ED.) * Poems, Dramatic and Miscellaneous. By 

- [See his likeness and references in Mr. Mrs. M. Warren. Boston: Thomas & Andrews, 

Porter's chapter. En | 1790. 



THE LITERATURE OF THE REVOLUTION. 147 

later period furnished the principal materials for her history of the Revo- 
lution. 1 

Phillis Wheatley, a waif brought to these shores in a slave-ship from 
the coast of Africa, wrote youthful verses, which at first attracted attention 
rather on account of the novelty of their origin than for any special merit of 

i/frm, <*<^ c^ee^>*^* 4*-e. sm^r S'T't*-^*^* 




their own. Her earlier poems were first published in England, whither she 
had been taken in 1773 in ill health, at the age of eighteen years. These 
poems, gratefully inscribed to the Countess of Huntingdon, her chief friend 
and benefactor, and subsequently republished in this country, are of vari- 
ous degrees of merit, the best of them being simple, graceful, and not 
without traces of genuine poetic and religious feeling. Her memorial verses 
on the death of Dr. Sewall, of George Whitefield, and of Governor Hutch- 
inson's daughter, and others, were well calculated to win the sympathetic 
interest of many persons ; while her more ambitious poems, " Goliath of 
Gath," " Niobe Mourning for her Children," and her contemplative and re- 
ligious poems show great purity of sentiment and unusual gifts of poetic 
expression. Poverty, neglect, and a tragic death following a melancholy 
marriage quenched the fire just as it was beginning to light her way to 
hope and fame. 2 

But the crowning achievement of this period, the magnum opus, to 
which the ripest thought, the highest aspiration, and the best literary skill 
of that generation contributed, were the Massachusetts Constitution and 
Declaration of Rights of 1780. No worthier monument exists to the intel- 
lectual elevation, as well as to the wisdom, sagacity, and breadth of view 
of the statesmen who modelled and the people who accepted it. John and 
Samuel Adams, Bowdoin, Hancock, Lowell, Parsons, Cabot, Sullivan, Cush- 
ing, and many more had a part in the work ; but John Adams was the 

* Mrs. Ellet, Women of the Revolution; Duyc- 1834 publication was written by Miss M. M. 

kinck, Cyclopedia of American Literature; Life Odcll, of Jamaica Plain. The book passed to a 

and Works of John Adams. [See Mr. Charles second edition in 1835, and to a third in 1838, 

A. Cummings's chapter in the present volume, the latter containing Phillis's letter to Washing- 

and Mrs. Ednah D. Cheney's chapter in Vol. ton, from Sparks, iii. 297. The original edition 

IV. ED.] f her "Poems on various subjects " was pub- 

Memoir and Poems of Pfiitlu Wheatley, a lishcd in London in 1773, with an engraved por- 

Nali-;- African and a Slave. Boston : George trait, and it was sold in Boston by Feb. 

W Light 1834; Allibone, Dictumary of Authors: Other editions were published at . 

Duvckinck, 'Cyclopedia ,-/ 'American Literature; I 7 93! at Philadelphia, 1801, as an appendij 

Max. Hist. Sac. Proc., 1863, 1864, pp. 166, 167 The \egro equalled by f*u> Europeans; at \\al- 

[where will be found various letters by her, pole, N. II., 1802 ; at Hartford, iSo 4 ;: 

edited by Charles Deane, with an account of England." iSi6. See Mrs. Cheney's 

her by N. B. Shurtleff. The memoir of the Vol. IV. ED.] 



148 THE MEMORIAL HISTORY OF BOSTON. 

chief architect. The distinguishing feature of this instrument, especially 
worthy of commemoration here, is the chapter relating to the University of 
Cambridge, the encouragement of literature, etc., which remains to this day 
a part of the supreme law of Massachusetts, at once a model of literary 
expression and the high-water mark of American statesmanship. 1 

This rapid sketch omits many names and many books entitled to a place 
in any complete review of the literature of the Revolutionary period. The 
teeming intellectual fertility of the town itself was stimulated by Thomas 
Hollis, Nicholas Boylston, Thomas Hancock, and a score of enterprising 
booksellers who brought or sent into the colony all the standard books on 
law, politics, and history, together with the best of the belles-lettres then 
read by the English-speaking world. The printers, moreover, on both sides 
of the controversy, responded to the spreading interest in public affairs, and 
poured out pamphlets and broad-sides, which found their way to every man's 
door. Stately and elaborate essays alternated with the light and ephemeral 
humors of the passing hour, presenting in every variety of form, and with 
every shade of feeling, the one leading thought of American intellectual 
or literary life. On the Loyalist side, under the greatest possible discour- 
agements, there were displayed ability, sincerity, devotion, and many noble 
virtues which will always command human sympathy. On the Patriot side, 
while the people were equally disinterested and courageous, the love and 
the hope of freedom took more passionate and complete possession of them. 
All social and public interests came under the sway of that impulse ; all 
talents were quickened and uplifted by that conviction. The long travail 
of a people contending against powerful injustice; the assurance that suc- 
cess would ultimately vindicate and reward their faith ; passing moods of 
depressing doubt and triumphant confidence, alternating with dreams of 
grandeur and happiness under new institutions, over which kingly power 
would have no control and lingering tyrannies would cast no shadow, 
these were the accompaniments of a political change wrought in a single 
generation, which in purity of motive, exaltation of purpose, and splendor 
of results is without parallel in the annals of men. 





1 " In all the formulas of rights adopted by lessons of history over the future of a new Com- 

the several States there is a general resemblance monwealth, for its repeated inculcation of the 

of substance and phraseology. . . . The Massa- duties of religion and education as the primary 

chusetts Declaration is more extended, and agencies of civilized States, and for its own 

enunciates more in detail the investiture of the simple and solid literature. With the exception 

liberties of the citizen subject; and though I of the third article it is the work of Mr. Adams, 

must unavoidably be suspected of bias, I am free though in the convention it took on considerable 

to express the opinion that, as a whole, it is su- changes in the grouping and phraseology." 

perior to any other similar form in existence Alexander H. Bullock, The Centennial of the 

for its comprehensive projecting of the eclectic Massachusetts Constitution, pp. 20, 21. 



CHAPTER IV. 

LIFE IN BOSTON IN THE REVOLUTIONARY PERIOD. 

BY HORACE E. SCUDDER." 

THE struggle for personal freedom which occupied the mind of Eng- 
land and her colonies in the eventful last quarter of the eighteenth 
century was sharply accented in Boston, and the crisis which came with the 
Boston Port Bill was of a nature to change materially and rapidly the con- 
ditions of life in the capital of New England. The succession of hostile acts 
on the one side, and of retaliatory reprisals on the other, practically sealed 
Boston Harbor before the British navy made its fence of ships across the 
entrance, and the sudden check upon free commerce fell with force upon 
the great centre of the town's activity. At the wharves were idle vessels, in 
the streets were idle sailors and mechanics, and the saw and hammer which 
had made the ship-yards noisy were thrown aside. The withdrawal of la- 
bor was the concentration of interest upon politics, for public affairs were 
now more than ever closely involved with private affairs. The introduction 
of troops into the town increased the disorder, and it would seem as if 
nothing was going on but town-meetings and street rows. The glance which 
we get at Boston in the few years immediately preceding the outbreak of 
the war through the columns of the journals, the records of the General 
Court and of the town discloses a half-turbulent, excited, angry, but res- 
olute town, where there was a constant exhibition in miniature of the 
conflict which was so imminent. 

The resolute, not to say obstinate, temper of the town found abundant 
opportunity for expression, and the hand seemed always on the hilt. In 
1773 the Governor and Council were to have their customary annual elec- 
tion dinner ; and the town, in its meeting, instructed the selectmen to grant 
the use of Faneuil Hall only on condition that neither the commissioners of 
the customs and their attendants, nor the officers of the army and navy 
stationed at Boston for the purpose of enforcing unconstitutional acts of 

1 [Mr. Scudder published in 1876, in Men and A Short History </ the English Colonies in Amer- 

Manners in America Onf //iiin/rf,/ }',;irs Ai,v, ,\ if a, iSSl, gives a chapter (p. 406) to depicting 

picture of life in the colonies, a third of the the condition of life in New England just at 

liook In inn given to New England ; dr.iwinjj his the out-l-reak of the war. Another general 

material, without change of form, from some of survey will IK- found in (he introduction to 

the most helpful of the contempor.ii \ account*. The First Century sf the Kefukiic, New York, 

The recent book of Mr. Henry Cabot Lodge, 1876. Ku.| 



150 THE MEMORIAL HISTORY OF BOSTON. 

Parliament by military execution, be invited, it being utterly against the 
inclination of the town that even one person who had rendered himself 
inimical to the rights of America should be admitted to the hall upon 
such an occasion. 1 

The famous non-importation agreement of 1770 struck into society; for 
those were days when politics and society were so closely identified that 
there were two camps, more strictly defined than even by religious differ- 
ences afterward. The matrons entered into an agreement to drink no tea 
until the revenue acts were repealed. " We do strictly engage," they say, 
" that we will totally abstain from the use of that article (sickness excepted) 
not only in our respective families, but that we will absolutely refuse it if it 
should be offered to us on any occasion whatsoever." A fortnight afterward, 
that no loophole might be left, the daughters of the Patriots signed a like 
agreement; and the Patriot papers now began to publish, and to keep stand- 
ing in their columns, the names of those shopkeepers who refused to enter 
the non-importation league, and they were practically excommunicated by 
the town. " It must evidently appear that they have preferred their own little 
private advantage to the welfare of America ; ... so those who afford them 
their countenance, or give them their custom, must expect to be considered 
in the same disagreeable light." 2 One frequently comes upon advertise- 
ments of dealers who offer certain goods with the assurance that these were 
all obtained before the non-importation agreement, and so may safely be 
sold and bought. Isaac Viburt publishes an indignant card because hand- 
bills have been posted charging his wife with buying tea of William Jackson. 
It was probably done, he declares, " to raise the resentment of the inhabi- 
tants, and to injure me in my business, which wholly depends on the em- 
ploy of the merchants and traders of the town, in repairing of vessels, etc. 
N.B. The occasion of Mrs. Viburt's going to Mr. Jackson's shop was, a 
number of shoes from Lynn was left there for her, and she called on Satur- 
day last and took them away." 3 Such advertisements illustrate well the 
village-like character of the town, and the extreme sensitiveness of the 
people. 

The sewing-circle was a miniature camp, and American ideas and indus- 
try were extolled : 

" Last Wednesday forty-five Daughters of Liberty met in the morning at the house 
of the Rev. Mr. Moorhead in this town ; and in the afternoon they exceeded fifty. 
By the evening of said day they spun two hundred and thirty-two skeins of yarn, 
some very fine. Their labor and materials were all generously given to the worthy 
pastor. Nothing appeared in their whole conduct but love, festivity, and application. 
. . . Their entertainment was wholly American production except a little wine. 
etc. . . . The whole was concluded with many agreeable tunes and Liberty songs, 
with great judgment ; fine voices performed and animated on this occasion in all the 
several parts by a number of the Sons of Liberty." 4 

1 Boston Town Records, May 14, 1773. 8 Boston Gazette, Feb. 19, 1770. 

* Boston Gazettf, Jan. I, 1770. * Ibid., May 21, 1770. 



LIFE IN BOSTON IN THE REVOLUTIONARY PERIOD. 

There was no mincing of matters. If a man went counter to the popular 
sentiment and passion he was denounced by name, and made to feel the 
scorn of his neighbors. The rebuke was open and public: 

" Upon a motion made and seconded, voted unanimously, that this town have 
the greatest abhorrence of one of its inhabitants. viz., Samuel Waterhouse, 
who, in defiance of the united sentiment, not only of his fellow-citizens but all his 
fellow-countrymen, expressed repeatedly in the votes and records of the Honorable 
House of Representatives of this Province, has continued to accommodate troops 
at this time so justly obnoxious to a free people and abhorrent to a free constitu- 
tion, and thereby basely prostituted a once respectable mansion-house to the use of 
a main guard." * 

There is something half petty, half sublime, in the solemn way in which 
the town, in measured sentence, proceeds to write down for posterity the 
names of those who have shown themselves unworthy townsmen. At a 
town-meeting held March 19, 1770, this vote was unanimously passed: 

" The merchants, not only of this metropolis but through the continent, having 
nobly preferred the public good to their own private emolument, and with a view to 
obtain a redress of the grievance so loudly and justly complained of, having almost 
unanimously engaged to suspend their importations from Great Britain, a measure 
approved by all orders as legal, peaceable, and most likely of all others to effect the 
salutary design in view, and which will be regarded by posterity with veneration, for 
the disinterested and truly public spirit appearing in it, the town cannot but express 
their astonishment and indignation that any of its citizens should be so lost to the 
feelings of patriotism and the common interest, and so thoroughly and infamously self- 
ish as to obstruct this very measure by continuing their importation ; be it therefore 
solemnly voted, that the names of these persons few, indeed, to the honor of the 
town [and then follow a dozen names, one only of which, that of John Mein, the 
bookseller, has any other notoriety] be entered on the records of this town, that 
posterity may know who those persons were that preferred their little private ad- 
vantage to the common interest of all the Colonies in a point of the greatest 
importance ; who not only deserted, but opposed their country in a struggle for the 
rights of the Constitution that must ever do it honor ; and who, with a design to en- 
rich themselves, basely took advantage of the generous self-denial of their fellow- 
citizens for the common good." 

The intimation in the last clause is of a not unnatural indignation felt and 
expressed by those traders who signed the agreement, and saw business fall- 
ing into the hands of less zealous merchants. 

Meanwhile, though foreign trade was paralyzed and the community was 
restless and often disorderly, the very excitement of life was doubtless a 
stimulus to activity in many directions John Hancock gave the town a 
fire-engine, and the town, accepting it with pleasure, directed with an honest 
simplicity that the engine " be placed, under proper cover, at or near Han- 
cock's Wharf; and in case of fires the estate of the donor shall have the 

1 Boston Twit AVivri/f, March 6, 1770. 



THE MEMORIAL HISTORY OF BOSTON. 







BOSTON MERCHANTS OK THE REVOLUTIONARY PERIOD. 

preference of its service." 1 A number of meetings were held to take 
measures for lighting the town, and the result was a private subscription 
and the purchase of between three and four hundred lamps. 2 Two respon- 



1 Boston Town Records, May 22, 1772. [Sev- 
eral papers relating to the engines and engine- 
men of this time are among the old papers in 
the Charity Building. En.] 

2 [Thomas Newell's diary notes: "March 2, 
1774. A number of lamps in town were lighted 
this evening for the first time." (Mass. Hist. Soc. 



Proc., October, 1877, p. 349.) He had already 
(January 8) recorded : " Began to make the tops 
of the glass lamps for this town." The lamps 
had come from England, and were on board one 
of the tea-ships which was wrecked in Decem- 
ber, 1773, on Cape Cod. Mass. Hist. Soc. Proc., 
1865, p. 327. -ED.] 



LIFE IN BOSTON IN TIIK K KVOLUTIONAKN I'KklOD. 153 




BOSTON MERCHANTS OK I MK RKVi tMTH >\ARV PERIOD. 



154 THE MEMORIAL HISTORY OF BOSTON. 

sible persons from each ward were appointed to decide, with the committee, 
upon the most fitting places. Gawen Brown, whose name is familiar upon 
many hall clocks which are still ticking regularly, set up a great clock on 
the Old South, which " goes with such regularity and exactness that for this 
fourteen weeks it has not lost by two minutes of time." 1 In February of 
the same year the newspaper takes notice of the finishing of an excellenf 
spinnet, 2 " which, for goodness of workmanship and harmony of sound, is 
esteemed by the best judges to be superior to any that has been imported 
from Europe." The protective high tariff of non-importation was evidently 
at work. 

The order of the town was naturally disturbed by the state of affairs ; and 
one article in the warrant for a town-meeting in March, 1770, was " to con- 
sider of some effectual methods to prevent unlicensed strangers, and other 
persons, from entertaining and supplying the youth and servants of the 
town with spirituous liquors ; for the breaking up of bad houses, and re- 
moval of any disorderly intruders to the places from whence they came ; 
and for the further discountenancing of vice and promoting a refor- 
mation of manners." A committee was appointed, but reported that 
the laws were sufficient, and only needed to be enforced. They ad- 
vised, however, the appointment of twelve tithing-men to see to such 
enforcement. 

The population which remained in Boston, when the town was fairly 
beleaguered, consisted of the garrison and its immediate camp-following; 
the Crown officers with their households ; a small society of Tories, rich 
and well-bred, many of whom had sought refuge in the town ; 3 a consider- 
able body of poor people, whose sympathies were chiefly with the Patriots ; 
and a few citizens who, belonging to the popular party, remained either to 
perform the duties of their offices as ministers or doctors, or to protect, 
as far as possible, their own property and that of their connections. It is 
probable that among these last would be found those whose interests 
were chiefly commercial, and who warily avoided committing themselves 
unreservedly to either side in the conflict. Our sources of information re- 
garding the common life of the town are derived from letters, journals, and 
the like, 4 from representatives of these several classes, excepting the very 

1 Boston Gazette, April 16, 1770. p. 281, too cautious to disclose much ; letters to 

2 [See an account of the spinnet of this time G. Greene, in Ibid., June, 1873; letter of Samuel 
in Harper's Magazine, Iviii. 860. ED.] . Paine, in N. E. Hist, and Gcneal. Keg., July, 1876 ; 

3 [Most of these are named in the Editorial British officer's journal, in Atlantic Monthly, 
Note on "The Loyalists," following this chap- April, 1877; Memoir and Letters of Captain 
ter. ED.] W. G. Evelyn, 1879, from which there are some 

4 [Such sources are the letters of John An- extracts in Mass. Hist. Soc. Prof., 1879, P- 2 &9- 
drews, in Mass. Hist. Soc. Proc., 1865, p. 405; After the action at Bunker Hill, thirty-one Pa- 
letters in American Historical Record, December, triots were thrown by General Gage into the jail 
1872; Newell's Diary, in 4 Mass. Hist. Col., i. ; in Boston. Among them was James Lovell, who 
letters in Essex Institute Collections, July, 1876; had delivered one of the Massacre orations. (See 
and Mr. W. P. Upham's paper, in Essex Insti- iarmg. Hundred BostonOrators,y. 33). The diaries 
tute Bulletin, March, i876 ; Andrew Eliot's let- of two of these captives have been preserved: 
ters, in Mass. Hist. Soc. Proc., September, 1878, that of Peter Edes was printed in Bangor in 



LIFE IN BOSTON IN THE REVOLUTIONARY PERIOD. 155 



humble ; and from the scanty chronicles preserved in the meagre Boston 
News-Letter, the only paper published in town during the siege, which was, 
of course, in the Tory interest. The life of which we catch glimpses was 
one of petty contrasts and of much common discomfort and misery. In the 
matter of shelter, the gentlemen and ladies of the Royal cause took posses- 
sion of houses which had been deserted by prominent citizens, or were 
welcomed by those who remained with satisfaction in their own houses. 
Hancock's house 1 was occupied by. General Clinton ; Burgoyne was in the 
Bowdoin mansion ; 2 and Lord Percy in the Gardiner Greene house ; 8 Gage 
and his successor, Howe, 4 took possession, in turn, of the Province House. 
The officers 5 found lodgings in the aristocratic boarding-houses, which long 
after this period were the resort of persons who wished a more dignified and 
comfortable resting-place than the taverns afforded. The troops were dis- 
posed in barracks in different parts of the town ; 6 and the general aspect of 
the place was altered by the exigencies of the situation. A number of build- 
ings were taken down near the old Hay-Market, to permit unobstructed pas- 
sage across the southern part of the peninsula, where the strongest works 



1837 ; that of John Leach is in the N. E. Hist, 
and Cental. Reg., July, 1865. The manuscripts 
of both are owned by Mr. H. H. Edes. His let- 
ter relating to the two journals is printed in the 
Mass. Hist. Soc. Proc., December, 1871, p. 176. 
See the Evacuation Memorial, p. 1 57. ED.] 

' [There is in the collection of Mellen Cham- 
berlain, Librarian of the Public Library, a paper 
signed by William Bant, "attorney to Mr. Han- 
cock," dated Boston, Feb. 26, 1777, which shows 
the damage done to Hancock's estate by the 
British troops during their occupancy, "so far 
as I have been able to collect it," amounting to 
4,732 2s.&)fd-> of which, 345 lew. d^d. was 
damage to the mansion-house and its fences, 
"since April 19, 1776, taken to Dec' 1776," in- 
cluding wines, furniture, "6 muskets given in to 
(leu 1 Gage by his arbitrary order, @ So / ," "lin- 
ing of the chariot torn out and carried away, 9," 
"rent of the House one year, 133. &r. 8</." 
Mention is also made of a " house back of the 
Mansion House, pull'd down and destroyed, 
300 ; " also " a house in Ann Street pull'd down 
and destroyed, 500." ED.] 

- [Dr. Ellis's paper on " Burgoyne in Boston," 
in Man. Hist. Soc. Proc., March, 1876, p. 233, 
^ivrs .1 synopsis of so much of Fonblanque's 
Life of Burgoyne as relates to his stay here. 
-ED.] 

8 [Percy at one time occupied a fine mansion, 
with garden, which stood on the northerly corner 
of Winter and Tremont streets, and which be- 
longed to Mr. John Williams, and had K-i n the 
town residence of Governor Bernard. After the 
war it was the home of Samuel Breck (whose 
Reminiscences we have had, as edited by Mr. 
Scuddcr), who sold tlir estate to John Andrews, 



whose letters, however, at the time now under 
observation, were written from a house in School 
Street, where he then lived. Percy is sometimes 
said at different times to have occupied also the 
Hancock House, Mrs. Sheaffe's at the corner of 
Columbia and Essex streets, and perhaps others; 
but Mr. C. W. Tuttle (Daily Advertiser, May I, 
1880) says he has seen no evidence, originating in 
that period, of his having lived in any house but 
that of Mr. Williams. ED.) 

4 [The quarters of General Howe were, be- 
fore Gage left, in a house at the corner of Oliver 
and Milk streets. Drake's Landmarks, 1872, p. 
271. ED.] 

6 (Brigadier Pigot, of the Forty-third, "im- 
proved a house just above Liberty Tree ; " but 
after the fight at Charlestown, his command of 
the troops on Bunker Hill required his resi- 
dence on that side of the river, ff. E- /fist, anil 
Cental. Kfg., July, 1876. Adjutant Waller's 
Orderly-Book has the following: 

"i6Aug., 1775. Whereas some evil-minded 
person did, on monday last, in the middle of the 
day, cut off the tail of a little black cow belong- 
ing to B. Gen 1 Pigot, whoever will give infor- 
mation against the person guilty of so much 
cruelty shall receive a guinea reward." Et>.| 

[Drake, Landmarks, p. 313, says that a bat- 
talion of troops was quartered in Sheriff Green- 
leaf's gardens, at the corner of Tremont and V 
streets. John Adams's house, in Queen Street 
(Court Street), n-d by one of the doc- 

tors of a regiment." It was found, after the 
ution, "very dirty, but no other damage 
done to it ; but the few things which were left 
in it, all gone." Familiar Letters, pp. 149, I$4- 
ED.] 



156 THE MEMORIAL HISTORY OF BOSTON. 

were built for defence against possible attack. 1 The Old South was used 
as a riding-school for the light dragoons, not without a contemptuous ref- 
erence to the prominence of the building as a gathering-place for the sedi- 
tious inhabitants, and other meeting-houses were used for barracks. The 
Old North Meeting-house was pulled down for fuel, and over a hundred 
houses were destroyed for the same purpose ; chiefly, probably, the old, 
small, and decaying wooden buildings. 2 There was, of course, no sentiment 
which would preserve the house of Governor Winthrop for a later destruc- 
tion by indifferent citizens. The order for destruction was not given until 
necessity compelled it. Supplies of fuel had been ordered but did not 
arrive, and the winter set in with uncommon severity. 

The customary avenues by which fuel, food, clothing, and other neces- 
sities entered the town had been closed, with the exception of the water-way 
into the harbor, and privateersmen were hovering about the coast harassing 
the transports that entered there. The town, before the siege, had taken 
care of itself by the ordinary dealings with the country, and by its com- 
merce ; but now it was the work of a military organization to supply the 
most common necessities of a large and helpless population. Suddenly to 
feed a town and garrison numbering together twenty thousand souls, and to 
be dependent chiefly upon slow-sailing vessels, coming from a distance in 
the inclemency of weather, was a task beyond the capacity of any common 
quartermaster's department ; and rich and poor found themselves in a sad 
quandary. The testimony on this point is varied and explicit, for men be- 
come very talkative about their dinner when they have either had none or 
fear there is none to come ; and the journals and letters of the siege are 
largely occupied with this topic. 3 John Andrews, one of the merchants 
who remained behind to have an eye on family property, and whose shrewd- 
ness and ready wit plainly stood him in good stead with both parties, makes 
a survey of the situation near the end of the siege : 

" I am well in health, thank God ! and have been so the whole of the time, but 
have lived at the rate of six or seven hundred sterling a year ; for I was determined 
to eat fresh provisions while it was to be got, let it cost what it would ; that since 

1 [These works are best shown in Page's in Frank Moore's Diary of the American Revolu- 

map, given in another chapter. This southern lion, p. 97 ; also as a wood-cut, in Lossing's Field- 

approach to the town is shown pictorially in the Book of the Revolution, i. 512. ED.] 
annexed heliotypes of two views of Boston, dat- 2 [The immediate occasion is said to have 

ing from this time ; the upper is one of Des been to supply transports with fuel which were 

Barres's views, and the Neck lines are shown at about to sail for England with sick. Moore's 

the point where a flag flies. Something of the Diary of the Revolution, i. 1X2. ED.] 
ruggedness of Beacon Hill is indicated in the * [" 29 May. Any women, as may be wanted 

mount beyond the town. In the lower view, as nurses at the General Hospital, or to do any 

which gives Shirley Hall in the middle distance other business for the service of the Garrison, 

on the left, Beacon Hill seems to assume an ap- and shall refuse .to do it, will immediately be 

pearance which it is hard to accept. The view is struck off the provision list." Waller's Orderly- 

much the same as the upper one, but from a point Book, 1775. In August, 1775, John Leach, then 

farther back from the shore. It follows a copy confined in Boston jail, enters in his diary : "This 

of a large print now in the Boston Athenasum. afternoon my wife came to ask my advice about 

What seems to be the same has been not very signing for buying meat, as none were to have it 

accurately engraved in Lossing's Washington, and but friends of Government." ED.] 



LIFE IN BOSTON IN THE REVOLUTIONARY PERIOD. 157 

October I have scarce eat three meals of salt meat, but supplied my family with fresh 
at the rate of one shilling to one shilling sixpence sterling the pound. What wood 
was to be got was obliged to give at the rate of twenty dollars a cord ; and coals, 
though Government had a plenty, I could not procure (not being an addresser or 
associator' ), though I offered so high as fifty dollars for a chaldron, and that at a 
season when Nabby and John, the only help I had, were under inoculation for the 
small-pox ; that, if you'll believe me, Bill, I was necessitated to burn horse-dung. 
Many were the instances of the inhabitants being confined to the provost for purchas- 
ing fuel of the soldiers, when no other means offered, to keep them from perishing 
with cold. Yet such was the inhumanity of our masters, that they were even denied 
the privilege of buying the surplusage of the soldiers' rations. Though you may 
think we had plenty of cheese and porter, yet we were obliged to give from fifteen 
pence to two shillings a pound for all we ate of the former ; and a loaf of bread of the 
size we formerly gave three pence for, thought ourselves well off to get for a shilling. 
Butter at two shillings. Milk for months without tasting any. Potatoes, from nine 
shillings to ten shillings and sixpence a bushel ; and everything else in the same 
strain." * 

The besieging soldiers had a joke that the town bull, aged twenty, was 
killed and cut up for the use of the officers ; and in a letter from one of these 
to his father in England, it is said : " Why should I complain of hard fate? 
General Gage and all his family have for this month past lived upon salt pro- 
vision. Last Saturday, General Putnam, in the true style of military com- 
plaisance which abolishes all personal resentment and smooths the horrors 
of war when discipline will permit, sent a present to General Gage's lady of 
a fine quarter of veal, which was very acceptable, and received the return of 
a very polite card of thanks." At one time during the siege only six head 
of cattle were in the hands of Butcher-Master-General Hewes, as entire 
stock for troops or inhabitants, and the rejected portions of the slaughtered 
animals found purchasers among those who were both rich and dainty. One 
of the accounts, dated the middle of December, says: "The distress of 
the troops and inhabitants in Boston is great beyond all possible descrip- 
tion. Neither vegetables, flour, nor pulse for the inhabitants, and the king's 
stores so very short none can be spared from them ; no fuel, and the winter 
set in remarkably severe. The troops and inhabitants absolutely and liter- 
ally starving for want of provisions and fire. Even salt provision is fifteen 
pence sterling per pound." 3 John Andrews, writing at one time when he 
was a little less cheerful than usual, did not boast of his fare: "Was it not 
for a trifle of salt provisions that we have, 'twould be impossible for us to 
live. Pork and beans one day, and beans and pork another, and fish when 
we can catch it." He gives, frankly enough, his reason for braving all these 
discomforts : " Am necessitated to submit to uch living, or risk the little 

1 An " addresser " was one of those, prouni- unteers who had offered their services to the 

ably loyalists, who joined in congratulatory commander -in -chief, and were enrolled under 

addresses to Gage and Howe on differ < that name. 

sions. An "associator " w.i-. one of the military //is/. Sff. fro,., July, 1865. 

company of Loyal American Associators, vol- * Frothingham, Siege of Boston, p. 280. 



158 THE MEMORIAL HISTORY OF BOSTON. 

all I have in the world, which consists in my stock of goods and furniture, 
to the amount of between two and three thousand sterling, as it 's said 
without scruple that those who leave the town forfeit all the effects they 
leave behind. Whether they hold it up as only a means to detain people or 
not, I can't say; but, in regard to slaves, their actions have been consistent 
with the doctrines, however absurd. It has so far availed as to influence 
many to stay who would otherways have gone." 

The higher life of Boston, which had made the town the spokesman for 
liberty, was perpetuated now outside of its limits, in Cambridge camp, and 
in the councils of the embryo nation ; but there was still a light left burn- 
ing within the besieged town, where were also the memorials of its past 
vitality. The very endurance of the poor tradesmen who remained, num- 
bering among them, doubtless, some of those who at an earlier stage of 
the struggle had refused to build barracks for the English troops, and thus 
had offered their little sacrifice of wages, the privations of life which stanch 
Patriots bore, these were witnesses to the indestructible spirit of the town ; 
and it may be said that the town, whether within or without the lines, was at 
any time ready for the doom of destruction if that sacrifice was required. 
The monuments of its cherished ideas bore also a dumb testimony to the 
conflict which was going on. The houses of the chief citizens, occupied by 
prominent officers, were for the most part respected by the occupants ; but 
that of Sam Adams, the arch-rebel, was mutilated and disfigured past his 
slender means of restoration. The public buildings were devoted to the 
uses of the soldiers. The Old South, as we have seen, was turned into a 
riding-school, the pulpit, pews, and seats being hacked and carried off. A 
beautiful carved pew, with silk furniture, belonging to Deacon Hubbard, 
was taken away and used for a hog-sty, according to Timothy Newell, upon 
the solicitation of General Burgoyne; and it is difficult not to see in some 
of the acts of officers and soldiers a spiteful temper. " Dirt and gravel were 
spread over the floors ; the south door was closed ; a bar was fixed, over 
which the cavalry leaped their horses at full speed ; the east galleries were 
allotted to spectators ; the first gallery was fitted up as a refreshment room. 
A stove was put up in the winter, and here were burned for kindling many 
of the books and manuscripts of Prince's fine library." 1 Timothy Newell's 
diary contains an amusing account of the shifts to which the worthy deacon 
resorted to evade the requisition made upon him for the use of Brattle 
Street Church, then recently built, and the pride of the town. He gives a 
sigh of relief as he records the fact that the necessity of taking down the 
pillars, and thus endangering the safety of the building, was all that saved 
the church from being used as a riding-school. It was used as a barrack. 
The West Church was used for barracks, and its steeple pulled down for 
firewood. 2 The North Church, built of wood, was pulled down for the same 
reason. The Federal Street Meeting-house was filled with hay. The 
Hollis Street Church was used for barracks. The Liberty Tree was cut 

1 Frothingham, Siege of Boston, p. 328. 2 [Shown in the frontispiece of this volume. En.] 



LIFE IN BOSTON IN THE REVOLUTIONARY PERIOD. 



159 



down amidst the jibes and taunts of the soldiers and Tories, who had not 
forgotten its almost personal symbolism. The most distinguished citizen 
who remained was the Rev. Andrew Kliot, who shared the ministerial work 
chiefly with Drs. Mather and Byles. 1 He was detained much against his 
will, but spent his time in service of the poor and sick. The Thursday- 
Lecture gave way near the end of the siege ; and Dr. Eliot notes in his 
diary, - 

" November 30 [1775]. Preached T. L. Cactus vere pama. The attendance of 
this lecture being exceedingly small, and our work greatly increased in other respects, 
Dr. Mather and I, who, since the departure of our other Brethren, had preached it 




THE LIBERTY TREE.* 

alternately, thought proper to lay it down for the present. I preached the last sermon 
from those words in Rev. 2, ' Remember how thou hast received.' etc. An affecting 
occasion of laying down a lecture which had subsisted more than 140 years. The 
small congregation was much moved at the conclusion." 



1 [See Mr. Goddard's chapter in the present 
volume. ED.| 

' 2 [This cut follows another given in Snow's 
Boston, p. 266. The tree stood at the southeast 
corner of Washington and Essex streets ; and a 
representation of it, carved in wood, now .nlonis 
a building erected on its site by the late David 
Sears. The tree was felled by a party led by- 
Job Williams, and it made fourteen cord- ot 
wood. A British soldier w.i- killed .11 tin- time, 
while trying to remove one of the lin: : 
liloquy in verse, published at the time in the 
Mjss<it-k*utts Gazfttf, Jan. 2, 1776, gives the i 



view of the case. It is reprinted in Muss. Hist. 
Sac. Proc., March, 1876, p. 270. A pole was fast- 
ened in the tree ; and the remnants of the flag 
used in 1775 are said to be owned by H. C. Fer- 
nald, and have been exhibited in the Old South 
iHection. On the stump which remained 
a liberty-pole was erected after the war, and this 
was replaced by another, July 2, 1826. In 1833 
I.il>crty-Tree Tavern stood upon the spot. Tu- 

'/>, p. 221; Drake, Landmark!, p. 307; 

.'.i> Memorial, p. 160; Sargent, Dealings 
with tke Dead, \os. 41 and 42. ED.] 



i6o 



THE MEMORIAL HISTORY OK BOSTON. 




The public schools were dispersed ; Master Lovell, of the Latin school, 
casting in his lot with the Crown, while his son James, an usher in the same 

school, was thrown into prison under 
suspicion of being a spy, and carried 
off in chains by the army with which 
his father decamped as a Loyalist. One 
solitary school was kept gratuitously 
by Mr. Elias Dupee. The only other educational offer seems to have been 
that of Daniel McAlpine, who had been for some years established " to in- 
struct all lovers of the noble science of defence, commonly called the 
back-sword, in that art." 

It was dull work for the officers and ladies and gentlemen to stay cooped 
up in the two little peninsulas through the dismal winter, their eyes and 
ears assailed by the for- 
lorn condition of the in- 
habitants. But no doubt 
there was some bravery 
of appearances; and the 
society which was light- 
ed and warmed by scarlet coats was driven in upon itself pretty rigorously. 1 
For half a century and more after this time there lived in Boston two 
maiden ladies, daughters of Dr. Mather Byles, who stoutly maintained to the 
last their loyalty to the Crown of England. They had been girls during the 
siege, and the war passed only to find them unflinching British subjects in 
will. They entertained visitors, who still remember them, with talks of the 
gallantry shown them by General Howe and Lord Percy during the winter of 
'775-76 ; how they promenaded with these great men on the Common ; and 
how Lord Percy serenaded them with the regimental band. 2 In the train of 




1 [Among other divertisements to relieve the 
weary hours of the siege, was their burlesquing 
some intercepted letters of John Adams to 
James Warren : " A paraphrase upon the second 
epistle of John the Roundhead to James the Pro- 
locutor of the Rump Parliament." See Works of 
John Adams, i. 180 ; Familiar Letters, pp. 85, 
101, 1 1 6. ED.] 

2 [An account of the tribulations of Dr. 
Byles, written by his daughter, Catharine Byles 
(for which we are indebted to Mr. George Hed- 
rick, of Lowell), runs thus : 

"Oct. 13, 1778. 

" Upon the first opening of the town, the people, among 
whom my father had officiated for forty-three years, had 
an irregular meeting, and desired his attendance ; when a 
charge of his attachment to government was read, of 
which, as he never could obtain a copy, I am unable to 
give an exact account Among others were included 
his friendly disposition to the British \voops, varticularly his 
entertaining them at his house, indulging them with his 
telescope, &c.; his prayers for the King, and for the preser- 
vation of the town during the siege. Some time after this 
a few lines were sent him, informing that six weeks be- 



fore (without so much as the advice of any Council) he 
had been dismissed from his pastoral charge Thus they 
left him without any support, or so much as paying his 
arrears, so that from the igth of April, 1775, to this day, he 
has received no assistance from them. They then repaired 
the church, which had been occupied as a barrack for the 
British army, and made choice of a new pastor. In May, 
1777, at a town-meeting, he was mentioned as a person in- 
imical to America ; a warrant was served and bonds given 
for his appearance the 2d of June, for a trial, when, as they 
expressed it, ' after a candid and impartial examination,' 
he was brought in Guilty, confined to his house and land, 
and a guard placed to prevent the visits of his friends; and 
(except tile removal of the guard, which was in about two 
months) in this confinement has he remained ever since; 
and had it not been for the generous assistance of his be- 
nevolent friends, he must inevitably have suffered. 

" Mi^s \obscjired} presents her most respectful compli- 
ments to Mrs. \obsatred}, and, knowing her benevolence 
of heart, begs leave to commit the foregoing pages to her 
care, wishing that the particulars mentioned in this little 
account may thro' Mrs. \obscurtd] hands be conveyed to 
her humane connections." 

In Massachusetts Archives, " Royalist," i. p. 
124, is a warrant from the court, dated June 2, 
1777, to deliver Mather Byles to the Board of 



LIFE IN BOSTON IN THE REVOLUTIONARY PERIOD. l6l 

these great acts of gallantry must have followed similar displays; and we 
can easily catch sight of British officers parading on the Mall with Tory 
ladies. A new regiment arrived from Kngland in December, and the News- 
Letter chirped at mention of the excellent band it brought, with promise of 
a concert for the diversion of the town. \Vhen the new year set in, a series 
of subscription balls was announced, to be held at Concert Hall once a fort- 
night. 1 The last ball at the Province House was the Queen's ball, given, 
oddly enough, on the twenty-second of February. 2 The festival of St. 
John the Evangelist was duly celebrated by a dinner at Freemasons' Hall, 
a march to Brattle Street, and an appropriate sermon ; but there is no 
mention of any public festivity at Christmas. 

Faneuil Hall, by a satirical retribution, was turned into a theatre, and 
the officers and other amateurs declaimed tragedy where the townsmen had 
held meetings of equal dramatic force and more reality of meaning. A 
number of officers and ladies formed a Society for Promoting Theatrical 
Amusements, a title which seems to give a certain solemnity to the proceed- 
ings ; and they did this, the announcement frankly stated, for their own 
amusement and the benevolent purpose of contributing to the relief of dis- 
tressed soldiers, their widows and children. The performances began at six 
o'clock. The entrance fee was not immoderate, one dollar for the pit, 
and a quarter of a dollar for the gallery. The surplus over the expenses 
was to be appropriated to the relief of poor soldiers. The play must have 
been very popular, for the managers were obliged to announce, after a few 
evenings, 

" The managers will have the house strictly surveyed, and give out tickets for the 
number it will contain. The most positive orders are given out not to take money at 
the door ; and it is hoped gentlemen of the army will not use their influence over the 
sergeants who are door-keepers to induce them to disobey that order, as it is meant 
entirely to promote the ease and convenience of the public by not crowding the 
theatre." 

The tragedy of Zara seems to have been the favorite ; and the comedy 
of The Busybody, with the farces of The Citizen and The Apprentice, were 
also given. The most notable piece was the local farce of The Blockade 
of Boston, by General Burgoyne. 8 On the evening of January 8 it was to 

War for transportation "off the continent." were already engaged," it was said, for "the 

There are in the Massachusetts Historical So- most brilliant thing ever seen in America." 

ciety's Library two plans of the estate of Dr. ED.| 

Mather Byles, made in 1832, showing how one 3 [John Andrews records "an innovation 

corner of the mansion projected into the line never before known, a Drum or Rout, given 

of the present Tremont Street.' issau by the admiral last Saturday evening, which 

(now Common) Street. See Vol. II. p. xxxix, did not break up till 2 or 3 o'ck on Sunday morn- 

and Mr. Goddard's chapter in the present vol- ing, their chief amusement being playing cards." 

ume. ED.] .'/"" //"' -S*-- fro, July, 1865, p. 323. ED.] 
1 [The News- Letter o\ ' l-YK .--. 1-76, contained Burgovne was proud of his literary per- 

a notice of a masquerade to bo given at Concert formances, of which a full account is given in 

Hall, March II, and of "a number of different chapter i.x. of DC Fonbl.im;- /,;,/. Mil- 

masks to be sold by almost all the milliners and itary Episodes in Iht latter half of the Eighteenth 

mantua-makers in town. Fen capital cooks Century, derived from tht Life anJ Correspon- 

VOL. III. 21. 



l62 



THE MEMORIAL HISTORY OF BOSTON. 



be given for the first time. The comedy of The Busybody had been acted, 
and the curtain was about to be drawn for the farce, when the actors behind 
the scenes heard an exaggerated report of a raid made upon Charlestown 
by a small party of Americans. One of the actors, dressed for his part (that 
of a Yankee sergeant), came forward upon the stage, called silence, and 
informed the audience that the alarm guns had been fired, and that a battle 
was going on in Charlestown. The audience, taking this for the first scene in 
the new farce, applauded obstreperously, being determined to get all the fun 
there was to be had out of the piece, when the order was suddenly given in 
dead earnest for the officers to return to their posts. The audience at this 
was thrown into dire confusion, the officers jumping over the orchestra, 
breaking the fiddles on the way ; the actors rushing about to get rid of their 
paint and disguises ; the ladies alternately fainting and screaming; and the 
play brought to great grief and summary conclusion. Whether it was ever 
given again or not does not appear ; but the News-Letter, in reporting the 
incident, announced that " as soon as those parts in The Boston Blockade, 
which are vacant by some gentlemen being ordered to Charlestown, can be 
filled up, that farce will be performed, with the tragedy of Tamerlane" 1 

There was no demonstration of patriotism within the town. The News- 
Letter, a complete file of which during the siege is scarcely known, copies 
in its issue for July 13, from one of the outside papers, a notice by William 
Cooper the town clerk, calling upon the dispersed freemen of Boston to 
meet at Concord, in order to choose a representative to the General Court, 
and adds, mockingly : " Some have been wondering of late at the peace- 
ableness of this town. It is to be hoped that their surprise will now cease, 
when they find that Mr. Cooper and the rest of our town-meeting folks 
have adjourned to Concord." 2 



dence of the Right Honorable John Burgoyne ; 
but of his jeux d'esprits at this time only a few 
lines of a prologue and epilogue to Zara have 
been saved. His farce was probably never 
printed, and efforts to recover it have never, so 
far as I know, succeeded. After the siege, a 
literary revenge was taken by an anonymous 
writer in the farce of The Blockheads; or the 
Affrighted Officers, a not over nice production, 
which jeers at the situation of officers and ref- 
ugees when forced to evacuate the town. The 
characters are 

Captain Bashard Ad 1. 

Puff G 1. 

L d Dapper ] L d P y. 

Shallow \ Officers G t. 

Dupe J Who you please. 

. G y. 

. R s. 

. B e. 

. M y. 

. E n. 



Refugees and 

Friends to 
Government 



Meagre 

Surly 

Brigadier Paunch 

Bowny 

Simple 

Jemima, wife to Simple. 

Tabitha, her daughter. 

Dorsa, her maid. 

Soldiers, women, etc. 



It is not difficult to supply the hiatus to the 
names, and read Lord Percy, Gilbert (Burgoyne 
perhaps is " Dupe "), Gray, Ruggles, Brattle, 
Murray, and Edson. Lord Percy is represented 
as a libertine, and there is some attempt at 
characterizing the several Loyalists. Brattle 
had the reputation of being a good liver, and 
Ruggles of being a rough-spoken man ; but 
the hits in the piece were more telling to those 
closer to the characters in time. In the pro- 
logue are the lines 

" By Yankees frighted, too ! Oh, dire to say ! 
Why, Yankees sure at Red-coats faint away! 
Oh, yes! they thought so too, for lackaday, 
Their general turned the blockade to a play. 
Poor vain poltroons, with justice we Ml retort, 
And call them blockheads for their idle sport." 

[See Colonel Clapp's chapter on the " Drama 
in Boston," in Vol. IV. ED.) 

1 [See Dr. Male's chapter in this volume. 
En.] 

- [Of the ffean-Lttttr, see the account in Mr. 
Goddard's chapter in this volume ; and regarding 
Cooper, see a note by the editor in Mr. Porter's 
chapter, also in the present volume. ED.] 



LIFE IN BOSTON IN THE REVOLUTIONARY PERIOD. 163 

Before the town had been finally purged, however, some of the bolder 
kept up a communication with their friends outside, by means of signals 
from the church steeples. " About three weeks ago," a letter-writer of July 
25 says, " three fellows were taken out of one of the latter [steeples], who 
confess they had been so employed for seven days." The altercations 
between townsmen and soldiers had ceased ; the town was under strict 
military discipline ; and though the selectmen were not allowed to leave, 
it does not appear that there was any government except that administered 
by the General of the army. With his immediate command of fourteen 
thousand or so, inclusive of women and children attached to the soldiery, 
General Howe treated the place as a garrison, and gave great attention to 
the health of the troops ; but the records show that he had a somewhat tur- 
bulent and unruly set of men to manage. 1 The large number of deserted 
houses, the destruction of others for fuel, the defenceless condition of the 
families of Patriots who had left the town, all conspired to tempt plun- 
dering and depredation. In one case the wife of one of the privates, con- 
victed of receiving stolen goods, was sentenced " to receive one hundred 
lashes on her bare back with a cat-o'-nine-tails, at the cart's tail, in different 
portions of the most conspicuous parts of the town, and to be imprisoned 
three months." The small-pox broke out both in the army and among the 
inhabitants, and was still ravaging the town when it was taken possession 
of by Washington, after the evacuation. 

The evacuation itself was so suddenly determined on that for a few days 
the town was in a distracted condition, and the lawlessness which had been 
suppressed by the military arm broke out again almost unchecked. For 
ten days there was sleepless anxiety. The army was embarking and carry- 
ing away such stores as it could, destroying much that it must leave ; plun- 
der was going on on all sides, both with and without authority ; and as the 
day drew nearer for the departure of the troops the excesses increased, 2 in 
spite of the following order from General Howe : - 

" The commander-in-chief finding, notwithstanding former orders that have been 
given to forbid plundering, houses have been forced open and robbed, he is therefore - 
under a necessity of declaring to the troops that the first soldier who is caught plun- 
dering will be hanged on the spot." 

John Andrews, who was a very interested witness, gives a vivid account 
of his personal anxiety during the last hours of the British possession: 8 

" By the earnest persuasion of your uncle's friends, and with the advice of the 
selectmen, I moved into his house at the time the troops, etc.. were preparing for 
embarkation, under every difficulty you can conceive at such a time, as every day 
presented us with new scenes of the wantonness ami destruction made by the soldiers. 

1 [This is apparent from the orders, and from 2 (The British soldier* cut down several of 

the reiteration of them, with the constant threats the finest trees on the Mall, on the day of their 

of corporal punishment. See Waller's Orderly- evacuating the town. ED.) 
book. ED. 1 * | Mass. Hist Sac. froc., 1865. p. 409. E i >. I 



1 64 THE MEMORIAL HISTORY OF BOSTON. 

I had the care of six houses with their furniture, and as many stores filled with effects, 
for eleven months past ; and, at a time like this, I underwent more fatigue and per- 
plexity than I did through the whole siege ; for I was obliged to take my rounds all 
day, without any cessation, and scarce ever failed of finding depredations made upon 
some one or other of them, that I was finally necessitated to procure men, at the ex- 
travagant rate of two dollars a day, to sleep in the several houses and stores for a fort- 
night before the military plunderers went off; for as sure as they were left alone one 
night, so sure they were plundered. Poor Ben, in addition to his other misfortunes, 
suffered in this : the fellow who took charge of his house neglected to sleep there 
the third night, being affrighted ; the consequence was, a party of soldiers got in, went 
into his cellar, took liquors from thence, and had a revelling frolic in his parlor ; car- 
ried off and destroyed his furniture, etc., to the value of two hundred pounds sterling, 
which was not to be named with what fifty other houses suffered, or I may say a 
hundred. I was obliged to pay at the rate of a dollar an hour for hands to assist me 
in moving. Such was the demand for laborers that they were taken from me even 
at that, by the Tories, who bid over me, for the sake of carrying away other people's 
effects, wherever they could come at them, which so retarded my moving that I was 
obliged to leave my kitchen furniture in the house I left ; consequently it was broken 
open and rummaged, and, with all my crockery, were carried off. Wat has stripped 
your uncle's house of everything he could conveniently carry off, which, had I known 
that had been his intention, I would by no means have consented to go into it ; but as 
I had moved most of my heavy things while he was preparing to go, it was too late for 
me to get off when I discovered it. Your Uncle Jerry was almost frantic about it, 
and said he should write his brother, and acquaint him that I was knowing to it, and 
yet permitted him to do it ; little thinking that it was not in my power to prevent his 
carrying off everything if he was disposed to do it, as I only took charge of the house 
as his (Wat's) substitute. He has left all the looking-glasses and window-curtains, 
with some tables and most of the chairs; only two bedsteads and one bed, without 
any bedding or sheets, or even a rag of linen of any kind. Some of the china, and 
principal part of the pewter, is the sum of what he has left, save the library, which 
was packed up corded to ship ; but your Uncle Jerry and Mr. Austin went to him, 
and absolutely forbid it on his peril. He treated them in a very rough, cavalier way ; 
told them they had no right to interfere with his business, he should do as he 
pleased, and would not hear what they had to say. Upon the whole, I don't know 
but what it would have been as well if he had taken them, seeing matters are going 
to be carried with so high a hand." 

Through all this family business and the confusion of narrative one may 
get a glimpse of the distractions and bitterness of the Tory hegira. " Noth- 
ing can be more diverting," says an amateur dramatist, " than to see the 
town in its present situation. All is uproar and confusion ; carts, trucks, 
wheelbarrows, handbarrows, coaches, chaises, are driving as if the very devil 
was after them." l The return, piecemeal, of the clocks, chests of drawers, 
tables, and chairs, which then emigrated to the Provinces, continues to 
this day. 

It is interesting to observe, as one of the first signs of the return of Boston 
to its independent life, that the Thursday Lecture was revived ; and Dr. Eliot 

1 " The Blockheads," Act iii. Scene 3. 



LIFE IN BOSTON IN THE REVOLUTIONARY PERIOD. 165 

delivered the first as a thanksgiving discourse in the presence of His Excel 
lency, General Washington. Shortly after, a town-meeting was held in tin 
Old Brick Meeting-house, and officers for the year were chosen as usual. 
The town-meeting and the church were the spiritual Boston which asserted 
itself before commercial and trading Boston had revived. The town felt its 
insecurity. No one knew how soon the enemy might return with increased 
force and more strenuous measures, and it was only by degrees that the 
people returned and resumed their occupations. On April 19 the shops 
remained generally closed. " The town yet looks melancholy," writes 
Ezekiel Price in his diary, under that day; "but few of the inhabitants 
being removed back into it, occasioned by its not being sufficiently fortified 
and garrisoned against any further attempt of the enemy, to which it now 
lies much exposed." It is significant of the growing consciousness of the 
historic conflict, that he adds: "This day is the anniversary of the famous 
battle of Lexington." l 

The Revolutionary War did not again make Boston a theatre of action ; 
but the town was subjected to at least one panic. 2 It was not till the close 
of the period that the people saw anything of military pageant. Then they 
welcomed the entry of Rochambeau's forces after the battle of Yorktown, 
and the harbor was bright with the flags of the French fleet. The visit of 
these famous allies was the occasion of a general rejoicing. The war was 
over, and the people asked for no better opportunity for an outburst of 
hospitality. Sam Adams called a town-meeting, and with James Sullivan 
prepared an address from Boston to Baron Viome'nil, the chief officer; 
Rochambeau himself having embarked elsewhere. 3 But during the period 

1 Diary of Ezekiel Price in Miss. Hist. Sac. Paris to the committee of foreign correspondence: 
Proc., November, 1863. " February 3. An expedition, with ten thousand 

2 Mrs. John Adams, writing to her husband of the enemy's best troops, will take place in 
under date of Aug. 5, 1777, says: " If alarming about two months, from Ireland. Altho' from 
half-a-dozen places at the same time is an act of the profound secrecy observed I have not yet 
general-hip, Howe may boast of his late con- been able to discover its destination with cer- 
eUict. We have never, since the evacuation of tainty, yet I have sufficient reason to think that 
Boston, been under apprehensions of an invasion Boston is the object of it." ED.) 

equal to what we suffered last week. All Boston 8 (The artillery were the earliest to reach 
was in confusion, packing up and carting out of Boston, arriving on November 18. Rocham- 
town household furniture, military Mores, goods, beau, who had accompanied the army to Provi- 
etc. Not less than a thousand teams were em- dence, here transferred the command of it to the 
ployed on Friday and Saturday; and, to their Baron dc Viome'nil, and returned to the Chesa- 
shamc IK- it told, not a small trunk would they peake and embarked. The main body of the 
carry under eight dollars, and many of them, I army reached Boston on December 3, 4, and 5, 
am told, asked a hundred dollars a load; for being favored with fair weather. On the twenty- 
carting a hogshead of molasses eight miles, third Viome'nil went on board the " Triomphant," 
thirty dollars. () human nature! or, rather, O and on the twenty-fourth the whole squadron, ten 
inhuman nature ! what art thou ? The report of sail in all, mounting seven hundred and fifty- 
the fleet'- bring n, Friday night, eight guns and carrying four thousand men, put 
gave me the alarm, and, though pretty weak, I to sea. (.I/,;.,, of Amrr. Hist., July, 1881.) The 
set about packing up my thing-, and on Satur- address of the citizen >n to Viome'nil, 
dav removed .1 load." Familiar f.,i/,-rs of John adopted at a meeting held December 7, and his 
Ailams, ami his wife Abigail A Jams, during the reply, are reprinted in Mag. of Amer. Hist., July, 
Reiiolutioii, p. jS;. l8i8l, p. 32, from tli . Jan. 
[Three years later there was another period S. : n account of these proceed- 
of suspense. In 1780, Arthur Lee writes from ings in Drake's Landmarks of Boston, 433. Kn.| 



l66 THE MEMORIAL HISTORY OF BOSTON. 

from 1776 to 1783 there were occasional visits from French vessels, and 
the reports made by Frenchmen who received the hospitality of the town 
give a hint of the social life of the period. The Frenchmen themselves 
were objects of great curiosity. Mr. Breck says in his entertaining Recol- 
lections : 

" Before the Revolution the colonists had little or no communication with France, 
so that Frenchmen were known to them only through the prejudiced medium of 
England. Every vulgar story told by John Bull about Frenchmen living on salad 
and frogs was implicitly believed by Brother Jonathan, even by men of education 
and the first standing in society. When, therefore, the first French squadron arrived 
at Boston [in 1778], the whole town, most of whom had never seen a Frenchman, 
ran to the wharves to catch a peep at the gaunt, half-starved, soup-maigre crews. 




AUTOGRAPHS OF FRENCH OFFICERS. 

How much were my good townsmen astonished when they beheld plump, portly offi- 
cers and strong, vigorous sailors \ They could scarcely credit the thing, apparent as 
it was. Did these hearty-looking people belong to the lantern-jawed, spindle-shank 
race of mounseers ? In a little while they became convinced that they had been de- 
ceived as to their personal appearance ; but they knew, notwithstanding their good 
looks, that they were no better than frog-eaters, because they had been discovered hunt- 
ing them in the noted Frog-pond at the bottom of the Common. With this notion 
in his head, Mr. Nathaniel Tracy, who lived in a beautiful villa at Cambridge, 1 made 
a great feast for the admiral, Count D'Estaing, and his officers. Everything was fur- 
nished that could be had in the country to ornament and give variety to the entertain- 
ment. My father was one of the guests, and told me often after that two large tureens 
of soup were placed at the ends of the table. The admiral sat on the right of Tracy, 
and Monsieur de 1'Etombe on the left. L'Etombe was consul of France, resident at 
Boston. Tracy filled a plate with soup which went to the admiral, and the next was 
handed to the consul. As soon as L'Etombe put his spoon into his plate he fished 
up a large frog, just as green and perfect as if he had hopped from the pond into 

1 [The Craigie or Longfellow house. ED.] 



LIKE IN BOSTON IN THE REVOLUTIONARY PERIOD. 167 

the tureen. Not knowing at first what it was, he seized it by one of its hind legs, 
and, holding it up in view of the whole company, discovered that it was a full-grown 
frog. As soon as he had thoroughly inspected it, and made himself sure of the nut- 
ter, he exclaimed : ' Ah ! mon Dieu ! une grenouille ! ' then, turning to the gentleman 
next to him, gave him the frog. He received it and passed it round the table. Thus 
the poor (rapaud made the tour from hand to hand until it reached the admiral. 
The company, convulsed with laughter, examined the soup plates as the servants 
brought them, and in each was to be found a frog. The uproar was universal. 
Meantime Tracy kept his ladle going, wondering what his outlandish guests meant by 
such extravagant merriment. ' What 's the matter? ' asked he, and, raising his head, 
surveyed the frogs dangling by a leg in all directions. Why don't they eat them? ' 
he exclaimed. ' If they knew the confounded trouble I had to catch them, in order 
to treat them to a dish of their own country, they would find that, with me at least, it 
was no joking matter.' Thus was poor Tracy deceived by vulgar prejudice and 
common report. He meant to regale his distinguished guests with refined hospitality, 
and had caused all the swamps of Cambridge to be searched, in order to furnish them 
with a generous supply of what he believed to be, in France, a standing national 
dish." ' 

Mr. Brack's father was agent for the French, and is the " Mr. Brick" whose 
name occurs so often in that part of the Marquis de Chastellux's Travels in 
North America which relates to Boston. This traveller, who was an officer 
in the French army, reached Boston during the stay there of Baron de 
Viome'nil ; and his record, while it gives little description of the town, in- 
timates that the hospitality extended to the French was unremitting. He 
had scarcely arrived in town before he was hurried off to the Association 
ball, where he took notice of the general awkwardness of the Boston dan- 
cers. The ladies he thought well dressed, but with less elegance and refine- 
ment than those whom he had met at Philadelphia. His visit was filled 
with a series of calls and entertainments ; and among them he notes a 
club: 

" This assembly is held every Tuesday, in rotation, at the houses of the different 
members who compose it ; this was the day for Mr. Russell, an honest merchant, who 
gave us an excellent reception. The laws of the club are not straitening, the number 
of dishes for supper alone are limited, and there must be only two of meat, for sup- 
per is not the American repast. Vegetables, pies, and especially good wine, are not 
spared. The hour of assembling is after tea, when the company play at cards, con- 
verse, and read the public papers ; and sit down to table between nine and ten. The 
supper was as free as if there had been no strangers. Songs were given at table, and a 
Mr. Stewart sung some which were very gay, with a tolerable good voice." 

A little further on he says: 

" They made me play at whist, for the first time since my arrival in America. The 
cards were Knglish, that is, much handsomer and dearer than ours ; and we marked 
our points with louis-d'ors, or six-and-thirties. When the party was finished, the loss 

1 Recollections of Samuel Kreck, ~.cith passages from his note-book, pp. 24-27. 



l68 THE MEMORIAL HISTORY OF BOSTON. 

was not difficult to settle ; for the company was still faithful to that voluntary law 
established in society from the commencement of the troubles, which prohibited play- 
ing for money during the war. The inhabitants of Boston are fond of high play, and 
it is fortunate perhaps that the war happened when it did, to moderate this passion, 
which began to be attended with dangerous consequences." 

Political clubs had long been active in Boston, and social clubs were 
now springing up. From 1777 dates the Wednesday Evening Club, which 
has maintained ever since an unbroken succession. 1 

Another French traveller, the Abbe Robin, who preceded Chastellux, 
has left an account of Boston in 1781, which deals more with the external 
features of the town : 

" The inside of the town does not at all lessen the idea that is formed by an exterior 
prospect. A superb wharf has been carried out above two thousand feet into the sea, 
and is broad enough for stores and workshops through the whole of its extent ; it 
communicates at right angles with the principal street of the town, which is both large 
and spacious, and bends in a curve parallel to the harbor. This street is ornamented 
with elegant buildings, for the most part two or three stories high, and many other 
streets terminate in this, communicating with it on each side. The form and construc- 
tion of the houses would surprise an European eye ; they are built of brick and wood, 
not in the clumsy and melancholy taste of our ancient European towns, but regularly, 
and well provided with windows and doors. The wooden work, or frame, is light, 
covered on the outside with thin boards, well planed, and lapped over each other as we 
do tiles on our roofs in France. These buildings are generally painted with a pale white 
color, which renders the prospect much more pleasing than it would otherwise be ; the 
roofs are set off with balconies, doubtless for the more ready extinguishing of fire ; the 
whole is supported by a wall of about a foot high ; it is easy to see how great an ad- 
vantage these houses have over ours in point of neatness and salubrity. All the parts 
of these buildings are so well joined, and their weight is so equally divided and pro- 
portionate to their bulk, that they may be removed from place to place with little 
difficulty. I have seen one of two stories high removed above a quarter of a mile, if 
not more, from its original situation ; and the whole French army have seen the same 
thing done at Newport. What they tell us of the travelling habitations of the Scyth- 
ians is far less wonderful. Their household furniture is simple, but made of choice 
wood, after the English fashion, which renders its appearance less gay ; their floors are 
covered with handsome carpets, or printed cloths, but others sprinkle them with fine 
sand. 

" This city is supposed to contain about six thousand houses, and thirty thousand 
inhabitants ; 2 there are nineteen churches for the several sects here, all of tffem con- 
venient, and several finished with taste and elegance, especially those of the Presby- 
terians and the Church of England ; their form is generally a long square, ornamented 
with a pulpit, and furnished with pews of a similar fabrication throughout. The poor 

1 \TheCentenniai Celebration of the Wednes- dwelling-houses, stores, and public buildings. 
day Evening Club, Instituted June 2\, 1777, Boston, exclusive of distilleries, sunar-houses, rope-walks, 
1878, gives the story of its career. ED.] mechanics' shops, and stables. (See 2 Mass. Hist. 

2 The Abbe's arithmetic is as wild as some Coll., ix. 204-222.) The population in 1783 did 
of his generalizing. In 1789 there were, by actual not exceed eighteen thousand, and remained 
count, two thousand six hundred and thirty-nine stationary for several years. 



LIFE IN BOSTON IN THE REVOLUTIONARY PERIOD. 169 

as well as the rich hear the word of God in these plucvs, in a convenient and decent 
posture of body. Sunday is observed with the utmost strictness; all business, how 
important soever, is then totally at a stand, and the most innocent recreations and 
pleasures prohibited. 1 Boston, that populous town, where at other times there is such 
a hurry of business, is on this day a mere desert ; you may walk the streets without 
meeting a single person, or if by chance you meet one, you scarcely dare to stop and 
talk with him. A Frenchman that lodged with me took it into his head to play on the 
flute on Sundays for his amusement ; the people upon hearing it were greatly enraged, 
collected in crowds round the house, and would have carried matters to extremity in 
a short time with the musician, had not the landlord given him warning of his danger, 
and forced him to desist. 2 Upon this day of melancholy you cannot go into a house 
but you find the whole family employed in reading the Bible ; and indeed it is an 
affecting sight to see the father of a family surrounded by his household, hearing him 
explain the sublime truths of this sacred volume. Nobody fails here of going to the 
place of worship appropriated to his sect. In thesr pl.uvs there reigns a profound 
silence ; an order and respect is also observable which has not been seen for a long 
time in our Catholic churches. Their psalmody is grave and majestic ; and the har- 
mony of the poetry, in their national tongue, adds a grace to the music, and contributes 
greatly toward keeping up the attention of the worshippers. . . . 

" Piety is not the only motive that brings the American ladies in crowds to the 
various places of worship. Deprived of all shows and public diversions whatever, the 
church is the grand theatre where they attend to display their extravagance and 
finery. There they come dressed off in the finest silks, and overshadowed with a pro- 
fusion of the most superb plumes. The hair of the head is raised and supported upon 
cushions to an extravagant height, somewhat resembling the manner in which the 
French ladies wore their hair some years ago. Instead of powdering, they often wash 
the head, which answers the purpose well enough, as their hair is commonly of an 
agreeable light color ; but the more fashionable among them begin now to adopt the 
present European method of setting off the head to the best advantage. They are of 
a large size, well proportioned, their features generally regular, and their complexion 
fair, without ruddiness. They have less cheerfulness and ease of behavior than the 
ladies of France, but more of greatness and dignity. I have even imagined that I 
have seen something in them that answers to the idea of beauty we gain from 
those master-pieces of the artists of antiquity, which . are yet extant in our days. 

1 [Mr. Charles Deane points out to the * [It is pertinent to consider that perhaps no 
Editor some satirical lines on the " Boston Sab- small part of this aversion arose from the corn- 
bath," printed in the Newport News-Letter, May mingling, in the common mind, of Papist and 
19, 1761, of which a few are: Frenchman. The time had not far gone by 

when, under the stress of the French and In- 

" Six days, said He (and loud the same expressed), dian wa forei gner could sojourn in Boston 
Shall men still labour ; on the seventh rest : 

But here, alas! in this great, pious Town, without being a suspected French spy: and i: 

They annul his law, and thus prefer their own. a Frenchman,.! Papist. There were those still 

living who could remember when Governor 

Five days and half shall men, and women too, Belcher issued the warrant, Mann 17,1731, now 

Attend their business and their mirth pursue. ,T, - ,, , , .- . 

, , , ., , . preserved in the Charity Building, directing the 
One day and half ns requisite to rest 

From toilsome labour and a luicious feast." shcrlff of Suffolk to search for Papists who joined 

with their priest speedily designed to celebrate 

The beginning of Sunday observance on Sat- mass ; and, if need be, to break o\xn any dwell- 

urday at sunset has obtained in New England ing-hnue, <!' Accompanying this warrant is a 

country towns down to a recent day, if indeed list nt -m li Papi-ts in Boston, largely men ser- 

this custom is yet wholly disused. ED.] vants, etc. l-'.u.] 
VOL. III. 22. 



1 70 THE MEMORIAL HISTORY OF BOSTON. 

The stature of the men is tall, and their carriage erect, but their make is rather slim, 
and their color inclining to pale ; they are not so curious in their dress as the women, 
but everything upon them is neat and proper. At twenty-five years of age the 
women begin to lose the bloom and freshness of youth ; and at thirty-five or forty, 
their beauty is gone. The decay of the men is equally premature ; and I am inclined 
to think that life itself is here proportionably short. I visited all the burying-grounds 
in Boston, where it is usual to inscribe upon the stone over each grave the name and 
age of the deceased, and found that few who had arrived to a state of manhood ever 
advanced beyond their fiftieth year ; fewer still to seventy ; and beyond that scarcely 
any." 

The picture of Boston given by the French travellers of this time, as 
indeed most of the representations of America then from the same sources, 
have an air of insincerity about them, as if written by men preoccupied with 
notions as to the virginal character of American nature and society. The 
people of Boston themselves were, during the progress of the war and im- 
mediately afterward, in a restless, semi-violent condition, demoralized by the 
sudden changes of fortune which befell merchants, and by the inequalities 
of life resultant upon war and disturbed relations. Sam Adams, always a 
democrat in principle and a doctrinaire in poverty, was indignant at the 
display of wealth made by Hancock and others. He frowned upon the in- 
creasing extravagance and levity of the town ; ' and he resorted to his 
favorite method of holding public meetings in rebuke of the temper, but 
with little avail. Minot the historian gives, in a few words, the general 
character of the change at work in society : 

" The usual consequences of war were conspicuous upon the habits of the people 
of Massachusetts. Those of the maritime towns relapsed into the voluptuousness 
which arises from the precarious wealth of naval adventurers. An emulation prevailed 
among men of fortune to exceed each other in the full display of their riches. This 
was imitated among the less opulent classes of citizens, and drew them off from those 
principles of diligence and economy which constitute the best support of all govern- 
ments, and particularly of the republican. Besides which, what was most to be la- 
mented, the discipline and manners of the army had vitiated the taste and relaxed 
the industry of the yeomen. In this disposition of the people to indulge the use of 
luxuries, and in the exhausted state of the country, the merchants saw a market for 
foreign manufactures. The political character of America, standing in a respectable 
view abroad, gave a confidence and credit to individuals heretofore unknown. This 
credit was improved, and goods were imported to a much greater amount than could 
be consumed and paid for." 2 

The most conspicuous person in this display of wealth and state was un- 
doubtedly John Hancock, a good-natured, vain man, with excellent quali- 
ties which his contemporaries perceived, but which have been obscured by 
his inordinate conceit and love of extreme distinction. John Adams ob- 
served with satisfaction Hancock's chagrin at finding himself subordinated 
to the Virginian, Washington, at the beginning of the contest, when Han- 

1 See Wells, Life of Samuel Adams, iii. 157-159. - Insurrections in Massachusetts, p. 12. 



LIFE IN BOSTON IN THK REVOLUTIONARY PERIOD. 171 

cock's reputation was quite as general as Washington's ; but he lets us also 
see the sincere good-nature and fundamental humility with which he bore 
his lesser rank. Among his own townsmen the rich Bostonian dearly loved 
to make himself of importance. " King I lancock " was the sobriquet which 
he earned, and he was a constant butt for Tory wits. 1 In the Pennsylvania 
Ledger for March -I i, 1778, " a gentleman from the eastward " says: 

" John Hancock of Boston appears in public with all the pageantry and state of an 
Oriental prince ; he rides in an elegant chariot, which was taken in a prize to the 
' Civil Usage ' pirate vessel, and by the owners presented to him. He is attended 
by four servants dressed in superb livery, mounted on fine horses richly caparisoned ; 
and escorted by fifty horsemen with drawn sabres, the one-half of whom precede 
and the other follow his carriage." a 

A good observer writes in 1 780 : 

" Boston affords nothing new but complaints upon complaints. I have been 
credibly informed that a person who used to live well has been obliged to take the 
feathers out of his bed and sell them to an upholsterer to get money to buy bread. 
Many doubtless are exceedingly distressed ; and yet, such is the infatuation of the day, 
that the rich, regardless of the necessities of the poor, are more luxurious and extrava- 
gant than formerly. 8 Boston exceeds even Tyre ; for not only are her merchants 
princes, but even her tavern-keepers are gentlemen. May it not be more tolerable for 
Tyre than for her ! There can be no surer sign of a decay of morals than the tavern- 
keepers growing rich fast." * 

We have but scanty personal recollections preserved of this period re- 
lating to the common life within the town, and must have recourse again to 
the good-natured Mr. Breck, who piques us by forgetting more important 
things than he remembered. His childhood was spent in Boston; and he 
remembered well the old beacon which stood on the hill, and was blown 
down in 1789: 

" Spokes were fixed in a large mast, on the top of which was placed a barrel of pitch 
or tar, always ready to be fired on the approach of the enemy. Around this pole I 
have fought many battles, as a South End boy, 5 against the boys of the North End of 
the town ; and bloody ones, too, with slings and stones very skilfully and earnestly used. 
In what a state of semi-barbarism did the rising generations of those days exist ! From 
time immemorial these hostilities were carried on by the juvenile part of the community. 
The school-masters whipt, parents scolded, nothing could check it. tt'as it a rem- 
nant of the pugilistic propensities of our British ancestors ; or was it an untamed feeling 
arising from our sequestered and colonial situation ? Whatever was the cause, every- 

1 [See further on Hancock in Mr. Porter's lions to a hall given by him .it Concert Hall, in 

and Mr. Lodge's chapters. Kh.l November, 1780, printed on (he Sack of playing- 

- Moore's Diary of the American Kft-n/utimi, card-, showing scarcity in other things than 

ii. II, 12. The "gentleman from the eastward " the necessaries of life. Kl> | 

appears to have been the ancc-tor of the similar * I l.i/.ird to Kelkiup. 5 Man. Hist. Coll., ii. 47. 

character who, during the late war, was alwavs lireck's house .>s nn Tremont Street, 

coming away from the front. at the corner of Winter Street; and this shows 

' [It is said that Hancock issued his invita- how meal appellations have changed. 



I 72 THE MEMORIAL HISTORY OF BOSTON. 

thing of the kind ceased with the termination of our Revolutionary War. ... I forget 
on what holiday it was that the Anticks, another exploded remnant of colonial man- 
ners, used to perambulate the town. They have ceased to do it now ; but I remem- 
ber them as late as 1782. They were a set of the lowest blackguards, who, disguised 
in filthy clothes and ofttimes with masked faces, went from house to house in large 
companies ; and, ban gre, mat gre, obtruding themselves everywhere, particularly into 
the rooms that were occupied by parties of ladies and gentlemen, would demean 
themselves with great insolence. I have seen them at my father's, when his assembled 
friends were at cards, take possession of a table, seat themselves on rich furniture, and 
proceed to handle the cards, to the great annoyance of the company. The only way 
to get rid of them was to give them money, and listen patiently to a foolish dialogue 
between two or more of them. One of them would cry out : 

" ' Ladies and gentlemen sitting by the fire, 

Put your hands in your pockets and give us our desire.' 

When this was done, and they had received some money, a kind of acting took place. 
One fellow was knocked down and lay sprawling on the carpet, while another bellowed 
out : 

" ' See, there he lies ! 

But ere he dies, 

A doctor must be had.' 

He calls for a doctor, who soon appears, and enacts the part so well that the wounded 
man revives. In this way they would continue for half an hour ; and it happened not 
unfrequently that the house would be filled by another gang when these had departed. 
There was no refusing admittance. Custom had licensed these vagabonds to enter 
even by force any place they chose. What should we say to such intruders now? 
Our manners would not brook such usage a moment. Undoubtedly these plays were 
a remnant of the old mysteries of the fourteenth and fifteenth centuries. 1 

" Connected with this subject and period may be mentioned the inhuman and re- 
volting custom of punishing criminals in the open street. The large whipping-post, 
painted red, stood conspicuously and permanently in the most public street in town. 
It was placed in State Street, 2 directly under the windows of a great writing-school 
which I frequented, and from them the scholars were indulged in the spectacle of all 
kinds of punishment, suited to harden their hearts and brutalize their feelings. Here 

1 Since the publication of Breck's Recollcc- St. George and the Dragon fight, and the 

tions a correspondent has called the Editor's at- latter is killed. Father Christmas calls out : 
tention to the probable origin of this horse-play. ,. , s (here a doctor , be foundj 

In Hervey's Book of Christmas, a Cornwall mys- All ready near at hand, 

tery is given by Mr. Sandys as " still performed To cure a deep and deadly wound, 

in Cornwall;" at the date, that is, of 1786. And make the champion stand?" 

In this Mystery several characters, as the Turk- The doctor appears, performs his cure, the fight 

ish Knight, the King of Egypt, St. George, is renewed, and the dragon again killed, 
the Dragon, Father Christmas, and others, The scraps of this performance, as given by 

enter by turn. When Father Christmas enters, Mr. Breck, do seem to be a reminiscence of this 

he says : West-of-England Mystery j and it appears as if 

" Here come I, old Father Christmas! some of the townspeople from that section had 

Welcome, or welcome not ; brought with them a rude sport which died out 

I hope old Father Christmas j n the more act j st j rring | ife o f the town . 

Will never be forgot. . r , 

I come not here to laugh or jeer, l The whipping-post was later removed to 

But for a pocketful of money and a skinful of beer." Tremont Street, near the West Street gate. ED.] 



LIFE IN BOSTON IN THE REVOLUTIONARY PERIOD. 






women were taken from a huge cage in which they were dragged on wheels from 
prison, and tied to the post, with bare backs, on which thirty or forty lashes were IK- 
stowed, amid the screams of the culprits and the uproar of the mob. A little farther 
in the street was to be seen the pillory, with three or four fellows fastened by the head 
and hands, and standing for an hour in that helpless (xxsture, exposed to gross and 
cruel insult from the multitude, who pelted them incessantly with rotten eggs and 
every repulsive kind of garbage that could be collected. These things I have often 
witnessed ; but they have given way to better systems, better manners, and better 
feelings." ' 

We have had occasion more than once to speak of the town-meeting 
as an exponent of Boston ideas. A single passage from Breck's Recollec- 
tions will suffice as an illustration of the same institution when taken as an 
exponent of the manners of the town. When Lafayette was in Boston in 
I784, 2 he received a good many attentions from the Breck family. 

" Anxious to show him all that related to our institutions and manners, my father 
invited him one day to go to Faneuil Hall to hear the discussion of some municipal 
law then in agitation. ' You will see,' said he, ' the quiet proceedings of our towns- 
men, and learn by a personal examination how erroneous is the general opinion abroad 
that a large community cannot be governed by a pure democracy. Here we have in 
Boston,' continued he, ' about eighteen thousand inhabitants, and all our town business 



1 Ketollections of Samuel ffreck, pp. 33-37. 

a [Lafayette was not personally unknown in 
Boston ; he had Ijeen here more than once be- 
fore. It will be remembered that after the fail- 
ure of the Rhode Island campaign, in 1778, 
he had come to Boston to use his per- 
suasion with the commander of the French 
fleet not to desert the cause. After York- 
town, when he hastened to France to carry- 
despatches to the French king, as well as 
from tenderer impulses, he had come to 
Bei-'ton to embark, reaching here on Dec. 
10, 1781. Here he had been enthusias- 
tically received ; a committee of the town, 
of which Samuel Adams was chairman, had pre- 
sented an address to him; and a subscription 
taKing place to rebuild the Charlestown meeting- 
house, burned during the battle on Bunker Hill, 
l.atavette had placed his name on the list for 
t\veni\ live guineas. The officers of the M.I--.I- 
ehusetts Line also presented an address. He- 
sailed, December 23, in the French frigate " I .' \i- 
liance." It was Aug. (. 17X4, when I^afayette 
again landed in New York ; and after first visiting 
Mount Vernon, he began that triumphal progress 
through the country which eviiued the love the 
people bore for him. to fie approached Bottom 
in Oe-tciber, the oltiecrs of the army met him at 
Wain town: then in a procession he niadr hi- 
cntry over Boston Neck, through Inn 
people, while he was e-ondm ted t.> I 



terns were lighted for the first time since the 
peace. On the nineteenth, the anniversary of 
Yorktown, Governor Hancock received him 
formally. Five hundred gentlemen dined with 




their guest in Faneuil Hall. Thirteen decorated 
arches surrounded the room, and Lafayette sat 
under a huge fUur-Jc-lis. Thirteen guns in the 
market-place accompanied as many patriotic 
toaata. When that one proposing the health of 
Washington was drunk, a curtain fell and dis- 
a picture of the General, crowned with 
laurel, and wearing the color of America and 
France. Lafayette led off the response with 
"Vive Washington!" In the evening. Madam 
Haley, a sister of the notorious- John Wilkes 
(see Vol. II. p. xliv), and a leader of fashion 
in the town, gave a great party, and there 
were many illuminations throughout the 
S. line davs later, after he had made excursions 
along the coast, he embarked in the French 
\vmphc." and sailed for Yirginia. 



where he returned their compliments in a speech .!/,;,'<!;/< ./ American History, I>ecember, 1878. 
from a balcony. In the evening the street Ian- Kn.J 



174 



THE MEMORIAL HISTORY OF BOSTON. 



BOSTON March j 9 , 1783. 



is done in a general assembly of the people.' The Marquis, glad of the opportunity, 
consented to attend my father. By and by the great bell of the celebrated Doctor 

Samuel Cooper's church, with a dozen others, 
called the inhabitants together. I forget what 
the business was, but it inspired universal in- 
terest, and drew to the hall an overflowing 
house. The Marquis was of course well ac- 
commodated, and sat in silent admiration at 
the demure manner in which the moderator 
was chosen and inducted to the chair, and the 
meeting fully organized. Then the debate 
opened. One speaker affirmed, another de- 
nied, a third rejoined ; each increasing in 
vehemence, until the matter in debate was 
changed into personal sarcasm. Gibe fol- 
lowed gibe, commotion ensued, the popular 
mass rolled to and fro, disorder reached its 
height, and the elders of the town were glad 
to break up the stormy meeting, and postpone 
the discussion. My father led the Marquis out 
in the midst of the angry multitude. When 
fairly disengaged from the crowd he said to 
the illustrious stranger : ' This is not the sam- 
ple which I wished to show you of our mode 
of deliberating. Never dp I recollect to have 
seen such fiery spirits assembled in this hall, 
and I must beg you not to judge of us by what 
you have seen to-day ; for good sense, mod- 
eration, and perfect order are the usual char- 
acteristics of my fellow-townsmen, here and elsewhere." ' No doubt, no doubt,' said 
the Marquis laughing ; ' but it is well enough to know that there are exceptions to 
the general rule,' or words to that effect, meaning to make a joke of the matter, 
which was, indeed, very often afterward the occasion of mirthful remarks upon the 
forbearance, calmness, decorum, and parliamentary politeness ever to be found in 
deliberative assemblies of pure democracy." ' 

Perhaps, if Mr. Breck had been philosophically disposed, he might have 
reminded his guest that the town-meeting offered an opportunity for the 
escape of feeling, and was thus a safety-valve. The newspaper had not yet 
taken the place of the public assembly as the clearest reflection of the life 
of the day. 



Lift night 

thii town ; nJ brought with him the following 
very impottant 

INTELLIGENCE, 



Philadelphia, jjd March, 178^. 

Half pad Sis o'clock. 
Dor S I R, 

TE N minutes fince, the Captjin of the 
Hyder Aly came Co M'-. Morris's, where I 
d'med, with nn account of a French packet being 
arrived at Chdler, in Thirty days from Cadiz^ 
with the news that i 

GENERAL PEACE 

wai fignrH the Twentieth of January ; and that 
Hoftilmei were to cufe, on this cojil, the zotli 
of this month. 

Juft now a meflenger arrived bora Monficur 
ognc, to tr>e Minister, with rhe fane new; : 
and that the Captain of the packet wa on the 
toad with the difpatcUs. 



Ood bleG yon I 



J. Wadfworth, Efq, 



Your'*, 

] CARTER. 



PEACE EXTRA. 1 



1 [This reduction of the Extra announcing the State for building a stage to exhibit the fire- 
conclusion of a general peace is made from an works for celebrating the peace, amounting to 
original owned by Colonel W. W. Clapp. The 16 17*. 30". En.] 

general celebration came later. William Bur- 2 Recollections of Samuel Breck, pp. 39, 40. 

beck rendered his bill, Feb. 28, 1784, to the 



LIFE IN BOSTON IN THE REVOLUTIONARY PERIOD. 175 



SUPPLEMENTARY NOTES BY THE EDITOR. 



THE LOYALISTS. Sabine, in his American 
Loyalists, estimates that some two thousand ad- 
herents of the King left Massachusetts. It is 
also stated that of the three hundred and ten 
who were banished by the State, over sixty were 
Harvard graduates. John Adams was inclined 
to believe that in the Colonies at large not more 
than two-thirds were against the Crown, and 
some of the Colonies were about equally divided. 
" The last contest in the town of Boston, in 
1775, between Whig and Tory, was decided by 
five against two." Works, x. 63, 87. Without 
aiming to make it complete, we offer the follow- 
ing list of such of the Loyalists as may claim, 
either as inhabitants or by official residence or 
association, to have some connection with Bos- 
ton. In making it we have used, besides 
Sabine, the list of the proscribed in 1778, as 
given in Vol. II. 563; the "list of the inhabi- 
tants of Boston who on the evacuation by the 
British removed to Halifax with the army," 
which is printed in the Mass. Hist. Sac. Proc., 
Dec. 1880, p. 266 (see also Curwtn's Journal, 
p. 485) ; the address to Hutchinson and its 
signers, June I, 1774, given in the Mass. Hist. 
Soc. Proc., Feb. 1871, p. 43, and on p. 45, the 
" Solemn League and Covenant," reported by 
Warren on the fifth of June, and sent out to the 
towns as a circular, which occasioned a " pro- 
test " and a " proclamation " from Gage, likewise 
printed in the same place. 

The names of the " protesters " against the 
" Solemn League and Covenant," and of the 
addressers of Hutchinson in 1774, are printed 
in Mass. Hist. Soc. Proc., Oct. 1870, p. 392. The 
signers to the address to Hutchinson in 1774 is 
also in Cttrwen's Journal, p. 465. The two 
volumes marked " Royalists," in the .)/.;*<. Ar- 
chives (vol. i. 1775-84, and ii. 1778-84) have 
also been examined. They are made up very 
largely of returns from town committees to the 
Provincial Congress, respecting suspected per- 
sons, confiscated estates, with the accounts of 
the agents of such estates, the doings of the 
Committee of Sequestration, conveyances of the 
property, etc. In the first volume, pp. 333 and 
338, is the return June 13, 1782, of the Com- 
mittee on Confiscated Estates in Suffolk County, 
showing whose estates were settled by an agent 
of the Province, and to whom the different lot-. 
and buildings were sold, and for what sum ; the 
whole amounting to ^32, o6j S..-. :,/. Numerous 
papers relating to absentee's estate-, i-S- 
are in Mass. Archives, cxxxix. and beginning 
p. 470, are the bonds of persons "supposed to 
be royalists." The confiscation acts <>l M.I--.I- 



chusetts are printed in Curwen's Journal, p. 475. 
and the banishment act of 1778, in Ibid. p. 479. 
The Journals and Letters of Samuel Cunoen give 
the best account of life among the Loyalisii in 
England, and numerous notices of I.oy.ilisis are 
appended to it, as edited by George A. Ward, 
' >n, 1864. A New England club of Loyalists 
w.i- formed in London in 1776, consisting of 
the following: Thomas Hutchinson, Richard 
Clark, Joseph Green, Jonathan Bliss, Jonathan 
Sewall, Joseph Waldo, S. S. Blowers, Elisha 
Hutchinson, William Hutchinson, Samuel Sew- 
all, Samuel Quincy, Isaac Smith, Harrison Gray, 
I ).ivid Greene, Jonathan Clark, Thomas Klucker, 
Joseph Taylor, Daniel Silsbee, Thomas Brinley, 
William Cabot, John S. Copley, Nathaniel Cof- 
fin, Samuel Porter, Benjamin Pickman, John 
Amory, Robert Auchmuty, Major Urquhart, 
Samuel Curwen, Edward Oxnard, most of 
whom were associated with Boston. 

Dr. John C. Warren, in 1800, speaks of the 
visits he paid in England to the Tories, Harrison 
Gray, the Vassalls, and others, who were then 
living there " very comfortably." Life of John 
Collins Warren, i 48. 

The enumeration below is confined in the 
main to heads of families : 
Acre, Thomas Berry, Edward 

Allen, Ebenezer Berry, John 

Allen, Jeremiah Bethel, Robert, Cl. Cel. 

Allen, Jolley * Bethune, George " 

Amory, John Black, David 

Amory, Thomas 2 Black, John 

Anderson, James" Black, William 
Andros, Barret Blair, John, Baker 

Apthorp, Rev. East' Blair, Robert 
Apthorp. Thomas' Hlair, William 
Apthorp, William* Blowcrs.Sams'n Sailer u 
Asby, James Borland, John " 

Ashley, Joseph Borland, John Lindall u 

Atkins, Gibbs' Bouman, Archibald 

Atkinson, John, Merck. Boutineau, James 1 * 
Auchmuty, Robert * Bowen, John 
Auhard, Benjamin Bowers, Archibald 
Aylwin, Thomas Bowes, William, jWlrr." 

Ayres, Eleanor Bowles, William 

Badger, Rev. Moses' Bowman, Arch'ld, /f*<. 
Baker, John, Jr. Boylston, John " 

Barclay, Andrew Boylston, Thomas 1 * 

Barnard, John Boylston, Ward Nich's" 

Barrell, Colhurn Bradstreet, Samuel 

liarrell, Walter, In. Gen. Brandon. John 
Barrick. James, Cl. Ins. Brattle, Maj Thomas* 
ll.nton, David Brattle, William 

Beath. Mary Hridgham, Kbenezer 

Bernard. Sir Krancis " Brinley, George 11 



THE MEMORIAL HISTORY OF BOSTON 



linn ley, Thomas, Mcr? 1 Cooley, John 
Broderick, John Copleyjohn Singleton 42 

Brown, David Cotton, John 43 

Brown, Thomas, Mer. Courtney, James 
Bruce, James 23 Courtney, Richard 

Bryant, John Courtney, Thomas 

Brymer, Alexander Cox, Edward 
Bulfinch, Samuel Cox, Lemuel 

Burch, William - 4 Crane, Timothy 

Burroughs, John Crow, Charles 44 

Burton, Mary, Milliner Cummins, A. and E. 
Burton, William Cunningham, Archib'd 45 

Butler, Gillam Cushman, Klkanah 

Butler, James Cutler, Ebenezer 48 

Butter, James Danforth, Dr. Sam'l 47 

Byles.Rev. Dr. Mather <* Danforth, Thomas ' 
Byles, Mather, Jr. 26 Davies, William 
Calef, Robert' 2 ' Davis, Benjamin 

Campbel, William Davis, Edward 

Caner, Rev. Dr. Henry 28 Deblois, Gilbert 
Capen, Hopestill De Blois, Lewis ^ 

Carr, Mrs. Dechezzan, Adam 6I 

Carver, Melzer 29 Demsey, Roger 

Gary, Nathaniel Dickenson, Nathaniel 

Case, James Dickinson, Francis 

Caste, Dennis Dickinson, William 

Caste, Dr. Thomas Dickson, William 
Cazneau, And'w, Law. 89 Domette, Joseph 
Cazneau, Edward 3I Dougherty, Edward 
Cazneau, William Doyley, Francis 

Cednor, William Doyley, John 

Ceely, John Draper, Margaret 62 

Chadwel, Samuel Draper, Richard 53 

Chandler, John, Esq. 32 Dudley, Charles, Col- 
C handler, Nathaniel lector, Newport. 

Chandler, Rufus, Law. Duelly, William 
Chandler, William Dumares<|, Philip, Mer. 64 
Cheever, Wm. Downe Duncan, Alexander 
Chipman, Ward " Dunlap, Daniel 

Church, Dr. Benjamin 34 Duyer, Edmund 
Clark, Benjamin Edson, Josiah 

Clark, John Elton, Peter 

Clark, Joseph Emerson, John 

Clarke, Isaac Winslow Erving, George 56 
Clarke, Jonathan 35 Erving, John M 
Clarke, Richard 30 Erving, John, Jr. 57 

Clemmens, Thomas Fall, Thomas 
Clement, Capt. Joseph Faneuil, Benjamin 58 
Clementson, Samuel Faneuil, Benjamin, Jr. 
Codner, William Field, John 

Coffin, Ebenezer 37 Fillis, John 

Coffin, John 88 Fisher, Turner 69 

Coffin, Nathaniel Fisher, Wilfred 

Coffin, Nathaniel 39 Fitch, Samuel 
Coffin, Nathaniel, Jr. Fleming, John 
Coffin, Sir Thos. Aston 4 'Flucker, Thomas 61 
Coffin, William 41 Forrest, James < 

Coffin, Wm. Jr. Merch. Foster, Edward 
Colepepper, James Foster, Edward, Jr. 
Connor, Mrs. Frankland, Lady 03 

Cook, Robert Fullerton, Stephen 



Gamage, James Hooper, Jacob 
Gardine^Dr.Sylvester^Howe, John 8 ' J 

Gay, Martin 1 ' 5 Hubbard, Daniel 

Gay, Samuel "' Hughes, Peter 

Gemmill, Matthew Hughes, Samuel 
Geyer, Fred'k William 67 Ilulton, Henry 

Goddard, Lemuel Hunt, John 

Goldthwait, Ezekiel Hunter, William 

Goldthwait, Joseph 08 Hurl*ton, Richard 

Goldthwait, M. I!. Hutchinson, Eliakim'" 

Gookin, Edmund Hutchinson, Elisha 91 

Gore, John ''" Ilulchinson, Foster 92 

Gore, Samuel Hutchinson,Gov.Thos. 113 

Gorman, Edward Hutchinson, Thos. Jr. 94 

Gray, Andrew Hutchinson, William 

Gray, Harrison 7n Inman, John 

Gray, Harrison, Jr. Inman, Ralph w 

Gray, John" Jackson, William " 

Gray, Joseph "- Jarvis, Robert 

Gray, Lewis Jeffrey, Patrick 97 

Gray, Samuel T:! Jeffries, John 98 

Gray, Thomas Jennex, Thomas 

Greecart, John Johonnot, Francis 

Greene, Benjamin " 4 Johonnot, Peter " 

Greene, David 76 Joy, John 

Greene, Richard 76 Kerland, Patrick 

Green, Francis 77 King, Edward 

Green, Hammond Kirk, Thomas 

Green, Joseph 7B Knight, Thomas 

Greenlaw, John Knutton, John 1 " 

Greenleaf, Stephen 7 " Knutton, William 

Greenwood, Isaac Laughton, Henry 

Greenwood, Nathaniel Laughton, Joseph 

Greenwood, Samuel Lawler, Ellis 

Gridley, Benjamin 8 Lazarus, Samuel 

Grison, Edmond Lear, Christopher 

Grozart, John Lechmere, Richard 101 

Hale, Samuel Leddel, Henry 

Hall, James 81 Lee, Henry 

Hallowell, Benjamin 82 Lee, Judge Joseph 102 

Hallowell, Robert 83 Leonard, Daniel 

Halson, Henry Leonard, George 

Harper, Isaac Leslie, James 

Harrison, Joseph 8 * Lewis, John 

Harrison, Richard A. & Lillie, Theophilus 

Haskins, John Linkieter, Alexander 108 

Hatch, Christopher Linning, Andrew 

Hatch, Hawes Lloyd, Henry 104 

Hatch, Nathaniel 80 Lloyd, Dr. James 105 

Heath, William Lloyd, Samuel 

Henderson, James Loring, Dr. Benjamin 1 " 

Hester, John Loring, Joshua 10 ' 

Hewes, Shubael 87 Loring, Joshua, Jr. 108 

Hicks, John 88 Lovell, Benjamin 109 

Hinston, John Lovell, John llu 

Hirons, Richard Lowe, Charles 

Hodges, Samuel Lush, George 

Hodgson, John Lyde, Byfield ul 

Hodson, Thomas Lyde, Edward m 

Holmes, Benjamin M. Lyde, George 

llomans, John Lynch, Peter 



LIFE IN BOSTON IN THE REVOLUTIONARY PERIOD. 177 



McAlpine, William ll " Patten, George 

McClintock, Nathan Patterson, William 

Macdonald, Dennis Paxton, Charles '* 

McEwen, James Pecker, Dr. James m 

Mackay, Mrs. Pecker, Jeremiah 

McKean, Andrew Pelham, Henry 

MacKinstrey, Mrs. '" Pemberton, Rev. Eb- 
McKown, John enezer 186 

McMaster, Daniel m Pepperell, Sir William 
McMaster, James " (the younger) " 

McMasters, Patrick Perkins, Houghton '' 

McMullen, Alexander Perkins, James "* 

McNeil, Archibald Perkins, Dr. Nathaniel 

McNeil, William Perkins, Dr. Wm. Lee w 

Madden, Richard Perry, William 

Magner, John Pettit, John Sam 

Malcom, John " 7 Phillips, Benjamin 

Marston, Benjamin Phillips, Ebenezer 

Martin, William Phillips, John 1(1 

Massingham, Isaac Phillips, Martha 

Mather, Samuel Phips, David ' 

Mein, John > 18 Pine, Samuel 

Meserve, George Pitcher, Moses ' 

Mewse, Thomas Pollard, Benjamin 

Miller, John Porter, James '* 

Mills, Nathaniel 9 Powell, John 

Minot, Christopher Powell, William D. 

Minot, Samuel Price, Benjamin 

Mitchel, Thomas Prince, Job 

Mitchelson, David Prince, Samuel 

Moody, John Prout, Timothy 

Moody, John, Jr. Putnam, James u< 

Moore, Augustus Putnam, James, Jr. 14i 

Moore, John Quincy, Samuel ' 

Morrison, John la > Ramage, John 

Morrow, Col. Rand, Dr. Isaac I4 ' 

Mossman, William Randall, Robert 

Mulcainy, Patrick 121 Read, Charles 

Mulhall, Edward '-- Reeve, Richard "" 
Murray, James Rhodes, Henry 

Murray, Col. John ' Rice, John 
Murray, William Richards, Owen 

Newton, Richard Richardson.Ebenezer * 

Nevin, Lazarus Roberts, Frederic 

Norwood, Kbene/er Rogers, Jeremiah Dum- 
Nunn, Samuel mer 160 

Ochterlony, David " Rogers, Nathan 
< Miver, Andrew '-"> Rogers, Samuel 

Oliver, Judge Peter '*' Rose, Peter 
( lliver, Dr. Peter Rowth, Richard '" 
Oliver, Thomas Royall, Isaac 1M 

Oliver, Wm. Sanford ' Ruggles, John " 
O'Neil, Joseph Ruggles, Richard 

Orcutt, Joseph Ruggles, Timothy 

I'.uldock, Adimi '*' Rummer. Kuh.ml 

Paddock, Adino, Jr.' : " Russell, K/ekicl 1S 
Page, George Russell. James lv ' 

Paine, Samuel Russell. Nath.iniel 

Parker, Re\ S.imuel 13a Saltonstall, 1 everett > 
Parker, William Saltonstall, Richard ' 

I'ashlev. C-eorge Sampson, John 

VOL. m. 23. 



Savage, Abraham 
Savage, Arthur "* 
Scammel, Thomas 
Scott, Joseph 
Selby, John 
Selkrig, James 
Selkrig, Thomas 
Semple, John 
Semple, Robert 
Semple, Thomas 
Serjeant, John 
Service, Robert 



Thompson, George 
Thompson, James 
Timiiiins, John 
Townscnd. Gregory 
Townsend, Shippy 
Troutbeck, Rev. John 1Ti 
Trowbridge, Edmund 17t 
Tufts, Simon tr < 
Tull, Thomaa 
Turill, Thomas 
Vassal!, John 17< 
Vassall, William 1 



Sewall. Jonathan ** Vassal!, William, Jr. 1 " 
Sewall, Samuel ><n Vincent, Ambrose 
Sheaffe, Nathaniel ' Waldo, Joseph '"' 
Sheaffe, Roger ' Walter, Rev. William ' M 

Sheaffe, Thos. Child > Warden, James 
Sheaffe, William 1M Warden, Joseph 
Shepard, Joseph Warden, William 

Sherwin, Richard Warren, Abraham 

Silsby, Daniel Waterhouse, Samuel 

Simmonds, William Welsh, James 
Simpson, John Welsh, Peter 

Simpson, Jeremiah Wendell, Jacob 
Simpson, Jonathan ' Wentworth, Edward m 
Simpson. William Wheaton, Obadiah 

Skinner, Francis Wheelwright, Job 

Smith, Edward Wheelwright, Joseph 

Smith, Henry " Whiston, Obadiah 

Smith, Richard White, Gideon '* 

Snelling, Jonathan White, John l 
Sparhawk, Samuel Whitworth, NathanT '" 
Spillard, Timothy Whitworth, Dr. Miles "" 

Spooner, Ebenezer Whitworth, Dr. Miles, 
Spooner, George Jr. lw 

Stayncr, Abigail Willard, Abel " 

Stearns, Jonathan Willard, Abijah " n 
Sterling, Benj. Ferdin'd Williams, Job in 
Sterling, Elizabeth Williams, John m 
Stevens, John lw Williams, Seth l 

Steward, Adam " Willis, David 
Story, William Wilson, Archibald 

Stow, Edward Wilson, Joseph 

Sullivan, Bartholomew Winnet, John, Jr. 
Sullivan, George Winslow, Edward ' 

Taylor, Charles Winslow, Edwardjr. " 

Taylor, John Winslow, Mrs. Hannah 

Taylor, Joseph 1TI Winslow, Isaac "" 

Taylor, Nathaniel 1T2 Winslow. John > 
Taylor, William Winslow. Joshua 

Terry, Zebedee Winslow, Pelham ' 

Terrv, William Wittington. William 

Thayer, Arodi 1:I Woolen, William 

Thomas, Jonathan W-nal, Tho. Grooby 
Thomas. Nath'l Ray 1T( Wright, Daniel 

NOTES. 

i S his account of his own mbutatioM m Mat. Hal. 
Sof. /v-., Ktbniary, 1878. 

Brother of John. S<* Sibint. who how b 
docenrlanU are well known among m now. 

hington tpcaks of him during lh a. ec 
manding the St.nch Comiuiiv in Boston. 



7 8 



THE MEMORIAL HISTORY OF BOSTON. 



* Of Christ Church, Cambridge ; the antagonist of 
Jonathan May hew. 

5 Estate settled by Martin Brimmer. Inventory in 
Mass. Archives^ " Royalists," i. 425. 

6 Estate settled by John Scollay. 

7 Died in Boston in 1806. 

8 Estate settled by Saml. G. Jarvis. See Vol.11, and 
IV. index. His house is shown in Vol II p. 343. 

9 Connected with the Saltonstalls. See Sabine. 

10 Estate settled by Joseph Smith. See Vol. II. index. 
Governor Bernard had left the country in 1769, but his 
estate was confiscated ten years later. It comprised fifty 
acres. 

11 His wife was a daughter of Benjamin Faneuil. He 
died at Cambridge in 1785. 

12 Went to England in 1774; returned in 1778; was im- 
prisoned ; but being released went to Nova Scotia, where 
he attained distinction and died in 1842. 

13 Estate settled by Richard Cranch. Inventory taken 
April 9, 1776; sold March, 1778. Mass. Archives. " Royal- 
ists," i. 423. See Vol. II. index. See Sabine. 

14 Estate settled by Israel Hutchinson. Died in Eng- 
land in 1825. 

15 See the chapter on the Huguenots in Vol. II. 

16 Died in England in 1805. 

17 John Boylston, son of Dr Zabdiel Boylston, left 
Boston in 1768, and lived afterward in London and Bath, 
whence his letters through the war evinced his kindly feel- 
ings for his townsmen, and he did much to relieve the 
sufferings of the American prisoners at Forton. In his 
will dated at Bath, in 1793. he makes a bequest " to the 
poor and decayed householders of the town of Boston," 
and for "the nurture and instruction of poor orphans and 
deserted children of the town of Boston, until fourteen 
years of age." The City Auditor's reports show that these 
funds now exceed one hundred thousand dollars. N. E. 
Hist. <Sr* GeneaL Reg., April, 1881 

18 Died in London in 1798, ruined in fortune and broken 
in heart. 

1 9 Name changed from Hallowell ; was the son of 
Benjamin Hallowell, named below. He returned to Bos- 
ton in 1800, and died at Roxbury in 1828. 

20 Recovered his patrimony by act of the Legislature in 
1784, and died in 1801. 

21 Died in Halifax in 1809. 

22 H. C. 1744; died in England in 1784. 

23 Perhaps the captain of one of the tea-ships. 

24 Commissioner of Customs. 

2 5 See Vol. II. index, and Mr. Scudder's chapter in this 
volume. 

26 See Vol. II index, and Mr. Goddard's chapter in this 
volume. 

27 Estate settled by Samuel Partridge ; son of John 
Calef, of Ipswich ; died in Virginia in i.Soi. 

28 Estate settled by Levi Jennings. See Rev. Dr. 
Brooks's chapter in this volume. This estate is now covered 
in part by the building of the Mass. Hist. Society. 

*9 A refugee in Boston ; embarked in 1776. 

30 Returned to Boston in 1788, and died in Roxbury in 
1792. His property escaped confiscation. 

31 Returned after the war; settled in South Carolina, 
and died in Boston. 

32 From Worcester; took refuge in Boston in 1774, and 
embarked in 1776. Died in 1800 in London. George Ban- 
croft is his grandson. The three names following are those 
of his brothers. 

33 He fled into Boston in 1775 ; and left with the troops : 
became distinguished in Nova Scotia. 

34 See a previous page in this volume. 

35 Son of Richard 

36 One of the consignees of the Tea, and father-in-law 
of Copley the artist. Died in England in 1795. 

37 Son of William, Jr. 

38 Son of Nathaniel, the Receiver-General. 



59 Died in New York, in 1780; Father of Sir Isaac 
Coffin. See Editorial Note to chap. I. of Vol. IV. 

40 Son of William, Jr. ; graduated at Harvard College 
in 1772. No evidence of his right to the title Sir. 

41 Son of Nathaniel, the Receiver-General. 

42 See Mr. Arthur Dextcr's chapter in Vol. IV. 

43 A great-grandson of the first minister of Boston; 
died in Boston in 1776 ; was royal deputy secretary. 

44 Carted to the British lines in Rhode Island in 1777. 

4 5 Died respected in Nova Scotia in 1820. 

46 Of Northborough ; sent into Boston by General 
Ward; left with the troops in 1776. 

47 Remained i n Boston after the siege. See Dr. Green's 
chapter in Vol. IV. 

48 Of Charlestown. 

*9 Lived where the Horticultural Hall stands; died in 
England in 1791. 

5 Died in England in 1779. 

51 Sabine says " Deonezzan." 

52 Widow of Richard ; died in England in 1800. 

5 3 See Vol. II. 392. 

s* Married a daughter of Dr. Sylvester Gardiner. See 
Vol. II. 268. 

55 Merchant ; embarked in 1776 ; died in London in 
1806 ; married daughter of Isaac Royall. 

5 6 An eminent merchant ; died in Boston, in 1786. See 
Vol. II. index. 

5 7 H. C. 1747 ; embarked in 1776 ; died in England in 
1816; married a daughter of Governor Shirley. His son, 
Dr. Shirley Erving, died in Boston in 1813. See Vol. II. 
P- 539- 

5 8 An eminent merchant ; died in Cambridge in 1785 
See Vol. II. index. 

59 Son of Wilfred. 

60 Printer; partner of Mein. See Mr. Goddard's chap- 
ter in Vol. II. 

61 Estate settled by Joseph Pierce. Of his family there 
is some account in Drake's Life of Knox, appendix. 
Died in England in 1783. 

62 Commanded the Loyal Irish Volunteers in Boston 
during the siege. 

63 See ante in this chapter, and Vol. II. index. 

64 Estate settled by Nathaniel Gorham. Banished,i778. 
Perkins's Copley, 56 ; Heraldic Journal, iv. 98 ; Sabine, 
i. 461 ; see also Vol. II. p. 558. 

65 Son of Rev. Dr. Gay, of Hingham ; left with the 
troops in 1776. 

66 Son of Martin; H.C. 1775 ; went to New Brunswick. 

67 Returned and restored to citizenship in 1789; was 
grandfather of Capt Marryat, the novelist. 

68 Born in Boston, 1730; banished 1778; Major of 
British army. See Perkins's Copley^ 57. 

*>9 Left with the troops in 1776; citizenship restored 
in 1787 ; died in Boston in 1796 ; father of Governor Chris- 
topher Gore. 

70 Estale settled by Joseph Henderson. Perkins's 
Copley, p. 68. See Harrison Gray Otis's defence of the 
character of his grandfather, Harrison Gray, in Loring's 
Boston Orators, p. 191. 

71 Son of Harrison Gray. 

72 See Sabine, i. 490 ; who gives a brother John Gray, " 
not to be confounded with John, the son of Harrison. 

73 Brother of Joseph. 

74 Died in Boston in 1807. 

75 Citizenship restored in 1789; died in 1812. 

76 Died at Boston in 1817. 

77 Graduated at Harvard College, 1760; after some years 
spent in Nova Scotia and England, he returned to Medford 
in 1797, and died there in 1809. 

78 Estate settled by Dr. Thomas liulfinch. " An inven- 
tory of the goods and effects found in the house of Joseph 
Green in School Lane, improved by John Andrews," is 
in the Mass. A rchives, " Royalists," i. 433. See his portrait 
in Mr. Goddard's chapter in this volume. 

\ 



LIFE IN BOSTON IN THE REVOLUTIONARY PERIOD. 179 



"9 Sheriff, died in Boston in 1795. 

80 Lawyer; H. C 1751 ; embarked with the troop* 
in 1776. 

81 Commanded the " Dartmouth," one of the tea-ships 
in 1773 ; proscribed in 1778. 

82 Estate settled by John Winthrop. See Vol. II. 
p. 343 ; Drake's Town of Roxbury t 408, The heirs of 
Mrs. Hallnwell, in whom was the fee, subsequently recov- 
ered the estate. *V. E. Hut. and Getteal. Kif., April, 
1858, p. 73. His sons were Sir Benjamin Hallowell Carew, 
and Ward Nicholas Boylston. 

83 Estate settled by Zephion Thayer. He was Comp- 
troller of the Customs He left with the troops in March, 
1776; after the war he returned to America, and in 1792 
lived in Battrrymarch Street, but removed to Gardiner, 
Me., in 1816, and died there in 1818. He was brother of 
Benjamin. 

84 Collector of Customs in 1768, 
** Son of Joseph. 

* Of Dorchester; H. C. 1742. 

87 Chief butcher to the British army during the siege. 
His shop was on the south corner of Washington Street 
and Harvard Place, opposite the old South. Drake's Land- 
marks, p. 270. Died in Boston in 1813. 

88 Printer ; finally returned, and died at Newton. 

*9 Father of Hon. Joseph Howe, distinguished in 
Canadian politics. 

9 Estate settled by Edward Carnes. His property in- 
cluded Shirley Hall in Roxbury, shown in the frontispiece 
of Vol. II., and his wife was Govemor Shirley's daughter. 
He died in 1775. 

91 Son of the Governor; partner of Thomas, Jr.; died 
in England in 1824. 

93 Estate settled by Joshua Pico ; brother of the Gov- 
ernor; died in Nova Scotia in 1799. 

9 5 Governor Hutchinsnn's estate in Milton was sold in 
1779 for ^38,038. Mass. Archives, ' Royalists," ii. 6f>. 
Died in England in 1780. 

94 Died in England in 1811 ; son of the Governor 

95 Died in Cambridge in 1788. 
9* Died in England in 1810. 

97 Returned, and died at Milton in 1812 

9 Estate settled by Dr. Scollay. He graduated at Har- 
vard College, 1763 ; left Boston with the troops in 1776 ; re- 
turned in 1790; died in 1819. 

99 Distiller; died in London in 1809. 

100 Died in New Brunswick in 1827. 

101 Estate settled by Mungo Mackay. He died in Eng- 
land in 1814. 

102 Was allowed to remain in Cambridge ; died in 1801. 
>3 Sabine gives it " Linkletter " 

I0 * Died in London in 1795 or 1796. 
lo * See Dr. Green's chapter in Vol. IV. 

106 Returned, and died in Boston in 1798. 

107 Estate settled by John Fenno. See Vol. 1 1. p. 344; 
Drake's Town of Roxbury^ p. 416. His estate in Roxbury 
was sold, June 1779, for ,26,486. 6s. 3d. Mass, Archives, 
** Royalists," ii 66. It comprised seventy-two acres. His 
hnuse in Boston was " next the south writing school, 
adjoining on the Common." He was commissary of 
pi; -mt-Ts in New York, and is charged with cruelty in his 
treatment of them. There was a witticism current among 
the British that he fed the dead and starved the living, -- 
alluding to 1>U practice of charping for supplies to prison - 
i-rv Umg after their death, and giving scant allowance to 
others. Moore's Diary, ii ii . Died in England in 1781. 

108 Died in England in 1789. 

|0 9 Son of John Lovell : died in England in 1818. 

110 The school master. See Vol. II. index. Died in 
Halifax in 177*. 

111 Died at Halifax in 1776. 

112 Died at New York in 1812. 

113 Printer and bookbinder, opposite the Old South. 
Died in C.lasfiow in 1788. 



"* Her husband, Dr. William McKinctrey, died in the 
harbor, before sailing, in M m h, 177*. ; she afterward re- 
turned and died at Havcrhill in i;v. See S-ibm*. 

m Died in New Brunswick in 1830. 

116 Died in New Brunswick in 1804. 

117 Customs officer of Portland: but suffered his tribula- 
tions in Boston in 1774. See Sabine. 

111 Primer; he fled from Whig wrath as early as 1769. 
See Mr. Goddard's chapter in Vol. II. 

"9 Printer; went to Nova Scotia. 

120 A New Hampshire minuter, who left the American 
camp after Bunker Hill and went into Boston; preached 
at Brattle Street Church and became a commissary. See 
Sabine. 

131 Sabine gives it " Mulcarty." 

122 Sabine gives it " Mulball." 

123 Of Rutland ; fled into Boston in 1774 ; left with the 
British in 1776; died at St. John in 1794. 

124 He lived at the lower corner uf North and Centre 
streets in a house still standing His son of the tame name, 
became a baronet. Drake's Landmarks, 153; Sabine, ii. 
121. 

"s Son of Daniel Oliver; Lieut -Governor; died in 
Boston in 1774 

126 Died in England in 1791. 

u? Of Middleborough ; fled to Boston ; died in England 
in 1823. 

138 The last royal Lieut. -Governor; lived at "Elm- 
wood," Cambridge, and in 1774, moved into Boston ; left 
with the troops; died in England in 1782. 

I2 9 Son of Andrew; died at St. John, 1813. For the 
Oliver family, see Vol. I. p. 580 ; II. 539. 

'*> Estate settled by William Bant. See chap. I. in 
this volume. He died in the Isle of Jersey in 1804. 

131 Became surgeon on the British side; died in New 
Brunswick in 1817. 

See M r. Goddard's and Dr. Brooks' s chapters in this 
volume. 

133 Estate settled by Joseph Shed ; Commissioner of 
Customs His portrait is in the Hist. Soc gallery. See 
chap. I. in this volume. Left with the troops. Died in 
England in 1788. 

' Died in 1794. 

* Pastor of Old North Church. See Dr. McKeniie's 
chapter in Vol. 1 1. 

i* The grandson of the first Sir William. He lived 
where Otis Place now is. He was son of Col. Nathaniel 
Spar hawk, the son-in-law of the first Sir William ; and 
assumed the name, and was subsequently created baronet. 
He married the daughter of Isaac Ruyall. Hewuthcfirst 
president of an association of Loyalists formed in London, in 
1779. and was pensioned by the British government. Sec 
Sabine, ii. 171. He died in London in 1876. 

"' Died in Halifax in 1778. 

'** Arrested in 1776; died in his home, on the sit* of 
the Tremont House, in 1803. 

13 9 Died in England in 1797. 

140 Died in Boston in 1794. 

n> Son of Lieut. -Governor Spencer Phips ; colonel of a 
troop of guards in Boston ; died in England in 1811. 

142 Died in Halifax in iKi 7 . 

"3 Comptroller-General of the Customs; embarked in 
1776 

144 Driven into Boston from Worcester, and left with the 
troops ; and died in New. Brunswick in i 

i of preceding; died in ('upland in 1838, 

'*> See Vol. II sV-.andMr. Morse'schapier in Vol. IV 
Samuel Quincy, who MH rrr<!.-i! Si-wall as Solicitor-General, 
was his cousin : and when Quincy'* younger brother, Josiah 
t. rose to eminence, a natural disappointment in 
the older v>n wa* n-^d by Hutchinson and Scwall to 
seduce him from the Patriot cause ; and thus he shared the 
fortunes of Iv* expatriated associate* An inventory of the 
confiscated library of Samuel Quincy is given in 



i8o 



THE MEMORIAL HISTORY OF BOSTON. 



Archives, " Royalists," i. 415. This estate was settled by 
Thomas Crofts. 

147 He was inactive in politics and remained in Boston. 

148 Died in England in 1789. 

*+9 He shot the boy Snider. See chap. I. of this volume. 

150 Graduated at Harvard College, 1762; took refuge in 
Boston ; commissary to British troops in Chariest own ; 
left with them, and died at Halifax in 1784. The grand- 
father of the Rev. Drs. Geo. E. and Rufus Ellis. 

*5' Collector at Salem; left with the troops. 

l $* Lived in Medford : left in 1778; closely connected 
with leading Boston Loyalists. See Brooks's Medford. 

*53 Took refuge in Boston in 1774 ; left with the troops ; 
and died in Nova Scotia in 1795. 

*s+ Printer ; died in 1796. 

I5 $ OfCharlestown ; died in 1798 ; grandfather of James 
Russell Lowell. 

J S6 Was in commercial life in Boston; left with the 
British; and served under Cornwallis. 

157 Took refuge in Boston from Haverhill ; left in 1775 ; 
died in England in 1788. 

"* Auctioneer; died in England in 1801. 

!59 Fled from Cambridge and took refuge in Boston in 
1774; returned from England to New Brunswick : and died 
there in 1796. 

'* Estate settled by John McLane ; died in London 
in 1811. 

6 Son of William. 

162 The young son of William Sheaffe ; prote'ge' of Lord 
Percy; afterwards Sir Roger Hale Sheaffe, bart. ; revisited 
Boston in 1788, 1792-93, 1803 and 1806; died at Edinburgh 
1851. 

163 Son of William; died in Boston before 1793. 

164 Deputy Collector of Customs. Sabine gives an 
account of thefamily. 

I() 5 Died in Boston in 1834. 

166 Went to Halifax ; returned, and died in Boston in 
1801. 

167 Commander of the Governor's guard; lived opposite 
Eliot's Church in Hanover Street ; went to Halifax ; died 
there in 1782. His son Jonathan married a daughter of 
Foster Hutchinson, and died in Halifax in 1809. 

168 Took refuge in Boston, and left with the troops. 

16 9 OfCharlestown; died 1792. 

" Carted to the British lines at Rhode Island in 1777. 
* Proscribed in 1778 ; returned, and died in Boston in 
1816. 

'" Proscribed in 1778 : died in Quebec in 1806. 

173 Proscribed in 1778, but returned and settled in Dor- 
chester, where he died in 1831. 

174 Took refuge in Boston as a mandamus councillor, 
and died in Nova Scotia in 1791. 

I7 * Assistant rector of King's Chapel- 
'> See Mr. Morse's chapter in Vol. IV. 

177 Proscribed in 1778; died in 1802. 

178 Of Cambridge, in 1775; took refuge in Boston ; died 
in England in 1797. 

17 9 Brother of John ; died in England in 1800. 

180 Son of William ; died in England in 1843. 

181 Died in England in 1816. 

182 Rectorof Trinity Church ; in 1776 went to England ; 
returned in i;<ji ; became rector of Christ Church, and 
died in iSoo; grandfather of Lynde M. Walter, founder of 
the Boston Transcript. 

183 Died in Boston in 1794. 

184 Fled from Plymouth into Boston ; and was at Bun- 
ker Hill on the British side. 

I8 $ Died in Boston in 1794. 

186 Died in Europe in 1709. 

187 Attended in Boston the Provincials wounded and 
made prisoners at Bunker Hill; died in Boston in 1779. 

188 Died in England in 1778. 

18 9 Accompanied the British in 1776; died in England 
in 1781. 



J 9 Of Lancaster; left with the troops in 1776; died in 
New Brunswick in 1789. 

'9 1 Cut down " Liberty Tree." See Mr. Scudder's 
chapter. Left with the British. 

'9 2 Inspector-General of the Customs. 

*93 Of Taunton ; took refuge in Boston ; and left in 1776. 

1 9* Brother of General John; took refuge in Boston; 
embarked in 1776; died in 1784. 

'95 Son of Edward ; joined the royal army in Boston in 
1 775i and became a colonel ; died in New Brunswick in 
1815. See Vol. II. pp. 124, 551. 

J 9* See Drake's Town of Roxbury, p. 256. Embarked 
in 1776; died in London in 1790. 

'9 7 General Winslow, whose portrait is given in Vol. II. 
p. 123 ; considered by Sabine a " prerogative man ; " died 
in 1774 ; and his widow is said to have embarked with the 
troops in March, 1776. 

^B Son of General John, of Plymouth ; took refuge in 
Boston in 1774: embarked in 1776; died in Brooklyn in 
1783- 

AFTER THE EVACUATION. Howe had be- 
gun his embarkation early in the morning of 
Sunday, March 17. By nine o'clock he with- 
drew his guard from Charlestown, and soon 
after the last boats put off from the wharves. 
" From Perm's hill," writes Abigail Adams from 
Braintree, March 17, 1775, "we have a view of 
the largest fleet ever seen in America. You may 
count upwards of a hundred and seventy sail. 
They look like a forest." Familiar Letters, 142. 
The American advance pushed forward cau- 
tiously down the Charlestown peninsula, and 
found the works tenanted only by wooden sen- 
tinels. A strong force embarked in boats on the 
Charles and fell down the river, prepared to act 
as might be required. A detachment from Rox- 
bury under Colonel Learned entered the works 
on the Neck, and, unopposed, unbarred the 
gates. The entry was made under the immedi- 
ate command of Putnam, who proceeded to seize 
the principal posts. On the soth, the main body 
of the troops entered, 1 and the next day Wash- 
ington, who still kept his headquarters at Cam- 
bridge, issued the proclamation given (on next 
page) in reduced fac-simile from a copy in the 
library of the Massachusetts Historical Society. 

An inventory of the stores, ordnance, and 
vessels left by the British was made March 18 
and 19, and is printed in the Siege of Boston, 
p. 406. Some of the cannon are now to be seen 
on Cambridge Common, about the Soldier's 
Monument. Drake's Landmarks of Middlesex, 

265. 

Dr. John Warren's account of the condition 
of the town is given in Loring's Hundred Boston 
Orators, p. 161 ; and with a statement of the 
strength of the works left by the British, in 
Frothingham's Siege of ftuston, 329; and in the 
Life of Dr. John ll'irrerr, by his son Edward 
Warren, Boston, 1873, which has a portrait, en- 

1 Dr. John Warren's diary chronicles the action of the 
enemy this same day : "March 2oth. This evening they 
burn the castle and demolish it, by blowing up all the for- 
tifications there They leave not a building standing." 



LIFE IN BOSTON IN THE REVOLUTIONARY PERIOD. i8l 
r HIS EXCELLENCY 

George Wafhington, Efq: 

Opum-Coreral and Commando in Chief of iht Forces of the Tfcrnm United Cefcwt. 



ri Tnr. ./BOSTON : W H, Form J,*, vi (Mm,,, md,, nf 



rjr^HEKE/fS Ih, Maifera/ /km? 
Yr CormnW. art a TlJ/ifa* of lit fanir ; 

I HAVEthcrefoTO thought it neceflary -ftr tbe PrcirrMcroe of Pace, good Order anj Difcipliae. to publilh the faucwaw 
ORDERS, ahit no Pcifon orteoding tbeieio, may plead Ignorance as an Lxcufe for unr MUconducr. 

ALL. Officers and Soldiers are hereby ordered to lite in the IricVfl Peace and Amity with the Inhabitants and no inhabitant, 
or other Prrfon employed in his lawful HuGnefs in rhr Town, n to be moWred in hu Prison or Property on any Pretence what- 
ewr If any Officer or Soldier fhaJI prefime to (rule, imyniforv, or oihrtWe iU-iiejt any of ike Inhabitants, they may depend on 
bcin< punifhed vmh the utmof) Seventy Aari if any Officer ol Soldier IhaU receitc airy Infuli from any of tba Lnhabitaits. he u 
lo fecit Red/eft, in a legal Way, and no other. 

ANY Non cammilTioned Officer. Soldier, or others under my Command, who flail be guilty of robbing or pluudtTBn B UK TUTU. 
tre robe immediately connned. and will be mofl rigidly puniffjed Ml Officers ate therefore ordered to be wry rigilaol in the D&oierj 
of fuch oflcnden, and report then Names, and Crime, to tbe Coomaoilin; Officer in ike Town, aa loan as Buy be. 

THE Inhabitants, and others, tie ealkd upon to make known to th: Courier-Matter General, or anr of his Deputies, .-,'1 e lolr , 
belonging to tbe Miniftenal Army, that may be remaining or tVcreted 1 1 ihe Town : Any Perton or Perfooa whareter, thai ft- .11 
be known to conceal any of the Hud Stores, of appicpruie them to hu or ii own Vic, will be cudeied at u Enemy of .*'.. 
and created accordingly. 

THE Selectmen, and other Mtgilrrttn of the Town, are delired (o return u tbe Commander in Chief, the Name) of all or any P.-rfaa 
or Perfons they may fufpc/r nf being employed as Spies upon the Concioeoul Army, that they may be dealt with accordingly. 

ALL Officen of tbe Continental Army, are enjoined 10 afliA the Civil V^iJutei in the Execution of their Duty, and to promote 
Peace and good order. They aie lo prevent, as mueb n puAUc. ttar ^oKhenrwjin rVevtKnimg r<pphog Howin, awd HiuJ^j dora 
their Podt Particular Nonce will be taken of fuih Officer! u >r* MumuK wad reaoJa m then Duty , and on the contrary, <<Kk onry 
who are aftive and ngdant. wall be entitled lo futuic f aw and Promouoa 



t OfflWidgt, Tw.^^jlO.y yManb, 



graved from the painting, now owned by Dr. 
John Collins Warren. It is Dr )ulm Warren's 
statements upon which the affirmation is some- 
times made that the redoubt on Hunker Hill, 
found by the Americans, was one erected hy 
the- British after they had levelled the earth- 
works of June 17, 1775; but it seems probable, 
as Frothingham, p. 331, shows, that the British 
preserved, perhaps with modifications, the origi- 
nal redoubt. 

There seems to have been left behind a con- 
siderable stock of the inhabitants' arms; for a 
memorandum on a letter. April 20, 1776, from 
the Provincial I'nn.niv-s at \Vatertown. signed by 
Wm. Sever, ami asking of the selcc inien a state- 
ment on this point (now in the Charity-building 
collection), has an endorsement on it: "1778 
guns, 273 bayonets, d;.( pi-tols. }S bhinderbu*t>, 
inhabitants' arms." This enumeration, how- 
ever, may refer to the number of arms which had 
been surrendered to Gage in April, 1775 

In the same collection is the following pa- 
per: 



OtOKQt 

" Cofjf tf acf. of lauei tlu team nulaintd kr lltr tmrmj. 
GivtH nt Dfc. 17, 1777. 

Town nock of powder in the Powder House . 150 6 S 

149 small arms and bayonets 74$ o o 

3 pr. pistols la o o 

Town library o o o 

King George the ad picture, full 

length 

Gen Conway, do in FaneuO 

Col. Ban*, do Hall . 133 6 S 

Peter Faneuil, Eaq , do. . . 
Gov Shirley, do. .... 



The portraits of Conway and Farre were the 
ones ordered by the town in their joy at the re- 
peal of the Stamp Act. 

John Adams (Familiar Letter), p. 216), speaks 
of the portraits of Conway and Barre as by Rey- 
nolds: hut the Life af Kn'HoJJs, by Leslie and 
Tom Tavlot. i. 157, nuik. - n . mention of them, 
although Sir Joshua painted Barre more than 



182 



THE MEMORIAL HISTORY OF BOSTON. 



Abigail Adams writes, March 31, 1776, to her 
husband : " The town in general is left in a bet- 
ter state than we expected. . . . Some individu- 
als discovered a sense of honor and justice, and 
have left the rent of the houses, in which they 
were, for the owners, and the furniture unhurt, 
or, if damaged, sufficient to make it good. Others 
have committed abominable ravages. The man- 
sion house of your president [Hancock] is safe 
and the furniture unhurt ; while the house and 
furniture of the Solicitor-General [Samuel Quin- 
cy] have fallen a prey to their own merciless 
party." Familiar Letters, p. 149. 

Greene succeeded Putnam for a short time ; 
but upon Washington's leaving for New York 
he placed Ward in command ; and in his instruc- 
tions, April 4, 1776, he particularly enjoined upon 
him to arrange some system of signals by which 
to rouse the country in case of the approach of 
a hostile fleet. Heath Papers, in 5 Mass. Hist. 
Coll., iv. 4. 

Mr. Samuel F. McCleary printed in the N. E. 
Hist, and Geneal. Reg. (1876), vol. xxx. p. 380, 
and in succeeding volumes, the records of the 
Boston Committee of Correspondence, Inspec- 
tion, and Safety, from May to November, 1776. 

On the I7th of May the " Franklin," a small 
craft under the command of an' adventurous 
Marbleheader, Captain Mugford, whom Ward 
had commissioned, boldly attacked, just off the 
harbor, a large armed ship the "Hope" 
bringing supplies to the town, then supposed to 
have a British garrison. British ships were still 
in Nantasket Roads, and saw the engagement, 
but failed to render any assistance ; and Mugford 
carried his prize through the Broad Sound into 
Boston. She had on board one hundred half- 
barrels of powder, a much needed addition to 
the Continental store. Two days later, the 
" Franklin " grounded in trying to escape from 
the harbor, and was attacked by boats from the 
English fleet; but they were repelled, at the cost, 
however, of Mugford's life. See Force's Ameri- 
can Archives, 4th ser. vi. 494-96, 532, 629 ; Gor- 
don's American Revolution, ii. 264 ; Moore's 
Diary of the American Revolution, i. 244. 

A good deal of good service was now done 
in this way by Captain Tucker, who intercepted 
more than one important British supply-ship and 
brought them into Boston, where his presence 
was not unfamiliar throughout the war. He 
had before this prepared some fireships at Ger- 
mantown to send down among the fleet, but the 
very day he was ready the fleet sailed. Familiar 
Letters of John and Abigail Adam's, p. 156 (April 
14, 1776). 

In June better organized efforts were made 
to drive off a few ships of the British which still 
lingered in Nantasket Roads. Detachments un- 
der Colonels Marshall and Whitney, and some 
artillery under Lieutenant Crafts, joined with 



some Continental troops and coast guards, the 
whole under the command of General Lincoln, 
took post at commanding points in the lower 
harbor and brought their guns to bear on the 
" Commodore " frigate and the other attendant 
vessels, which had recently been joined by a fleet 
of transports with troops. The defnonstration 
caused them all soon to put to sea. Adams's 
Famtttar Letters, p. 185; Moore's Diary, \. 251. 

The admiral had kept a detachment on the 
lighthouse island to protect that structure ; but 
when the fleet finally left, these men were taken 
off, but not until they had laid a train by which 
the tower was thrown down; and it was not till 
1783 that the present lighthouse was erected. 
Shurtleff's Description of Boston, p. 572. 

A day or two later the Continental brig 
" Defence," of Connecticut, captured in the bay 
two armed transports with Highlanders on board, 
and brought them safely in under the newly 
mounted guns at Nantasket. The " Defence " 
was aided by a small privateer under Captain 
Burk. (Familiar Letters of John Adams, p. 187.) 
In July a fleet of the enemy hovered about the 
bay for a week, but left without attempting hos- 
tile acts. (Ibid. p. 201.) In September, "the ' Mil- 
ford' frigate rides triumphant in our bay, taking 
vessels every day, and no Colony or Continental 
vessel has yet attempted to hinder her. She 
mounts but twenty-eight guns, and is one of the 
fastest sailers in the British navy. They com- 
plain we have not weighty metal enough, and I 
suppose truly." Ibid. p. 226. 

A committee of the Provincial Congress, with 
James Sullivan at the head, had soon been ap- 
pointed to consider a plan for fortifying the 
approaches to Boston by water ; and Sullivan was 
also named first on a committee for carrying his 
report into execution. Under General Lincoln's 
direction the works at Fort Hill, on Dorchester 
Heights, an'd on Noddle's Island were completed, 
and hulks were sunk in the channel. The Con- 
gress provided the cannon left by the enemy as 
an armament for them. The letters written by 
John Adams to his wife show his anxiety at the 
delays in this work. In one of her replies, May 
9, she says : " I believe Noddle's Island has been 
done by subscription. Six hundred inhabitants 
of the town 'meet every morning in the Town 
House, from whence they march with fife and 
drum, with Mr. Gordon, Mr. Skilman, and Mr. 
Lothrop at their head, to the Long Wharf, where 
they embark for the island ; and it comes to the 
subscribers' turn to work two days in the week." 
Familiar Letters, p. 171. 

Later in the year, when Massachusetts an- 
swered renewed calls for troops for the New 
York campaign, Boston was left exposed to sud- 
den incursions from the enemy. In December 
the regiments in the harbor were prevailed upon 
to continue their service, and additional regi- 



LIFE IN BOSTON IN THE REVOLUTIONARY PERIOD. 



'83 



ments were ordered to be raised for the same 
service. 

INDEPENDENCE DECLARED. There was 
published some years since in the (British) 
I 'nited Service Journal an account of the way 
Independence was first proclaimed in Boston, 
written by a British officer, who in June, 1776, 
h.ul been captured on board a transport in the 
hay, and was then held as a prisoner in the town. 
I Ie was invited, with other officers then on pa- 
role, to the Town House, on the i8th of July. 
"As we passed through the town," he says, "we 
found it thronged; all were in their holiday suits; 
every eye beamed with delight, and every tongue 
was in rapid motion. The streets adjoining the 
Council Chamber were lined with detachments 
of infantry tolerably equipped, while in front of 
the jail [Court Street] artillery was drawn up, 
the gunners with lighted matches. The crowd 

ned a lane for us, and the troops gave us, as 
we mounted the steps, the salute due to officers 
of our rank. . . . Exactly as the clock struck 
one, Colonel [Thomas] Crafts, who occupied the 
chair, rose and read aloud the Declaration. This 
being finished, the gentlemen stood up, and each, 
repeating the words as they were spoken by an 
officer, swore to uphold the rights of his country. 
Meanwhile the town clerk read from a balcony 
the Declaration to the crowd ; at the close of 
which a shout, begun in the hall, passed to the 
streets, which rang with loud huzzas, the slow 
and measured b om of cannon, and the rattle 
of musketry. . . . There was a banquet in the 
Council Chamber, where all the richer citizens 
appeared; large quantities of liquor were dis- 
tributed among the mob; and when night closed 
in, darkiK-.> was dispelled by a general illumi- 
nation." 

The scene is also described by Mrs. Adams 
in her letters, July 21, Familiar Letters, p. 204, 
and in the New Kagtaiiil Chronicle, July 25. 

It was now in front of the old historic Bunch 
. .1 ( drapes tavern, on the upper corner of Stale 
and Kilby streets, that all portable signs of roy- 
ally in the town, such as the arms from the 
Town House, the Court House, and the Custom 
I louse, were brought and thrown in a pile to 
make a bonfire. 

The first anniversary (July 4, 1777) of the 
Declaration of Independence was celebrated 
in Boston with great parade, a sermon by I>r. 
Gordon Ix-fore the Legislature, a public dinner, 
and much booming of cannon. Moore's Diary, 
i. 463. 

A copy <>f the broadside Declaration of Inde- 
pendence, attested in script, " A tine copy. John 
Il.imock, I'u siil' ," is in "' v.r, cxlii. 23. 

It is one of the copn ich of the Slates 

by 'inter of ('oiu:re>s. Jan. iS. i""*. and is 
marked in print " Baltimore, in Maryland ; 



printed by Mary Katharine Goddard." With it 
i- Hancock's letter transmitting it to the Massa- 
chusetts authorities. There is in the Public Li- 
brary another copy of the same broadside, on 
which is written " Attest, Cha. Thomson, Secy. 
A True Copy, John Hancock, I'rcsid'." It is 
not evident to which of the States it was sent, if 
indeed it is one of those sent to the States. 

GENERAL HEATH IN COMMAND. In 1777 
(iimi.d Heath 1 succeeded Ward in command. 
1 1> headquarters were in the house of Thomas 
Knssell, which was in Summer Street, about 
where Otis Street is. Major Andrew Symmes 
had the immediate charge of the garrison of the 
town. During the summer an uncertainty as to 
the destination of the British fleet, then preparing 
to leave Newport, caused some uneasiness and 
renewed vigilance, and precautions were taken 
for alarming the country in case of impending 
danger. (See order in fac-simile on next page). 
Signals for announcing the approach of an ene- 
my's ship to Hull, were arranged by the Council 
Sept. 10, 1777, and they are given in the Mass. 
Archives, cxlii. 105. Mrs. Adams describes the 
fright : " All Boston was in confusion, packing 
up and carting out of town household furniture, 
military stores, goods, etc. Not less than a 
thousand teams were employed on Friday and 
Saturday." Familiar Letters, p. 287. 

It was during Heath's term of service here 
in Boston that the army of Burgoyne, which had 
surrendered at Saratoga in October, 1777, was 
marched to Cambridge. The news of the sur- 
render had preceded them, and was received 
with illuminations, bonfires, and cannon. Moore's 
Diary, i. 513. The provincial authorities had lost 
no time in chartering a swift vessel to carry the 
news to the Commissioners in Paris. The des- 
patches were entrusted to Jonathan Loring Aus- 
tin ; and after prayers had been said by Dr. 
Chauncy in the old Brick Meeting-house, the 
vessel sailed, and reached Nantes in safety in 
November. Loring, Boston Orators, p. 174. 

The English reached Prospect Hill Novem- 
ber 6, and were put into barrack- there. The 
Hessians arrived the next day at Winter Hill, 
and were quartered there. General Burgoyne, 
who entered Cambridge in a pelting storm at 
the head of his troops, was lodged tem|K>rarily 
at Bradish's tavern, now known as Porter's; but 
Mibsequentlv was quartered at the house oppo- 
site Gore Hall, known as the Bishop's Palace. 

1 A portrait of Oncr.il Heath n owned by Mr. G. 
Brewer, of Boston. An old oval, engraved portrait of htm 
is marked "H William-, pin" I R- Smith, train." 
There is a copy in the Historical Society'* Library Gen- 
eral Heath's estate lay in Rnxburv at the foot of Parker 1 ! 
Hill, and is now bisected hv Heath Street. Here, on the 
easterly comer of that street and Bickford Avenue, the 
homestead stood It was demolished in iS4> DiakVt 
Town of Rtxlmry, p 386. 



THE MEMORIAL HISTORY OF BOSTON. 




V\. . The British artillery was 
v ^X parked on Cambridge 
\A Common. General Rie- 
>^v desel and his wife were 
established in the Jona- 
than Sewall house, on the 
corner of Brattle and 
Sparks streets. The 
camps of the " Conven- 
tion troops," as they 
were called in allusion to 
the terms of their condi- 
tional surrender, were 
guarded by Massachu- 
setts militia, while the 
officers signed a parole 
not to pass beyond speci- 
fied limits. 

This document is re- 
ferred to by Barry (iii. 
146) as being in the pos- 
session of J. W. Thorn- 
ton, Esq., and as if it 
were the original conven- 
tion paper signed at Sar- 
atoga by Burgoyne and 
his officers. One sheet is sub- 
scribed by Burgoyne and the Eng- 
lish officers; and the other by 
Riedesel and the German officers. 
Mr. Thornton put it into the great 
Sanitary Fair held in Boston, with 
the understanding that it should 
be given to the Public Library if 
jjiiooo were subscribed for the ob- 
jects of the Fair ; and this being 
done, the interesting document, 
which was originally among the 
Heath papers, passed in 1864 into 
that depository. 

The Convention troops proved 
a rather turbulent set. The militia 
were not disciplined, and encoun- 
ters not infrequently occurred be- 
tween the prisoners and their 
guards. Some blood and even life 
was lost; and at last Colonel Da- 
vid Henley, who was in com- 
mand in Cambridge, was charged 
by Burgoyne with cruelty and 
unsoldierly conduct, and brought 
to trial. Colonel Glover presided, 
and Colonel William Tudor acted 
as judge-advocate. Henley was 
acquitted. He had been brigade- 
major to Heath during the siege. 
In the summer and autumn of 
1778 apprehension arose that the 
British might make an attempt to 
rescue the prisoners by landing 
near Boston ; and so by detach- 



LIFE IN BOSTON IN THE REVOLUTIONARY PERIOD. 



ments the Convention troops were sent under 
guard into the interior of the State. The last of 
them left on the 1 5th of October ; but some thirty 
or forty of the worst characters were left behind 
confined in the guardships in the harbor. In 




have done their part ; but very few, if any, 
private families have any acquaintance with 
them." (Familiar Letters, p. 342.) Hancock 
entertained them at a "superb ball " in Concert 
Hall, October 29. (Moore's Diary, ii. 88, 102.) 
The French left for the West Indies in Novem- 
ber, and the regiments went home. 



November, as is well known, the prisoners were 
marched to Virginia. See the authorities enu- 
mer.ited in Winsor's Readers' Handbook of the 
Revolution, p. 149. 

In November the Baron Stcuben had arrived 
at Portsmouth, eager to throw his influence and 



(L 



skill into the American cause. Coming to Boston 
he found the community elated over the capture 
of Burgoyne, and addressed a letter at once to 
Gates, " the conqueror of Burgoyne," commend- 
ing himself to his attention. We cannot follow 
him to Valley Forge, nor relate here the benefit 
which came to the camp there from his devotion. 
Late in the summer of 1778 the expedition 
which was intended to drive out the British from 
Newport, and with which Hancock had gone as 
Major-General in command of the Massachu- 
setts militia, came to nought. The French 
fleet blockading the English had been scattered 
in a gale ; and on returning to the blockade they 
were not prevailed upon to assist in an attack, 
but sailed for Boston, leaving Sullivan, who had 
charge of the expedition, to extricate himself as 
best he could. Arrived in Boston late in Au- 
gust, the French repaired their vessels and 
replenished their stores. Lafayette came to 
lioston and endeavored to prevail upon the 
French Admiral, D'Estaing, to remain on the 
coast ; while Howe, following the French, had 
come within (he Capes with his fleet, as if eager 
for a battle. The contingency was alarming, 
and nine regiments of militia were ordered to 
I'M ist on; but the danger passed when Howe 
withdrew. Mrs. Ad.ims, mentioning the hos- 
pitalities which the French officers extended 
on board their ships, adds : " I cannot help 
saying that they have been neglected in the 
town of Boston. Generals Heath and Hancock 
VOL. III. 24. 



IN COMMAND. In the au- 
tumn of 1778 (November 6) General Gates ' siu 
ceeded Heath in the command in Boston. He 
came with his. wife and a suite, and the people 
welcomed him kindly. Here he continued till 
the following spring; but his stay was not 
altogether an agreeable one. William Palfrey 
writes to General Greene in January, 1779, of 
the condition of affairs during Gates's command 
in Boston : " There seems to be a 
coolness between Hancock and Gen- 
eral Gates. Neither they nor their 
ladies have visited each other. Gen- 
eral G. seems not very well pleased 
with his situation, and I believe wislu^ 
<"jy most heartily to return to his Sabinc 
/P* fi.M. HJ S family have been involved 
in quarrels almost ever since 
they have been in the place, 
which bid fair to proceed to 
such a length that the civil 
authority thought proper to interpose. Mi. 
Bob. Gates and Mr. John] Carter have fought; 
but it proved a bloodless encounter." Sargent's 
Loyalist Poetry, 160. 

The duel thus referred to took place on the 
last day of the year, in a pasture near the Rox- 
bury Meeting-house. Gates missed Carter, and 
Carter refused to fire. 



fields. 



THE PENOBSCOT EXPEDITION. This was 
seemingly the most formidable and actually the 
most luckless expedition which Boston sent out 
during the course of the war. There have been 
various incidental accounts and illustrative con- 
tributions, as detailed in Winsor's Readers' Hand- 
book of the American Revolution, p. 208 ; but dur- 
ing the present year the Wcymouth Historical 
Society has published The Original Journal of 
General Solomon Lm-ell, kept during the fenoosfof 
Expedition, 1779, with a Sketch of hit Life, by 
Gilbert N . 

Lovell, as colonel of one of the Massachu- 
setts regiments, had been at Dorchester Heights 
in 1776. The next year he was made the rank- 
ing officer of the 
militia of the sea- 
board, subordinate ~V^^a * 
to the general of 
the department at Boston, a position which 
he retained during the war. In 1778 he had 

1 Stuart's superb poi trait of Gates is fir 
gravure in Mason's Stuart, p. i8j. 




j 86 



THE MEMORIAL HISTORY OF BOSTON. 



commanded a portion of this militia in the 
Rhode Island campaign of forty-seven days; 
and in October following, upon him had de- 
volved the command of the militia hastily 
assembled at the apprehension of an attack 
from the British fleet. 

In June, 1779, a British force had taken pos- 
session of a peninsula on Penobscot Bay, where 
now Castine is, in order to prevent that region 
being longer the resort of the active Boston and 
Salem cruisers, which were preying upon the 
British supply-ships as they approached the 
coast. The Massachusetts authorities, with as- 
sistance from New Hampshire, at once organ- 
ized an expedition ; and, June 26, put Lovell in 
command of twelve hundred militia and one 
hundred artillery. The " Warren," a new ship 
of thirty-two guns, and the " Providence," a 
sloop of twelve guns, both Continental vessels, 
were borrowed ; and others were chartered and 
bought. Peleg Wadsworth, the adjutant-general 




of the State, was placed second in command. 
Paul Revere, then a lieut.-colonel, was put 
in command of the artillery. The fleet dropped 
down to Nantasket Roads on the I5th of 
July, and sailed on the igth. It consisted 
of nineteen armed vessels, mounting three hun- 
dred and twenty-four guns, manned by over 
two thousand men, with over twenty transports, 
all commanded by Dudley Saltonstall, the 
captain of the " Warren." After landing on the 
Maine coast and receiving some recruits from 
York and Cumberland, of a dubious character, 
and a few Penobscot Indians, they reached the 
enemy's station on the 25th. The next day the 
troops made in part a successful landing ; but 
they were unsupported by the fleet. Two or 




three weeks were consumed in bickerings be- 
tween the Commodore and the General, with 
right apparently on the side of Lovell ; when 
a British fleet reinforced the enemy, and led 
in an attack on the American armed vessels 
and transports. The result was the destruc- 
tion of the whole floating armament, and the 
thorough dispersion of the land forces through 



the neighboring wilderness. Lovell got back 
to Boston about the twentieth of September. 
A court of inquiry, with General Artemas 
Ward as chairman, exonerated Lovell, and 
blamed Saltonstall. Their report is in the 
Massachusetts Archives, cxlv., and is printed by 
Nash. 

The Penobscot expedition-rolls are in Kcrolu- 
tionary Rolls, xxxvii. 83; with a list ol vessels 
chartered for the service, p. 173, with orders, 
etc., p. 187. Vol. xxxviii. gives other papers ; and 
also xxxix. p. 113. Massachusetts Rwolutionary 
Rolls, xxviii. 58, gives the officers of the expe- 
dition, and also the officers of the Boston regi- 
ments, and two new regiments. 

THE NAVAL SKRVICE. On Dec. n, 1776, 
the Government of Massachusetts authorized 
Mr. John Peck to build an armed vessel of six- 
teen guns, of a new construction. She was built 
in Boston, called the " Hazard," was brig-rigged, 

and of peculiar 
model. She had 
a short but bril- 
liant career, and 
took many prizes, 
some ol tiiein val- 
uable. One was the British brig "Active," Cap- 
tain Sims, of eighteen guns, sixteen swivels, and 
one hundred men, captured March 16, 1779, off 
St. Thomas, W. 1., after a sharp action of thirty 
minutes, during which the " Hazard " lost three 
killed and five wounded, and the enemy thirteen 
killed and twenty wounded. She had also an 
action with a British ship of fourteen guns and 
eighty men, which, after several attempts to 
board, sheered off. In these engagements she 
was commanded by Captain John Foster Wil- 
liams, who subsequently became celebrated as 
the commander of the " Protector." The " Haz- 
ard " was one of the unfortunate Penobscot 
expedition, and in August, 1779, was burned 
by her crew to prevent her falling into the hands 
of the enemy. 

Mr. Peck, who modelled the " Hazard," 
was the most scientific naval architect 
whom the United Colonies had produced. 
Among the vessels built by him during the 
Revolution were the " Belisarius " and the 
" Rattlesnake," noted for their stability and 
swiftness. One hundred years ago it was 
a common remark that to have a perfect 
vessel it must have a Boston bottom and 
Philadelphia sides. The "Belisarius" does 
not appear on Emmons's Lists, but the " Rattle- 
snake," a ship of twenty guns, one hundred and 
eighty-five men, commanded by Mr. Clark in 
1781, does. The British claim to have captured 
a cruiser of the name ; but as there were no less 
than four schooners so named belonging to 
Pennsylvania, and one from South Carolina, it 



LIFE IN BOSTON IN THE REVOLUTIONARY PERIOD. 



,8 7 



may have been one of them. Emmons, in his 
usually accurate tables, says that the frigates 
" Hancock " (32), and " Boston " (24), were built 
in lioston, in 1776; but they were both built by 
Stephen and Ralph Cross at their yard in New- 
binypoit, by order of the Commonwealth of 
Massachusetts, and only equipped in Huston. 
The " Hancock " was launched July 5, 1776, the 
day after the Declaration of Independence, and 
before it had been noised abroad. 

In March, 1777, Tucker was put in command 
of the " Boston ;" and on Feb. 17, 1778, he sailed 
in her to convey John Adams to France on his 
diplomatic mission. 

On the gth of November, 1776, Congn 
thorizcd the purchasing or building of three 
vessels of seventy-four guns, five of thirty-six 
guns, one of eighteen guns, and one packet. 
One of the seventy-fours, and the only vessel of 
war ordered by the Continental Congress to be 
built at Boston, was commenced in the yard of 
Benjamin Goodwin, afterward known as Tilley's 
Wharf, a short distance from Charlestown. 
Thomas Gushing, afterward the Lieut.-Gov- 
ernor of the Commonwealth of Massachusetts, 
as the agent of the Government, took pos- 
session of the dwelling-house, store, wharf, and 
yard of Goodwin for the purpose of building 
this ship. It is probable but little progress was 
made upon her, as we find in the Journal of 
Congress, July 25, 1777, 

" The Mamie Committee having represented that the 
extravagant prices now demanded for all kinds of material 
used in shipbuilding, and the enormous wages required by 
tradesmen and laborers, render the building of ships of war 
.ih. Mdy ordered by Congress, not only exceedingly expen- 
sive, but also difficult to be accomplished at this time,'* etc., 
wherefore it was 

" Resalvttt, That the Marine Committee be empowered 
to put a stop to the building of such of the Continental 
ships of war already ordered by this Congress to be built, 
as they shall judge proper, and to resume the building of 
them again when they shall find it consistent with the inter- 
est of the United States to do so." 

In 1784, the exigency having passed, the ship 
was sold on the stocks by Thomas Russell, as 
agent of the United States. The only seventy- 
four launched was the " Alliance," built under 
the superintendence of Paul Jones at Ports- 
mouth, and presented to the French Government 
in 1782, to replace the " Magnifique," lost in 
Boston Harbor. 

In September, 1777, James Sullivan writes 
from Boston: "A ship arrived yesterday with 
twelve thousand nine hundred bushels of salt, 
anil other goods, taken by the ' Tyrannicide,' a 
Massachusetts brig. Several of our public vi 
have arrived within this day or two, from l-'i 
and Spain, with clothing, tents, and arms ; one 
with ten thousand pounds sterling in value of 
Dutch cordage. The stores imported by the 
Massachusetts Hoard of War are immense." 



There is in Mojsachusetti Archives, cxlii. 158, 

a pa | x:r signed by leading Boston merchants, 

agreeing to fit out two armed ships to protect 

miing in and going out of the port of 

lioston. It is dated April 26, 1779, 

In September, 1779, the two Continental fri- 
^ati s, " lioston," Captain Tucker, and " Deane," 
Captain Nicholson, arrived, bringing as prizes 
two British armed ships, with two hundred and 
fifty prisoners. Other of their prizes had been 
ordered to Philadelphia. Boston Gatette, Sept 
13, 1779; Independent Chronicle, Sept. 9, 1779, 
In 1780 Tucker, rich as he supposed from 
prize money, moved to lioston, and lived some- 
what luxuriously for six years, in Fleet Street ; 
when, meeting embarrassments in fortune, he 
returned to Marblehead : so Shcppard says in 
his Life of Samuel Tucker, 1868, a perform- 
ance of some value, but rather too jejune for an 
octogenarian to write. 

Massachusetts built in 1779 a twenty-gun 
ship, the " Protector," and gave the command to 
John Foster Williams, Boston-born, and one of 
the most conspicuous of the enterprising sea- 
rovers of the day. A recruiting office was 
opened on Hancock's Wharf, and by dint of 
daily parades with drum and fife a crew of two 
hundred and thirty men was got together ; and 
the ship sailed from Nantasket Roads the first 
of April, 1780. William*'* first officer was a 
Marshficld man, Captain George Little, the same 
who twenty years later commanded the frigate 
"lioston." The " Protector's " second lieuten- 
ant was Joseph Cunningham of Boston. We 
have an account of her cruise from her log, now 
in the library of the New England Historical 
and Genealogical Society ; from the Kevolution- 
ary Adventures of Ebtneur Fox of Roxbury, Bos- 
ton, 1838; and from the Memoirs (MS.) of Cap- 
tain Luther Little, who served on board as mid- 
shipman and prize-master. She engaged, June 
9, an English letter-of-marque, eleven hundred 
tons, thirty-two guns, and after a severe fight 
the enemy's ship blew up. The " Protector " 
landed her sick on the coast of Maine, and came 
shortly after back to Boston to refit. On this 
second cruise, during which she sent one prize 
at least into Boston, commanded by Luther Lit- 
tle, she was overpowered off Nantucket by two 
English cruisers and taken into New York. 
Williams and George Little were carried to 
England, where the former remained as a pris- 
oner till the war closed; while Little, bribing 
a sentry, escaped to France. See list of " Pris- 
' ommitted to the Old Mill Prison," in 
.V. E. Hist. ,;</ Gfih-al. Kef., July, 1865, p. 209. 
There is much about American prisoners at 
Fort on during the Revolutionary War, \nN.E. 
Hist, and Gfne.il. J9 Washington 

<d Williams to the command of the 
revenue cutter " Massachusetts." in 1790: and in 



1 88 



THE MEMORIAL HISTORY OF BOSTON. 




this office he died, at seventy, in June. 1814. AT. 
E. Hist, and Geneal. Keg., January, 1848. 

After the defeat of Comte de Grasse in the 
West Indies, in 1782, a section of his fleet, four- 
teen sail, under Admiral Vaubiard, arrived in 
Boston, Aug. n, 1782; and one of his ships, the 
" Magnifique," entering by the narrows, was 
stranded on the bar at Lovell's Island, where 
her ribs are still embedded in the sand. Many 
attempts have been fruitlessly made to secure 
treasure from the wreck. One attempt, made 
forty or more years ago, gave no return except 
specimens of very beautiful wood of which the 
vessel was built. In July, 1859, another trial 
yielded copper, lead, and cannon-shot in consid- 
erable quantities. In 1868-69, when General 
Foster of the United States Engineers was 
widening the main ship-channel, his machines 
brought up, from a depth of more than twenty 
feet, large pieces of plank and oak timbers, which 
were thought to be a part of the wreck. The 
pilot under whose misdirection the vessel was 
lost became the sexton of the New North Church, 
and the wilful boys of the parish used to taunt 
him by chalking this couplet on the meeting- 
house door: 

" Don't you run this ship ashore 
As you did the seventy-four." 

(Shurtleff's Description of Boston, p. 552.) In 
October Mrs. Adams writes : " The French fleet 
still remain with us, and the British cruisers in- 
sult them. More American vessels have been 
captured since they have Iain here than for a 
year before." Familiar Letters, p. 407. 

The Provincial Congress of Massachusetts, 
April 29, 1776, ordered the naval flag to be a 
green pine-tree upon a white ground, with an in- 
scription, "Appeal to Heaven." The earliest 
representation of this emblematic pine-tree now 
known is found in the vignette of a contempo- 
rary French map, and is re-engraved in Froth- 
ingham's &>? of Boston, p. 262, and in Lossing's 
Fit'ld-liook of the Revolution, i. 570. 

In the autumn of 1776, by orders of the 
council, the sloop " Freedom," commanded by 
John Clouston, and the sloop " Republick," 
commanded by John Foster Williams, had been 
ordered to Boston ; and one of these vessels, at 
least as late as August of 1777, bore the pine- 
tree flag, as the annexed bill shows. 



The Editor has used in this section some 
notes kindly furnished by Admiral George Henry 
Preble, as well as this writer's exhaustive History 
of the American Flag. 



PART I. 



CHAPTER I. 

THE LAST FORTY YEARS OF TOWN GOVERNMENT, 

1782-1822. 

BY HENRY CABOT LODGE, PH.D. 

~D ETWEEN the Treaty of Peace at Paris, which acknowledged American 
-*-^ Independence, and the change of local government in Boston from the 
form of a town to that of a city, forty years elapsed. That period was to 
Boston a season of growth and prosperity ; the former slow, the latter bril- 
liant at times, and at times clouded by the storms of war which then shook 
the civilized world. The heroic period in the history of the town in its 
corporate capacity closed when Washington marched in at the head of his 
army, and Lord Howe sailed out of Boston Harbor. In the years preced- 
ing that event Boston had been the most important name in the long list of 
English possessions. It had figured in the newspapers, in the conferences 
of cabinets and the debates of Parliament, with unrivalled frequency. It 
had lighted the flame of resistance, endured the. first stroke of angry rulers, 
and had witnessed the first disaster to the British arms. During the Revo- 
lution, Boston untouched after the first shock of war had passed away 
had her share of glory and suffering; but she ceased to be the central point 
of resistance, or to attract further the attention of England and Kurope. In 
the forty years which followed the close of the war the old town, as such, 
took no memorable action, with one or two rare exceptions which will be 
described in their place. During this period, therefore, the history of Bos- 
ton is, in its most salient features, interwoven with that of national politics, 
and, above all, with the fate of a great political party, which found here 
some of its ablest and most steadfast leaders ; and which here, too, pre- 
served longer than anywhere else an almost unbroken ascendancy. The 
history of the town, then, at this time is to a large extent the history of a 
party and of the men who composed and led it. In those days subjects of 



190 THE MEMORIAL HISTORY OF BOSTON. 

interest were few in the extreme. The fortunes of the Bostonians were in- 
volved in commerce, enterprising, far reaching, and successful ; 1 but it may 
be fairly said, that outside of business and professional work the only intel- 
lectual excitement was found in politics ; and to politics, consequently, all the 
strongest and ablest men of the community turned their zealous attention. 
To understand the history of Boston during the period included between 
the dates placed at the head of this chapter, it is necessary, if we wish to 
set in strong relief the characteristic features of the time, and not to wander 
in a tangled maze of valueless details, to study the fortunes of the ruling 
political party in the town. In that party, or in opposition to it, we must 
sooner or later meet with every man of importance ; in their contests we 
must deal with every question which affected the interests of the town as well 
as those of the State or Nation ; and thus we cannot fail to comprehend the 
general character of the life and society of that day and generation. 

The peace of 1782 found Boston shorn of many of the attributes which 
had made her the first among the towns of the English colonies in America. 
The population, which before the war had numbered nearly twenty thousand, 
sank at the time of the siege to six thousand, comprising only those abso- 
lutely unable to get away ; and when peace came it had risen to but little 
over twelve thousand. Military occupation, pestilence, and the flight of the 
Tory party had done their work, and had more than decimated the people. 
Commerce, the main support of the inhabitants, suffered severely in the war, 
and had been only partially replaced by the uncertain successes of the pri- 
vateers. The young men had been drawn away to the army ; both State 
and Confederacy were practically bankrupt ; and the disorganization conse- 
quent upon seven years of civil war was great and disastrous. Boston was 
brought face to face with this gloomy condition of her affairs when the long 
strain of the Revolution was removed by the Treaty of Paris, and her 
people, with characteristic energy, set to work at once to remedy their 
misfortunes. Again the harbor was whitened with the sails of merchant 
ships, once more the trades began to flourish with their old activity in shop 
and ship-yard, 2 and the old bustle and movement were seen anew in the 
streets ; but there was much weary work to be done before the ravages of 
war could be repaired. Ten years elapsed before the population reached 
the point at which it stood prior to the Revolution ; and in that decade 
both town and State had much to endure in settling the legacies always 
bequeathed to a community by civil strife. The adjustment of social, finan- 
cial, and political balances, after such a wrenching of the body politic, was 
a slow and in some respects a harsh and trying process, and many years 
passed before a condition of stable equilibrium was again attained. 

The mere fact of revolution implies, of course, a rearrangement of 
classes in any community to a greater or less extent. In the provincial 
times, although the political system and theory of Massachusetts were demo- 

1 [See Mr. H. A. Hill's chapter in Vol. IV. '-' [See the chapter on "Industries" in Vol. 
ED.] IV. ED.] 



THE LAST FORTY YEARS OF TOWN GOVERNMENT. 19! 

cratic, there was a vigorous and powerful aristocracy holding all the ap- 
pointed and many of the elective offices, and recognized as leaders in public 
affairs. As a rule, this provincial aristocracy, which had its headquarters 
in Boston, was strongly in sympathy with the Crown, and abandoned the 
country on the success of the Patriots, either in the great flight which t"<>k 
place when Howe evacuated Boston, or singly, when opportunity offered. 
Their estates were confiscated, and they themselves took refuge for the nn >^t 
part in the northern provinces, and sometimes in England ; but wherever 
they were their loyalty was remembered, and they were aided by the Kng- 
lish Government. 1 Here and there exceptions to this rule could, of course, 
be found, as notably in the case of John Hancock and the Quincys; 
although even in the latter family of Patriots one distinguished member was 
a Tory, and went into exile in consequence. 2 There were a few others of 
this class who, while their sympathies were with Kngland, managed to 
preserve a judicious neutrality, and remained in their native town, suspected 
by many, and stripped of all political power, but retaining their social posi- 
tion, and after many years regaining some portion of their influence. These 
j remnants of the provincial aristocracy were at best but trifling, and new 
men ftad ample openings in the great gaps which war had made. The new 
men, of course, came ; and equally, of course, they were the leaders of the 
successful Revolution. They were not, however, as commonly happens in 
such cases, drawn from the class immediately below that which had been 
overthrown. The country aristocracy, the squires and gentry of the small 
towns and villages, unlike their brethren of the capital, had been as a rule 
on the side of resistance to England, and had furnished most of the Revolu- 
tionary leaders. When their battle was won, many of them came up from 
their counties and settled in Boston, occupying the places of their banished 
opponents, and not infrequently by. cheap purchases becoming possessors 
of the confiscated homes of the exiles. To this class, which, to borrow 
a very famous name, may be not inaptly styled the Country party, be- 
longed, for example, the Adamses and Fisher Ames from Norfolk, the 
Prescotts from Middlesex, and the Sullivans from New Hampshire; while 
from Essex, most prolific of all, came the Parsonses, Pickerings, Lees, Jack- 
sons, Cabots, Lowells, Grays, and Elbridge Gerry. These men and their 
families rapidly filled the places left vacant in society by the old supporters 
of the Crown, and, of course, already possessed the political power which 
they had gained by the victories of the Revolution. This new aristocracy 
maintained for many years the ascendancy in public affairs which had been 
held by their predecessors, but their tenure, weakened by the ideas devel- 
oped in the Revolution, was more precarious ; and although they dictated 
the policy of the State for nearly half a century, their power as a class 
broke down and disappeared before the rapid rise and spread of democracy 
during the lifetime of the next generation. 

1 [See Editorial Notes at the end of Mr. cral of the Province, a brother of J.wiah Quincy, 
Scudder's chapter in this volume. ED.] Jr., the Patriot. There is a biography of him in 

a [This w.is S.imuel Quincy, Solicitor-Gen- the appendix to Curuxii's Journal. En.] 



THE MEMORIAL HISTORY OF BOSTON. 



The Patriot party the Whigs of the Revolution triumphed so com- 
pletely by the result of the war that they found themselves not only 
masters of the field in 1782, but absolutely unopposed. In their own num- 




JOHN ADAMS. 1 

bers future party divisions were in due time formed, and we can detect the 
germ of those divisions, even before the peace, in the Constitutional Conven- 
tion which met at Boston in i/So. 2 The old chiefs as a rule leaned, as 



1 [This cut, made by the kind permission of 
the Hon. Charles Francis Adams, follows Stu- 
art's portrait of the old statesman, taken in 1825, 
a year before his death, in his eighty-ninth year. 
See Mason's Stuart, p. 125. A portrait by Cop- 
ley, showing him in court dress, painted in 1783, 
was given to Harvard College in 1828 by W. 
N. Boylston, is engraved in Adams's Works, 
vol. v., and hangs in Memorial Hall, where is 
another by J. Trumbull, given by Andrew Cragie 



in 1794. Another by Stuart is owned by Mr. T. 
Jefferson Coolidge, of Boston. There is in the 
Historical Society's cabinet a copy, by Stuart 
Newton, of Gilbert Stuart's portrait. See Pro- 
ceedings, April, 1862, p. 3. The Boston Magazine, 
February, 1784, has a full-face portrait of John 
Adams, engraved by J. Norman. En.] 

2 [See Mr. Charles Deane's valuable paper 
on the connection of Judge Lowell with the 
Declaration of Rights, in Mass. Hist. Soc. Proc., 



THE LAST FORTY YEARS OF TOWN GOVERNMENT. 



'93 



might be expected, to popular and democratic views ; but what was more 
important, they belonged, like Sam Adams, to the class of minds which can 
destroy or defend, but which cannot construct. The younger leaders, on 
the other hand, belonged to the coming period of reconstruction, when a 
new fabric of politics and society was to be built up, and were more con- 
servative and less democratic than those whom they had followed in the 
conflict with England. The first serious division of opinion in the Patriot, 
party grew out of the difficulties engendered by the war. The heaviest 
burdens were financial. Debts, public and private, weighed severely upon 
the State, and upon nearly every member of the community. General in- 
solvency, in fact, prevailed. The war had drained the country of specie; 
the Continental paper was worthless, and that of the State not much better. 
The scarcity of a decent circulating medium was so great that payments in 
kind were legalized. To thinking men it was already obvious that a strong 
central government, stability, order in the public finances, and a vigorous 
administration, both State and National, were essential to drag the country 
put of the chaos of floating debts, and knit once more the political bonds 
almost dissolved by war. To effect such results was no easy matter. So- 
ciety and public opinion had been grievously shaken, and old habits had 
been loosened and weakened. As always happens in times of distress and 
depression, there were many among the more ignorant of the community who 
mistook effect for cause. They were poor and in debt ; and in the means 
adopted by their creditors to collect debts through the usual legal machinery, 
they believed they saw the source of their sufferings. The popular feeling 
of discontent in the western part of the State, therefore, began as early as 
1782 to express itself in resistance to law and to the courts. Matters went 
on from bad to worse ; violence and force became more and more common ; 
the power of the State was crippled ; and at last it all culminated in the 
insurrection known in our history as Shays' Rebellion, which not only 
threatened the existence of the Commonwealth, but shook to its foundations 
the unstable fabric of the Confederacy. While the storm was gathering, 
John Hancock, the popular hero and governor, not fancying the prospect 
opening before the State, and the consequent difficulties and dangers likely 
to beset the chief magistrate, took himself out of the way, and the younger 
and more conservative element in politics elected James Bowdoin in his 
stead. It was a fortunate choice in every way. Bowdoin was a wise, firm, 
courageous man, perfectly ready to sacrifice popularity, if need be, to the 
public good. He was warmly supported in Boston, as the principles and 
objects of Shays and his followers were peculiarly obnoxious to a business 
community. The alarm in the town was very great, for it looked as if their 
contest for freedom was about to result in anarchy. The young men came 
forward, armed themselves, and volunteered for service; but the Governor's 
firmness was all that was needed. General Lincoln, at the head of the mili- 

April, 1874, p. 299; also Governor Bullock's admirable paper in the Amcr. Antiq. Sac. Prvt n 
April 27, iSSi. ED.] 
VOL. in. 25. 



194 THE MEMORIAL HISTORY OF BOSTON. 

tia, easily crushed the feeble mob gathered by Shays, whose followers were 
entirely dispersed. 1 Nevertheless the rioters represented, although in a 
very extreme fashion, the general sentiment of the State, demoralized and 
shaken by civil war, as was shown by the almost criminal delay of the lower 
branch of the Legislature in sustaining the Governor in his efforts to main- 
tain order, and by their reluctance to declare the insurgents in rebellion, a 
step forced upon them by the vigor of the Governor and Senate. This un- 
happy condition of public opinion was still more strongly manifested at the 
next election. The issue was made up between pardon and sympathy for 
the rebels on the one side and just and salutary punishment on the other. 
The conservative party, in favor of the latter course, put forward Bowdoin ; 
while Hancock, who had been under shelter, now came forward once more 
to catch the popular support as the advocate of mercy, which another better 
and braver man had alone earned the right to dispense. Hancock had 
chosen his time well. Popular feeling in the country districts was with the 
insurgents, and Bowdoin was defeated ; although Boston, now thoroughly 
in the hands of the younger and more conservative party, strongly sustained 
him. Thus the new party of order and reconstruction started in Boston, 
which continued to be its headquarters; and gradually extending its influ- 
ence, first through the eastern towns and then to the west, came finally to 
control the State. 

The Shays Rebellion did more, however, than decide the elections in 
Massachusetts. It was without doubt an efficient cause in promoting the 
Constitutional Convention at Philadelphia, and in frightening the decrepit 
and obstructive Congress of the Confederation. The adoption of the Con- 
stitution, submitted by the delegates who met in Philadelphia, was an event 
of national as well as local importance, for the adhesion of the great State 
of Massachusetts was essential to success. Boston was the scene of the 
protracted struggle in the Convention which was held to consider this 

1 [The story of this insurrection enters into supplied the means by which, in January, Gen- 
the substance of all histories of Massachusetts, eral Lincoln was put in command of forty-four 
but it has been amply told by G. R. Minot, in his hundred men, and with these he marched from 

Roxbury on the twenty-first. 

When Bowdoin went to Cambridge to 
review Brooks's troops, being then about 
fifty-eight years old, he is described as 
monograph, Insurrections in Massachusetts in wearing a gray wig, cocked hat, white broad- 
1786, published in 1788, and in a second edition cloth coat and waistcoat, red small-clothes, and 
in 1810; and there are numerous refer- 
ences to contemporary and other au- 
thorities in a chapter on it in Barry's 
Massachusetts, iii. ch. 6. See also Sar- 
gent's Dealings with the Dead, No. 29, 
and Holland's Western Massachusetts. 
There is a volume in the Massachusetts 
Archives on Shays' Insurrection. A 
company of light infantry was raised in Boston black silk stockings. Sullivan's Public Men, 
to act against the insurgents, Harrison Gray letter ii. Massachusetts Rei.>olutionary Rolls, ix. 
Otis being made captain, with Thomas Russell contains certificates of service in Shays' Rebel- 
and John Gray as lieutenants. Boston liberally lion. ED.] 




THE LAST FORTY YEARS OF TOWN GOVERNMENT. 



'95 



momentous question, first in Brattle-Street Church, still bearing the marks 
of Washington's cannon, and later in the State House, and later still in 
the meeting-house in Long Lane. 1 The town was, of course, deeply 
interested in the result, and strongly in favor of the Constitution; but 
the details of the long conflict which ended in its adoption do not im- 
mediately concern this history. The conservative elements, which had 




JAMES BOWDOIN.* 

begun to take a party shape in the Shays Rebellion, developed into a 
strong and homogeneous body in favor of the Constitution. They had 
an arduous battle to fight, and they fought it well. Against them were 
arrayed all the sympathizers with the Shays Rebellion, besides many who 
had actually taken part in it, and who. having tasted the sweets of incipient 
anarchy, were averse to anything like strong government. There can be no 

delivered at Bowdoin College an excellent ad- 
dress on Bowdoin's life and character, which is 
contained in his Sfeerke* and in a later volume 
on RmvJoin, Franklin, and Washington, from the 
same gentleman. A privately piintcd edition, 
with additions and notes of the Lift and Smite* 



i [See Vol. II. p. 513. 

* [This cut follows a miniature by Copley, 
painted about 1770, now owned by the Hon. 
Robert C. Winthrop. I'.owdoin's descendant. 
Bee 1'crkins's Cffkyi r.if,- .i*J r>iiti>K'.V-3}- 
There is a profile of Howdoin in the M,ISS,IC/IH- 



1 nere is a prome 01 DVWWMII " 

tttt, Atagaume, January. ,79' Mr. Winthrop ,/ AW.. U-.u- d,te i: 



196 THE MEMORIAL HISTORY OF BOSTON. 

doubt that at the outset public feeling and a majority of the Convention 
were against the Constitution ; and, moreover, the great leaders of the Rev- 
olutionary period, Hancock and Adams, were lukewarm. By ability in 
debate, by perseverance, by managing and flattering Hancock, 1 these dif- 
ficulties were gradually overcome ; while to gain the earnest and active 
support of Adams, the popular sentiment of Boston was invoked. The 
mechanics of the town, under the lead of Paul Revere, held a great meeting 
at the Green-Dragon Tavern, 2 on Union Street, and passed resolutions in 
favor of the Constitution. This was the voice of an oracle to which Adams 
had often appealed in trying times, and its utterance now weighed with him, 
and changed cool and critical approval to active support. Perhaps it de- 
cided the fate of the Constitution ; for the great influence of Adams may 
well have counted for much in a close majority of only nineteen votes. 

The adoption of the Constitution by Massachusetts was a source of great 
satisfaction to Boston, 3 and was celebrated with great rejoicing. After the 
ratification the members of the Convention dined together, toasts were 
drunk, and the asperities of debate were forgotten for the moment in a 
general sense of pleasure and relief. The next day a procession paraded 
the streets. First came the representatives of agriculture; then the trades; 
then the " Ship Federal Constitution," drawn by thirteen horses, with a crew 
of thirteen men ; then captains and seamen of merchant-vessels ; and finally 
more trades and the militia companies. The procession visited the houses 
of the Boston delegates, fired salutes in front of the State House, while the 
proceedings concluded with another great public dinner. In the evening air 
old long-boat, named " The Old Confederation," was borne by another pro- 
cession to the Common, and there burned amid the shouts of the people. 

With intense interest Boston watched the adoption of the Constitution 
by one State after another ; and we can see, in the newspapers, the rapid 
development of the new party of reconstruction, the friends of the Con- 
stitution, now known as Federalists, and the corresponding increase of 
bitterness toward all who attempted to thwart a measure believed, in Boston 
at least, to involve the future existence of the nation. The party which 
thus took shape in the debates of the Constitutional Convention, and was 
solidified and strengthened by victory, bent all its energies to selecting 
senators and representatives who were well known to be strong friends of 

1 [Referring to Hancock's proposition of 2 [See Vol. II. p. v. ED.] 

amendments, which perhaps saved the Consti- 8 [The debates of this convention, edited by 

tution in the Convention, Rufus King writes to B. K. Peirce and Charles Hale, were published 

General Knox : " Hancock will hereafter receive by the State in 1856 The " conciliatory resolu- 

the universal support of Bowdoin's friends; and tions" introduced l>y Hancock were written by 

we tcil him that if Virginia does not unite, which Parsons (Memoir of Theophilus Parsons, 70), 

is problematical, that he is considered as the only though their authorship has been claimed for 

fair candidate for President." We all know the James Sullivan, and perhaps for others. Some 

sequel: Virginia did unite; and the Massachu- of Dr. Kelknap's minutes of the debates are 

setts Governor had a very bad attack of gout printed in Mass. Hist. Soc. Prof., March, 1858, 

when the Virginian President visited Boston the p. 296. See Mr. Cummings's chapter in this 

next year. See Amory's James Sullivan, i. 223. volume for an account of Benjamin Russell's 

ED.] reports. ED.] 



THE LAST FORTY YEARS OF TOWN COVERN.M1.M. 



'97 



the new scheme. Flushed with their first triumph, the Federalists were 
generally successful, and both senators were tried friends of the Constitu- 
tion; but their most signal victory was in the Boston District, 1 where they 
elected Fisher Ames, 2 the young and eloquent champion of the Constitu- 
tion, over Sam Adams, the veteran of the Revolution, the idol of the town, 
but now suspected of coolness toward the great instrument which was des- 
tined to be the corner-stone of a nation. The defeat of Adams by Ames 
marked Boston as the great centre of New England Federalism. 

The pleasure excited in Boston by the successful establishment of the 
new government found an opportunity for expression when Washington, 
venerated and beloved, the mainstay of the Union, as he had been of 
the Revolution, made his visit to Massachusetts in the autumn of 1789. 
The President, accompanied by the Vice-President, John Adams, was re- 
ceived by the authorities on the outskirts of the town; 8 and, having been 
presented with an address, rode through the streets on a fine white horse, 
escorted by a long procession, 4 civil and military, and greeted on all sides 
by the applause of a dense crowd. On arriving at the State House he 
was conducted to a platform thrown out on the west side of the building, 



1 [On April 12, John Adams, on his way to 
New York to become the first Vice-President 
under the new Constitution, was escorted into 
Hoston from Roxbury by a troop of horse Amid 
the ringing of bells he was carried to Governor 
ll.incock's, where he lunched with the digni- 
taries ; and then, amid another firing of cannon, 
he went on his journey. ED. | 

3 [The son of Fisher Ames, Seth Ames, Ksi| , 
in making in 1854 a new edition of the works, 
speeches, and correspondence of his father, con- 
cluded that as hi- ow i recollections were of no 
account, he was but three years old at his fa- 
ther's death, he could not do better by way of 
introduction than to give the kindly memoir by 
Dr. Kirkland, and let the letters, then first printed, 
stand as a supplement to it. In 1871 a new con- 
tribution to the subject appeared in a volume of 
Ames's Speeches in Congress, 1789-1796, edited 
by I'elham W. Ames, including five speeches nut 
given in his works. Fisher Ames studied in the 
office of William Tudor, in Boston, and though 
his residence in the town was not a long one, he 
represented it as part of the Suffolk District in 
the First Congie . It was he, too, when Wash- 
ington died, who was selected to pronounce a 
eulogy before the Legislature in Boston. On his 
own death, in 1808, his body was brought to 
ISostim, that Samuel Dexter might pronounce 
an or.iti.in over it. Stuart's portrait of Am 
owned bv Mrs. John I''.. Lodge, of I'ost.m. di - 
seending to her from her grandfather, C,eorge 
Cabot] Ann-'- friend. The likeness in Memo- 
rial Hall. Cambridge, is a copv, not ,-ueounteil 
good, by Stuart, purchased of him in 1810. 
Mason's Sftiiirf, p. I 27. A good engraving, by T. 



Kelley, of Stuart's Fisher Ames appeared in the 
Boston Mi'ii/lily .\f,igti;ine, January, 1826. He is 
the subject of some further biographical details 
in Loring's Hundred Boston Orators, p. 296. 
KM. | 

8 ( As Washington approached Boston he was 
met by a troop of horse from Cambridge, and in 
this town he tarried an hour, to visit the man- 
sion which had been his headquarters at the 
time of the siege. His chariot was now changed 
for the saddle, and at the village green General 
Brooks saluted him with a thousand militia in 
line. ED.] 

4 [The procession was headed by the band of 
the French fleet then in the harbor, which at the 
same time united its salvos with those of the 
Castle and the parading artillery companies; 
while Colonel Bradford, with five companies of 
city troops, took the lead. It will be remembered 
that l>eforc the start was made Washington was 
kept waiting in the cold while an unseemly al- 
tercation took place between the selectmen and 
Sheriff Henderson, who was present represent- 
ing the Governor, and assumed to control the 
order of the march. The sheriff threatened " to 
make a hole " through some of the town's officers, 
and they waived their rights. They later, Dec. 
>. wrote an indignant letter to Hancock, 
who replied by sending Henderson's version of 
the affair, in which he claimed to have acted 
:ing to his Excellency's orders," which 
Hancock did not gainsay ; and to this the select- 
'irned a temperate reply that they should 
not presume to altercate with his Excellency, 
etc. The letters are in the Charity Building 
collection. Ei>.] 



198 



THE MEMORIAL HISTORY OF BOSTON. 



and arranged, as we are informed, " to exhibit in a strong light .the Man 
of the People. " As Washington stood forth in all his simple majesty, 




WASHINGTON. 1 

cheers rang out, and an ode was sung in his honor by singers placed in a 
triumphal arch close by. After this the procession broke up, and then for 



1 [This cut follows the well known Koston 
Athenaeum head by Stuart, now in the Art Mu- 
seum. Washington gave the artist sittings in 
the spring of 1796; it was never finished. This 
picture was bought, after Stuart's death, of his 
widow, and given to the Athenaeum, which also 
owns the companion head of Mrs. Washington, 
and a considerable portion of Washington's li- 
brary. See Mason's Gilbert Stuart, 103, for a 
photogravure of the original canvas. It is from 
this that Stunrt's later pictures of Washington 
were reproduced. Replicas of Stuart's Washing- 



ton, varying sometimes in accessories, are owned 
in Boston : one by Chief-Justice Gray, formerly 
the property of the Pinckney family, of South 
Carolina; one painted for Jonathan Mason, now 
owned by Mrs. William Appleton ; a copy of the 
Athenaeum head, made in iSiofor Josiah Quincy, 
now at Quincy; one belonging to the Hon. R. 
C. Winthrop, formerly owned by the MacDon- 
ald family ; one which was in a series of the first 
five presidents of the United States, bought of 
Col George Gibbs's estate by Mr. T. Jefferson 
f'oolidge. These items arc taken from a long 



THE LAST FORTY YEARS OF TOWN GOVERNMENT. 199 

several days there was a round of dinners and state visits. Washington 
lived during his stay in Boston on the corner of Tremont and Court streets, 
where a small and lofty tablet still commemorates his sojourn. The 
most amusing incident of his visit, and the one most characteristic both 
of the men and the times, was the little conflict between him and John 
Hancock on a point of etiquette. Hancock, as the chief officer of what 
he esteemed a sovereign State, undertook to regard Washington as a 
sort of foreign potentate, who was bound to pay the first visit to the ruler 
of the Commonwealth in which he found himself; while Washington took 
the view that he was the superior officer of the Governor of Massachu- 
setts, and that, as the head of the Union, Hancock was bound to visit 
him first. Washington's sense of dignity, and of what was due to his 
position, had often been exempjified, and the Governor's vanity and State 
sovereignty were no match for ft. Hancock prudently made the gout an 
excuse for giving way ; and having as fine a sense as the first Pitt of the 
theatrical properties of his malady, appeared at Washington's door, swathed 
in flannel, and was borne on men's shoulders to the President's apartments. 
After this all went well, and Washington's visit not only drew out the really 
vigorous personal loyalty of the people, but still further kindled the en- 
enumeration of copies, by himself, of Stuart's like- 
nesses of Washington given by Mr. Mason. 

A silhouette of Washington, taken (hiring the 
last years of his presidency, is now preserved in 
the Mass. Hist. Society's cabinet, of which a 
heliotype is given in their Prixeedings, Decem- 
ber, 1873- 

The Historical Society also owns a copy of 
C. W. Peale's full-length of Washington, fol- 
lowing the copy owned by the Earl of Albe- 
marle ; while other repetitions of Peale's work 
are at present in the Smithsonian Institution, at 
Versailles, and at the College of New Jersey. 
Mass. Hist. Soc. froc., 1873-75. PP- 3 2 4- 35- S 66 - 

375-77- 

In 1851 there was published in Boston a pro 
file likeness of Washington, purporting to have 
been taken in Boston, in 1776, by one Fullerton. 
A pen-and-ink sketch, marked J. Hiller, 1794, 
mentioned in Muss. ///>/. -S>. . /Vac., 1874, p. 243, 
is thought to have been drawn from this. It is 
thought that a miniature likeness of Washington, 
in plaster, mentioned as tolonging t>> Mr. Melvin 
Lord, in Mia. ///>/ -V. . /''.',. Kcl.iu.uy. 1874, 
p. 254, may have been taken in Boston or Cam- 
bridge at the time of the siege. 

During Washington's visit to Boston in 1789, 
Gullaghcr, the painter, stealthily made a likeness 
of the General, while he was at chapel ; but a day 
or two later, following him to Portsmouth, he 
made the likeness hi, h is cn-i-ived in the Miss. 
Hist. Set. /'>'<:, March. iSjX. |>. 309. The artist 
sold his picture in Boston, by a rattle, and it 
finally came into the poueuiofl of Dr. Belknap. 
Harvard College had given its first doctorate of 



laws to Washington in 1776; and at the request 
of its corporation his likeness was painted in 
1790 by Edward Savage, of which there is an 
engraving by the artist, published in 1793. The 
painting hangs in Memorial Hall. 

Christ Church contains the first monument 
ever erected to his memory. It is a bust in mar- 
ble, of which photographs have recently been 
taken by Notman at the instance of Mr. John C. 
Ropes. Chantrey's statue of Washington, which 
stands in the State House, was erected in 1828, 
at a cost of $1 5,000. In this building are to be 
seen fac-similes of the monumental stones erected 
in the church at Brington, Northamptonshire, to 
the memory of members of Ihe Washington fam- 
ily, who were long supposed to be ancestors of 
George Washington, the reproductions having 
been given l>y K.ul Spencer to Charles Sumner, 
and by him to the State, in 1861. Later investi- 
gations of Colonel Joseph 1.. Chester have ren- 
dered it almost certain that the American family 
did not spring from this stock. See tf,-n,l,i and 
Genealogist, London, and Heraldi, Journal, Bos- 
ton, 1866. The equestrian statue in the Public 
Garden, modelled by Thomas Ball, of which an 
engraving is given in Vol. IV. w.is not placed 
in position till 1869, though begun some years 
earlier. 

It was after this visit of the General, in 
1789, that the main thoroughfare into the town 
from Roxbury was named for him; but the 
various names that designated this street north 
( ;, t, were not displaced, and the 

name applied to the whole length of it, till 1824. 
Ei). | 



2OO 



THE MEMORIAL HISTORY OF BOSTON. 



thusiasm of Boston and of New England for the Union, and consequently 
strengthened the hands of the Federalists. 1 

The assumption of the State debts by the new Federal government did 
much to relieve the financial burdens of Massachusetts ; and this, combined 
with the sense of stability in public affairs, aroused the spirit of enterprise 
everywhere, so that Boston became the centre of many great schemes for 
public improvements, most of which came to nothing, although they served, 
nevertheless, to encourage the business of the town. The population had 




THE TRIUMPHAL ARCH. 2 

again reached the number which it had before the Revolution, and the new 
era to which the war had been a prelude was fairly begun. As if to mark 
the change which had set in, one of the most conspicuous characters of the 
old period passed away at this time, by the death of John Hancock. 3 
There have been but few men in history who have achieved so much fame, 
and whose names are so familiar, who at the same time really did so little, 
and left so slight a trace of personal influence upon the times in which 
they lived, as John Hancock. He was valuable chiefly from his pictur- 



1 [Recollections of Washington's visit, by 
General W. H. Simmer, are printed in the New 
England Historical and Genealogical Register, 
April, 1854, and April, 1860, p. 161. See also 
Loring's Hundred Boston Orators, p. 114; Ed- 
ward Everett's Mount Vernon Papers, 106. See 
the account of the musical accompaniments in 
the Hon. Robert C. Winthrop's Speeches and 
Addresses, 1852-1867, p. 330. Some explana- 
tions by Nathaniel Gorham upon the disturb- 
ance between Hancock and Washington, printed 
in Drake's Landmarks of Middlesex, p. 1 5, throw 



a light upon the matter more favorable to Han- 
cock. ED.] 

' 2 [This is a fac-simile of the view of this tri- 
umphal arch, which appeared in the Massachu- 
setts Magazine, January, 1790 The erection 
stretched with a triple arch across Washington 
Street, just north of Court Street. The inscrip- 
tion read : " To the man who unites all hearts." 
-Er,.] 

' [Hancock died Oct. 8, 1793, an l was buried 
in the Granary burying-ground. See Shurtleff, 
Description of Boston, p. 212. ED.] 



THE LAST FORTY YEARS OF TOWN GOVERNMENT. 2OI 



esqueness. Everything about him is picturesque, from his bold, hand- 
some signature, 1 which gave him an assured immortality, to his fine house 
which appears in the pictures of the day as the " Seat of His Excellency, 
John Hancock." His position, wealth, and name made him valuable to 
the real movers of the Revolution, when men of his stamp were almost 
without exception on the side of the Crown ; and it was this which made 
such a man as Sam Adams cling to and advance him, and which gave him 
a factitious importance. Hancock was far from greatness; indeed it is to 
be feared that he was not much removed from being " the empty barrel," 
which is the epithet, tradition says, that the outspoken John Adams applied 




to him. 2 And yet he had real value after all. He was the Alcibiades, in a 
certain way, of the rebellious little Puritan town ; and his display and gor- 
geousness no doubt gratified the sober, hard-headed community which 
put him at its head and kept him there. He stands out with a fine show 
of lace and velvet and dramatic gout, a real aristocrat, shining and res- 
plendent against the cold gray background of every-day life in the Boston 
of the days after the Revolution, when the gay official society of the Prov- 
ince had been swept away. At the side of his house he built a dining 
hall, where he could assemble fifty or sixty guests : and when his company 
was gathered he would be borne or wheeled in, and with easy grace de- 



1 [Few signatures are so well known as Han- 
cock's; and, as it happens, that oftenest seen, 
attached to the Declar- 
ation of Independence and 
given in the text, is one of 
the boldest and finest of 
them all. Ordinarily his 
signature, though preserv- 
ing some of the character- 
istics of that, lacked its 
steadiness and regularity of 
curve. That which is given 
in Mr. Scudder's chapter, 
and under his portrait in 
Vol. IV. p. 5, is more near- 
ly an average one. The 
one annexed, taken from a 
writing of his college days, shows some of the 
possibilities of the later ones. En.) 

a [Yet see what John Adams savs of him in 

Works, x. 259-261 ; and the grandson. Charles 

Francis Adams, not unfairly estimates the value 

of Hancock to his times in the brief memoir of 

VOL. III. 26. 



him prepared in 1876, which is printed in the 
Pennsylvania Magazine of History and Biography, 




\ favorable account is given in Sander- 
rs f the Dtilaratien of Indtftndente, 
\\hiih has been In some attributed to John 
Adams; but see John Ao it, ii. 416. 

See aKo Tutim'- ;6l, and 11. E. 

Scudder's chapter in the present volume. ED.) 



2O2 



THE MEMORIAL HISTORY OF BOSTON. 




THE HANCOCK HOUSE. 1 



light every one by his talk and finished manners. In society his pettiness, 
peevishness, and narrowness would vanish, and his true value as a brilliant 



1 [This cut follows a view of the house given 
in the Massachusetts Magazine, July, 1789; also 
given in heliotype in the Evacuation Memorial, 
p. 99 Another view of it, twenty years later or 
more, will be found in the view of upper Beacon 
Street, taken from the Common in 1804-1811, 
given in the fourth volume ; and a still later view 
(1825) is that in Snow's Boston, p. 325. Views 
of it as it appeared at a later day, when but 
a mere house-yard was left about it, are num- 
erous. Hinton, United Stales, Boston, 1834, ii. 
342; S. A. Drake's Landmarks, p. 339; S. G. 
Drake's Boston, p. 681 ; King's Handbook of Bos- 
ton, p. 12 ; Lowing*! Field-book of the Revolution, 
\. 507, etc. 

In 1859 a strenuous effort was made in the 
State Legislature to secure the passage of a bill 
by which the Commonwealth should become the 
owner of the house, using it for the residence of 
its Governors, or for any other good purpose. 
The Governor had raised the question of its 
purchase in his message, and a committee with 
the Hon. Edward G. Parker at its head had re- 
commended that $100,000 be appropriated for 
the purpose, and the heirs executed a bond to 
sell for that sum. This report was printed in 
the Boston newspapers, in February, 1859 The 
Hon. Charles W. Upham, March 17, 1859, made 
a strong appeal in the House of Representa- 
tives, in urging the claims of Hancock on the 
grateful recognition of the State, and this speech 
is reported in the Boston Daily Advertiser, March 
24, 1859. The project failed; and finally, on 



Feb. 18, 1863, the land was sold to James M. 
Beebe and Gardner Brewer, for $125,000, who 
built for their own occupancy the two houses 
now standing on the site. The mansion was re- 
served for re-erection elsewhere; but this plan 
likewise miscarried, and it was at last pulled 
down and sold as old material. The knocker 
of the front door was given to Dr. O. W. Holmes, 
who put it on the door of the old Holmes house 
in Cambridge. Mass. /fist. Soc. Proc., May, 
1875, p. 38. There is a historical account, by 
Arthur Gilman, of the Hancock house and its 
founder, in the Atlantic Monthly, 1863, P- 9 2 - 
The house was built in 1737, by Thomas Han- 
cock (see Vol. II. p. 519, for his portrait), of 
whom there is an account by Alden Bradford, in 
Hunt's Merchants' Magazine, i. 346; and who, 
dying in 1764, left his mansion and the bulk of 
his estate to his nephew, John Hancock. See 
the genealogy in N. E. Hist, and Geneal. Reg. 
ix. 352. There is no trace of a grant to war- 
rant the use of the arms borne by John Hancock. 
(Heraldic Journal, ii. 99.) For a time after he 
resigned the presidency of Congress, Hancock 
lived during the summer in Jamaica Plain, in a 
cottage which stood just beyond the present resi- 
dence of Mr. Moses Williams. The story goes 
that he gave up his residence; there because his 
neighbor, William Gordon, the historical writer, 
who was one of the overseers of Harvard Col- 
lege, greatly offended Hancock by his severe 
strictures on Hancock's neglect to settle his ac- 
counts as treasurer of that institution. ED.] 



THE LAST FORTY YEARS OF TOWN GOVERNMENT. 203 

and picturesque figure would come out. His death was but one of the 
incidents which, as the old century hastened to its close, marked the change 
which had fairly come. The old simplicity, as well as the old stateliness and 
pomp, were alike slipping away. Those were the days when the gentry lived 
in large houses, enclosed by handsome gardens, and amused themselves with 
card parties, dancing parties, and weddings ; when there were no theatres, 
and nothing in the way of relaxation except these little social festivities. 
But the enemy was at the gates, a great, hurrying, successful, driving 
democracy. Brick blocks threatened the gardens ; the theatre came, des- 
pite the august mandate of Governor Hancock; ' the elaborate and stately 
dress of the eighteenth century began to be pushed aside, first for grotesque 
and then for plainer fashions; 2 the little interests of provincial days began 
to wane ; Unitarianism sapped the foundations of the stout old church of 
Winthrop and Cotton ; 8 and the eager zest for intellectual excitement 
poured itself into business and politics, the only channels then open, giv- 
ing to the latter an intensity hardly to be appreciated in days when mental 
resources are as numerous as they then were few. Boston was feeling the 
effects of the revolution which had been wrought by the War for Inde- 
pendfence, the first act of the mighty revolutionary drama just then reopen- 
ing in Paris. 

To this change and progress in society and in habits of life the French 
Revolution gave of course a powerful impetus. 4 The tidings from Paris 
were received in this country at first with a universal burst of exultation, 
which found as strong expression in Boston as anywhere. The success of 
Dumouriez was the occasion of a great demonstration. A liberty pole was 
raised, 5 an ox roasted, and bread and wine distributed in State Street; 
while Sam Adams, who had succeeded his old companion as Governor, 
presided, with the French Consul, at a great civic banquet in Faneuil Hall. 
The follies of the Parisian mob were rapidly adopted ; " Liberty and 
Equality " was stamped on children's cakes; and the sober merchants and 
mechanics of Boston began to address each other as " citizen " Brown, and 
" citizen " Smith. The ridiculous side of all this business would soon have 
made itself felt among a people whose sense of humor was one of their 
strongest characteristics ; but when the farce became tragedy, and freedom 
was baptized in torrents of blood, and the gentle, timid, stupid king, known 
to Americans only as a kind friend, was brought to the block, the enthu- 
siasm rapidly subsided. 6 Every one knows how the affairs of France were 
dragged into our national politics for party purposes, with Democratic 
societies and Jacobin clubs in their train, and the bitterness which came 

1 [Sec the chapter on "The Drama," by [The pole, sixty feet high, was raised, Jan. 

Colonel Clapp, in Vol. IV. En.] 24, 1793, in the area then named, and since 

" [See Mr. J. 1'. Onincy's chapter in Vol. .ailed. 1 .iK-rtv Square. The ox was roasted on 

IV. li.| ('o|ip'> Hill, and the viamU were served on 

' [Sec I>i. I'. al>o ( ly's chapter in the present tables in State Si: nu from the Old 

volume. Ki>.| State HOUM (.. m-.ir Kill>v Street. Kn.| 

| Sec it> effect on the press, noted in Mr. ' [See M. J. 1' VUMI.^S chapter in Vol. 

Ciimmings's < liapter in this volume. Ki>.| IV. p. II. Kr> 1 



204 THE MEMORIAL HISTORY OF BOSTON. 

from them ; but all this gained little foothold in Boston, where the insults 
of Genet roused general indignation, and the attitude of Washington toward 
the insolent Frenchman found hearty support. But fidelity to Washington 
and to the Federalist party was about to encounter a much severer strain. 
The war with England was so recent that it was hazardous to make any 
treaty with that country, and to carry through such a treaty as was actually 
made was a task for which Washington alone was capable. The Jay treaty, 
which even Hamilton is said to have called, in the first moment of irrita- 
tion, " an old woman's treaty " on the one side ; and which Charles Fox, 
with all his liberalism, thought unfavorable to England on the other, 
was received in America with a cry of rage so general that it seemed uni- 
versal. In Boston a popular meeting ' was held, and Democratic leaders 
indulged in vehement and acceptable denunciation. Riots broke out of a 
rather ugly character, which Governor Adams, blinded by prejudice, refused 
to repress ; 2 and the excellent Mr. Jay was hung and burned in effigy, to the 
perfect satisfaction of the mob. The Federalists were stunned. Many of 
them openly condemned the treaty, while only the very coolest heads 
among them believed in sustaining the administration. Gradually, however, 
the leaders rallied. The Boston Chamber of Commerce passed resolutions 
in support of the President ; reaction began ; the stern, calm replies of 
Washington checked the tide of angry passion, and men at last began to 
see, especially in a business community, that the treaty, even if not the best 
possible, was necessary and valuable, and that the fortunes of the young 
nation could not be entangled with those of the mad French Republic. 
Boston was once more Federalist, and the stormy gust of anger had blown 
over. 3 

The growth of the Federalist party was shown when Sam Adams re- 
tired from public life, by the choice of Increase Sumncr 4 as his succes- 

sor. Governor Sum- 
ner was an ardent sup- 
porter of John Adams, 





eventful administra- 
tion, and the troubles with France which ensued awakened deep indignation 
in Boston. Sumner's course drew out the most violent attacks, but he 
was re-elected by an overwhelming majority. The fortunes of the Feder- 

1 [At a town-meeting convened in Boston to Ames which carried the House of Representa- 

consider it but one defender of it spoke. The lives into measures sustaining it. This, the most 

selectmen transmitted to the President their Res- famous of his speeches, is in his Works, and in 

olutions of disapproval, and drew from Wash- the later Speeches, where an interesting note on 

ington a dignified reply. Sullivan's Public Men, it is prefixed. En.] 

p. 96. See further, on the opposition to Jay's 4 [Increase Sumner was born in Roxbury. 

treaty in Boston, in Loring's Hundred Boston See a memoir and genealogy in N. E. Hist, and 

Orators, p. 307. Harrison Gray Otis at this time Cental. Keg., April, 1854; also Genealogy of the 

made his first political speech. ED.] Sumner family, by W. S. Appleton, iSSo; Gen- 

'* Wells's Life of S. Adams, iii. 351. eral W. H. Sumner's History of East Boston; and 

8 [It was the masterly speech of .Fisher Bridgman's Pilg rims of Boston. En.] 




THE LAST FORTY YEARS OF TOWN GOVERNMENT. 205 

alists were at their highest point, and Moses Gill, the Lieut-Governor, 
whom the death of Sumner left at the head of the government, was suc- 
ceeded by Caleb Strong, 1 an ex-senator and 
one of the stanchest of Federalists. Hut 
even in the midst of their success the hour 
of their downfall was at hand. The admin- sy 

istration of John Adams was torn with fierce *r 

internal dissension, and the President and the leaders in New England 
were hopelessly estranged. But although many of the chiefs in Boston 

drew off from the President, the clans 

1 

stood by him and gave him the vote 
Massachusetts. It proved a usc- 
less loyalty. The Federalists fell 
from power, and the new century 
opened with the accession of Jefferson, an event which both leaders and 
followers in Boston had brought themselves to believe would be little else 
than the coming of a Marat or a Robespierre. It is hardly necessary to say 
that nothing of this sort happened, but that on the contrary a period of 
prosperity, for which the short-lived peace of Amiens opened the way, be- 
gan, as unequalled as it was unexpected. This prosperity took the form 
of maritime commerce, and poured its riches into the lap of Boston, con- 
spicuously among all the seaports. 8 At the same time, of course, all the 
country throve, although the great advance was most apparent among the 
merchants of Boston and New York and the seafaring population of New 
England. When men are making money and prospering it is not easy to 
awaken among them great political enthusiasm, nor is it easy to convince 
them that the administration under which they have succeeded is a bad 
one; but this was not the case with the leaders. Nothing could check their 
deadly hatred of Jefferson, which increased as they saw their own power 
decline and that of the Government wax strong. As the conviction forced 
itself upon their minds that the sceptre of government had passed finally to 
tin- South, before whom a divided North was helpless, they struggled vainly 
against fate ; and the bitterness of party, so marked in the first decade of 
the century, found its origin in the years of Jefferson's first term, when 
peace and prosperity reigned throughout the country. Like the Whig party 
in England after the coalition, when they were called to face Pitt and his vast 
majorities, the thin ranks of the Federalists were still further weakened by 
the internal dissensions growing out of the sorry strifes of the Adams admin- 
istration. These quarrels had been allayed by defeat; but they were only 
partially healed, and were soon to bear bitter fruit. Of all this Boston wa> 
of course the centre; and when the annexation of Louisiana roused the 
Federalists to desperation, it was in Boston that a meeting was to be held 
at which Hamilton should be present, and where the schemes of secession, 

[An engraving, after Stuart's portrait, will [See Mr. H. A. Hill's chapter in Vol. IV. 

be found in .!/<. .W.r/. JVv. Proc., \. 290 ED.) ED.] 



;06 THE MEMORIAL HISTORY OF BOSTON. 

which the New England leaders had been seriously discussing under their 
breath, should find expression and obtain a decision on their merits. The 




HAMILTON. 1 

good sense of some of the leaders contributed with other causes to prevent 
the occurrence .of this meeting ; but had there been no other obstacle, the 

1 (This statue, cut in granite, designed by Island of Nevis, West Indies, n January, 1757; 

Rimmer, and given to the city in 1865 by Tho- died in New York, 12 July, 1804." "Orator, 

mas Lee, stands in Commonwealth Avenue. It writer, soldier, jurist, financier. Although his 

is inscribed, " Alexander Hamilton, born in the particular province was the treasury, his geaiua 



'HIE LAST FORTY YKARS OF TOWN GOVERNMENT. 2OJ 

death of Hamilton would have sufficed to cause postponement, if nothing 
else. The loss of that great man was peculiarly felt in Boston, where aim 
i-vcry man of note was one of his devoted followers, and where 1-VderaliMii 
had struck its roots deeper and clung with a greater tenacity than anywhere 
else. In Hoston Hamilton's death was deeply mourned. There the money 
a large sum for those days was raised to buy his lands and relieve the 
necessities of his family ; and there the first statue of later times was raised 
to the great Secretary, commemorating alike his genius and the enduring 
and faithful Federalism of the old town in the years when the power of the 
Democracy seemed universal. 

In this dark hour the Federalists were, indeed, nearly extinct, and when 
Massachusetts in 1804 gave her electoral vote to Jefferson it seemed as if 
the end could not be far distant. In fact the Federalist party would soon 
have perished utterly had it not been for the amazing blunders of Jefferson's 
second term, which gave the party a new lease of life and a vigorous and 
partially successful existence. This revival had not begun when an incident 
occurred, familiar to all who know the history of Boston, and which forcibly 
illustrates the violent party divisions of the town. This was the famous 
shooting of young Austin by Thomas Selfridge, the former a Democrat, 
the latter a Federalist. The story of the death of Austin and the con- 
sequent trial of Selfridge are told in this History by another hand, 1 and 
do not need repetition here. The affair was made a party question ; the 
newspapers were full of flings at Federalist murders and their impunity, 
and the talk, criticism, and invective connected with it give a vivid picture 
of the heated politics of Boston at that time. But the fervor of partisan 
feeling was soon to glow with a still fiercer heat, owing to the course of the 
world's history, in which the United States the only neutral nation and still 
shackled by colonial feelings was the foot-ball of the two great contending 
forces, Napoleon Bonaparte and the English Government. Into the stream 
of these mighty events, which are world-wide in their scope, the fortunes 
of Boston were strongly drawn. The renewal of hostilities by Napoleon had 
thrown the trade of all nations, and particularly that of Kngland, the dom- 
inant power of the commercial world, into confusion. From this disorder 
the United States, as the only neutral with a strong merchant-marine, reaped 
a rich harvest, the fruits of which fell of course largely to New Kngland, 
and therefore to Boston. It was the golden era of the American merchant- 
service, in which much of the best ability and the most daring enterprise 
were concentrated. Always alert and flushed with success, the New Kng- 
land sea-captains and merchants of Boston took quick advantage of the 
troubles of Europe to engross rapidly the carrying trade of the world, 

pervaded the whole administration of \Va>hiiii;- plaster model of it is no* preserved in Albany. 

ton." The first marhlr -tame ever erected in Mif. c/ Amer. //.-,.'.. iSS, 

America is said : ' 1 1 imilion, by ' [See the chapter in Vol. I \ 

Ball Ilnuhes tin- Boston Kldptor, whi l.v Mr. Jolr 

in the Merchant-' Exchangl in Men Yoik. and Warren w.i- called 

was destroyed in the tire of 1835. The original Lift oj J. C. H\i,,cn, i. 67.- 



208 THE MEMORIAL HISTORY OF BOSTON. 

and to heap up handsome fortunes from its enormous profits. We may 
see all this energy, courage, and enterprise depicted in the now almost 
forgotten voyages of Cleaveland and Delano, and learn how strong and 
true the genius for the sea is in the New England race. 1 But we can 
also see there the dark side of the picture; not merely the normal clan- 
gers and hardships, but the insult and pillage inflicted by French and 
English, and the helpless, manly wrath and indignation of the Amer- 
ican seamen. Our success and prosperity after the outbreak of war in 
Europe was in truth too obvious, and soon aroused the unsleeping jealousy 
of England. Seizures began to be made by British cruisers; then came 
unwarrantable condemnations in the British admiralty courts ; and then op- 
pressive Orders in Council. The first sensation was one of angry pride and 
keen disappointment at interference with our apparently boundless sources 
of profit. Sharp remonstrances and resolutions went out from Boston to 
spur the lagging Executive. The Federalist leaders, who regarded Eng- 
land as the bulwark of civilization against the all-destroying French Revo- 
lution personified in Napoleon, were overborne ; and, while reprobating 
these violent measures in secret, seemed about to lose their last hold upon 
the people, and were forced to see their Governor, Caleb Strong, replaced by 

a leading Democrat, James Sullivan. 2 
The y were properly helpless before 
the righteous indignation which blazed 
up more fiercely than ever when the English, not content with despoiling 
our merchant-vessels, fired upon the national flag flying from a national 
ship. 3 If Mr. Jefferson had at that supreme moment declared war and ap- 
pealed to the country, he would have had the cordial support of the mass 
of the people not only in New England but in Boston itself; but it was 
not to be. The President faltered as the Federalists rallied and renewed 
their attack, fell back on his preposterous theories of commercial warfare, 
well suited to his timidity and love of shuffling, and forced the celebrated 
embargo through both Houses of Congress. The support of New England 
in the trying times which were at hand was lost to the administration, and 
the political game in that important section of the country was once more 
in the hands of those Federalist chiefs whose headquarters were at Boston. 
The Federalism of Boston had in fact remained steady in every trial, al- 
though there was a moment when Jefferson might have sapped its strength. 
It had been heard in Washington for years through the eloquent lips of 

1 [See Mr. H. A. Hill's chapter in Vol. IV. and principles of the Federalists better known, 

ED.] he gave his book the greater latitude of familiar 

- [Engravings of Stuart's portrait of James letters. In 1847 his sun rtM.-sucd it, much en- 
Sullivan can be found in T. C. Amory's Life of largecl. William Sullivan was born in 1774. It 
Governor Sullh'an, and in Mass. Hist. Soc. Proc., \. was he who said : " Dignified civility, based upon 
In 1834 it fell to the lot of William Sullivan, self-respect, is a gentleman's weapon and de- 
the son of Governor Sullivan, who had taken fence." William Sullivan died in 1839. See 
the opposite side in politics, to publish his Pub- Loring's Hundred Boston Orators, p. 317. ED.] 
lie Men of the Revolution and the period im- 3 [John Lowell in Peace without Dislionor,lVar 
mediately following; and to make the motives without Hope, tried to allay the excitement. ED.] 




THE LAST FORTY YEARS OF TOWN GOVERNMENT. 209 

Josiah Quincy, 1 whose voice now rose clearer and stronger than ever, trumpet- 
tongucd against the embargo policy. The defection of John Quincy Adams 
on this same measure gave the town another strong and outspoken repre- 
sentative in the Senate in the person of James Lloyd, a leading merchant; 
and thus equipped in Washington, Boston faced the impending troubles. 

So bitter was the feeling against England, so strong the sense of 
wounded national pride, that even the embargo was received in Boston 
at first with silent submission ; but its operation told so severely upon 
both town and State that hostility to the administration rapidly deepened 
and strengthened. We can now hardly realize the effect of this measure 
upon Boston ; but one fact lets in a flood of light. The tonnage of the 
United States in 1807 was, in round numbers, eight hundred and fifty thou- 
sand tons, and of this three hundred and ten thousand tons belonged to 
Massachusetts alone. The total cessation of commerce fell therefore upon 
Boston with blighting effect. Her merchant-ships rotted at the wharves, or 
were hauled up and dismantled. The busy ship-yards were still and silent, 
and all who gained their living by them were thrown out of work. 2 The 
fisheries were abandoned and agriculture was distressed. If in Philadelphia 
seamen marched in large bodies to the City Hall for relief, we can 
imagine what the condition of the seafaring population must have been in 
Boston. Ruin threatened the merchants, and poverty stared the laboring 
classes in the face. Gradually all this began to tell upon the temper of the 
people ; riots and insurrections were feared by men of all parties ; and the 
Federalists now found willing listeners when they pointed out to a people 
naturally brave and ready to fight, that the injuries inflicted by England 
were trifling in comparison with the total destruction of trade caused by 
their own Government; that the embargo had not as usual a limitation, but 
might become permanent ; and that, however it might be disguised, the only 
nation really benefited by the embargo was the French. Slowly political 
power returned to the party constantly in opposition to Jefferson and all 

1 [Of Mr. Quincy his daughter says: "The of Representatives he was -brought before the 
desertion of his friends and the violence of his people, and made speaker; and in the convcn- 
opponents were great elements of his success, tion held on the separation of Maine, he became 
He was a Federalist from principle, but too in- justly appreciated, and would have been run fur 
dependent to join in party measures. When governor the next year had he not accepted the 
in Congress, some of the leading Federalists did office of municipal judge." Mr. Quincy's political 
not support him as he could have wished. They conduct can be traced only too scantily in Ed- 
would not believe that their representative in mund Quincy's Life of his father. Something 
\\ Islington could have clearer views of the of his Congressional career, with a fac-simile of 
policy of the administration than they had, sit- " Josiah the First," a monarchical squib of which 
ting in their insurance offices in Boston. . . . his opponents thought him a fit subject, is given 
But he remained true to the Federalists, and in !. .'.{-Ixvt cf tht H'.ir cf iSu. The 
they rewarded him in 18:0 by striking his name Congressional documents which he gathered dur- 
from their list of senators without giving him ing his service at Washington are now in the 
the least intimation that they intended doing so. Public Library, and serve in part to make the 
He felt this deeply, but he went to the caucus collection of United States documents in that 
and spoke in favor of the ticket from which his library what is presumably the best in existence. 
name had been struck. This made him gener- El).] 

ally popular, and by being put into the House " [See Mr. Hill's chapter in Vol. IV. Eo.J 
VOL. III. 27. 



2IO THE MEMORIAL HISTORY OF BOSTON. 

his works. Resistance began to crop out on all sides. Pickering attacked 
Governor Sullivan in a violent pamphlet; Samuel Dexter argued in court 
against the constitutionality of the embargo, and juries refused to convict 
for infractions of the hated law. The Federalists carried the Legislature, 
and passed resolutions denouncing the embargo and questioning its con- 
stitutionality ; while the town of Boston instructed its representatives, in 
town-meeting, to resist the embargo in terms which recalled the days of 
Sam Adams and the Port Bill, and which induced John Randolph to 
remind Jefferson of the fate of Lord North in a former difficulty with 
the Puritan town. Then it was that John Quincy Adams thought treason 
and secession were afoot in Boston, and warned the administration of its 
peril. He was mistaken as to the extent of the danger, for there was no 
treason, and nothing worse than ominous whisperings of secession. The 
ripeness of the times and of the public in Boston for desperate measures 
was sufficient to excite such suspicions ; but the Federalists did not aim at 
violence. In the state of society then existing, in the opportunity offered, 
and in the condition of the times, it is a matter of wonder that passions 
were so controlled ; for it is not easy to appreciate now the mental concen- 
tration in that day and generation. There was no art, no literature, no 
science ; the only great branch of business was laid low by the embargo ; 
there were none of the thousand and one interests which now divide and 
absorb our energy and activity. Absolutely the only source of intellectual 
excitement was politics; and to this were confined the mental forces of a 
small, vigorous, cultivated, and aristocratic society, which flung itself into 
politics with its whole heart and soul. They were a convivial race, these 
Federalist leaders in Boston, and were wont to dine together at three o'clock ; 
and at five, when the ladies left the room, Madeira and politics flowed with- 
out stint until midnight and after. It is small wonder that their politics 
were heated, that ex-senators and governors bandied harsh words in the 
offices of State Street or demanded explanations in the newspapers, and 
that the traditional feuds and bitterness of 1808, although softened and ap- 
parently forgotten, have survived in Boston among those who inherit them 
even to the present day. 

With matters in this state, the passage of the enforcing act aroused 
such anger, the attitude of New England became so menacing, that the 
Northern Democrats quailed; and led by such " pseudo Republicans" as 
Joseph Story, who were not ready to sacrifice their homes to Mr. Jefferson's 
theories, they repealed the embargo. There was a great sigh of relief; and 
when the Erskine arrangement was made, the sails of the merchant-ships 
again whitened the harbor of Boston. The more reasonable policy of Mr. 
Madison was only temporary, however, in its effects, and was soon replaced 
by vacillation and by labyrinthine complications, into which it is unneces- 
sary to enter. The relaxation, however, sufficed to loosen the hold of the 
Federalists, and Governor Gore was replaced by Elbridge Gerry, whose 
administration was in itself enough to strengthen and give victory once 




THE LAST FORTY YEARS OF TOWN GOVERNMENT. 2 I I 

more to his opponents. He denounced in a message the publications of the 
Federal press, which were, indeed, vituperative and coarse to a high degree, 
especially in Boston ; and he endeavored to bring ^ 

:n the power of the government to punish the Jr x 

aggressors. He also supported a plan of arrang- 
ing election districts for partisan purposes, which 
was so bad, and at that time so unheard of, that it 
gave a new word to the language. All this en- 
abled the Federalists to defeat him by a close vote, in which they were 
aided by the gathering clouds of conflict, which broke, June 18, 1812, in 
Mr. Madison's declaration of war against England. 1 

The preceding years of mercantile restrictions had not only hardened and 
embittered the Federalist leaders, but had estranged the affections and 
worn out the temper of the people of Boston and of New England, ready 
enough to have supported a manly war policy in 1807. Their trade had 
been crippled, and had crumbled away before restrictive measures; the 
navy, which they chieflymanned and in which they believed, had been 
neglected, and they were in no humor for a war which put the finishing 
stroke to their commercial prosperity and activity for the time being. 
They were perfectly ready to sympathize with the protest of the Federalist 
representatives against the war, which they accepted with sullen dislike. 
Some of the Federalist leaders, notably Samuel Dexter, 8 conceiving that 
party differences should be buried in the presence of the enemy, seceded ; 
but the Federalist majorities only grew with each election, while the belief 
that the war was needless and unjust, and was part and parcel of a general 
policy designed to ruin New England, spread daily and gained favor, carry- 
ing with it resistance to the administration. Into the controversies thus 
engendered it is not fitting to enter here, although they involved the for 
tunes of the town, for they were wide and far reaching, and chiefly con- 
cerned the Nation and States. The general sentiment in Boston seems to 
have settled down into a determination to do nothing in active support of 
offensive war, but resolutely to defend themselves against any foreign ag- 
gression. This they were called upon to do before the war closed. 8 

In 1814 the British policy of coast descents was extended to New Eng- 
land ; scattered attacks were made, accompanied with burning and pillage, 
and the sails of English cruisers could daily be descried from Boston. The 
town was in a defenceless condition, the forts almost useless, and owing to 
the bitter quarrels with the administration no help had been given, or was 

1 [The news of this declaration reached Bos- proclamation for other ends than for the mill- 
ton June 23, 1812, and the General Court, then tia to be held in readiness for an emergency. 
in session, passed a vote, 406 to 240, disapprov- En.] 

ing of it. General Dearborn, as the United - (See Sargent's Keminiscnuet of Dexter, p. 

States officer commanding in Massachusetts, 77. ED.) 

immediately made a requisition on Governor [The events leading up to the war, ai 

Strong for a body of the militia, eight com- the part played in it bv Ho>ton. arc detailed 

panies of which were to be assigned to Bos- in Gener.il I'.ilfrey's chapter in the present 

l,, ll; |,,,( t|,,. GovernOI lel'u.-ed to iSMC his voltma. r.l'.| 



212 



THE MEMORIAL HISTORY OF BOSTON. 



to be looked for, from the national government. The people of Boston and 
of Massachusetts had, however, no mind to endure the fate of Washington, 

and took prompt measures to 
protect themselves. The old 
forts were put in order, and 
a new one, Fort Strong, was 
thrown up on Noddle's Island, 
the work being rapidly per- 
formed by large bodies of ready volunteers 
under the direction of Loammi Baldwin, the 
engineer. 1 The militia were called out and 
stationed at the forts and at other points, ready 
to repel the expected attack, which fortu- 
nately never came. 

The exposed condition of the capital 
and of the other seaports however, and 
the neglect of the national government, 
did much to precipitate the crisis in the 
relations of State and Nation which had 
been long impending. In October the 
Legislature took steps toward concerted 
action among the New England States, 
with a view to defending themselves and forcing upon the administration 
the policy which they believed to be right. The result was the famous 
Hartford Convention, whose history belongs to the State and to New Eng- 
land, and not to Boston ; although the feeling which led to that meeting 




THE GERRYMANDER. 2 



1 [See Sumner's East Boston, p. 397. See 
also General Palfrey's chapter in the present 
volume. ED.] 

2 [In 1812, while Gerry was governor, the 
Democratic Legislature, in order to secure an in- 
creased representation of their party in the State 
Senate, districted the State in such a way that the 
shapes of the towns, forming such a district in 
Essex, brought out a territory of singular outline. 
This was indicated on a map which Russell, the 
editor of the Centinel, hung in his office. Stuart, 
the painter, observing it, added a head, wings, 
and claws, and exclaimed, " That will do for a 
salamander!" "Gerrymander!'' said Russell, 
and the word became a proverb. An engraving 
of the fabulous beast was circulated later through 
the State on a broadside ; and from one of these, 
preserved by the late Isaac P. Davis, the above 
cut, reduced from the original, seven inches 
hi.u'h, is copied. Hut the process had accom- 
plished its purpose, for while the Federalist 
majority in the State was sixteen hundred and 
two, the senate stood twenty-nine Democratic to 
eleven Federalist members. The next year pro- 
duced a change; the Legislature became Fed- 



eralist, and the old districts were restored. In 
the Boston Gazette for April 15, 1813, there 
is an "obituary notice" 
of the monster, with a 
cut representing him bent 
up in his coffin, and a 
sketch of his grave-stone : 
"Hatched, Feb. n, 1812; 
died, April 5, 1813." Such 
is the story told by Buck- 
ingham in liis Reminiscen- 
ces. But other claimants 
have been put forward. 
The place is said to have 
been Colonel Israel Thorn- 
dike's house in Summer 
Street; the artist, Tisdale; 
the sponsor, Alsop. See 
Drake's Landmarks of Afid- 
dtesex, p. 321. The reader 
will observe that the back 
line of the body in the large 
cut forms a profile carica- 
ture of Gerry, with the 
nose at Middleton. El>.l 




THE LAST FORTY YEARS OF TOWN GOVERNMENT. 



213 



found its fullest expression, perhaps, in the capital, where the newspapers, 
notably the Daily Advertiser then just started, urged strong measures and 
hinted at secession, and where the younger and more violent portion of the 
Federalist party was ripe 
for almost any step. The 
old and trusted leaders, 
however, threw themselves 
into the gap, determined 
to commit no overt act, 
but to check and control 
the movement at that time 
and leave the future to 
shape their subsequent 
course. Boston was rep- 
resented at Hartford by 
George Cabot, who was 
chosen" president of the 
convention, and by Wil- 
liam Prescott, Harrison 
Gray Otis, and Timothy 
Bigelow. The result was 
as Mr. Quincy prophesied, 
a "great 'pamphlet," 
and the committee sent 
to Washington reached 
there at the same time as 
the news of the Ghent 
treaty. 

Peace was received in 







MASSACHUSETTS SIGNERS.' 



Boston with ringing of 

bells and with every form 

of rejoicing, public and 

private ; 2 and by none was it more welcomed than by the Federalists. 

The effect of the war on Boston was severe in the extreme. Not only 



1 [These are the signatures of the delegates 
from Massachusetts to the final report of the 
Uartford Convention. Of this number, Cabot 
was born in Salem, but latterly lived in Boston. 
Dane was ,\ l.uwer in Beverly; necessarily prac- 
tising imirli in lioston, acquiring eminence; the 
founder of a law professorship at Cambridge, 
and the author of the ordinance of 1787. Otis 
\\.i~ well known. Prescott was the father of the 
historian, and son of the Colonel Pre- 
Bunker Hill fame. Bigelow had been a law vet nf 
Worcester County, speaker of the M.iss.n Im^t -tt- 
House of Representatives, and w as the father-in- 
law of Abbott Lawrence. Thomas was a judge 



of probate in Plymouth County. Wilde, though 
born in Taunton, gained his early reputation as 
a lawyer in Maine, became a Justice of the Su- 
preme Court of Massachusetts, and removed to 
Boston in 1831. I.yman and Kliss were important 
men in the Connecticut Valley. Longfellow, of 
Portland, was the father of the poet. Waldo wa 
nf Worcester. 

Theodore Dwight's History of He Hartford 
Cen-entisn is in vindication of it. ED.] 

- |S iah P. Quincy's chapter on 

Life in Boston,'' in Vol. IV., and Mr. 

Edmund Ouincy'.s l.itt of JasiaM Quttujr, p. 

360. 



214 



THE MEMORIAL HISTORY OF BOSTON. 



was commerce, the great source of industry and wealth, wholly cut off, 
but the dependence upon England, now so difficult to realize, not only 




GEORGE CABOT. 



for every manufactured article of luxury but for many of the necessities 
of life, had, by the cessation of intercourse, brought a sense of privation 



i [No likeness of George Cabot of a maturer 
age exists, and the present cut follows a portrait 
owned by Colonel Henry Lee, kindly placed at 
my disposal, which represents him at sixteen. It 
is a pastel drawing. Mr. Lodge, the writer of 
this chapter, published in 1877 the Life and Let- 
ters of George Cabot, consisting chiefly of Letters, 
which had been preserved by Mr. Cabot's corre- 
spondents, with elucidatory introductions to the 
several chapters. Mr. Cabot had himself before 
his death destroyed almost all the papers re- 
maining in his own hands. On the Hartford 
Convention, however, Mr. Lodge's excursus is 
prolonged and valuable ; and in writing it he had 
the use of the Pickering manuscripts (over sixty 



volumes in all) in the Massachusetts Historical 
Society, and also the letters of Governor Strong. 
Mr. Lodge has also drawn somewhat from Ham- 
ilton's IVorks, and from Gibbs's Administration 
of Washington and Adams, and in a smaller de- 
gree from the Life of Timothy Pickering as con- 
tinued by Mr. Upham. In turn Mr. Lodge's 
work has been drawn upon in part by Mr. Henry 
Adams in his Documents relating to New Eng- 
land Federalism, 1800-1815, which was pub- 
lished in 1877 ; nor should there be forgotten 
the Memoir of John Qtiiuey Adams, published in 
1858 by President Quincy, and the voluminous 
Memoirs, based largely upon Adams's Diary, 
which have boon issued in twelve volumes by his 



THE LAST FORTY YEARS OF TOWN GOVERNMENT. 215 

and loss into every household. But the war, and the policy of commercial 
restriction preceding it, had upon Boston a deep and lasting effect, which 
was hardly perceived at the moment, but which changed her business char- 
acter, and has powerfully influenced her politics from that day to this. In 
the first years of the nineteenth century Boston was a great commercial 
centre and nothing else. Mr. Jefferson with his embargo and its kindred 
measures, and the War of 1812, shook the whole financial and economical 
system of the town. Commerce was crippled, at times almost extin- 
guished, and comparatively large masses of capital were set loose and left 
idle, while at the same time an immense fund of enterprise and activity was 
unemployed. The result was to force all this capital and enterprise into 
other charrels, where they had begun to flow very slowly. Manufactures 
received a great impetus ; and the capital, which ha' been turned aside by 
the policy of the administration, did not, when peace came, revert to its old 
pursuits. From being a strong free-trade town, Boston became as vigo- 
rously protectionist before the first quarter of a century closed. Mr. Jeffer- 
son seems to have designed to reduce the commercial interest and weaken 
New England by his policy ; he certainly regarded with complacency the 
fact that it would have that tendency. The result was that manufactures 
were stimulated ; the progress of Boston was changed, not arrested ; and 
New England industries were for years protected at the expense of his 
beloved South. 

The conclusion of the war, and the revival of business in all directions 
closed the differences which had divided the country since the foundation of 
the government, and turned men's minds from the political issues of the past. 
It was the dawn of the so-called era of good feeling, the transition period in 
which old parties disappeared and new ones were developed. The Federal- 
ists of Massachusetts retained their power for many years, dexterously avoid- 
ing the rocks of religious controversy on which their party brethren of 
Connecticut were wrecked. They held the government by reason of past 
services solely, for the great political questions which had brought them 
forth and given them strength no longer existed. Gradually, however, they 
faded away; the old leaders in Boston and elsewhere retired from public 
life or were removed by death ; and the century had hardly completed its 
second decade when the great party of Washington, really extinct for some 
years, vanished even in name from our history finally and irrevocably. 

Almost coincident with the disappearance of the Federalist party was 
the change of municipal governmc-nt in Boston from the town form to that 
of a city. The change had been agitated at various times from a very early 
period down to 1821, and in the next year the old town government came 

son, Charles Francis Adams, between 1874 and progress easier in the Lift of Hamilton as writ- 

1877. The Life of Hamilton so t'.ir a- it reacted ten by John T. Morse, Jr. in 1876 Of the part 

upon the Federalism of lio>ti>n is not without im- played by the press in the political movements 

portancc ; and the reader who has not the cour- in this period, see D. A. Goddard's Newspapers 

age to compass the somewhat assuming and vo- ami \ewsfafer Writers in \,w England, 1787- 

luminous Life by John C. Hamilton may find 1815, a pamphlet published in 1880. ED.) 



216 



THE MEMORIAL HISTORY OF BOSTON. 



to an end. It had been the government of Winthrop and Cotton, of Adams 
and Franklin. It had defied George III. and Lord North, and its name had 
rung through two continents in the days when it faced the English Parlia- 
ment alone and unterrified. It was the most famous municipal organization 
in America, and it passed away into history honored and regretted. The 
next chapter traces in detail the transformation which followed. 






CHAPTER II. 

BOSTON UNDER THE MAYORS, 1822-1880. 
BY JAMES M. BUGBEE. 

HHE purpose of this chapter is to give some account of the local govern- 
ment of Boston since its organization under a city charter in the year 
1822. The extent of the change in the administration of local affairs in- 
volved in the establishment of a municipal council in place of the town- 
meeting can hardly be appreciated without going back for a moment to con- 
sider the origin and development of what is known as the New England 
town-system. Most New Englanders cling to the belief that the system of 
local self-government which their Pilgrim and Puritan ancestors set up here 
was wholly original; that a new principle of government was introduced 
which had its natural culmination in the Declaration of Independence and 
the formation of the Federal Union : but the investigations of modern his- 
torians have made it clear that the early settlers of this country were gov- 
erned largely by the traditions which had come down to them from their 
Teutonic ancestors. The form of government which they established had 
not its exact counterpart among any other people, but it was based on the 
ancient Anglo-Saxon township ; and the new features which were introduced 
were only such as were necessitated or suggested by the peculiar circum- 
stances in which the colonists were placed. They were wiser than many of 
their eulogists would make them. Had they struck out for themselves in an 
entirely new path, their subsequent development would have been wanting 
in those elements of conservatism and steadiness which have shown New 
England to be the lineal descendant of Old England. 1 

The charter of the Massachusetts Bay Company contained no express 
authority for the erection of town governments or the establishment of 
minor political divisions; and Sir Edmund Andros could say with truth, that 
in a legal point of view there was no such thing as a town in all New Eng- 

1 [See Vol. I. pp. 217, 427, 445, 454. This exact study at the hands of Dr. Herbert B. 

interesting subject of the origin of our town sys- Adams, of Johns Hopkins University. See H. 

t'-ni. upon which so much new light has been < I .'isi Colimie.- in America, p. 414, 

thrown since the publication of Sir I K-nrv M.iinc's and //.irrwr./ I'nr.-trsity Bulletin, June I, iSSl, 

I'illage Communities, is now undergoing more or vol. ii. 214. ED.) 
vol.. in. 28. 



2l8 THE MEMORIAL HISTORY OF BOSTON. 

land. Boston was never formally incorporated as a town. The order of 
the Court of Assistants (Sept. 7, O. S. 1630), changing the name from 
Tri-mountain to Boston, 1 has been construed by the courts to be sufficient 
to entitle it from that time forward to all the privileges of a town ; but no 
corporation was specifically established until 1822. Springing up in this 
way, outside of the formal scheme of government devised by the king, the 
line between the town governments and the colonial government could never 
be very clearly defined ; and it may well be imagined that the former were 
continually encroaching upon the just and necessary powers of the latter. 2 
Fortunately for the maintenance of local government, the colonial authority 
as represented by the General Court was composed of delegates from the 
towns ; and therefore almost any exercise of authority on the part of the 
towns, which did not interfere directly with the operations of the general 
government, was permitted and indeed encouraged. The extent and variety 
of the powers exercised by the town of Boston in its early days go far be- 
yond those exercised by the city of to-day. The conditions upon which 
strangers should be allowed to reside in the town, 3 the admission of new 
comers to the rights of citizenship, 4 the conditions upon which allotments 
of land should be made, 5 the prices of commodities, the rates of wages for 
labor, the conditions upon which suits at law should be prosecuted, 6 and even 
great questions of peace or war, were discussed in meetings of all the free- 
men; "' and the action of the town was determined by the number of voices 
that shouted for the affirmative or the negative. 

In the beginning all public affairs were passed upon by the whole body 
of freemen; but as the population increased, the frequent attendance upon 
town-meetings was found to be burdensome. Then certain persons were 
chosen to act for a limited time, at first for six months, and afterward for 
a year, to "order the affairs of the town." That was the origin of the 
Board of Selectmen, the name by which the chief executive body in town 
government is now widely known. 8 Subsequently other town officers were 
elected to look after special departments of the public service, constables, 
surveyors of highways, clerks of the market, sealers of leather, packers of 
fish and meat, and hog-reeves. 9 A commissioner was also chosen at the 

1 Vol. I. p. 116. they are called "the selectmen." See Vol. I. pp. 

2 [See Mr. C. C. Smith's chapter, " Boston 388, 505 of this History. 

and the Colony," in Vol. I. p. 217, of this His- 9 Reeve is from the Anglo-Saxon Gerefa, 

tory. En.] concerning the etymological connection of which 

3 Boston Town Records as printed in Secant/ with the German Graf there has been a good 
Report of Record Commissioners, 1877, pp. 10, 90, deal of controversy. It is curious to see how a 
109, 152. once honored title has become degraded. The 

4 Ibid. p. 46. first civic temporal magistrates in England were 

5 Ibid. p. 6, ft seq. the Reves. William the Conqueror, in the first 

6 Ibid. p. 5. charter granted to London, "greets William 
' See Richard Frothmgham's Oration, July the Bishop, and Godfrey the Portrevc." Later 

4, 1874 ; City Documents, 68, 1874. the Anglo-Saxon Pvrtreve was superseded by the 

8 They are referred to in the first volume of French Mayor. Shire-reve has been contracted 

Boston records as " the ten men," " the nine to Sheriff ; and the Reve survives only as the 

men," and "the town's men," until 1647, when keeper of hogs. 



BOSTON UNDER THE MAYORS. 



219 



annual meeting to receive the proxies for magistrates and county treasurer 
and carry them to the shire-meeting. 

The system of government which grew up in this irregular way was full 
of make-shifts, it would have vexed the soul of the political doctrinaire; but 
it was admirably adapted to the wants of a small, homogeneous community. 
It was covered with patches, but the patches protected just the places which 
hard wear threatened to expose. That it performed its functions to the gen- 
eral satisfaction of the people for a period of nearly two hundred years is 
shown by the fact that during that time they steadily resisted all attempts to 
change its original form. There were not wanting individuals who favored a 
change, and who had their patent devices for making the government better 
than the people ; but so well satisfied were the majority of the voters with 
what they had, that they clung to the old system long after the growth of the 
town appeared to make a change necessary for the maintenance of good 
government. 1 Upon the suggestion of the selectmen a committee was ap- 
pointed in 1708 to " draft a charter of incorporation " for " the better govern- 
ment of the town ; " but at the annual March meeting in the following year 
the " town's men " refused to accept the draft which was submitted to them, 
and refused to refer the subject to any future meeting. The next attempt to 
make a radical change in the constitution of the government was in 1784, 
when, on the petition of a number of influential citizens, a committee of 
thirteen was appointed " to consider the expediency of applying to the Gen- 
eral Court for an act to form the town of Boston into an incorporated city, 
and report a plan of alterations in the present government of the police, if 
such be deemed eligible." The committee reported two plans, one making 
the town a body politic, by the name of " the Mayor, Aldermen, and Com- 
mon Council of the City of Boston ; " the other making it a body politic by 
the name of " the President and Selectmen of the City of Boston." At a 
meeting of the inhabitants it was voted, " by a great majority," " inexpedient 
to make any alterations in the present form of town government." 2 

In 1791 "the want of an efficient police" led to another petition for 
a change ; and a plan was reported which provided for a division of the town 
into nine wards, and the election in each ward of two men who, with the 
selectmen, were to constitute the Town Council, with power to make by-laws 
and to appoint all executive officers except selectmen, town clerk, overseers 
of the poor, assessors, town treasurer, school-committee men, auditors of ac- 
counts, firewards, collectors of taxes, and constables, who were to continue 
to be elected by the legal voters. A good deal of time was given to the 
discussion of this scheme, and it was printed and distributed in hand-bills to 
all the inhabitants; but when the vote came to be taken upon its adoption, 
it met the fate of former schemes. Another report in favor of changing the 

1 [See Vol. I. p. 219; jV. E. Hist, and Cental. Forming the Tmm of Roston into an Incorporated 

Reg. July, 1857; Quincy's Municifal History of City, Published ty Order of the Town for the Pe- 

Boston, ch. i. ED.] rusal an J Consideration of the Inhabitants. The 

a [There is in Harvard College Library a day nameil for the further consideration of them 

little tract of cij;ht paj;es called Two Plans for i.s June 17. Ki> .] 



22O THE MEMORIAL HISTORY OF BOSTON. 

town government was negatived by a decisive vote in 1804. The next move- 
ment for a change was not made until 1815, when a committee submitted the 
draft of a bill which provided for the incorporation of the town under the 
name of "the Intcndant and Municipality of the Town and City of Boston." 
The municipal council was to consist of the selectmen, chosen by the citizens 
in town-meeting, and two delegates from each ward chosen by the inhabi- 
tants of the ward. The Intendant was to be chosen annually by the 
selectmen and delegates ; and was given powers which made him rather 
a mild chief executive. The title appears to have been imported either 
directly from France or from the Gallicized municipalities in the Canadas. 
This scheme came pretty near adoption, nine hundred and twenty votes 
being in the affirmative and nine hundred and fifty-one in the negative. 

What turned the scale against it, perhaps, and what would have been 
urged equally against any scheme by which the town government was to be 
changed to a city government, was the fact that there was no provision in 
the State Constitution which appeared to authorize the erection by the Gen- 
eral Court of city governments. The subject was brought before the Con- 
stitutional Convention of 1820, by one of the Boston delegates, Mr. Lynde 
Walter, who procured the passage of a resolution instructing a committee to 
inquire into the expediency of so altering the Constitution, that the Legisla- 
ture should have power to grant to towns charters of incorporation with the 
usual forms of city government. Daniel Webster, chairman of the commit- 
tee to which the matter was referred, reported that it was expedient so 
to amend the Constitution as to provide that the General Court should have 
full power and authority to erect and constitute municipal or city govern- 
ments in any corporate towns in the Commonwealth, provided such towns 
contained not less than a certain number of inhabitants. The proposed 
amendment was strongly opposed by some of the country members, who 
feared that the city governments would make laws by which " the inhabi- 
tants of the towns, going into the cities, would be liable to be ensnared 
and entrapped." The reasons for the proposed change were set forth very 
clearly by Lemuel Shaw, afterward the Chief-Justice of the Commonwealth. 
He said that it was not the intention to grant any special powers or privileges 
to the citizens of Boston, but simply to give them an organization adapted to 
the condition of a numerous people. All the towns in the Commonwealth 
possessed the powers and privileges of municipal corporations in England. 
They had power to choose their own officers, to send members to the Gen- 
eral Court, to make by-laws, to assess and collect taxes, to maintain schools 
and highways, relieve the poor, and to superintend licensed houses and 
other matters of local police. The Constitution as it stood required all the 
inhabitants of a town to assemble in one body, be they few or many. The 
sole purpose of the proposed change was to provide an organization by 
which the voters in municipalities containing a large number of inhabitants 
would be enabled to meet in sections for the purposes of election, and to 
choose representatives who should be empowered to make the by-laws and 



BOSTON UNDER THE MAYORS. 221 

vote the supplies instead of the whole body. The amendment was adopted 
by the Convention and subsequently (April 29, 1821) ratified by the people 
of the State. 

It would naturally be supposed that after this there would be no serious 
opposition to the proposed organization of a city government in Boston ; 
but there was a conservative element in the old town which could not be con- 
vinced that any change was either necessary or desirable, even though the 
venerable John Adams supported the amendment in the Convention. The 
national census of 1820 gave the town a population of forty-three thousand 
two hundred and ninety-eight. The number of qualified voters exceeded 
seven thousand. 

" When a town-meeting was held on any exciting subject in Faneuil Hall, those 
only who obtained places near the moderator could even hear the discussion. A few 
busy or interested individuals easily obtained the management of the most important 
affairs in an assembly in which the greater number could have neither voice nor hear- 
ing. When the subject was not generally exciting, town-meetings were usually com- 
posed of the selectmen, the town officers, and thirty or forty inhabitants. Those who 
thus came were for the most part drawn to it from some official duty or private interest, 
which, when performed or attained, they generally troubled themselves but little, or not 
at all, about the other business of the meeting. In assemblies thus composed, by-laws 
were passed, taxes lo the amount of one hundred or one hundred and fifty thousand 
dollars voted on statements often general in their nature, and on reports, as it respects 
the majority of voters present, taken upon trust, and which no one had carefully con- 
sidered except perhaps the chairman." 

Among the number who resisted the proposed change, " by speech and 
pen, as long as there was any chance of defeating it," was Mr. Josiah Quincy, 
who afterward, in his Municipal History of Boston, made the statement above 
quoted. " He believed," says his son, " the pure democracy of a town- 
meeting more suited to the character of the people of New England, and 
less liable to abuse and corruption, than a more compact government." 

In January, 1822, the subject was brought before a special meeting of the 
inhabitants in Faneuil Hall, on the report of a committee recommending 
that there should be a chief executive, called the " Intendant," elected by 
the selectmen ; that there should be an executive board of seven persons 
called the " Selectmen," elected by the inhabitants on a general ticket; and 
that there should be a body with mixed legislative and executive powers 
called a " Board of Assistants," consisting of four persons chosen from each 
of the twelve wards. For three days the subject was debated with much 
earnestness and some heat. The report was amended by giving to the 
chief executive the title of " Mayor; " by putting " Aldermen " in place of 
the Selectmen ; and by changing the name of the Board of Assistants to " the 
Common Council." The amended report was then put into the form of five 
propositions and submitted to the inhabitants to be voted upon by ballot, 
yea or nay. The vote on what may be considered the test proposition, - 



222 THE MEMORIAL HISTORY OF BOSTON. 

namely, " that the name of ' Town of Boston ' should be changed to ' City 
of Boston,'" was two thousand seven hundred and twenty-seven in the 
affirmative, and two thousand and eighty-seven in the negative. The other 
propositions were all adopted by a greater or less majority. 

Application i was immediately made to the Legislature for an act of 
incorporation ; and on Feb. 23, 1822, the Governor approved " an act estab- 
lishing the city of Boston," which is known as the first city charter. As the 
earliest departure, under Massachusetts laws, from the ancient system of 
town government, the act was regarded as one of grave importance. The 
city form of organization, copied in most cases from the form which had 
been established in London as early as the thirteenth century, had long been 
in use in other parts of the country. New York received a city charter in 
the English form in 1665, and several charters were granted in the name of 
the king to large towns outside the New England colonies, previous to the 
Declaration of Independence. The lord proprietor of Maine had exercised 
the right given him by his patent to make the little town of Agamenticus 
(now York), with two hundred and fifty inhabitants, a city under the name 
of Gorgeana, with a mayor, aldermen, common council and recorder; 
but when the province came under the jurisdiction of Massachusetts, the 
town system was substituted. In Connecticut, city charters were granted 
immediately after the Revolution ; and so freely were they granted, that at 
last " a little clump of Indians took it into their heads to apply for city pow- 
ers and privileges," which " convinced the Legislature of the impolicy of 
granting charters with so much liberality." ' 

The new charter of Boston, drafted by Mr. Lemuel Shaw, provided that 
the title of the corporation should be " the City of Boston ; " that the ad- 
ministration of all the fiscal, prudential, and municipal concerns of the city, 
with the conduct and government thereof, should be vested in one principal 
officer, to be styled " the Mayor , " one select council of eight persons, to be 
denominated " the Board of Aldermen," and one more numerous council of 
forty-eight persons, to be denominated "the Common Council; " that the 
city should be divided into twelve wards ; that the mayor, aldermen, and com- 
mon councilmcn should be elected on the second Monday of April annually, 
and enter upon their duties on the first day of May; 3 that the mayor and 
aldermen should compose one board, the mayor presiding and having a 
right to vote on all questions, but not the veto power; that the administra- 
tion of police, together with the general executive powers of the corporation, 
and the powers formerly vested by law or usage in the selectmen of the 
town, should be vested in the mayor and aldermen ; that all the other pow- 
ers then vested in the town or in the inhabitants thereof as a municipal cor- 

1 [See the paper in chapter iii. of this sec- the annual election was changed to the second 
tion. En.] Monday in December; and the officers then cho- 

2 From Remarks of John Adams, in the Con- sen entered upon their duties on the first Monday 
stitutional Convention of 1820. Debates, Massa- in January following. In 1872 the election-day was 
chusetts Convention, p. 195. changed to the Tuesday after the second Monday 

3 By an act of the Legislature passed in 1825, in Dcx-cmbcr. 



BOSTON UNDER THE MAYORS. 223 

poration should be vested in the mayor, aldermen, and common council, to be 
exercised by concurrent vote, each board having a negative upon the other; 
that the citizens in the several wards should choose, at the annual meeting 
in April, a number of persons to be firewards ; and also one person in each 
ward to be overseer of the poor, and one person to be a member of the 
school committee. 




JOHN PHILLIPS. 1 

At " a legal meeting of the freeholders and other inhabitants of the town 
of Hoston," held in Faneuil Hall on March 4, 1822, the question, Will you 
accept the charter granted by the Legislature?" was decided in the affir- 
mative, by a vote of 2,797 to 1,881. Among the large number who voted 
in the negative there were many who opposed any radical change of the 

[Thi, cut follows .. <>f a portrait her, 1825; and a brief sketch, with a 'Portrait, is 

owned l.v Mr. Wendell Phillips, kimllv furnished llM (jivcn in the .V. E. /f 

byhim. Mr. John Phillip. died My*M*J * Ouoher. ,866; and a 

memoir of Phillips, with an gd portrait, an- Bond's MM I here ,, also a sketch 

peared in the Baton Monthly Magtatne, Novcm- in Ulfcfl O,.. 



224 THE MEMORIAL HISTORY OF BOSTON. 

old system, and others who were dissatisfied with the form of organization 
provided by the new charter. 

Mr. Josiah Quincy, who had always taken an interest in town affairs, and 
who presided at the last town-meeting held in Fancuil Hall, was invited by 
many substantial citizens to be a candidate for the office of mayor. He ac- 
cepted the invitation, without knowing, it is said, that the Federal leaders 
proposed to make Mr. Harrison Gray Otis the first mayor, preparatory to 
his elevation to the governorship of the State. That any respectable Feder- 
alist should be presumptuous enough to stand for any office which Mr. Otis 
was willing at that time to take, was sufficient to stir up a great deal of feel- 
ing among the party managers : it was much the same as if, twenty years 
later, Mr. Choate had allowed his name to be used for an office which Mr. 
Webster wanted. Mr. Quincy's supporters were not willing to release him 
from his engagement, however, and it docs not appear that he was at all 
anxious to be relieved. It was not in his nature to be influenced, by weight 
or numbers, to withdraw from a position which he had once deliberately 
accepted. The night before the election the Democrats nominated Mr. 
Thomas L. Winthrop for their candidate, and threw enough votes for him 
to prevent an election, a majority of all the votes being necessary for a 
choice. Mr. Quincy would undoubtedly .have been elected had not the 
Democrats resorted to the trick of using Mr. Winthrop's name without his 
authority, and greatly to his displeasure. 

Both Mr. Otis and Mr. Quincy then withdrew their names, and John 
Phillips 1 was elected without serious opposition. lie was in many respects 
well qualified for the position ; a man of rather pliable disposition, but of 
strict integrity and general good judgment, a character well fitted for the 
somewhat delicate task of commending the nc\v order of things to those 
who had been adverse to a change. One who knew him well, and knew the 
difficulties by which he was surrounded, has said : - 

" Selected for the critical task of making the first experiment with a system new to 
the acquaintance, and, as far as then appeared, uncongenial in some degree with the 
habits, of his constituents, to the operation of which indefinite expectations were at- 
tached and a jealous observation directed, the Mayor exhibited that discretion and 
sound judgment which so eminently characterized him." 

The new city government was organized in Faneuil Hall on May i, 1822. 
The chairman of the board of selectmen delivered into the charge of the 
new authorities the town records and title deeds, and the city charter inclosed 
in a silver case. The Mayor, after paying " a just tribute to the wisdom of 

1 A descendant in the fifth generation from He delivered the Fourth of July oration before 

the Rev. George Phillips, the first minister of the town authorities in 1794; and for many years 

Watertown. He was born in Boston, Nov. 26, acted as Town Advocate and Public Prosecutor. 

1770; received his early education at the acad- He served for twenty years as a member of the 

cmy in Andover which bears his family name, State Senate, and for ten years was President of 

and was graduated at Harvard College in 1788. that body. 



BOSTON UNDER I HI. MAYORS. 325 

our ancestors as displayed in the institutions for the government of the 
town, under which for nearly two centuries so great a degree of prosperity 
had been attained, and during which the great increase of the population of 
the place had alone made this change in the administration of its affairs 
essential," proceeded to remark, in respect of those " who encouraged hope- 
which could never be realized, and of those who indulged unreasonable ap- 
prehensions in regard to the city charter, that they would derive benefit 
from reflecting how much social happiness depended on other causes than 
the provisions of a charter." The policy of the new administration, to keep 
things substantially as they were, was thus foreshadowed ; and it may be 
said that that policy was adhered to during the year, but little of impor- 
tance being done beyond the organization of the several departments of the 
city government. 1 

The debt transferred from the town to the city amounted to about 
$100,000, and was incurred on account of two prisons, then in course of 
erection, and a new court house. The current expenses for the year 1822 
amounted to about $249,000, and the tax levy for that year was $140,000. 
It was a day of small things as compared with the present time.* The ap- 
propriations to meet the current expenses for the financial year beginning 
May r, 1880, amounted to $10,190,387 ; and the tax levy was $9,466,896. 

The result of the first year's administration under the new charter 
did not meet the expectations of those who had been instrumental in 
procuring it. They were eager for a more energetic system, and they 
charged Mr. Phillips with pursuing a timid and hesitating course for fear 
of losing his popularity ; but when he demitted office Mr. Quincy could 
say of him : 

" After examining and considering the records and proceedings of the city author- 
ities for the past year, it is impossible for me to refrain from expressing the sense I 
entertain of the services of that high and honorable individual who filled the chair of 
tliis city, as well as of the wise, prudent, and faithful citizens who composed during 

1 The city clerk elected at this time Samuel " Every incident thai contributes to the lite of the pic- 

F. McCleary continued to hold the office by "'^valuable, though it may seem trivial: so I add this a, 

... .. , . . . ' i lustratntf how small Boston limits were n'ehiv yean aco. 

success.ve annual elections until h,s resignation .. My ,,_ ,, )c firj , mlynr bujl , j/,^ lh( .Tr 

in |S52, when he was succeeded by his son, bear- *,/<-* house that was buili on iicacon Street. It .till Hands 
ing the same name, who holds the office to-day ; "" >he wesiem corner of Walnut and Beacon treet. 

so thai the < iu records from the beginning bear Abovc * nd bclow tt>m " re a fcw wood * n I"*"". "? 

. J nexl the State House stood Hancock's stout house. This 

the attestation of a single name. A city seal ,,, ,',eaco,,) was then considered /,//.. 
H.I- adopted, the motto for which was suggested Whrn \^ joy was advised to take his invalid wife out 

1'V | mini- 1 l.ivis. It was taken from tl !h t* 1 *"' of country air. he built her. eijhty 

ing verse of the Scripturt-s : " Sil Deus nol-iscum, ^ ^ * ""^I" hou< "- . whlc 

dor s house now oW*. on the western comer of Joy and 

sicut fuit cum patnbus nostris." I. Regan*, BMCor , street , . lnc | , , b,,-!, , Ml Vernon street, 

viii. 57. As adopted for the seal it stands : "Si- or near it. I have often seen loads o( hay. cut on ine square 

.ill patriotlS, Sit Dens nol.is." The impression between Joy. Walnut. Mt. Verm.;,, and lleau-n Mi-eels, car- 

.... ... ried in to Dr lov's front gate, where Mr. Armstrong < 

within the motto contains a view of the city from (ron| rfo<ir <tjmls now wfcen my h|h( . r more< , imo ^ 

South Boston I'nint. Bc.icon-Strett hou, his uncle, judge O. Wendell, was 

- To show what a small part of the penin- asked, in Stale Street, 'what had induced his nephew to 

sula of Boston was occupied at the lxj",inninu of m ""' ''"' ' '< m "-'" 

the present century. I venture to print the fol- the view of Beacon Street about this 

lowing, from Wendell Diillips, Ksq : lime, given in .Mr. v napter. ED.] 

VOL. III. 29. 



226 THE MEMORIAL HISTORY OF BOSTON. 

that period the city council. . . . Whatever success may attend thos.e who come after 
them, they will be largely indebted for it to the wisdom and fidelity of their prede- 
cessors." 

And Mr. Otis, in his inaugural address in 1829, said: - 

" The novel experiment of city government was commenced by your first lamented 
mayor, with the circumspection and delicacy which belonged to his character, and 
which were entirely judicious and opportune. He felt and respected the force of 
ancient and honest prejudices. His aim was to allure and not to repel; to reconcile 
by gentle reform, not to revolt by startling innovation." 

Mr. Phillips had no desire for a second term, his health having begun 
to give way. Josiah Quincy ' was therefore sought as a candidate by the 
progressive element in the community. He accepted the position, and 
was elected, receiving 2,505 votes out of 4,766, the whole number cast. 

Mr. Quincy was at this time fifty-one years of age, to him the prime of 
life ; a man of large experience, of kindly disposition, but of most decided 
will. He left his impress on the government of the city as no other man 
has done. His administration, covering a period of six years, has formed a 
standard to which the efforts of his successors arc continually referred. It 
was not a great office to be a mayor with limited power over a city of only 
forty-five thousand inhabitants ; but he performed the duties in such a way 
as to give it more than a local importance, and to produce results of a last- 
ing character. He was like an accomplished actor who takes a small part 
and makes of it a great one. 

In his inaugural address, the Mayor gave prominence to the defects of 
the ancient town organization, and the remedy provided for them in the 
powers of the mayor. His object was to bring the responsibility of the chief 
executive into distinct relief before the citizens, and thereby prepare their 
minds for the prominent part which he intended to play. In order to put 
himself in a position to exercise to the full the powers conferred upon him 
as mayor and as a member of the board of mayor and aldermen, he did not 
hesitate to make himself chairman of all committees of the board. But 
such was his tact and his capacity for work, that this extraordinary proceed- 
ing does not seem to have excited any ill-feeling among his associates in 
the city council. 

He first gave his attention to improving the sanitary condition of the 
city, and established the system of cleaning the streets and collecting house- 
offal, which has been followed to the present day, and which has proved a 
model of economy and efficiency. Under the town government the powers 
relative to the preservation of the public health had been vested in a board 
elected by the inhabitants ; but the city charter transferred those powers to 
the city council, " to be carried into execution by the appointment of health 

1 Of Mr. Quincy's previous career in public life some account will be found in another part of 
this work. 



BOSTON UNDKk llll. MAYORS. 



227 




JOMAII griNcv. 1 

commissioners, or in such other manner as the health, cleanliness, comfort, 
and order of the city might in their judgment require." When the new 
government was organized, three health commissioners were appointed with 



1 |Stuart painted Mr. Quincy twice, the 
first time in 1806, a half-length, now belonging 
to the heirs of Kdnmml (.Hiincy, of Dcdham. In 
Nmrinh i. IN.'.}, he painted him again, and this 
picture.' Mis^ I, S. Ouincy gave to the Mn-cnm 
Hi Fine Arts in 1876 It is engraved on steel in 
Kdniuml Onini v's Life of Josiah Quinsy, and is 
followed directly from the canvas in the al>ove 
cut. (Ma.-on'> i:.\ ':>/ Miitirt, p. .' 
a third portrait, liv Page, in iS)j. in '.< 
I'resident of Harvard University; anil .1 fourth, 
liv Wight, about iS^j, now in the Historical 
Society's gallery. A statue of Mr. Oiiiiux, !>v 
W. \V. Story, which likewi-e represents him in 



Icmic gown, .stands in Memorial Hall at 

Cambridge Another statue, showing him in 
plain dres>, executed by Thomas Ball, stand* 
in front of Citv Hall, and a photograph of it is 
given in Citv Document, No 115, for 1879. The 
docinm cm of the ccremo- 

dedii ation, including a commemorative 
oration by his Honor F. ( ) Prince, then mayor 
of the city. There is a bust of Qni 

ii, and another by Crawford, in Me- 
H.ill at ('.inibrid '.>uincy's Life 

. p 550: i in engraving 

'hotogiaph from lite, taken in his eighty- 
ninth year. 



228 



THE MEMORIAL HISTORY OF BOSTON. 



the general powers of the town board of health. They were unwise enough 
to stand in the way of certain reforms proposed by the Mayor, and they 
were speedily swept out of existence. The internal police of the city was 
placed under the superintendence of the city marshal ; and the external 
police, covering the enforcement of the quarantine regulations, was placed 
under a single commissioner. The board of surveyors of highways was also 
abolished, and by legislative enactment the powers were conferred upon the 
mayor and aldermen, who have continued to exercise them up to the pres- 
ent day. 




QUINCV MARKET AND FANEUIL HALL. 

The next important measure which Mayor Quincy initiated and carried 
out, and the one by which he is most generally known, was the establish- 
ment of a new market-house. The Faneuil Hall market-house was first 
opened in 1742; and at the time of which we are writing the whole space, 
occupied by stalls in and around the building, did not exceed fourteen hun- 
dred feet. The accommodations were not only insufficient for the wants of 
the inhabitants, but they were notoriously unhealthy and extremely incon- 
venient of access. The scheme proposed by the Mayor for enlarging the 

1 [This view follows the engraving in Quincy's old Faneuil house. The large trees were on 
Municipal History of Boston, taken by Hammatt the rear part of the Vassall estate, then occu- 
Hillings (1826), not long after the erection of the pied by Gardiner Greene; and they were a 
market-house. Pemberton Hill is seen in the prominent land-mark for ships entering the bar- 
distance. It was then sixty or more feet higher bor. A similar view is given in Snow's Boston, 
than now, and on its slope was a tower, built p. 378. See also Dearborn's Boston Notions, p. 
by Lieut.-Governor Phillips, in the garden of the 115. ED.| 



BOSTON UNDER THE MAYORS. 22 g 

market was of such magnitude as to invite serious opposition, even from 
many of the most prominent citizens; and he had not only to win over to 
his views the members of the city council, but he had to procure the en- 
dorsement of his scheme by the inhabitants of the city and the Legislature 
of the Commonwealth. The opposition was bitter and determined, but the 
Mayor triumphed over every obstacle. What was accomplished can best 
be stated in his own words : 

" A granite market-house, two stories high, five hundred and thirty-five feet long, 
fifty feet wide, covering twenty-seven thousand feet of land, including ever}' essential 
accommodation, was eroded at a cost of one hundred and fifty thousand dollars. Six 
new streets were opened, and a seventh greatly enlarged, including one hundred and 
sixty-seven thousand square feet of land ; and Hats, doc ks, and wharf-rights obtained of 
the extent of one hundred and forty-two thousand square feet. All this was accom- 
plished in the centre of a populous city, not only without any tax. debt, or burden 
upon its pecuniary resources, notwithstanding, in the course of the operations funds 
to the amount of upwards of eleven hundred thousand dollars had l>een employed, 
but with large permanent additions to its real and productive property." ' 

The corner-stone of the new market-house was laid on April 22, 1825, 

and the stalls were opened in i827. 2 

Among other reforms instituted by Mr. Quincy soon after he came into 
office was the reorganization of the fire department. Its efficiency at that 
time depended largely upon the aid of the inhabitants, applied under the 
authority of the firewanls who were elected annually by the citizens in each 
ward. "They formed lanes of by-standers, who, by their direction, passed 



Municipal ///./<>;-> <>/ fi t >s/,w, p. ness consist* in supplying the hotels and retail 
74. [This history is reviewed by Francis llowen dealers in and around lioston, and the great sum- 
in the .\\'i\'i. >. I /: rican Kevi, , vol. Ixxiv. An ac- HUT resorls on the sea-shore and among the 
count of the semi-centennial celebration, Aug. mountains of New England. The market owes 
26, 1876, of the opening of the market, was pub- much of its success and its popularity to the 
lished in 1877, by William \V Whcildon. El>.| high character of the men who occupy it In- 

1 It was due to the originator of the enter- stead of disposing of the stalls annually by auc- 

prise that his name should have been given tion, as is customary in many other cities, i'l has 

officially to the new market; but the plausible always been the policy in this market to fix a 

statement that it was merely an enlargement of reasonable rent for the use of the stalls, and re- 

the old Faneuil Hall Market was -.ntticient, with new leases to good tenants This policy has 

the personal feeling against Mr. Onincy engen- not been without its results in maintaining a 

dered by his persistence in carrying out his high standard in the quality of the articles <rf- 

plans. to induce the city council to extend the fered for sale Charges of " forestalling " and 

name of the old market to the new. Hut , the "monopolizing" have been often raised by a 

people have taken the matter into their own few discontented persons; but repeated im 

hands, and the new house will always be popu- gations by committees of the council have failed 

Ivly known as " QuinC] Market." to show that the influence of the market has 

Since iis establishment the character of the been used to maintain high price-:. The statute 

Imsinc-s tran-ai ted in it has almost wliollv provision allowing sales from market-wagons on 

changed. It has ceased to be the place to which the Directs around the market-houses, introduces 
the householders of llo-,ion generally mpctition which effectually pre- 

their supplies of provisions. lilu-c ..... etobethe vents any monopoly prejudicial to the public 

great provision i w England. It inter ce street-stands 

draws in its Stalls food products of the l>cst from niav IN ^aid to i emulate the price -ions 

all parts of the world, and it distributes them all in 1'. ..,-/ 100 of 1865, and 

over the country; although its principal Imsi- Citv Dcxument 91 of 1870. 



230 THE MEMORIAL HISTORY OF BOSTON. 

buckets of water from pumps or wells in the vicinity to the engines playing 
on the fire, and returned them for further supply." The men who worked 
the engines were formed into companies, and received a small compensa- 
tion for their services, besides being exempt from militia duty. "To be 
first, nearest, and most conspicuous at fires was the ambition of the engine- 
men ; and the use of hose, as it had a tendency to deprive them of this gratifi- 
cation, was opposed." In 1823 several companies petitioned for additional 
compensation. It was refused ; and in one day all the engines in the city 
were surrendered by their respective companies ; and on the same day every 
engine was supplied with a new company by the voluntary association of 
public-spirited individuals. Application was then made to the Legislature 
for authority to reorganize the department; and in 1825 an act was passed 
giving the mayor and aldermen power to appoint all the engineers, fire- 
wardens, and firemen. The sense of security which the new organization 
gave is shown by the fact that the rates of insurance against fire on the real 
property within the city were reduced twenty per cent. 

In the year 1821, just previous to the change in the municipal organiza- 
tion, Mr. Quincy, having given considerable attention to the subject of 
pauperism, was appointed chairman of a town committee on the subject 
of the relief and disposition of the poor of Boston. On his recommenda- 
tion, and under his supervision, a tract of land was purchased on the north- 
erly shore of South Boston, and a House of Industry was erected. The 
overseers of the poor a body then elected by the town, and subsequently 
by the inhabitants of the city, and possessing statutory powers which made 
it largely independent of the city council resisted the proposed change in 
the disposition of the paupers; and it was npt until Mr. Ouincy became 
mayor, and obtained additional legislation, that the reformation which he 
had recommended was fully carried into effect. 

" The evils attendant on the promiscuous mingling of the honest poor with rogues 
and vagabonds were mitigated by the establishment of the first House of Correction, 
properly so called, in Boston during the first year of his mayoralty. A building in 
the jail-yard was used at first for this purpose, but the establishment was afterward 
removed to South Boston, near the House of Industry. The separation, more impor- 
tant yet, of the young convicts from the old in places of penal restraint led to the 
establishment of a House of Reformation for juvenile offenders, the results of which 
both direct, in the large proportion (if young persons who were saved to society by 
its means, and indirect, by the encouragement which its successful experiment has 
given to the system elsewhere have been of the happiest nature." 1 

As chairman of the school committee, Mr. Quincy took an active in- 
terest in the public schools. His action upon one question, the mainte- 
nance of a high school for girls, raised a good deal of feeling against him 
at the time ; and, if repeated at the present day in the face of the more 
numerous advocates of a higher education for women, the feeling would 

1 Life of Josiah Quincy, by Edmund Quincy, p. 394. 



BOSTON UNDER THE MAYORS 331 

doubtless be intensified ; but the principle which he stated at the time, as 
governing his opposition to the establishment of a high school which would 
be used almost wholly by the daughters of wealthy parents, was a sound 
one. "The standard of public education," he said, "should be raised to 
the greatest desirable and practicable height; but it should be effected by 
raising the standard of the common schools." ' 

During Mr. Qtiincy's second term he had the honor of receiving and 
entertaining General Lafayette, who was made the guest of the city. The 
building at the ^corner of Park and Heacon streets was given up to the 
city by the club which occupied it, and, having been completely furnished 
and provided with servants, was made the home of the distinguished visitor 
during his stay. 2 

There were many other events of interest in the municipal history of 
the city during Mr. Quincy's administration; but as they were of a tem- 
porary character the limits of this work preclude any description of them. 
It was hardly possible for any man to do what Mr. Quincy did during 
those years without raising an opposition which must sooner Or later de- 
prive him of an office held by the frail tenure of an annual election. As 
his sixth term drew to a close, the opposition combined and assumed a 
tone of bitterness and malignancy which has seldom been equalled even 
on a much larger political field. The reorganization of the fire depart- 
ment provoked the hostility of a class of voters who were active and some- 
what unscrupulous. Then there were those whose private interests had 
suffered in the establishment of the new market-house and the penal and 
reformatory institutions, and in the enforcement of the laws relating to 
gambling, prostitution, and the sale of intoxicating liquors. In carrying 
out the street improvements and the enlargement of the market, a city 
debt, amounting to $637,000, had been created ; and this excited consider- 

1 [See the chapters by Mr. Dillaway and Dover Street, bore this inscription, written by 

Mrs. Cheney, in Vol. IV. ED.] Charles Sprague : 

[There is an account by General \V. H. Sum- w , , M LAFAyErrE , 

ner of Lafayette I visit, with the entertainment 

given him, in the A'. K. //,.<>. ami Gcnt.,1. A'ff., 

Thai gathered wilh thee 10 the 6ghl ; 
April, KS 5 .> (*ce Drake s l.,,,,J,mirks, p. 354.) , , h<; , win etCTna ,, y kKp 

The editor has been favored with the use of a The tablet of gratitude brinht. 
scrap-book, filled with newspaper clippings, We bow not the neck ; we bend not the knee : 
broadsides, etc., collected by Mi K. S. Ouincy Bui our hearts, Lafayette, we iirender to thee I 
during Lafayette's stay in America. A inanu- In a recent account of this visit. In F.lla R. 
script note in it says: "On Commencement day, Church, in the Mag. of Amer. Hist., May, 1881, 
Mayor Quincy called for Lafayette at his lodg- it is stated, in testimony of Lafayette's happy 
IIIL;-. and while the barouche waited for the Cov- memory, that at the reception at the State House 
<i mil's i. iniage to precede, a irowd gathered, he recognized an elderly colored man who. as a 
' Havi i been in Europe. Mr. Ouin ;nt of I Ian. o, k, had waited upon the Mar- 
asked the guest. 'No, never' 'Then you can (juis when a guest of his master forty years be- 
have no idea of what a crowd i- The desccndair : Judah Alden 
declare, in comparison the people oi Boston , tradition a remark which he 
seem to me like a picked population out "f made to that old soldier when he first saw him 
the whole human race'" Kdmiind on this visit, "Alden. h'^ I know 
'.Miincv's /./, ,'/" Josiah Qitiiiiv. 404.) An arch, you ' ISO I)carl>orn'i Sosttm 
which was erected on the Neck, just above -\ Kn.| 



232 



THE MEMORIAL HISTORY OK BOSTON. 



able discontent among the taxpayers, although the Mayor was able to 
show that in carrying out these improvements the city had become pos- 
sessed of real estate exceeding in value $7OO,ooo. 1 He could never have 




PARK STREET. 2 



maintained his position as long as he did, had he not been a man of the 
strictest integrity, a man against whom even an unscrupulous opposition 



1 The average rate of taxation during the 
last seven years under the town government was 
$8.15 on a thousand. During the first seven 
years, under the city government, it was $7.27. 

2 [The house on the left of the picture is the 
one occupied by Lafayette. It was built about 
1804, by Thomas Amory, but with its extension 
was afterward converted into four clwelliim>. 



Malbone the painter, Samuel Dexter the lawyer, 
and Governor Christopher Gore have all lived 
in it. It is also seen in the heliotype of the 
Connhon, 1804-1810, given in another chapter. 
The portion above and beyond the main entrance 
became the residence of George Ticknor, the 
historian of Spanish literature, and in it he died. 
Tin window above the front door, and the two 



BOSTON UNDER THE MAYORS. 233 

found it impossible to frame a charge of dishonesty, and had he not, 
moreover, constantly used his tongue and his pen to explain and defend 
his measures before the people. 

At the municipal election in December, 1828, Mr. Quincy failed on the 
first ballot to receive a majority of all the votes cast. Another ballot was 
then taken with substantially the same result. 1 Thereupon the Mayor sent 
a note to the press, stating that " no consideration would induce him to 
again accept the office." 

At the close of his term he summoned the two branches of the city 
council to meet in convention, and delivered an address which those who 
had made themselves conspicuous in opposing him must have long re- 
membered. In concluding he said : - 

" And now, Gentlemen, standing as I do in this relation for the last time in your 
presence and that of my fellow-citizens, about to surrender forever a station full of 
difficulty, of labor, and temptation, in which I have been called to very arduous duties, 
affecting the rights, property, and at times the liberty of others ; concerning which 
the perfect line of rectitude though desired was not always to be clearly dis- 
cerned ; in which great interests have been placed within my control, under circum- 
stances in which it would have been easy to advance private ends and sinister projects, 
under these circumstances, I inquire, as I have a right to inquire, for in the re- 
cent contest insinuations have been cast against my integrity, in this long manage- 
ment of your affairs, whatever errors have been committed (and doubtless there 
have been many), have you found in me anything selfish, anything personal, any- 
thing mercenary ? In the simple language of an ancient seer, I say : ' Behold, here 
I am ; witness against me. Whom have I defrauded ? Whom have I oppressed ? 
At whose hands have I received any bribe ? ' " a 

After Mr. Quincy's withdrawal from the canvass, Harrison Gray Otis 
was induced to become a candidate, and was elected without opposition for 

windows beyond it, lighted his library, of which 1859, and Edward Everett delivered the dcdica- 
a view is given in Mr. Cummings's chapter in this tory oration. See Editorial Note to the chap- 
volume. The house next beyond, originally the ter on " The Bench and Bar," in Vol. IV. 
home of Abbott Lawrence, the merchant and ED.| 

ambassador, is now occupied by the Union Club. ' On the first ballot Mr. Quincy lacked eighty- 
Mayor Quincy lived in a house further down the three votes of a majority; and on the second bal- 
street. Park Street, when laid out by Charles lot he lacked sixty-six votes. 
Bulfinch in 1804-5, was called Park Place, and 3 I have dwelt at some length on this early 
had the following residents from the church up : period of our municipal history, because the foun- 
General Arnold Welles, Dr. John C. Warren, dations of our present system were then estab- 
Richard Sullivan, Jonathan Davis, John Gore, lished. Indeed, something more than the founda- 
Judge A. Ward, Jonathan Amor)-, Governor tions were laid. It may be said in general terms 
Gore. In 1860 the houses, going up the street, that the only material changes made in the sy- 
were occupied by Thomas Wiiyleswonh, Dr. J. tem which was put into operation during the ad- 
M.ISOII Warren, Mrs. T. \V. Ward. Josi.ih Quincy, ministration and through the instrumentalir 
Jr., President Quincy, J. Sullivan Warn-n. Gov- Mavor Quincy have been made in recent years ; 
ernor Henry J. Gardner, Mrs. Abbott Lawrence, and have Iwen necessitated, as the change from 
George Ticknor. Sec view <>l Common in Lift the town to the city government was alone ne- 
of John C. Warren. The statin ot Danirl \\ !>> the increase of population. See 
ster, by Hiram I'owtts standing in the State Ktfort of ' ncrs on the revision of the 
House yard, in the foreground, was erected in City Charter, (. lity Documtnl 3 of 1875. 
VOL. III. 30. 



234 THE MEMORIAL HISTORY OF BOSTON. 

three successive terms. He was at this time sixty-three years of age, 
having been born in Boston, Oct. 8, I/6O. 1 

The principal recommendation which he had to make in his first address 
to the city council was that the project for railroad communication with the 
Hudson River should be encouraged. "Unless," he said, "the surveys and 
calculation of skilful persons employed in this business are fallacious, there 
is no doubt that a railroad from this city to the Hudson may be made with 
no greater elevation in any part than is found between the head of Long 
Wharf and the Old State House ; and that the income would pay the inter- 
est of the capital employed." 2 

On the day fixed for the organization of the city government of 1830, 
Mr. Otis was unwell, and the members of the city council were invited to 
assemble at his private residence for the purpose of being qualified. It 
was a proceeding without precedent; but no one thought of questioning 
the propriety of any request from Mr. Otis. His invitation was equivalent 
to a command ; and the aldermen and councilmen went to his house and 
were sworn in, and listened to the reading of the inaugural address. It 
appeared that the city debt was $883,630; and that the assets, exclusive 
of city lands, amounted to $257,341.42. The assessors' valuation of real 
and personal property for purposes of taxation was $29,793.00, and the 
rate of taxation was $8.10 on a thousand. 3 The fifth national census, of 
1830, gave the city a population of sixty-one thousand three hundred 
and ninety-two. 

In May of this year the Society for the Suppression of Intemperance 
petitioned for a band of music on the Common during the afternoons and 
evenings of the general election, and on the Fourth of July, "such a prac- 
tice having, in their judgment, a tendency to promote order and suppress 

1 He had been prominent in public affairs al- uals, public or private, of the many or the few, 
most from the time of his leaving college. In or privy to any correspondence of whatever de- 
1788, when twenty-three years of age, he deliv- scription, in which any proposition having for its 
ered the Fourth of July oration before the town object the dissolution of the Union, or its dis- 
authorities. He was a man of courtly manners memberment in any shape, or a separate confed- 
and winning address. His style of oratory was eracy, or a forcible resistance, to the government 
much admired in those days ; but his published or laws, was ever made or debated ; that I have 
speeches and addresses fail to sustain the reputa- no reason to believe that any such scheme was 
tion which he held among his contemporaries, ever meditated by distinguished individuals of 
His political popularity had been on the wane the old Federal party." [See H. C. Lodge's 
for some years, and he could not forbear making chapter immediately preceding this. ED.] 
a pathetic reference to the fact in his first inau- - [See further on this subject Mr. C. F. 
gural address as mayor. This address, delivered Adams's chapter in Vol. IV. ED.] 
in Faneuil Hall in presence of a large assembly :i It should be stated that the law in force at 
of citizens, had for its principal object the vindi- this time (see Rev Sts. 1836, c. 7, 15, 30, 37) 
cation of Mr. Otis's political career. To afford permitted assessors after they had made a true 
him an opportunity for so doing, in a sort of valuation of the real and personal estate, to as- 
semi-official way, was probably the chief induct- scss taxes upon a reduced value, provided their 
ment to his acceptance of the office. His con- record should show both the real value and the 
nection with the Hartford Convention having assessed value. The assessors of Boston, from a 
been made the basis of a charge of disloyalty, date preceding 1830, and including 1841, assessed 
he took occasion to "distinctly and solemnly half the true value. From 1842 to the present 
assert that at no time in the course of my life time assessments have been made upon the full 
have I been present at any meeting of individ- valuations. 



BOSTON i NDI:K THI. MAYORS. 



235 



an inclination to riot and intemperance." An appropriation was made 
from the city treasury to carry out the request of the petitioners. 

On the recommendation of the Mayor, the city council voted to alter 
the Old State House, at the head of State Street, so as to provide accom- 





modations therein for the mayor, aldermen, common council, and other 

city officers. It was decided to take possession of the new apartments on 

' [This cut Mio> a likenew p.unu-d hv Gil- N. E. H to, vol. 

I bert Stuart about 1814, and owned bj ti Lit. See boring's ffmtA 

Geort;, \V I M,ian, who kindly permit! 

engraved. A memoii of OtW :"< in <^"1<I'* Ktpubiuan Court. 

Perkins is in the M.-ninri.il /.'.v; r.tflii.-x f the 



236 THE MEMORIAL HISTORY OF BOSTON. 

September 17, the two hundredth anniversary of the settlement of the 
town. Mr. Josiah Quincy, who, after retiring from the mayoralty, had 
become President of Harvard College, accepted an invitation to deliver an 
address on the same day. Accordingly, on the morning of the seventeenth 
the two branches of the city council being assembled in convention, the 
Mayor made an address, " after which," as the record states, " the two 
branches went in procession to the Old South Church, escorted by the 
Ancient and Honorable Artillery Company, where an address was deliv- 
ered by the Hon. Josiah Quincy, and a poem by Charles Sprague, 
Esq." 1 

In his inaugural address for 1831 the Mayor had no special recommen- 
dations to make except in regard to the administration of county affairs. 
What he had to say on this point led to the passage of an act by the Legis- 
lature, vesting all the property of the county of Suffolk in the city of Boston, 
and requiring the city thenceforward to furnish and maintain all the county 
buildings, and to pay all the county charges. 

In the municipal election which took place Dec. 12, 1831, there were 
three prominent candidates, Charles Wells, William Sullivan, and Theo- 
dore Lyman, Jr. Mr. Wells and Mr. Lyman received, in round numbers, 
eighteen hundred votes each, and Mr. Sullivan eleven hundred. A second 
election was held December 22, the contest being between Mr. Wells and 
Mr. Lyman, and the former was elected by a majority of seven hundred 
and four votes, and re-elected in the following year without opposition. 

The election of Charles Wells 2 was a sort of protest from the middle 
classes against the magnificent way of doing things inaugurated by Quincy 
and Otis, and against any further increase of the city debt. He had some 
knowledge of city affairs, having served as a member of the common 
council and the board of aldermen. He was a man of simple character, 
not much versed in affairs of state, but not ill-qualified, on the whole, to 
perform the ordinary duties of the mayor's office, lie made no formal ad- 
dress when the city government was organized in 1832, and his two terms 
of service were not marked by any events of importance beyond the erec- 
tion of the present Court House, the extension of Broad, Commercial, and 
Tremont streets, and the establishment and enforcement of strict quaran- 
tine regulations, by which the' inhabitants were protected from the spread 
of cholera, then (in 1832) prevalent in the British provinces. 

At the election which took place in December, 1833, there were two 
candidates for the mayoralty. Theodore Lyman, Jr., who was called the 
Jackson candidate, and William Sullivan, who was the candidate of the 

1 [See Vol. I. p. 246. En]. The only and had the cows behaved with proper respect 

other notable event of this year was the exclu- to the ladies, Mayor Otis would never have inter- 

sion of cows from the Common. Rights of pas- fcrcd with their ancient privilegrs. 
turage on this public ground had been enjoyed - He was born in llnstim. Dec. 30, 1786, and 

by certain of the householders ever .since 1660; was by occupation a master bnilder. 



BOSTON UNDER THE MAYORS. 



237 



National Republicans, the party which had supported Mr. Wells. The con- 
tcst resulted in the election of Mr. Lyman. who held the office for two terms. 1 
lie made no address when the government was sworn in on the first Mon- 
day in January ; but he took occasion a few weeks later to send a long 
and carefully prepared message to the common council, recommending to 
its " early and earnest attention the subject of bringing a copious and 
steady supply of pure and soft water into the city of Boston." A portion 




THEODORE LYMAN. 1 

of the inhabitants were supplied with water at this time by an aqueduct 
corporation, chartered in 1795. The water was conveyed from Jamaica 
Pond, in West Roxbury, through four main pipes of pitch-pine logs. 8 The 



1 He was a native of Boston, born Feb. 20, 

i-i)2, and was educated at Phillips Academy and 
1 larvard College. A man of admirable parts, of 
good understanding, enlarged by a liberal educa- 
tion and extensive foreign travel, he was well 
equipped for a mote icspon>ible and dignified 
office than the one which a laudable ambition to 
serve his fellow-citi/ens had prompted him to 
accept. 

-' [This cut follows a likeness by Gerard, 
painted in I'.tiis in i.MS. and MM owned by 



Colonel Theodore Lyman. There is a sketch 

of Mr. I.yman's character in L. M. Sargent's 

Dealings with the Dead, No. 56, p. 204 ; and a 

memoir by h nel Theodore Lyman, in 

lorial Piograpkiet of the N. E. Hist 

Cicneal. Soc.. iS8o, vol. i. See the Gtntalog) of 

in Family, by Lyman Coleman, Albany, 

1872. r.i..| 

* (The route of this aqueduct is shown in 
Dearlxirn's map of 1X14, given in another chap- 
ter. ED.] 



238 THE MEMORIAL HISTORY OF BOSTON. 

lineal extent of the pipes in Boston was about fifteen miles, extending on 
the easterly side of the city nearly to State Street, and on the westerly 
side to the Massachusetts General Hospital. In 1825, on the recommenda- 
tion of a committee of the city council, Mr. Quincy appointed Professor 
Daniel Treadwell a commissioner " to ascertain the practicability of supply- 
ing the city with good water for the domestic use of the inhabitants, as 
well as for the extinguishing of fires and all the general purposes of com- 
fort and cleanliness." Professor Treadwell subsequently reported that there 
were two places in the neighborhood of Boston from which an adequate 
supply of pure water could be obtained, and which appeared to possess 
advantages over all others ; namely Charles River, above the falls of Water- 
town, and Spot Pond, in Stoneham. Estimates of the cost of bringing 
water into the city from those two places were furnished; but no further 
action was taken by the city council until 1833, when the Mayor was re- 
quested to apply to the Legislature for the necessary authority to supply 
the inhabitants with water. The authority was not granted ; and there the 
matter rested until Mr. Lyman's message was received. The subject was 
then referred to a committee of which the Mayor was chairman, and they 
selected Colonel Loammi Baldwin, a distinguished engineer, to make a sur- 
vey of the several sources of supply. Colonel Baldwin's report was of 
great and permanent value. It furnished the basis on which all subse- 
quent surveys -and reports relating to the water supply have been made. 
He came to the conclusion that Farm Pond, in Framingham, and Long 
Pond, in Natick, were the most eligible sources. The committee having 
the subject in charge recommended that the question of introducing water 
through the agency of the city council should be submitted to the people ; 
but no action was taken beyond printing and distributing the engineer's 
report. Twelve years elapsed, during which a water supply was the princi- 
pal topic of discussion in the city government; and then, in 1846, satisfac- 
tory legislation was obtained, enabling the city to draw from the sources 
recommended by Colonel Baldwin. 1 

On the night of Aug. 11, 1834, the Ursuline Convent, on Mount Bene- 
dict in Charlestown (now Somerville), was destroyed by a mob, composed 
largely of men who lived in Boston. Vague threats of what the " Boston 
Truckmen " intended to do were made for days and even weeks beforehand, 
but they produced no serious impression upon the authorities or upon the 
citizens generally ; and when the mob rolled up to the convent doors and 
began its work of destruction, there was not a solitary policeman or other 
peace officer to bar its progress. 

The Ursuline school, from which the institution derived its support, was 
composed almost entirely of Protestant pupils, many of them the daughters 
of wealthy or well-to-do parents living in Boston or in its vicinity; but dark 
stories had been circulated concerning the restraint put upon some of the 

1 f A history of the introduction of water into and printed in iS6S ; and a supplement, by D. 
Boston was prepared by Nathaniel J. Bradlee, Fitzgerald, was added in 1876. ED.] 



BOSTON UNDER THE MAYORS. 239 

nuns. One of them, while in delirium from brain fever, had escaped in her 
night-dress and taken refuge in a farm-house near by. While being taken 
back to the convent, her ravings had attracted attention, and it was said that 
she had fallen under the displeasure of the lady superior, and been long 
confined in an underground cell. About this time a sensational book, called 
Six Months in a Convent, was published as the work of a girl who had just 
escaped from the Ursuline Convent. " It purported to relate the threats 
and persuasions used by the inmates of the convent to make the writer a 
Catholic against her will ; and it ended with an account of her escape from 
their clutches just in time to save herself from being carried off by force to 
St. Louis." The common people believed all these stories ; and it must be 
said that the original impulse which moved those who organized the attack 
on the convent was not a bad one. They regarded this institution, and all 
such institutions, as " anti-Christian, anti-republican," and in every way 
" injurious to the best interests of the community;" but that feeling would 
probably never have moved them to acts of violence. What did move 
them was the belief that an old-world institution had been established among 
them where persons were deprived of their liberty, and where gross im- 
moralities were practised by " a company of unmarried women placed for 
life under the sole control of a company of unmarried men." The way in 
which they proceeded to vindicate republican institutions and the laws of 
society cannot, of course, be excused from any point of view; but there is 
this to be said, that they acted from a much higher motive than the men 
who, in the following year, dragged Garrison through the streets, or who, 
many years afterward, broke up Antislavery meetings and resisted the en- 
forcement of the Conscription Act. 

As the mob surged up to the building, the lady superior, a woman of 
great courage and dignity, but altogether wanting in discretion, tore herself 
from the detaining hands of the sisters, and, rushing out on the front steps, 
ordered the men to disperse immediately ; " for if you don't," she is re- 
ported to have said, " the Bishop has twenty thousand Irishmen at his com- 
mand, in Boston, who will whip you all into the sea." One cannot help 
feeling a sort of admiration for the fiery little French-Irish woman, standing 
alone before some thousands of riotous Protestant Americans and making 
such a speech ; but such a speech, if made, was not calculated to soothe 
the passions of those to whom it was addressed. Two shots were fired at 
this time by some one in the crowd; " and the affrighted nuns, hovering in 
the shadow of the door, behind my lady, pulled her back by force and 
barred the door." All the inmates of the institution then withdrew to the 
back-garden, and subsequently found refuge in a private house on Winter 
Hill. The doors of the convent were forced, the rooms ransacked, and the 
building was then set on fire and entirely destroyed. Several of the engine 
companies in Boston, attracted by the light of the fire, went to the scene with 
their engines, and were afterward charged with aiding the rioters ; but the 
charge was not sustained. As the work of destruction went on, the spirit 



240 THE MEMORIAL HISTORY OF BOSTON. 

of lawlessness and violence developed rapidly, as is usual in such cases, 
and was stimulated by drink. The lady superior was sought for, and had 
she been found she would probably have been killed. 

On the day following the affair at Mount Benedict, there were serious 
apprehensions of a riot in Boston ; and a conflict would undoubtedly have 
taken place between the returning rioters and the Irish population, had not 
the Mayor taken measures to prevent it. 1 He called a meeting in Faneuil 
Hall at one o'clock that day; and, after speeches by Mr. Quincy and Mr. 
Otis, resolutions were adopted in which the attack on the convent was de- 
nounced as "a base and cowardly act; " and the Mayor was requested to 
appoint a committee of citizens to investigate the affair, and " to adopt 
every suitable mode of bringing the authors and abettors of the outrage 
to justice." 

On the request of the Mayor, the State authorities made arrangements 
to call out the militia in case the posse comitatus was found inadequate to 
the support of the laws; but no further disturbance occurred. Madame 
St. George, the vivacious lady superior, being unable to hire another build- 
ing in this vicinity for her purpose, and making herself somewhat obnoxious 
by her snuff-taking, her levity, and her denunciations of the canaille, drifted 
off with her black-robed sisters into another part of the country, and was 
heard of no more by the " Boston Truckmen ; " but the blackened and crumb- 
ling walls of the convent remain to mark the spot where once stood the most 
" elegant and imposing building ever erected in New England for the educa- 
tion of girls." 2 

In his inaugural address, at the beginning of the year 1835, the Mayor 
called attention to the city debt, now amounting to $1,265,164.28, and sug- 
gested that if the present policy of borrowing for all purposes that could not 
be considered as strictly belonging to the current expenses of the year was 
pursued, it was obvious that in a single century there would be an accumu- 
lation both of interest, which it would be troublesome and inconvenient to 
pay, and of principal, which it would be most burdensome to redeem. He 
recommended, therefore, that whenever any new public work was ordered, a 
certain proportion of the cost should be added to the appropriations of the 
year. To this recommendation we owe the establishment of a sinking 

1 Colonel Theodore Lyman writes : shot!' Immediately the band-master went in all 

"I used to hear my father relate the amus- haste and told them he would not play. This 

ing device by which he prevented an anti-Catho- defection damped their ardor. However, a small 

lie riot in Boston, after the convent affair. The number collected and began to move across 

Charlestwn mob had arranged to march in pro- Charlestown Bridge. At the city end my father 

cession on the day following the fire, and to pass had stationed a man on horseback, who, as the 

.through Boston with a brass band, and bearing crowd drew near, turned and. in an ostentatious 

Catholic trophies stolen from the convent. Per way, galloped furiously off. Immediately a cry 

contra, the Irish prepared to attack the proces- rose: 'He is going for the military!' and the 

sion when it entered the city. mob retired whence it came ! " 

" My father sent for the leader of the band, 2 [See the statements on these events made 

and said: 'You are to play at the head of the in the chapter on "The Roman Catholic Church 

procession. The militia are under arms. They in Boston," in the present volume, and also City 

will fire. You are a stout man, and will be surely Document 1 1 of 1834. ED.) 



BOSTON UNDER THE MAYoRS. 241 

fund, which has been of great value in preserving the city credit. He also 
dwelt at some length in his message on the subject of pauperism, and the 
reformation of juvenile offenders, making some valuable suggestions which 
were afterward acted upon. 1 

It was during this year that the famous demonstration against the 
Abolition movement occurred, of which a particular account is given in 
another chapter. 2 

On August 15 a great meeting was held in Faneuil Hall, to show that 
the wealth and intelligence of Boston were opposed to any interference with 
the constitutional guarantees which protected slavery. The Mayor pre- 
sided; and it should be said of him, as of many others who took part 
in this meeting, that, while condemning the methods of the Abolitionists, he 
was heartily in sympathy with any measures by which, in a constitutional 
way, slavery could be restricted or exterminated. His Fourth of July 
oration before the town authorities, in 1820, and his Report to the Massa- 
chusetts House of Representatives, in 1822, on the admission into this State 
of free negroes and mulattoes, show that from early manhood he had sym- 
pathized with the Antislavery cause. 

A few days before the outbreak (October 2 1), a letter written by a 
graduate of the theological seminary at Andover, whose integrity of char- 
acter was vouched for by the professors, had been published in the news- 
papers, stating that George Thompson had said to him, three or four times, 
" that every slave-holder ought to have his throat cut." Thompson denied 
having made the statement ; but in the face of a solemn re-affirmation of 
its truth by the person who originally made it, the denial went for little. 
What followed was undoubtedly due largely to the feeling created by this 
statement. 

It was chiefly against Thompson that the passions of the hour were 
aroused ; and when the Mayor, on inquiry, learned that Thompson was 
not in the city, and would not be present at the meeting whose announce- 
ment had caused so much solicitude on his part, there seemed to him no 
reason to apprehend any serious disturbance of the peace, and no extraor- 
dinary precautions were taken. Upon the seizure of Garrison, however, 
by the mob, the circumstances attending which need not be repeated 
here, and his rescue by the police, the Mayor ordered the officers to 
take him into the City Hall, and offered his own body as a shield against 
the rioters. After a stubborn fight, the entrance to the City Hall was 

1 The establishment of the State Reform haps to his wise suggestions at the time of its 

School at Westboro', "for the proper disci- foundation as to his prim . In the last 

pline, insti union, employment, anil reformation codicil to his will he - separate sch<p| 

of juvenile offenders," the first institution f "f a similar character for girls ; and to that sug- 

the kind in America, was due mainly to Mr. urstion we owe the institution now in operation 

Lyman. He gave $22,50010 the school during at I-ancaster. He was the benefactor, and for 

his lifetime, the sole condition being that his man the Farm School for 

name should not then lie m.i.U- public; and he I Uland. 

left to it $50,000 more by his last will. The * (That on "The Am ememV by 

success of the school |, a s been due as much per- James Krixman Clarke. Ku] 
VOL. III. 31. 



242 THE MEMORIAL HISTORY OF BOSTON. 

gained, and Garrison was conveyed upstairs to the Mayor's office. As the 
crowd attempted to follow, the Mayor took his stand on the steps, and 
declared that " any person who passed there would have to pass over his 
dead body." Night was coming on, and the excitement of the crowd 
showing no abatement, it was thought best to commit Garrison to the jail, 
ostensibly as a disturber of the peace. The necessary papers were made 
out by the sheriff, who was present, and after a hard fight he was put into 
a carriage and conveyed by a circuitous route to the jail, where he again 
barely escaped falling into the clutches of the crowd assembled about the 
entrance. As the doors of the jail closed upon him, he sank exhausted on 
a seat, exclaiming, " Never was a man so rejoiced to get into a jail before." l 
He received no personal injuries while in the hands of the mob. On the 
day following his commitment he was discharged from the jail, and, acting 
on the advice of friends, retired to the country for a short time. 

The Mayor has been blamed for not having a sufficient civil force at hand 
to check the mob in the beginning, and for not calling out the military forces 
later, to prevent the necessity of committing Garrison to jail as a criminal ; 
but it appears that he did use, as effectively as possible, the small police 
force at his command; and that, as the law then stood, he had no such 
power as the mayor now has to issue precepts calling the militia to the 
aid of the civil authorities. Mr. Samuel E. Sewall, an Abolitionist who took 
part in the meeting which caused the riot, and who was very active in efforts 
for Garrison's security, said, in a communication to the Liberator shortly 
after the affair, that he believed the Mayor " was as sincerely desirous of 
suppressing the riot as any man in the city," and that he had " adopted 
such measures as seemed to him calculated to effect the object." 

There is no doubt that the public sentiment of the community was in 
sympathy with the mob to the extent of breaking up the meeting ; and while 
it was not in sympathy with it to the extent of doing personal violence to 
Mr. Garrison, it was not in favor of punishing those who laid violent hands 
upon him. According to one of the papers, the mob was composed, in part 
at least, of " gentlemen of property and standing." The Advertiser of the 
day following concluded a very short account of the affair by saying : 

" As far as we had an opportunity for observing the deportment of the great num- 
ber of persons assembled, there appeared to be a strong desire that no act of violence 
should be committed any further than was necessary to prevent these fomenters of 
discord from addressing a public meeting. If those who call these useless meetings 
have not regard enough for the public quiet to avoid the summoning of another 
assemblage of this kind, we trust the proper authorities will take care that they are 
bound over to keep the peace." 

It is true, as has been stated, that hardly a night passes in any of our 
larger cities without greater violence done to person and to property than 
occurred in the so-called " Garrison mob." It would long ago have passed 

1 Boston Atlas, Oct. 22, 1835. This statement rison use substantially the same words in describ- 
is corroborated by persons who heard Mr. Gar- ing the affair shortly after it occurred. 



BOSTON UNDER THE MAYORS. 243 

out of memory but for the prominence which the man and his cause after- 
ward attained. Garrison was then an obscure individual. During Mr. 
Otis's administration the mayor of Baltimore requested him to suppress the 
Liberator, copies of which were sent to that city. Mr. Otis wrote to him 
that the " officers had ferreted out the paper and its editor, whose office 
was an obscure hole; his only visible auxiliary, a negro boy; his supporters, 
a few ignorant persons of all colors." 

While the Mayor had no sympathy with the mob, and stood up bravely 
in defence of the object of its persecution, he was not as zealous as he 
might have been in seeking out and punishing those who had committed 
such an offence against the rights of an American citizen ; not as solicitous 
for the good name of the city as he showed himself to be when he called a 
meeting in Faneuil Hall to denounce the destruction of the Ursuline Con- 
vent; not as energetic as the mayor of 1837, who in two hours mustered a 
sufficient military force to put down the great riot in Broad Street. Look- 
ing back upon it at this day, one cannot but regret that the feeling which 
prompted him to shield Mr. Garrison with his own body had not induced 
him to make the effort, at least, to punish those who had so openly defied 
his authority. 

At the municipal election in December, 1835, Samuel Turrell Arm- 
strong, 1 the Whig candidate, was elected mayor for the ensuing year. He 
held the office for only one term, and the principal acts of his administration 
appear to have been the erection of the gloomy iron fence which still en- 
closes three sides of the Common, and the extension of the mall through 
the burial ground on Boylston Street. The new Court House in Court 
Square was completed this year ; and the ringing of the church-bells was 
changed from eleven o'clock to one, or, as it was said, from the hour for 
drinking to the hour for dining. 2 

For some reason Mr. Armstrong was not a candidate for re-election ; 
and at the end of his term the Whigs put up Samuel Atkins Eliot, 8 a suc- 
cessful and highly respected Boston merchant, and elected him over the 
combined opposition by a majority of about eight hundred votes. He held 
the office for three years, and showed a remarkable aptitude for the per- 
formance of its duties. Following the custom of his immediate predecessors, 
Mr. Eliot made no formal address upon the organization of the city gov- 
ernment at the beginning of his first term. 

The most important act of his administration was the reorganization of 
the fire department. The necessity of bringing that department into a 

1 He was born in Dorchester, Mass., April ernor after the election of Governor John Davis 

29, 1784; educated at the puMic srhoo!.-. and to the United States Senate, March 4, 1835. 
became a printer, publisher, ami ' He Vol. II. p. 509. I'i'l 

had been a member of the board of aldermen * He was a native of Hoston, born March 5. 

for four years ( tSjS-ji) ; Licut.-Governor of the 1798, and had served a* a member of the board of 

Stat for three years ( 1833-35), and Acting Gov- aldermen while Mr. I.yman held the mayoralty. 



244 



THE MEMORIAL HISTORY OF BOSTON. 



higher state of discipline and efficiency was made apparent to the citizens 
on the occasion of the Broad-Street riot. The succession of violent dis- 
turbances of the peace which took place during these early years under 
the city government shows that there must have been in these " good old 
times," as they are now called, a greater tendency to fighting and to the 
destruction of property than there is at the present time. The Boston of 
that day was small, but it was evidently intense. Its feelings could not 




SAMUEL A. ELIOT. 



then, as now, find expression in the mild vagaries of a Radical Club. The 
truckmen, looking piously on the motto of the city seal, saw no other 
way of preserving the religion of their fathers than by burning the first 
convent that was set up in their neighborhood ; the merchants, having in 
their keeping the material prosperity of the city, saw no other way of pre- 
serving that on which its prosperity rested the Union of the States 

1 [This cut follows a photograph, taken 1817, is now in the possession of Professor 

about 1850, kindly loaned by Charles W. Eliot, Charles Eliot Norton, in Cambridge. For his 

his son, President of Harvard University. A family connections, see Vol. IV. p. 7. He died 

portrait of Mayor Eliot by Stuart, taken about in 1862. ED.] 



BOSTON UNDER THE MAYORS. 



2 45 



than by hustling Mr. Garrison, and then locking him up in jail for allow- 
ing himself to be hustled; the firemen the embodiment of a long series 
of Fourth of July orations saw no other way of vindicating American 
muscle and American independence than by breaking the heads of their 
Irish fellow-citizens. 

It was on Sunday, June n, 1837, tnat t ne Broad-Street riot occurred. 
An engine company returning from a fire came into collision with an Irish 
funeral procession. It would not have been a serious affair had not an 
alarm of fire been sounded on the church-bells, calling other fire companies 
to the scene. The Irish had a temporary advantage in numbers; but the 
firemen, and those who came to their aid, soon got the upper hand. The 
Irish were driven into their houses, whither they were followed by their 
assailants, who had now reached a pitch of fury which, but for the appear- 
ance of the military, would have ended in the destruction of the whole Irish 
quarter of the town. No lives were lost, however, but there was a good 
deal of blood-letting, and considerable property was destroyed. It was 
estimated that over fifteen thousand persons were concerned in the affair. 
The Mayor was on the ground at the first alarm, and finding himself 
powerless to preserve order with the small police force under his com- 
mand, he took immediate steps to have the military called out. Fort- 
unately for the peace of the city, the National Lancers, constituting a 
company of cavalry in the militia organization of the Commonwealth, had 
just been formed, and the members being well known the authorities were 
able to bring them together at short notice. Portions of several companies 
of infantry were also collected; and in two hours after the affray began the 
Mayor entered Broad Street at the head of some eight hundred men under 
arms. The Lancers led the way and did the most effective service. The 
>treet presented a singular spectacle at this time. The air was full of fly- 
ing feathers and straw from the beds which had been ripped open and 
emptied out of the windows; some of the tenement houses were com- 
pletely sacked, the occupants fleeing for their lives. Peace was restored 
very soon after the arrival of the militia; but the people were in such an 
excited state that a military patrol was maintained through the night, and 
sentinels were posted at all the church doors to prevent false alarms. 
The energetic action of the Mayor alone prevented a serious loss of life. 
From the report of an investigating committee of the city council, it ap- 
pears that the blame for beginning the disturbance rests about equally on 
the firemen and the Irishmen. 

The moral which the Mayor drew from the occurrence was that both the 
police and fire departments ought to be reorgani/ed. lie succeeded in 
making the changes he desired in the fire department, but failed to secure 
the co-operation of the city council in his proposed reform of the police 
department. The firemen at that time received no compensation for their 
services. A small annual allowance was made to the en-ine and hook and 
ladder companies to pay for refreshments; but beyond that the free souls 



246 THE MEMORIAL HISTORY OF BOSTON. 

composing the department disdained to receive anything. The Mayor saw 
that in order to secure discipline reasonable compensation must be made 
for the services required. He told the city council that " it ought not to be 
regarded as a matter of reproach to any one to receive pay for his labor." 
He saw no reason why the firemen should not be paid and still retain all the 
ambition, ardor, and generous spirit which characterize voluntary associ- 
ations, and which are not less characteristic of naval and military corps. 
The compensation was intended as an inducement for the firemen to place 
themselves under that strict discipline necessary to insure efficiency, and 
not as an equivalent for perils which could not be really paid for. The 
ordinance reorganizing the department and fixing the pay of its members 
was passed and went into operation on the first of September. For several 
weeks it was necessary to maintain all over Boston volunteer patrols against 
incendiaries. 

In the following year authority was procured from the Legislature for 
the appointment by the mayor and aldermen of police officers, with all the 
powers of constables except the power of serving and executing any civil pro- 
cess. Under this authority a small police force for day duty was organized 
and placed under the city marshal, who was the principal health-officer of 
the city. This force was entirely separate and distinct from the watch, which 
at this time included one hundred and ten watchmen and ten constables, 
who went on duty at six o'clock in the winter and at seven o'clock in the 
summer, and patrolled the streets until sunrise. 

At the municipal election in December, 1837, the inhabitants were called 
upon to give in their votes on several amendments to the city charter pro- 
posed by the city council. Most of the amendments were merely for the 
purpose of curing certain defects in the phraseology of the original act; 
but there was one which transferred from the inhabitants of the several 
wards to the city council the power of electing overseers of the poor, and 
this proposition was regarded with so much disfavor that all the amend- 
ments were defeated. They were again submitted at a special election in 
February, 1838, and again rejected. 

Under the authority of an act of the Legislature, a superintendent of alien 
passengers was first appointed by the city in 1837. It was made the duty 
of that officer to prevent the landing of persons incompetent to maintain 
themselves, unless a bond was given that the person should not become a 
charge to the city or the State within ten years ; and the sum of two dol- 
lars was collected from all other alien passengers as a commutation for the 
bond. Some years afterward this assessment of " head money," as it was 
called, was resisted by the transportation companies ; and a case being car- 
ried up to the Supreme Court of the United States, the law which authorized 
it was declared to be unconstitutional. 

The erection of a hospital for the insane was begun in 1837, on tne 
grounds adjoining the houses of Industry and Correction, in South Boston ; 
and was opened for patients in 1839. 



BOSTON UNDER THE MAYORS. 



247 



In his inaugural address at the beginning of the year 1838 the Mayor re- 
ferred to the commercial crisis which had occurred during the previous year, 
and stated that it had produced far less general distress in this community 
than in some others. He recommended the erection of a new city hall 
and a county jail ; but no action was taken on these recommendations be- 
yond procuring plans and estimates for the former. No other measures of 
importance received the attention of the city council during this year. 

At the charter election in December, 1839, Jonathan Chapman, 1 the 
Whig candidate, was elected mayor, and held the office for the three fol- 
lowing years. When he took office in January, 1840, he addressed the city 
council at some length, recommending, as the principal object of their 
efforts, the gradual reduction of the city debt. From $100,000 the debt 
had in eighteen years risen to $1,698,232; but the city had in the mean 
time acquired a property which not only accommodated the public busi- 
ness, but furnished an income which covered more than half the interest on 
the debt; and it owned, besides, about $200,000 in bonds and notes, and 
between five and six million feet of land and flats. The national census 
taken this year gave the city a population of ninety-three thousand three 
hundred and eighty-three. The valuation of the real and personal prop- 
erty of the city for purposes of taxation amounted to $47,29O,8oo, 2 and 
the rate of taxation was $11 on $ 1,000. The annual current expenses 
of the city, excluding all except those for ordinary purposes, and also 
the payments on account of the principal or interest of the city debt, 
amounted to about $425,000. The public schools absorbed nearly a 
quarter of this amount. 

The project of building a new city hall on land lying between the Court 
House and School Street, which had been purchased for the purpose dur- 
ing the preceding year, was not favored by the Mayor. When, later in the 
year, a new building for the probate and registry offices was completed, and 
the old county court house was abandoned, the city council decided to 
remodel the old building for the purposes of a city hall. This was done for 
a comparatively small expense, and the city government took possession of 
its new quarters on March 18, 1841, and listened to an address from the 
Mayor. 

The year 1840 formed a sort of epoch in the commercial history of the 
city. Through the enterprise of Mr. Samuel Cunard, steam navigation was 
established between Boston and Liverpool. 3 The event was celebrated by a 
great dinner, given on July 22, in a pavilion in front of the Maverick House 

1 Ho w.i- horn in Boston, Jan. 23, 1807, and Christian Examiner, and the newspapers of the 

w.ix the son of Captain Jonathan Chapman, who d.iy. an tft M! and political 

had .-on oil in the oftii'e of -oKvtm.m for the occasions, and altogether a man of rather bril- 

t<mn "I lioxtoii. Ho reoeived his (.-(111031101) at liant pait-. 

Phillip- Ao.iiloniv and H.iiv.nd I'ollege, and en- .-54. 

tered the Suffolk liar from Jmluo Sh.iw'- ofl \1>. II \. II ..,'- chapter fa Vol. IV., 

He possessed considerable literary ability ; was and the M ._;ural Adi:. /'jrar 

acontributor to the North American Krciev, the ment 2 of 1841. Kn.) 



248 THE MEMORIAL HISTORY OF BOSTON. 

at East Boston. Referring to the matter in his inaugural address at the 
beginning of the following year, the Mayor said it had already given to 
the city a commercial importance unknown to her before ; and when con- 
sidered in connection with the great internal improvement through this 
Commonwealth, so shortly to be completed, the most important results to 
our prosperity might justly be anticipated. The period of general depres- 
sion in the various branches of industry and business seemed rapidly giv- 
ing place to one of activity and success ; and he thought he could say truly 
that in no period of the city's history had her prospects been so bright 
and cheering. 1 

During this year the Mayor incurred the enmity of the sellers of in- 
toxicating liquors by temporarily increasing the police force for the purpose 
of prosecuting the violators of the law. There was a license law in opera- 
tion at this time, which authorized the mayor and aldermen to grant as 
many licenses to retail spirituous liquors as in their opinion the public 
good might require. The Mayor was opposed to a license law, and in his 
address to the city government of 1842 he gave his views on the question 
at some length. It appears that he prosecuted the violators of the liquor 
law simply because they were law-breakers, and not because he expected 
in that way to cure the evils of intemperance. He objected to the license 
law because it created a monopoly, and because its enforcement necessi- 
tated the entering of a man's house or place of business for the purpose of 
procuring evidence. He said : 

" Let the licensing system be entirely done away, as wrong in principle and in- 
jurious in effect. Let the severest penalties be affixed to the keeping of disorderly 
houses. Demand of your police to keep the outside in order, to see to it that the 
public peace is preserved, and the public proprieties in no way violated. But as 
to the use of spirituous liquors within, so long as it is peaceable and in order, leave 
that to individuals, and above all to the Washingtonians, who have grasped the sub- 
ject in the right way." 

During the year 1841 another revision of the city charter was made 
and submitted to the Legislature, but no action was taken by that body ; and 
the Mayor in his address at the beginning of the following year urged a 
renewal of the application for additional legislation. The application was 
made, but the higher power " smiling put the question by." 2 

1 The great internal improvement referred to 2 In the ordinary affairs of the city nothing 

was the Western Railroad, which was completed of importance beyond what has been mentioned 

and opened to the Hudson River in 1841. . The occurred during Mr. Chapman's three years of 

city government "noticed this joyous occasion " service ;. but it ought perhaps to be mentioned 

by visiting Albany, and receiving in return a as something beyond the ordinary, that on Feb. 

visit from the officers of that city. [See the 2, 1842, a public dinner was given to Mr. Charles 

chapter on " The Canal and Railroad Enterprise Dickens, at which the Mayor made quite a no- 

of Boston," by Charles Francis Adams, Jr., in table little speech, full of the kind of wit that is 

Vol. IV., and Mr. Hamilton A. Hill's chapter on appreciated on such occasions ; and that on Nov. 

"The Trade, Commerce, and Navigation of Bos- 24, 1841, the Mayor's wife danced with the Prince 

ton," in the same volume. ED.] de Joinville, at a great ball in Faneuil Hall. 



BOSTON UNDER THE MAYORS. 249 

Martin Brimmer 1 was the next mayor of Boston. He was the Whig 
candidate, and was elected by a majority of two thousand and .sixty-one 
votes over Bradford Sumner, the candidate of the " Loco-focos." 

His address at the organization of the city government on Jan. 2, 1843, 
was devoted largely to the question, which had been agitated for some 
years, of building a new prison for the county of Suffolk. He pointed out 
the defects of the old jail in Leverett Street, and the difficulty of caring for 
its inmates in a manner suited to the requirements of the times. He had 
given considerable attention to the subject of prison discipline and con- 
struction, about which an active controversy was going on at that time ; 
and he made some suggestions in his address which were acted upon when, 
at a later day, the new jail was constructed in Charles Street. 

Mr. Brimmer was also deeply interested in the cause of public education, 
and was an ardent supporter of the new departure advocated by Horace 
Mann. During his mayoralty he gave much thought to the improvement 
and increase of the Boston schools. At that time the literature of educa- 
tion was scanty. A valuable work The School and the Schoolmaster, by 
Alonzo Potter and George B. Emerson had recently been published, and 
the Mayor had an edition of three thousand five hundred copies printed at 
his own expense, and sent a copy to each public school and school com- 
mittee in the State. 2 

In his address to the city government of 1844 the Mayor sketched the 
rapid growth of the city during the preceding twenty-two years, for the 
purpose of impressing his associates with " the importance of enlarged 
views in relation to the improvements of the city, in extending and beautify- 
ing the streets and public places, in a careful attention to internal health 
and police, in an enlarged system of internal and external intercourse, in a 
liberal encouragement of charitable and literary institutions, in a far-sighted 
preparation for the moral, literary, and physical education of the rising 
generation." 

The policy inaugurated by Mr. Chapman for a gradual reduction of the 
city debt was continued by Mr. Brimmer. The debt which amounted to 
$1,698,232, in 1840, was reduced under Mr. Chapman's administration to 
$1,594,700, and under Mr. Brimmer's to $1,423,800. 

At the charter election, Dec. 9, 1844, several propositions in regard to 
procuring a supply of pure water for the inhabitants of Boston were sub- 
mitted to a popular vote. The proposition to take the supply from Long 
Pond in Natick and Framingham, or from any of the sources adjacent 
thereto, as recommended by Colonel Baldwin, was adopted by a vote of 
six thousand two hundred and sixty yeas, to two thousand two hundred 
and four nays. The Mayor was thereupon instructed to apply to the Leg- 

1 Mr. Brimmer was born in 1793, and grad- board of aldermen, and one term as a represen- 

uated at Harvard College in 1814. Although tative in the Legislature. 

engaged in mercantile pursuits he was al\\ J [Sec Mr. DilUw.iy's chapter on " Educa- 

interested in public affairs, and previous to his tion, Past and 1'rcscnt," in Vol. IV. El).] 
election as mayor had served one term in the 
VOL. III. 32. 



250 THE MEiMORIAL HISTORY OF BOSTON. 

islature for the necessary authority ; and the last important act of his ad- 
ministration was a compliance with this instruction. 1 

Mr. Brimmer having declined a re-election for a third term, there was a 
remarkable contest over the election of his successor. Thomas Aspinwall 
Davis was the candidate of a new political organization, called the Native 
American party; Josiah Quincy, Jr., was the candidate of the Whigs, and 
Adam W. Thaxter, Jr., was the Democratic candidate. On the first ballot 
Quincy received four thousand four hundred and sixty-four votes ; Davis, 
three thousand nine hundred and eleven, and Thaxter, two thousand one 
hundred and seventy-three. There being no choice, Mr. Quincy with- 
drew, and Thomas Wetmore was put forward as the Whig candidate. He 
proved less popular than Mr. Quincy, and on the second ballot Davis 
led ; but Colonel Charles G. Greene, who had been nominated as the 
Democratic candidate in place of Mr. Thaxter, received sufficient votes to 
prevent a choice. It was not until the eighth ballot was taken, on Feb. 
21, 1845, that Mr. Davis received a bare majority, and was declared 
elected. His principal opponent on the last ballot was Mr. William 
Parker, a Whig, who had been chosen chairman of the new board of alder- 
men, and who acted as mayor until Mr. Davis was sworn in on February 
27. Mr. Parker appears to have had some feeling over his defeat, as he 
immediately withdrew from the board of aldermen. 

Mr. Davis's inaugural address, delivered on February 27, was devoted 
mainly to the subject of a water supply; but he could not forbear referring 
to the contest over his election, and saying a few words in defence of the 
party which had brought him forward. He said : 

" The numerous and exaggerated statements that have been freely circulated in 
reference to the objects and aims of the American Republican party, which has re- 
cently sprung into existence and is so rapidly increasing in many parts of the coun- 
try, require a word upon this subject. It is not the object of the American party, by 
word or act, to engender unkind feelings between the native born and foreign born 
citizen. Its object is, by the establishment of general and salutary naturalization and 
registration laws, by educational and moral means, to place our free institutions upon 
such a basis that those who come after us, the descendants both of the foreign and the 
American citizen, may be free and independent." 

On March 25 the Legislature passed an act authorizing the introduction 
of water from Long Pond ; but the act was not to take effect unless ac- 
cepted by a majority of the legal voters of the city. The question of its 
acceptance was voted on at special meetings held in the several wards on 
May 19, and it was rejected by a small vote; the principal cause of its re- 
jection being the extraordinary powers given to the three water commis- 

1 \History of the Introduction of Pure Water two vols., maps, and plans, Boston, 1868-1876. 
into the City of Boston, by N. J. Bradlee, with a See also, on the matter specially referred to, 
continuation from 1868 to 1876 by D. Fitzgerald, City Documents, 1844. ED.] 



BOSTON UNDER THE MAYORS. 251 

sioncrs, who were, by the terms of the act, to be appointed as the agents 
of the city council. 

On October 6, Mr. Davis having been ill for some time, and unable to 
perform the duties of his office, sent his resignation to the city council; 
but it was not accepted, and he continued to be the nominal head of the 
city government until November 22, when he died. He was a man of ex- 
cellent character, but lacked the qualities essential to success in the admin- 
istration of a public office. 1 

At the charter election on Dec. 8, 1845, there were three candidates for 
mayor: Josiah Quincy, Jr., nominated by the Whigs; John T. Heard, by 
the Democrats ; and William S. Damrell, by the Native Americans. Mr. 
Quincy was elected by a handsome majority ; and on the eleventh of the 
same month the city council elected him, as authorized in such cases by 
the city charter, to fill the office until the beginning of the next municipal 
year. During the interval between November 22 and December n, Ben- 
son Leavitt, then chairman of the board of aldermen, acted as mayor. 

Josiah Quincy, Jr., 2 served in the office of mayor from Dec. 1 1, 1845, to 
the first Monday in January, 1849. He had a thorough knowledge of mu- 
nicipal affairs, and his administration was characterized by much of the 
energy and ability which distinguished his father's service of the city. In 
his inaugural address on Jan. 5, 1846, he dealt with the water question in 
away to secure the hearty co-operation of his associates in the government. 
The time for deliberation, he said, had passed. The time for action had 
come. A competent and disinterested commission had decided that Long 
Pond was the source from which this blessing was to be derived, and the 
honor of beginning the important work had been conferred upon the pres- 
ent administration. He then proceeded to make a financial statement, 
from which it appeared that the cost of introducing water, estimated by the 
commissioners to be $2,651,643, was more than covered by the value of 
the city lands, estimated at that time to be worth $3,175,000. The funded 
city debt on Jan. i, 1846, amounted to $1,085,200, showing a reduction of 
over $600,000 since 1840. This favorable exhibit of the city's financial 
condition had much to do with securing the approval of the citizens to the 
next act of the Legislature, authorizing the introduction of water. Ten 
days after the new government came in, the Mayor was authorized to pe- 
tition for another act. It was granted, in the form desired, on March 30, 
and accepted by the citizens on April 13, the vote standing four thousand 
six hundred and thirty-seven in the affirmative, and only three hundred and 
forty-eight in the negative. On May 4, James F. Baldwin, Nathan Hale, 

1 His ancestors were among the earliest set- * He was born in Boston, Jan. 17, 1802, and 

lers of the town of Krookline, Mass., where he was educated at Phillips Academy and Harvard 

was born on Dec. 11,1798. He was educated in College. He was a member of the common 

the public schools, and at the time of his elec- council for four years (1833-37), and its presi- 

tion as mayor was engaged in business as a dent for three years. [His portrait is given in 

jeweller. Mr. Adams's chapter in Vol. IV. ED.| 



352 THE MEMORIAL HISTORY OF BOSTON. 

and Thomas B. Curtis were chosen by the city council as commissioners 
under the act; and on August 20 the ceremony of breaking ground for 
the beginning of the work at the lake was performed by the Mayor, as- 
sisted by his father and the venerable John Quincy Adams. At the colla- 
tion which followed, the Mayor called attention to the name by which the 
source of supply was generally known, and said the name Long Pond was 
like the name John Smith, without distinction. He suggested, therefore, 
that the Indian name " Cochituate " should be substituted, and the sug- 
gestion was immediately adopted. 

On Oct. 25, 1848, in the last year of Mr. Quincy's mayoralty, there was 
another celebration, this time on Boston Common. The rising of the sun 
was saluted with a hundred guns, and by the ringing of all the church-bells. 
A great procession was formed, which marched through the streets and 
then to the Common, where an ode, written by Mr. James Russell Lowell, 
was sung by the school children, and addresses were made by the Mayor 
and by Mr. Nathan Hale, chairman of the water commission. After the 
citizens had been duly impressed with the importance of the blessing about 
to be bestowed on them, the Mayor inquired if it was their pleasure that 
water should then be introduced. There was a tremendous affirmative, and 
thereupon the gate was opened, and a column of water six inches in di- 
ameter rose to a height of eighty feet. What followed is thus described 
by the historian of the water works : 

" After a moment of silence, shouts rent the air, the bells began to ring, cannon 
were fired, and rockets streamed across the sky. The scene was one of intense ex- 
citement which it is impossible to describe, but which no one can forget. In the 
evening there was a grand display of fireworks, and all the public buildings and many 
of the private houses were brilliantly illuminated." 

The committee on finance, of which the Mayor was chairman, was au- 
thorized in 1846 to borrow money to the amount of $2,500,000, for carrying 
on the work; but they found great difficulty in negotiating a loan upon any 
reasonable terms. The leading European bankers who were consulted on 
the subject united in saying that the repudiation of some of the States had 
made it impossible to dispose of American bonds. During a part of 1847 
the rate for money was two per cent a month, on the best paper. In April 
of that year it was decided to advertise for a loan of a million dollars. 
The city's financial condition was so well presented to capitalists, that the 
finance committee were enabled to place the whole amount at a little less 
than six per cent, a lower rate than was obtained by the United States. 

During Mr. Quincy's first term the police force was reorganized. Francis 
Tukey, who occupies a large place in the traditions of the department, was 
appointed city marshal. He was a police officer of the French school, 
possessing great coolness and audacity, a thorough knowledge of the weak- 
nesses of human nature, and an entire indifference as to the methods by 
which he accomplished his ends. On a larger field, and under a less dem- 



BOSTON UNDER THE MAYORS. 253 

ocratic form of government, he would have been one of the noted civil 
officers of his time. He made himself the terror of evil-doers, and, it 
must be added, of some who were not evil-doers. As the law then stood, 
the city was obliged to maintain a night-watch, separate and distinct from 
the police force. The watch numbered at this time about one hundred and 
fifty men, and were under the control of a captain. They were in the habit 
of enveloping themselves in large coats, and, after a round or two at the 

inning of their watch, retiring to the shelter of the watch boxes, which 
were then provided, and slumbering peacefully until relieved. Marshal 
Tukey's force consisted in the beginning of only twenty-two day men and 
eight night men, the night men being a sort of detective force, and, 
under the lead of their dashing chief, doing more effective police service 
than the whole night-watch. This force was gradually increased to forty 
patrolmen for day duty, twenty patrolmen for night duty, and five regular 
detectives. In 1853 the Legislature passed an act authorizing the city 
council to unite the watch and police, and in the following year the union 
was effected. 

Among other police regulations introduced during Mr. Quincy's term, 
was one requiring licensed places of amusement to abolish what was known 
as the "third row," a place which for years had been set apart in all the 
theatres for the special accommodation of prostitutes. By the Mayor's 
casting vote, licenses for the sale of intoxicating liquors were refused. 
" When I left the office," says Mr. Quincy, " there was no place where 
such liquors were openly sold. An attempt was made on this account to 
prevent my re-election for a third term, but after a most excited canvass 
I was rechoscn." 

In order to make good his statement as to the city's means for meeting 
its obligations, the Mayor urged upon the city council the importance of 
preparing the lands owned by the city for public sale. In 1847 he was 
authorized to contract for filling a portion of the marsh lands on the east- 
erly side of the Neck, known as the South Bay ; and under the contracts 
then made an extensive tract of land was graded, laid out in streets and 
lots, and made ready for the market. 

The subject of providing a new jail for the county of Suffolk, to which 
reference has already been made, was discussed a good deal during the 
first two years of Mr. Quincy's administration ; but the two branches of 
the city council were unable to agree upon any plan of action. In 1848 
the city solicitor gave an opinion that the -duty of providing a county jail 
was imposed by law upon the board of mayor and aldermen, who in this 
matter, as in some others, had the powers of county commissioners. The 
Hoard lost no time in exercising its authority. The project of erecting 
the jail in connection with the House of Correction at South Boston was 
abandoned ; a large lot of land on the north-easterly corner of Cambridge 
and Charles streets was purchased, and before the Mayor retired from office 
lie signed the contracts for the new building. 



254 THE MEMORIAL HISTORY OF BOSTON. 

The reforms in our public school system which Horace Mann and 
George B. Emerson were advocating at this time received the cordial sup- 
port of the Mayor. The " double-headed system," as it was called, under 
which a grammar master and a writing master exercised a divided authority 
over the schools, was abolished ; women were more generally employed as 
teachers, and larger school buildings were erected. 

At the municipal election on Dec. n, 1848, John Prescott Bigelow, 1 the 
Whig candidate, was elected by a majority of two thousand four hundred 
and twenty-seven votes, although all shades of the opposition were repre- 
sented in the four candidates who ran against him. He occupied the office 
for three terms, and performed its duties with marked ability and discretion. 

In his inaugural address at the organization of the government in 1849, 
he dwelt particularly on the action of the mayor and aldermen of 1847 m 
refusing licenses for the sale of intoxicating liquors. The attempt, he said, 
to suppress the traffic in that way had utterly failed. The number of drink- 
ing places had augmented to an extent never before witnessed, and there had 
been an appalling increase of intemperance and its attendant crimes. He 
therefore recommended that the license system be re-established, as, with 
all its defects, it produced better results than the prohibitory system. The 
Mayor's recommendation on this point was sustained by the grand jury of 
Suffolk County, who expressed the opinion that " the entire interdiction of 
the sale of ardent spirits, however beneficial its effects may be in small com- 
munities, is wholly inoperative for good in a great city." But the aldermen 
were unanimously opposed to the granting of licenses ; and on a test case 
which came up in the board on March 3, 1849, the Mayor had not a solitary 
supporter. A majority of the members of the board were re-elected for the 
following year, and therefore the question was not taken up. In 1851 the 
increase of drunkenness and crime caused the aldermen to propound cer- 
tain interrogatories to Marshal Tukey. In reply to the question, " How 
many places are there where intoxicating liquors are sold ? " he stated that 
there were fifteen hundred such places ; and in reply to the request " to 
furnish an opinion as to the best method of checking the increase of crime 
and the traffic in liquors," he contented himself with the simple state- 
ment, " Execute the law." This novel proposition appears to have filled 
the aldermen with such astonishment that they were unable to do anything 
further that year. In 1852 a prohibitory liquor law was passed by the Leg- 
islature. Governor Boutwell, who first vetoed the bill and afterward ap- 
proved it, said " it contained new principles of legislation and was of doubtful 
expediency." Before it went into effect the board of mayor and aldermen 
granted about five hundred innholders and victuallers licenses under the 

1 He was born in Groton, Mass., on Aug. 25, tion. The new mayor had taken an active inter- 

1797, and was educated at Harvard College, est in City and State affairs, having served for 

His father was a well-known lawyer, and his seven successive terms in the common council 

grandfather, Colonel Timothy Bigelow, won an (1827-33), and for the same length of time (1836- 

honorable reputation in the war of the Revolu- 42) as Secretary of State. 



BOSTON UNDER TI1K MAYORS. 255 

provisions of the old law. A complaint was made by some of the prohibi- 
tionists against MM-, Williams, who had received one of the licenses, with, 
a view to testing the power of the board to grant it; but the court sustained 
the license. 

Mr. Bigclow did not look with much favor on the plans of his predeces- 
sor for the erection of a new jail. He suggested that it might be found 
advisable to cancel the contracts, and alter the old building in Lcverett 
Street. The aldermen decided, however, to proceed with the work, modify- 
ing the plans so as to make a considerable reduction in the expense. The 
building was completed in 1851, at an expense, including the site, of about 
$450,000. 

The great expense involved in introducing and distributing water, and in 
raising the grade of the city's lands in the southerly section of the city justi- 
fied the Mayor in criticising any further expenditures which would add to the 
city debt. He called' attention for the first time to the fact that the high 
rate of taxation which these expenditures involved was inducing many of the 
largest owners of personal property to escape into the country at the annual 
period of taxation. The number of citizens who thus evade the payment 
of their proportion of the expense of providing for the public safety and 
convenience in the city where they reside during seven or eight months in 
the year, and where their business is protected during the whole year, has 
steadily increased since Mayor Bigelow's time. Several attempts have 
been made to check it by legislative enactments ; but the decisions of the 
highest court, as to the right of a man to choose his domicil, have made 
the new legislation practically inoperative. 

During the summer of 1849 Asiatic Cholera prevailed to an alarming 
extent; the death rate exceeded that of any previous year in the history 
of the city. With a population of about one hundred and thirty thousand, 
the number of deaths was five thousand and eighty; one-fifth of the num- 
ber being caused by the epidemic. 

The seventh national census, taken in 1850, gave the city a population 
of one hundred and thirty-six thousand eight hundred and eighty-one, 
showing an increase of about sixty-two per cent during the preceding de- 
cade. The rapid growth of the city at this period was due to the opening 
of communication by rail with the West and by steamship with the East. 
The assessors' valuation of real and personal property within the city this 
year amounted to $180,000,500.' The tax levy was $1,237,000; and the 
rate of taxation was $6.80 on a thousand. The funded debt of the city on 
April 30, 1850, including water loans, was $6,195,144.35. In his address to 
the city government at the beginning of 1850 the Mayor said: "I have 
reason to believe that there is no other city in the world, certainly not in 
our country, the affairs of which in proportion to its size arc administered 
at so great an expense as our own. The current annual expenditures of the 

1 For an explanation of the remarkable increase in the valuation between 1840 and 1850 see 
note to p. 234. 



256 THE MEMORIAL HISTORY OF BOSTON. 

city of New York, with more than three times our population, do not more 
than double those of Boston." 

Among the noteworthy events of this year in which the local govern- 
ment had an interest was the breaking up of a meeting in Faneuil Hall, 
called to congratulate George Thompson, then a member of Parliament, 
on his arrival in this country. Mr. Edmund Quincy presided. When 
Wendell Phillips attempted to speak there were cheers for Webster, for 
Jenny Lind, and for the Union, so loud and long continued that he was 
unable to proceed. Mr. Thompson undertook to read an address, but was 
obliged to give it up, and the meeting was declared adjourned. The per- 
sons who interrupted the proceedings were good-natured, but determined 
that neither Thompson nor his sympathizers should be heard. Marshal 
Tukey, who was present with a considerable police force, took no steps to . 
check the disturbance; and Mr. Quincy subsequently lodged a complaint 
against him in the board of aldermen. At the hearing before a committee of 
the board he met the charges against him with the statement that he acted 
under the instructions of the mayor; and the committee so found, and ex- 
onerated him. 

At the beginning of the year 1851 the Mayor was able to state that 
every section of the city was supplied with pure water. The whole cost 
of the water-works at that time amounted to $4,321,000. The aggregate 
length of streets, courts, and lanes through which main and distribution 
pipes had been laid was ninety-six miles ; and the number of water-takers 
was thirteen thousand four hundred and sixty-three. 

During the year 1851 the new almshouse on Deer Island was completed 
at a cost of about $150,000. The Mayor recommended that all the inmates 
of the House of Industry at South Boston should be removed to Deer 
Island ; and his recommendation was subsequently carried out. The system 
of telegraphic fire alarms invented by Dr. William F. Channing was intro- 
duced this year; and although the old-fashioned engines were then in use, it 
was said to be hardly possible for a great fire to occur again. The first 
steam fire-engine was introduced into the department in 1854. It was long 
regarded as a failure, and the firemen found the English language quite in- 
sufficient to express the contempt they felt for it. But continued experi- 
ments led to improvements; and in 1860 the manual engines were banished 
to those rural districts where the stagecoach was still in use, the steam- 
engines took their place, and the character of the department was wholly 
changed. The new fireman is as unlike the old fireman as the crew of a 
modern steamship is unlike the crew of a sailing vessel of thirty years ago. 

On April 2, 1851, the police arrested Thomas Sims, a fugitive slave, and 
locked him up under the Court House to await the decision of the United 
States authorities on a process for his rendition. The day-police, number- 
ing at that time forty men, were armed with mariners' cutlasses, and drilled 
in anticipation of a disturbance ; but as Sims was a disreputable fellow, the 
public sympathy was not actively enlisted in his favor, and on April 12, at 



BOSTON UNDER THE MAYORS. 257 

four o'clock in the morning, he was marched down State Street under a police 
guard, and placed without opposition on board a vessel bound for Savannah. 
Mr. Charles Devens, Jr., then United States Marshal, applied to the mayor 
and aldermen for a detail of police officers to aid in transporting Sims back 
to the State from which he had escaped ; but the application was refused 
on the ground that the city needed all its officers for home duty. 1 

The board of aldermen of this year gained a sort of flickering notoriety 
by refusing the use of Faneuil Hall for a reception in honor of Daniel 
Webster. The ground of the refusal was that a similar application from 
the Abolitionists had been denied for fear of a disturbance. The intense 
indignation of Mr. Webster's friends can easily be imagined. On the day 
following their refusal another meeting of the mayor and aldermen was 
held, and a motion made to reconsider the action. The mayor and three 
aldermen voted to reconsider, and four aldermen voted in the negative. 
Mr. Moses Kimball, a member of the board, declined to vote, and there be- 
ing a tie, the motion to reconsider did not prevail. At a meeting of the 
common council held a day or two afterward an order was passed ap- 
pointing a joint committee " to tender Honorable Daniel Webster, in the 
name of the city council of Boston, an invitation to meet and address his 
fellow-citizens in Faneuil Hall at such time as he shall elect." The mayor 
and aldermen then met, and after passing a resolution asserting their own 
dignity and independence, concurred unanimously in the action of the com- 
mon council. When the committee waited upon Mr. Webster at the Revere 
House and humbly asked him to signify his pleasure in the matter, he treated 
them very coldly, and said he would give his answer in writing. The answer 
was a curt one : " It will not be convenient for me to accept the invitation." 
When election day came the mayor and aldermen found that political pre- 
ferment was not to be obtained through snubbing Mr. Webster. They were, 
all and singular, remanded to private life, and there they mostly remained. 
In the following year, on an invitation from a new and revised city council, 
Mr. Webster addressed his fellow-citizens in Faneuil Hall, " the doors on 
golden hinges turning," as Mr. Choate said. 

The completion of the railroad lines connecting the city with the Canadas 
and the great lakes was celebrated in September of this year. The official 
report published by the city says: " However extensive and brilliant may 
have been the public pageants on other occasions, not one, it is believed, 
has on this continent surpassed, if any have equalled, that of September 17, 
1 8, and 19." On the first day the President of the United States, accompa- 
nied by the members of his cabinet, arrived and were received by the city and 
State authorities ; and there was a military review on the Common. On the 
second day there was an excursion down the harbor in the morning; in the 
afternoon, Lord Elgin, Captain General and Governor-in-chief of the British 
Possessions in North America, arrived with his suite, and was formally re- 
ceived by the Mayor; and in the evening there was a grand military ball in 

1 [See the chapter on " The Antislavery Movement." ED.] 
VOL. III. 33. 



258 THE MEMORIAL HISTORY OF BOSTON. 

Union Hall. On the third day there was a procession, followed by a dinner 
on the Common, at which three thousand six hundred persons sat down ; 
and in the evening, fireworks and illuminations. Altogether it was a very 
brilliant affair, and the Mayor did the honors of the city very handsomely. 1 

At the charter election on Dec. 8, 1851, there were four candidates for 
the mayoralty. John H. Wilkins received a plurality of votes, but not 
a majority ; and a new election was held on December 24, at which Ben- 
jamin Seaver, 2 the Whig candidate, was elected, receiving only one vote 
more than the united votes of his opponents. Mr. Seaver held the office for 
two terms. A service of five years (1845-49) in the common council had 
given him a knowledge of city affairs which, with his business training and 
his executive ability, made him an excellent chief magistrate. It was said 
that he owed his first election to the police ; and it is undoubtedly true that 
Marshal Tukey directed his men to work for Mr. Seaver ; but if the mar- 
shal looked for special favor on account of his political support, he had 
a very imperfect knowledge of the character of the man whom he had as- 
sisted to office. The law then in force required the annual appointment of 
police officers; and when the Mayor came to make his appointments for the 
year he made some changes which the marshal criticised rather freely. 
Mr. Seaver was not a man to be criticised with impunity by a subordinate. 
He lost no time in putting another man at the head of the police force, and 
Marshal Tukey ceased to be a terror to anybody. 

The new mayor looked upon the office to which he had been elected as 
essentially a business office, and he applied business principles to his admin- 
istration of it. During the preceding six years the city had been engaged 
in works which had added largely to the city debt. Those works had been 
substantially completed, and the Mayor felt that it was time to pause and 
husband the city's resources for a while before entering on any new enter- 
prises. That the record of his administration does not occupy so large 
a space as that of some others is an evidence of the Mayor's firmness in re- 
sisting the temptation to make a name at the expense of the city. The 
most important act of his administration was the vote to erect a building 
for the Public Library; but the story of that institution's inception and 
progress is to be told elsewhere. 3 

On the recommendation of the Mayor a board of land commissioners 
was established in 1853, to take the place of a joint committee of the city 
council which had been found unequal to the duties imposed upon it; and 
burials within the city limits, except in particular cases, were prohibited 
after the first of July, 1853. 

Henry J. Gardner, afterward Governor of the Commonwealth, was presi- 
dent of the common council during Mr. Seaver's two terms ; and on retir- 

1 [See the chapter on " Canals and Rail- at the time of his election was engaged in busi- 
roads," in Vol. IV. ED.] ness as an auctioneer. 

2 He was born in Roxbury, April 12, 1795; 3 C In Vol. IV., by the Editor of the present 
educated at the Roxbury Grammar School ; and work. ED.] 



BOSTON UNDER THE MAYORS. 259 

ing from the chair on Dec. 29, 1853, he delivered an address in which he 
'avc prominence to the question of revising the city charter. He pointed 
out so clearly and forcibly the changes which an experience of thirty years 
h.u! shown to be necessary, that the city council of the following year ap- 
plied to the Legislature for a new act of incorporation which was granted on 
April 29, 1854. 

At the municipal election on Dec. 12, 1853, there were three candidates 
' for mayor : Benjamin Seaver, the nominee of the Whigs ; Jerome Van Crown- 
inshield Smith, 1 the nominee of the Native American party; and Jacob 
Sleeper, the nominee of the Temperance men. Mr. Seaver received the 
highest number of votes, but not a majority; and on the third ballot, taken 
Jan. 9, 1854, Dr. Smith was elected. During the interval beween the first 
Monday in January and the date at which the new mayor was sworn in (the 
sixteenth of that month) Mr. Benjamin L. Allen, the chairman of the board 
of aldermen, acted as mayor. 

The new mayor was a most indefatigable worker, and seemed to have 
an ambition to leave some enduring memento in every department of 
science, art, literature, and politics. Without undertaking to pass upon 
his achievements in the more retired walks of life, it may be said that as 
a man of affairs he was not entirely successful. He made a great many 
suggestions for the improvement of the city government, but fortunately 
for the city's credit few of them were carried out. He thought the po- 
lice appointments would be improved if twelve men were elected by pop- 
ular vote, one from each ward, with power to appoint all police officers, 
subject to the approval of the mayor and aldermen. He recommended 
the sale of Quincy Market to private individuals ; the erection of an in- 
sane asylum at Deer Island; the erection of a tall tower on Beacon Hill, 
for the use of the fire telegraph and fire department offices; the forced 
sale of city lands in order to promote the erection of buildings ; the ap- 
pointment of a physician in every ward to be^paid by the city for serving 
the poor. He was never taken quite seriously as a chief magistrate. 

In 1853 an act had been passed authorizing the city council to unite, by 
ordinance, the watch and police departments ; but no action was taken un- 
til the following year. On May 26, 1854, the old watch, which had been in 

1 Dr. Smith was born in Conway, New Hamp- Hall. Finding that the exhibition could be en- 

shire, on July 20, 1800; graduated at Brown joyed without expense, he joined the moving 

University in 1818, and subsequently took the de- throng, and was presently looking down from a 

gree of Medicina Doctor at Williams College, quiet, corner in the gallery upon what appeared 

He served in the office of city physician fora to be a religious ceremony. He awaited in brcath- 

luunUer of years, and in that way became familiar less expectation the advent of the animal whose 

with riiv at'faii-. Like the famous Whittington, name was in everybody's mouth; and it was not 

he had a sort of premonition of his coming great- until after the ceremony was concluded that he 

The day on which he rame to Boston to could be made to understand the significance of 

sivk his fortune happened to be the very day what he had witnessed. He had a presentiment 

when the first mayor of the city was sworn into that he should some day be the central figure of 

nttk-e. Seeing a large numlicr of people moving siuli an exhibition, and he shaped his career 

in one direction he asked the C.UIM:. .md was told accordingly. 
tlut .\ iiiiirf was to be inaugurated in Kanenil 



260 THE MEMORIAL HISTORY OF BOSTON. 

existence as a department of the town and city government since 1631, was 
abolished, and a police department was established, consisting of two hun- 
dred and fifty men under the charge of a chief of police, two deputies, and 
eight captains of divisions. The form of organization adopted at this time 
was not materially changed until 1878, when the department was placed un- 
der a commission appointed by the mayor. By an ordinance passed in 1863, 
the system of annual appointments was changed to appointments during 
good behavior. 

On the very day that the new police force entered upon its duties it was 
called upon, at a moment's notice, to suppress a riot in Court Square, caused 
by the attempt to release Anthony Burns, a fugitive slave, who had been 
arrested by United States officers and confined temporarily in the city prison. 
For nine days, while the hearing on the question of Burns's rendition was 
going on, the city was in a fever of excitement. The efforts of the city au- 
thorities were directed solely to the preservation of order, and the execution 
of the mandates of the court. 1 

On November 1 5 of this year the inhabitants voted to accept the revised 
city charter. It went into effect for the purpose of electing municipal 
officers on the second Monday in December, and for all other purposes 
on the first Monday in January following. The principal changes intro- 
duced by the new charter may be briefly summarized as follows : the 
persons having the highest number of votes at municipal elections were 
to be declared elected ; the mayor was deprived of his vote on matters 
coming before the board of aldermen, and was given a qualified right to 
veto all acts of the city council, and all acts of either branch where an ex- 
penditure of money was involved ; the board of aldermen was enlarged 
from eight to twelve members, and all the executive powers of the corpor- 
ation, formerly vested in the selectmen of the town and in the board of 
mayor and aldermen of the city, were transferred to it ; the mayor, when 
present at meetings of the board, had the right to preside ; the school com- 
mittee, which had consisted of the mayor, the president of the council, and 
two persons elected annually from each ward, was enlarged by the election 
of six persons from each ward, two being elected annually. 

It was not the intention of those who drafted the new charter to curtail 
the mayor's powers, but their work had that effect. Following the prece- 
dent established by the elder Quincy, it had been customary for the mayor 

1 Burns was taken into custody on the even- sons composing it flocked to the Court House 
ing of May 24, 1854, and on the following day and attempted to break down the doors. One 
taken before Edward Greely Loring, who was a constable was killed and several persons were 
United States commissioner, and who also held seriously wounded. Burns was finally remanded 
the office of judge of probate for Suffolk County, to slavery ; but subsequently he was bought by 
On the evening of May 26, a great meeting was some Northern people and sent to Canada, 
held in Faneuil Hall to protest against the outrage where he died in 1862. Edward G. Loring 
on liberty. George R. Russell presided. While was removed from the office of judge of pro- 
Wendell Phillips was speaking, a person entered bate, and was then appointed by the President 
the hall and announced that a mob of negroes judge of the court of claims at Washington, 
was in Court Square attempting to rescue Burns. [See the chapter on "The Antislavery Move- 
The meeting immediately dissolved, and the per- ment " in this volume. ED.] 



BOSTON UNDER THE MAYORS 26 1 

to act as chairman of all the most important committees of the city council ; 
and as the chief executive officer of the corporation, and as a member and 
chairman of the board which had not only succeeded to all the executive 
powers formerly exercised by the selectmen of the town, but which had 
equal powers with the common council as a legislative body, he was in 
a position to exercise a powerful influence upon the management of city 
affairs. Under the new charter, the mayor continued to have the power 
of appointing police officers, but his appointments were subject to approval 
by the aldermen, and the administration of the police department was placed 
entirely in the hands of the aldermen. That board also had control of the 
fire department, the health department, the markets, the streets, the county 
buildings and the granting of licenses for various purposes; and where their 
action did not involve an expenditure of money the mayor had no power to 
pass upon it. 

There has been no general revision of the city charter since 1854. Nu- 
merous changes have been made, both directly and indirectly, by subse- 
quent legislation, the most important of which will be pointed out further 
on; but the mayor's power, although somewhat increased, is still far from 
being what is necessary to secure a responsible and an efficient executive. 

At the charter election in December, 1855, Alexander Hamilton Rice, 1 
the " Citizens' " candidate, was chosen mayor for the ensuing year. The 
Native American, or " Know-Nothing " party, as it had come to be called, 
had fallen into disrepute, and its candidate, Dr. Nathaniel B. ShurtleflT, failed 
of an election by some two thousand votes. Mr. Rice possessed most of 
the qualifications by which an enduring success in public life is achieved, 
a pleasing address, a knowledge of men and affairs, more than ordinary 
readiness and ability as a public speaker, and a keen sense of the popular 
wishes. During the two years that he served in the office of mayor the 
affairs of the city were managed with prudence and economy. In his first 
address to the city council he announced as the guiding principle of his 
administration the improvement of the institutions and means already pos- 
sessed by the city, and the avoidance of new and dazzling enterprises which, 
however promising, might prove in the end to be only costly experiments. 

The most important act of the government during Mr. Rice's first term 
was an agreement on the part of the city with the Commonwealth and the 
Boston VVater-Power Company, by which provision was made for the im- 
provement of the territory now known as the Back Bay. It should be stated 
that previous to the year 1827 the city held the fee in about one hundred 
acres of flats in this locality. In that year it ceded to the Boston Water- 
Power Company its title to these flats in consideration of the right to dis- 

1 Mr. Rice was born in Newton, Mass., on at the time of his election was the leading mcm- 
Aug. 30, 1818, ami received his education in the her of a firm engaged in the manufacture of 
public and private schools of the neighborhood, paper. He had served as a member of the 
and in Union Collide at Schcncct.ulv. On Icav- school committee and the common council, hav- 
ing s> hon| lu M)iij;ht finplnynu-iit ill Boston, and ing been president of the latter body in 1854. 



262 THE MEMORIAL HISTORY OF BOSTON. 

charge the drainage from the adjoining territory into the Back Bay basin. 
It was provided in the agreement made at that time that the water in this 
basin should be kept at a certain specified depression below high-water 
mark. This led to the erection of buildings on the surrounding territory at 
a grade fixed with reference to the drainage into a bay several feet below 
high-water mark, and presently the accumulation of sewage matter caused a 
nuisance from which the city has not yet ceased to suffer. In assenting to 
this arrangement with the Water-Power Company, it must be said that Mr. 
Quincy did not show his accustomed foresight. The exercise of the right 
which the city had acquired created a nuisance which made the right value- 
less. The new agreement entered into on Dec. n, 1856, provided, among 
other things, for the construction of a large sewer from Camden Street, 
through lands of the Water-Power Company and the Commonwealth, to 
Charles River. This tripartite agreement, although forming the basis of the 
great improvement on the Back Bay, was never fully carried out ; and in 
1864 a new agreement was entered into, establishing a more complete sys- 
tem of streets and sewers for this territory. 

The management of the public institutions of the city, including under 
that head the House of Correction, the Houses of Industry and Reforma- 
tion, and the Lunatic Hospital, was at this time in the hands of three distinct 
boards, which were not always in harmony on questions affecting the city's 
interests. Mr. Rice recommended that all these institutions should be 
placed under the government of one board elected for different periods of 
service, and composed in part of members of the city council and in part of 
persons chosen from the citizens at large. In 1857 the Legislature passed 
an act establishing such a board, and providing for the election of its mem- 
bers by concurrent vote of the city council. The board is still in existence, 
and has fully answered the purpose for which it was organized. 

In 1857 the Mayor recommended the establishment of a city hospital, 
transmitting to the city council at the same time a memorial from several 
leading physicians, giving their opinion of the necessity and value of such 
an institution. In the following year an act was passed by the Legislature 
authorizing the city to establish and maintain " a hospital for the reception of 
persons who, by misfortune or poverty, may require relief during temporary 
sickness." Elisha Goodnow, who died in 1851, had bequeathed to the 
city twenty-five thousand dollars for a local hospital, provided it was estab- 
lished either at the South End or South Boston ; but no definite action 
was taken until 1860, when a site was selected at the South End on land 
reclaimed from the sea, and a hospital building was erected thereon and 
opened in 1864. 

On Dec. 14, 1857, Frederic Walker Lincoln, Jr., 1 was chosen mayor for 
the following year. He was known as the Faneuil-Hall candidate, having 

1 Mr. Lincoln was a descendant of Samuel lie was born in Boston Feb. 27, 1817, and re- 
Lincoln, who settled in Hingham as early as 1637. ceived his education in the public and private 



BOSTON UNDER THE MAYORS. 263 



been nominated by representatives of different parties who held a conven- 
tion for that purpose in Faneuil Hall. Charles H. 1 1. ill, his opponent. wa-> 
also put forward as a Citi/ens' candidate, but was badly beaten, Mr. Lincoln 
receiving a majority of nearly four thousand votes. 

As an administrative officer Mr. Lincoln was eminently successful. That 
he won the respect and confidence of his fellow-citizens to an unusual <le 
is shown by the fact that, without any effort on his part, he held the 
office of mayor for a longer time than any individual who preceded him <>r 
who has succeeded him. 

The first year of his administration was not marked by any measures of 
special importance, unless the uniforming of the police may be so regarded. 
That was an act of great local interest, and the policemen and their friends 
said a good deal about copying the customs of the Old World, and turning 
free Americans into liveried servants. But the citizens who had often 
searched in vain for a policeman in citizen's dress looked favorably upon a 
change which would enable them to know an officer when they saw him. 

In 1859 an act was passed by the Legislature, to take effect when ac- 
cepted by the citizens of Boston, annexing to the city a considerable tract 
of land and flats on the Back Bay, formerly included within the city of Rox- 
bury ; and providing that no buildings should be erected between Arlington 
Street and Charles Street. The act was accepted by an almost unanimous 
vote of the citizens on April 26, 1859, and a plan was soon after adopted 
for the improvement of the Public Garden. An attempt was made by 
several public-spirited individuals to preserve the Back Bay as an open 
space for sanitary purposes, and to that end a number of elaborate plans 
were submitted to the State and city authorities ; ' but the General Court 
saw an opportunity to put some money into the State treasury by cutting 
the territory into house lots, and greed carried the day. 

In 1859 Mr. Lincoln was successful in securing the co-operation of the 
United States authorities in the preservation of Boston Harbor. It appeared 
from the testimony of the old pilots that the water was shoaling in many 
places in the harbor, owing to the encroachments upon the headlands and 
islands. In a special message to the city council, the Mayor recommended 
the appointment of a commission of United States officers to make a sci- 
entific examination of the subject. The recommendation was approved, 
and the Mayor went to Washington and saw the heads of the Treasury, 
War, and Navy departments, Cobb, Floyd, and Toucey, three men who 
occupy a bad eminence among American cabinet officers. They were ex- 
tremely gracious to the representative of Boston, and immediately complied 
with his request to detail General Totten, chief of the engineer corps, Pro- 
schools. When only thirteen years of age he branch of the State Legislature (1847-48), and 
was apprenticed to a maker of mathematical in- had been a delegate to the Constitutional Con- 
struniunts, and at the time of his election to the vention of 1853. 

mayoralty he had risen to a prominent position ' [One is given in the folio edition of Drake's 
among the Ini-iiiux men of the city, lie had />>./,>. Sec- also />,>, niiifiits of the Massathxults 
served two terms as a member of the lower Stnatt, A'a. 186, 1859. El>.] 



264 THE MEMORIAL HISTORY OF BOSTON. 

fessor Bache, superintendent of the coast survey, and Commander Davis 
of the Navy, to make the proposed examination. During the seven years 
following, the commissioners made ten reports, which have been of im- 
mense value in securing appropriations from the National Government for 
the improvement of the harbor, and in preventing by wise legislation any 
further encroachments upon the ship-channels. 1 

The national census of 1860 gave the city a population of 177,992. The 
valuation of real and personal property for purposes of taxation amounted 
to $276,861,00x3. The amount of tax raised for State, county, and city pur- 
poses was $2,530,000; and the rate was $8.99 on the $1,000. The funded 
city debt amounted to $8,491,599. 

In the latter part of this year another collision occurred between the 
Abolitionists and those who were opposed to the Antislavery agitation. 
Through the instrumentality of some rather obscure individuals a meeting 
was called in Tremont Temple, on December 3, to commemorate the anni- 
versary of the execution of John Brown, and to consider the question, 
How can American Slavery be abolished? The election of a Republican 
President, and the threatening attitude assumed by the South, had the 
effect of making a good many men, especially those whose business inter- 
ests would be endangered by any disturbance of the established order of 
things, deprecate any expressions in this section of the country which would 
appear to identify the Republican party with the supporters of John Brown ; 
but in undertaking forcibly to prevent such expressions they only scattered 
the coals and propagated the fire. The promoters of this meeting, having 
hired the hall for a legal purpose, had a right to be protected in its use ; 
but the city authorities did not protect them. A large number of persons 
opposed to the objects of the meeting quietly entered the hall as soon as 
the doors were open, elected their own chairman and secretary, and adopted 
a series of resolutions, in which John Brown and all " aiders and abettors 
in his nefarious enterprise" were heartily denounced ; and it was declared 
that the people of this city " had submitted too long in allowing irrespon- 
sible persons and political demagogues of every description to hold public 
meetings to disturb the public peace and misrepresent us abroad." " They 
have become a nuisance," the resolutions said, "which in self-defence we 
are determined shall henceforward be summarily abated." In the midst of 
the confusion consequent upon these proceedings the chief of police en- 
tered the hall accompanied by several trustees of the building, and stated 
that he had orders from the Mayor to dismiss the meeting and to clear the 
hall ; which he proceeded to do. In the evening the Antislavery people 
held a meeting in a small church for colored people at the West End, 
and although riotous demonstrations were made in the streets, the police 
force was sufficient to preserve order. It was known that the Mayor had 
taken the precaution to have two companies of cavalry under arms at 

1 For further details in regard to the meas- the chapter on " Boston Harbor " in Vol. IV. ; 
ures taken for the preservation of the harbor, see also City Documents, 1859-66. 



BOSTON UNDER TilK MAYORS. 265 

their armories to act in case of emergency. On the following morning 
the Advertiser said: 

" The cry of ' free speech,' which will no doubt be set up on behalf of those who 
yesterday saw their meeting taken out of their hands, can find little support among 
unprejudiced observers. . . . Sensitive as the chord is which any appeal for free 
speech touches, it will hardly vibrate in response to the appeals of those who claim 
that glorious privilege only to abuse it ; and what abuse of it could be more flagrant 
or more deserve condemnation than to use it simply as the means of adding to a great 
national <.-.v itement the peril of misleading one section of the country as to the senti- 
ment which pervades the other, and embittering still further that controversy which 
now divides the States of the Union." 

This may be taken as a fair expression of the sentiments of moderate 
Republicans of that day. 

In the charter election of December, 1860, political feeling ran very 
high. Joseph Milner Wightman ' was the candidate of both wings of the 
Democratic party and of the Old Line Whigs. Moses Kimball was the Re- 
publican candidate. The Webster Whigs were still a power in Boston, both 
socially and politically, and they threw the whole weight of their influence 
against Mr. Kimball on account of his action as a member of the board of 
aldermen that refused the use of Faneuil Hall in 1851 for the Webster recep- 
tion. Mr. Wightman, who had formerly acted with the Whig party, but 
who had been carried into the Democratic ranks by the Antislavery agita- 
tion, was elected by a majority of over three thousand votes. 

As an executive officer Mr. Wightman was not wanting in energy or in 
honesty of purpose; but he lacked dignity and discretion. His administra- 
tion fell upon an important period in our municipal history. The extraordi- 
nary demands upon the city authorities, growing out of the war, enlarged the 
powers and duties of the mayoralty to an unprecedented extent, and raised 
many questions new to municipal legislation. It required a man of much 
more than ordinary ability to manage the affairs of the city at such a time 
to the satisfaction of a community which had been favored with chief magis- 
trates who were generally dignified and sometimes wise. But while Mr. 
Wightman was not a man of more than ordinary ability, he possessed a 
good deal of energy and enthusiasm, and it was a time when energy and 

1 He was born in Boston on Oct. 19, 1812, duction of water into the city first led him to 
and was the son of English parents. At the take \n interest in local affairs. He was ex- 
early age of ten he had been obliged, by the tremely active in promoting the scheme which 
ile.ith of his father, to leave school and Iwcome was finally carried out, and from, that time forth 
apprenticed to a machinist. While serving out he has had a conspicuous part in municipal 
the terms of his indenture he eagerly availed politics. He .is a prominent member of the 
himself of every opportunity to acquire a knowl- school committee for ten years (1845-55), and a 
edge of mathematics, geometry, natural philos- member of the board of aldermen from April, 
ophy, and mechanical engineering ; and soon 1856, when he was elected to fill a vacancy, 
after coming of age he went into business as to January, 1859. In both these positions he 
a manufacturer of philosophical apparatus. The performed services which have been of perma- 
discussion of the question concerning the intro- nent value to the city. 
VOL. III. 34. 



266 THE MEMORIAL HISTORY OF BOSTON. 

enthusiasm were wanted. He was put into the office by those who had 
been opposed to the election of a Republican President, but no one ever 
had occasion to charge him with lukewarmness in responding to the de- 
mands of the national administration for means to put down the Rebellion. 

The Antislavery agitators, who were indignant over the failure of a Re- 
publican mayor fully to protect their freedom of speech, looked with con- 
siderable alarm upon the accession to power of a Democrat who might be 
inclined to shut them up altogether ; and it seemed to them that the time 
had arrived to call in country Republicanism, which was of a more radical 
type than city Republicanism, to redress the balance. On Jan. 21, 1861, an 
order was introduced into the State Senate for the appointment of a joint 
special committee to consider the expediency of amending the charter of 
Boston so that its police should be appointed by the authorities of the 
State. While the order was under consideration, on January 24, the Anti- 
slavery Society held its annual meeting in Tremont Temple. The galleries 
and the rear of the hall were filled with persons who interrupted the pro- 
ceedings by hisses and groans. The Mayor was called upon by the officers 
of the meeting to suppress the disturbance. He sent thirty policemen, 
but they made no serious effort to preserve order. Finally, on the writ- 
ten request of the trustees of the building, who feared injury to their 
property, the Mayor went to the meeting, accompanied by the chief of 
police, and under his instructions the galleries were cleared and order re- 
stored. As soon as he withdrew the disturbance was renewed, and the meet- 
ing was then adjourned until evening, with a view to having the admission 
to the hall regulated by tickets. Some of the disturbers announced their 
determination to remain in the building until the evening meeting was held ; 
and the Mayor, being apprehensive of a riot, instructed the chief of police 
to clear the hall, close the doors, and prevent any meeting from being held 
in the evening. There was no such riotous spirit abroad as would justify 
such an arbitrary measure. The police might have preserved order if they 
had been properly instructed so to do by their superiors. After such an 
affair the proposition to place the control of the city police in the hands of 
the State authorities was favored by a good many persons who had no love 
for the Abolitionists. A committee of the General Court was appointed, 
and a great deal of testimony was taken in regard to the condition of 
the police force and the improper influences to which it was subjected by 
the mayor and aldermen; but although a "precedent for the action proposed 
had been established by the New York Legislature, and had thus far worked 
well, the sentiment in favor of local self-government was too strong to be 
overcome even by the fervid rhetoric of the Antislavery leaders, and it was 
decided to let Boston manage her own affairs until her incapacity for so 
doing had been more fully demonstrated. The question was brought up 
several times in after years, but always with the same result. 

Soon after the war broke out, the city was called upon to appropriate 
money for a variety of purposes not authorized by existing laws. To have 



BOSTON UNDER THE MAYORS. 267 

refused to appropriate the money on the ground of a want of authority 
would have seriously impeded the work of furnishing men and supplies for 
the army. It is to the credit of the city authorities, and especially of the 
Mayor, that they did not hesitate to take the responsibility of using the 
city's money to do whatever was necessary to minister to the comfort of 
the soldiers and of the soldiers' families. Many persons who received com- 
missions t<> organize military companies had no means to provide quarters 
or subsistence for their recruits, and the Governor had no power at that 
time to establish camps where the volunteers might be maintained, drilled, 
and disciplined at the expense of the State. The city provided recruiting 
stations and paid for the subsistence of the men until they were mustered 
into the service of the United States. Uniforms and other clothing were 
also provided for the Boston volunteers; and regiments from other States, 
and from other portions of this State, passing through the city to the 
scat of war, were welcomed and refreshed on the Common or in Faneuil 
Hall. For these purposes about one hundred thousand dollars were ex- 
pended from the city treasury during the year 1861. Among other 
measures instituted by the city council of 1861 for the benefit of the 
volunteers and their families was one which involved only a trifling ex- 
pense to the city, but which was of incalculable value to the persons 
concerned. Arrangements were made by which the commanders of com- 
panies or regiments were enabled with little trouble to collect a portion 
of the money which their men received from the government paymaster 
and transmit it, without expense, to the mayor, to be deposited by him in a 
savings-bank, or paid to such persons as the soldier might designate. A 
very large amount of money was transmitted in this way, and many poor 
families had occasion to bless the Mayor for saving them from the necessity 
of receiving aid in a form which made them feel that they were objects of 
charity. In the following year the benefit of this system of allotments 
was extended by an act of the Legislature to the families of all the Mas- 
sachusetts volunteers, the money being transmitted to the State treasurer, 
and by him distributed to the several city and town treasurers; but some 
of the Boston regiments continued to send their money directly to the 
Mayor until the close of the war, as it reached its destination more quickly 
in that way. 

In his address to the city government at the beginning of 1862, the 
Mayor strongly recommended the erection of a new city hall. The subject 
had been before the city council many times during the preceding twelve 
years, but the two branches had not been able to agree either upon a site or 
upon the plans for a building. Although there was strong opposition to 
entering upon any new enterprises while the resources of the people were 
being so heavily taxed to maintain the national government, a majority of 
the city council this year voted to build a new hall on the site of the old 
one, at an estimated expense of $160,000, and the corner-stone was laid 
on Dec. 22, 1862. 



268 THE MEMORIAL HISTORY OF BOSTON. 

The requisitions made in July of this year for men to serve in the army 
created almost a panic and led to the offer of heavy local bounties for vol- 
unteers. The city began by paying a bounty of one hundred dollars for 
men credited to its quota; and afterward, in order to compete with other 
municipalities which were offering much larger amounts, the payment was 
increased to two hundred dollars. The city was able to meet the demands 
made upon it without resorting to a draft ; but by the end of the year nearly 
a million dollars had been expended in premiums for volunteers. 

The election of December, 1862, resulted in the defeat of Mr. Wight- 
man, and the reinstatement of Mr. Frederic W. Lincoln in the mayor's 
office. 

The expenditures for war purposes during the years 1861 and 1862, 
although illegal and often extravagant, were never called in question by the 
people ; but what they did question was the expediency of erecting public 
buildings, widening and extending streets, and spending the city's money 
on other works which, in view of the tremendous crisis through which the 
country was passing, might well be postponed. The expenditures for what 
is known as "city junketing" began to assume rather formidable propor- 
tions about this time, and to excite the comments of the taxpayers. Junket- 
ing is not a modern vice. It has been the custom from the earliest times for 
the city magistrates to have occasional feasts or, as Washington Irving 
calls them, gormandizings at the public expense; and so the name of 
alderman, originally used to designate the elderman, the man of the high- 
est wisdom and experience in the Teutonic community, has come to be 
applied to the man of 

" Fair round belly, with good capon lined." 

But while the ancient alderman was satisfied with an occasional feast, his 
modern prototype seems filled with the desire to feast all the time ; and the 
question as to the extent to which this desire should be gratified has fre- 
quently entered into the municipal elections in this city, and has sometimes 
determined the choice of a chief magistrate. 

Mr. Lincoln was elected to bring the city government back to a more 
careful expenditure of the public money; and so well satisfied were the 
people with his efforts in that direction, that they continued him in office 
through four successive terms. 

During the latter part of the year 1862 the cities and towns of the Com- 
monwealth had engaged in a ruinous competition for men to fill their sev- 
eral quotas under the calls of the President for additional troops. The 
raising of money by taxation for the purpose of paying bounties was 
illegal, and might have been stopped at any time on the application of ten 
taxpayers to the highest court of the Commonwealth ; but the local au- 
thorities were sustained by the great body of the people in almost any meas- 
ure that was likely to avert a draft ; and no man was willing, or rather no 



BOSTON UNDER THE MAYORS. 269 

man dared, to throw any obstacles in the way of procuring volunteers for the 
army. When the Legislature met in January, 1863, the Governor recom- 
mended that bounties should be equalized and assumed by the State, to be 
paid by a tax on the property and polls of all the people. An act was 
accordingly passed forbidding towns and cities from raising or expending 
money for the purpose of offering or paying bounties to volunteers under 
future calls of the President, and a State bounty of fifty dollars was offered 
in lieu of all local bounties. In the summer of 1863, the city having failed 
to meet the requisitions for men by voluntary enlistments, it was found nec- 
essary to resort to a draft. On the afternoon of July 14 two assistant pro- 
vost marshals were serving notices upon the men who had been drafted for 
military service, and who lived in rather a disreputable quarter at the North 
End of the city, when they were suddenly assaulted by a woman whose 
husband was numbered among the conscripts. The cries of this infuriated 
woman acted like a preconcerted signal upon the. people in the neighbor- 
hood. In an instant the narrow, crooked streets in the vicinity of the great 
manufactory of the Boston Gas-Light Company were filled with a mob of 
which women were the leaders, the most frightful of all mobs. The 
marshals fled for their lives, and the local patrolmen, coming to their rescue, 
were set upon and beaten nearly to death. One gallant officer, a man of 
noble physique and of undaunted courage, attempted to make head against 
the terrible throng, but he was borne down, trampled upon, and maimed for 
life. The police rolls of the city still bear his name ; and although he has 
never been able to do another day's service, no taxpayer grudges him the 
continued compensation of an active officer. 

In a short time the whole North End of the city was in a state of revolt. 
The police of the First Division retreated into their station, which was threat- 
ened with assault. Then the city authorities saw that they had serious work 
on hand. For two days previous a portion of the city of New York had been 
under the control of a mob ; and although there had been some indications 
of a disposition in this city to resist the enforcement of the draft, it was not 
believed that there would be any concerted resistance. It appeared after- 
wards that quite a formidable organization to resist the laws had been 
partially formed ; but the leaders in that organization were probably as 
much taken by surprise at the sudden outbreak on the afternoon of the 
fourteenth as were the city authorities. Having taken possession of the 
streets at the North End, and surrounded the police station, the mob paused 
and awaited the next move of the city authorities. The composition of 
the mob was changed in the mean time. The men came from their work in 
the gas-house and elsewhere and took the places of the women. They pur- 
posed to test the question whether the Government had a right to drag tlum 
from their homes to fight in a cause in which they did not believe. The 
news of the great uprising in New York had been circulated among them, 
and its temporary success greatly stimulated their determination to resist. 
" I'd rather fight here, where I can go home to dinner," said one, " than in 



270 THE MEMORIAL HISTORY OF BOSTON. 

the Southern swamps, where they don't have regular meals." But as a 
whole the assemblage was not a humorous one : it was taciturn, and took 
rather a serious view of the situation. 

The Mayor was first informed of the disturbance by the marshal whose 
assistants had been mobbed. He was soon satisfied from the police reports 
which followed that extraordinary measures must be taken to preserve the 
peace. He acted with great promptness and resolution. There were only 
three local militia organizations in the city at that time : the independent 
company of Cadets (the prescriptive body-guard of the Governor), a bat- 
talion of cavalry, and a battery of light artillery. To these the Mayor 
issued his precepts, as authorized by the laws of the State, directing them to 
report to him forthwith, armed and equipped for service. This force was 
strengthened by several military organizations then in camp at Readville, 
preparing for service in the field, and by detachments from the heavy artil- 
lery and infantry companies on duty at the forts in the harbor. The Cooper- 
Street Armory, occupied by a light battery, was situated in the very midst of 
the riotous populace. The members of the local company had assembled 
quietly in the armory during the afternoon, without attracting much atten- 
tion. It was about seven o'clock in the evening when a company of United 
States artillery from Fort Warren marched down into the disturbed quarter 
to join the local battery. It was hooted and hissed while on the way, but 
was allowed to enter the armory without serious opposition. Then the mob 
closed in around the building in a dense mass, and began to break the win- 
dows. A lieutenant of the light battery, who attempted to pass through 
the crowd, was beaten and trampled upon. The men sent out to rescue 
him could regain the armory only by firing and using their bayonets. Then 
the building was assaulted in earnest; the brick sidewalks and cobble-stone 
pavements were torn up and hurled against the doors. A citizen standing 
at one of the windows inside the armory was killed by a pistol-shot. Just 
as the mob was about to effect an entrance through the front doors, which 
they had partially battered down, a loaded cannon was fired from within. Its 
charge tore through the mass and demolished a part of the opposite house- 
front. There was a moment's pause, and then the attack was renewed ; but 
the firing of the infantry from the windows and doors dampened the ardor 
of the assailants, and a diversion was presently created by the proposition to 
sack Reed's gun-store, in Dock Square. In the mean time, the other militia 
organizations had been brought together, and were about to march to the 
Cooper-Street Armory, with the Mayor at their head, when word was re- 
ceived of the movement in the direction of Dock Square. A plan of the 
Square as it existed at that time, with the great number of narrow streets 
and lanes radiating from it, bears a very close resemblance to the centre 
of a spider's web. If the rioters had obtained arms from the numerous 
gun-shops in the neighborhood, and established themselves in this spot, 
they might, with intelligent leaders, have held the approaches against a 
greatly superior force; but as they came pouring in from the North End, 



BOSTON UNDER THE MAYORS. 271 

they were met by an advance guard of policemen, who held them in 
check until the Mayor with his military force came up and effectually dis- 
persed them. One gun-store was broken into and a considerable quantity 
of arms taken; but the men who took them were scattered before they 
could make use of their weapons. 

That was the end of the famous draft-riot in Boston. The whiff of 
grape shut at the Cooper-Street Armory and the repulse at Dock Square 
disheartened the rioters. Those who had been drafted concluded that it 
would l>e less hazardous to fight the Southern rebels than to fight Mayor 
Lincoln. There were some slight disturbances in different sections of the 
city during the succeeding twenty-four hours, and a considerable portion of 
the military force was kept on duty for several days; but the spirit of the 
mob had been effectually crushed before midnight of the fourteenth. The 
number of rioters killed is unknown, as the bodies were in most cases con- 
veyed away secretly and buried without any official permit. 

There was no further attempt to obstruct the operation of the Conscrip- 
tion Act. Of the twenty-six thousand one hundred and nineteen ' men 
furnished by Boston for service in the army and navy, it appears that only 
seven hundred and thirteen were drafted. In the year 1864 the city ob- 
tained, through an act of Congress, credit for a large number of men who 
had enlisted in the navy since the beginning of the war; and although that 
gave a surplus of about five thousand men to offset any future requisitions, 
recruiting was continued with unabated zeal until the end. 

In 1864 an important and a much needed improvement was made in the 
municipal organization for the relief of the poor. Under the provisions of 
the first city charter one person was elected in each ward of the city to be an 
overseer of the poor, and the persons thus chosen constituted the board of 
overseers, with all the powers formerly exercised by the town board. In 
the administration of their department they claimed the right to spend 
money to any extent and in any manner they saw fit. Grocers, coal-dealers, 
and others got elected on the board for the sole purpose of furnishing, either 
directly or indirectly, the articles for which the city paid. Mayor Quincy 
attempted in 1824 to obtain additional legislation by which the doings of 
the board would be brought under the supervision of the city council, but 
he failed ; and his successors who afterward renewed the attempt failed, 
for the reason that the people could not be made to understand why the 
persons elected by them to the board of overseers were not as trustworthy 
as those elected to the city council. The change effected in 1864 was due 

1 The Mayor in his message to the City to the message. (City Document No. I, 1866.) I 

Council, at the beginning of tin year 1866, gives have not been able to find cither in the city 

>~ the total number of men furnished by clerk's office or the adjutant-general's office any- 

Boston, as far ned, at that date: thine more complete or accurate than the state- 

.uinv, seventeen tliou-aml one hundred and inent furnished by the Mayor. |See General 

seventy-live ; navy, eii;ht thousand nine him- Palfrey's chapter on Mierv." in the 

dred and forty-four. The several oryani/ations present volume, and Si liouler's Histury i/ Malta- 

in which they enlisted are given in the appendix ckusetts in the Civil H'ar. ED.| 



272 THE MEMORIAL HISTORY OF BOSTON. 

more, perhaps, to Alderman Norcross than to any other person. As the 
chairman of a committee which investigated the subject in 1862, he ex- 
posed the loose and irresponsible methods of the old board so effectually 
that the city council petitioned the General Court for authority to appoint 
the overseers and to audit their accounts. An act giving that authority was 
passed April 2, 1864; and the new board, composed of honest and capable 
men, was organized July 4 following, with Robert C. Winthrop as chairman. 

On September 18, 1865, the city government took possession of the new 
City Hall, on School Street, and listened to an admirable address by Mayor 
Lincoln. Since January, 1863, the mayor, the city council, and some of the 
heads of departments had occupied the building belonging to the Massa- 
chusetts Charitable Mechanics' Association, on the corner of Chauncy and 
Bedford streets. The new hall was well fitted for the accommodation of 
the government of that day ; but the growth of the city has since made it 
necessary to hire outside offices for many of the departments. 

On April 4, 1865, an act was passed by the Legislature authorizing the 
city to build the new reservoir, since known as the Chestnut Hill Reservoir. 
This enlargement of the water-works became necessary to save the water 
which was wasted at the lake when it overflowed, and to have a larger 
supply than the Brookline reservoir to draw from in case of accident to 
the aqueduct. The cost of this work, including the handsome driveway 
which was constructed around the reservoir, was $2,450,000. The city 
was also authorized the same year to cut a street through Fort Hill. This 
led to the entire removal of the hill. Washington Square, which crowned 
its summit, once an attractive green spot, surrounded by the fine houses 
of wealthy residents, had come to be a turfless, unwholesome piece of 
ground, surrounded by tenement houses of the lowest class. The work 
of cutting through the street was begun Oct. 15, 1866, and the whole ele- 
vation was removed by July 31, 1872. The amount of earth carried off, 
partly by an elevated railroad, to fill Atlantic Avenue and the docks on the 
landward side, and partly by carts, to raise the grade of the territory which 
had had its drainage impaired by the filling of the Back-Bay basin, was 
five hundred and forty-seven thousand six hundred and twenty-eight cubic 
yards. The total cost of the improvement was $1,575,000. The mayor 
and aldermen had extraordinary powers from the General Court to take 
private property and assess the damages. 

In the year 1866 the Legislature gave the city what it had been long pray- 
ing for, that is, power to lay out, widen, and grade streets, and to assess 
upon each of the estates abutting on such streets a sum not exceeding half 
the amount which the estate is benefited by the improvement. Previous 
to the passage of this act the street widenings in the old portion of the city 
had generally been made by taking portions of estates where the owners 
had given notice of intention to build. By pursuing this policy the ex- 
pense of paying for buildings and for breaking up the occupants' business 
was saved ; but it was nevertheless a very expensive way of doing the work, 



BOSTON UNDER THE MAYORS. 273 

as the assessments for damages on account of taking property in that way 
were generally very heavy, and the city was unable to get the benefit of the 
widening in the increased value of the property for purposes of taxation 
until the improvement was completed. The whole amount expended by tin- 
city for laying out, widening, and extending streets, from June I, 1822, to 
May i, 1880, was $26,691,495*85. Had the city government steadily ad- 
hered to the " prospective plans for the improvement of the streets," adopted 
in 1825 under the administration of Mayor Quincy, a considerable portion 
of this enormous expense would have been saved. 

In the charter election of December, 1866, Otis Norcross, 1 the Republi- 
can candidate, was successful, receiving nine hundred more votes than his 
Democratic opponent, Dr. Nathaniel B. Shurtleff. Mr. Norcross held the 
office of mayor only one year. His failure to receive the customary re- 
election for a second term was due, perhaps, to a certain stiffness of virtue, 
which, in political life at least, seldom receives the reward it merits. His 
administration is chiefly to be commended for what it did not do. It fell 
upon a time when some very sensible people were congratulating the 
country on the blessing of being in debt, and when municipal aid was 
sought and often granted for the promotion of private enterprises. A 
great number of projects, involving the expenditure of millions of dollars, 
were under consideration when Mr. Norcross took office ; and had he not 
been a man of considerable firmness, one who had an intelligent idea of 
the scope and purpose of municipal government, and old-fashioned notions 
concerning municipal indebtedness, the city would have been committed 
to some enterprises of very doubtful expediency. Among other measures 
which claimed the attention of the government was one for the improve- 
ment of the flats on the northerly shore of South Boston, extending from 
Fort Point Channel to Castle Island. The improvement was intended partly 
for the benefit of the harbor, by deepening the ship-channel and increasing 
the movement of the water therein, so as to prevent it from shoaling, and 
partly for the direct benefit of commerce, by providing additional facilities 
for the delivery at deep water of freight from the West. It was proposed 
that the city should enter into a contract with the Commonwealth to fill 
these flats, build docks, streets, sewers, and bridges, and reimburse itself by 
the sale of the property to corporations and individuals. It was a magnifi- 
cent scheme, but the Mayor did not believe that the city ought to un*:r- 
take to carry it out alone. He endeavored, and successfully, to secure the 

1 Mr. Norcross was the descendant of Jere- of correction, a member of the school commit- 
iniah Norcross, who came to this country in tee, president of the water board, treasurer tu 
1638, and shortly afterward settled at Water- the overseers of the poor, and for three years 
town. He was born in Boston Nov. 2, 1811, and (1862-1864) a member of the board of alder- 
was educated ;it private schools and at the Bos- men. In all these positions he performed ser- 
ton high school. At the time of his election he vices of lasting value to the city, by introducing 
was one of the leading merchants of the city, letter business methods, and raising the stand- 
He possessed a thorough knowledge of muni- ard of official duty, 
cipal affairs, having been a director of the house 

vroi MI. 35. 



274 THE MEMORIAL HISTORY OF BOSTON. 

co-operation of all the parties interested, the State, the city, and the 
railroad corporations which desired additional terminal facilities. Had 
the city undertaken to do the whole work, it would have been called upon 
to spend an enormous amount of money, and the property would probably 
have been thrown upon the market, before it could be utilized so as to cover 
the cost of the improvement. 1 

In his inaugural address the Mayor called attention to the unhealthy con- 
dition of the territory lying south of the Public Garden, caused by the want 
of suitable drainage. This territory was on the border of the Back Bay, 
and had been built upon before a grade was established, and when there 
was a right of drainage into a basin in which the water did not rise more 
than three feet above low-water. The filling of the basin by the Common- 
wealth and the Water-Power Company made it necessary to extend the 
sewers to points where the natural rise of the tide prevented the sewers 
from discharging their contents during the greater part of the day. The 
drainage of the whole territory lying west of Washington Street, between 
the Public Garden and the Roxbury line, was injuriously affected by the 
Back Bay improvement ; but it was only within the district lying between 
Boylston Street and Dover Street, which had been built upon many years 
before any scheme for filling the adjoining flats had been seriously con- 
sidered, that the injury was of a character to call for immediate action. 
The householders in that locality thought that the city should bear all the 
expense of providing suitable drainage, but the city authorities took the 
ground that the estates should be assessed for a portion of the benefit 
which would accrue from raising the grade of the territory. The subject 
had been discussed for some years, and with much bitterness. Mr. Nor- 
cross recommended an application to the Legislature for special authority 
to abate the nuisance and to recover a portion of the expense for so doing. 
His recommendation was adopted ; and an act was passed during the ses- 
sion of 1867 giving the city authority to take that portion of the territory 
known as the Church-Street District, raise the grade, and either reconvey 
the several estates to their former owners upon payment of certain ex- 
penses, or sell them to the highest bidder. The act contained provisions 
new to the legislation of the State ; but it was drawn with great care by 
an eminent jurist, and it enabled the city to carry out a great sanitary im- 
provement without hardship to the numerous individuals whose property 
was taken, and without large expense to the city. In the following year 
the provisions of the act were extended to the territory known as the 
Suffolk-Street District, thereby covering all the low territory lying between 
the Public Garden and Dover Street. The net cost to the city of carrying 
out these improvements amounted to $2,558,745. Forty-seven acres of 
territory, occupied by one thousand two hundred and thirty buildings, and 
two thousand one hundred and fifty-five families, were included within the 
provisions of the legislative acts. The streets, alleys, and back-yards were 

1 The plan of improvement which was adopted is described in the chapter on " Boston Harbor." 



BOSTON UNDER THE MAYORS. 275 

raised to the grade of eighteen feet above mean low-water ; the cellars were 
raised to the grade of twelve feet; and the buildings were raised to cor- 
respond to the grade of the streets. It took four hundred and five thou- 
sand three hundred and four cubic yards of gravel, mostly brought from 
the country by steam power, to do the filling. The work was not entered 
upon until June, 1868, after Mr. Norcross had gone out of office; and it was 
not completed until 1872. 

i the close of the year 1867 the city council passed orders approv- 
ing certain plans for the erection of a new hospital for the insane, on a lot 
of land purchased for the purpose several years before in the town of 
Winthrop. The hospital at South Boston, erected in 1839, and enlarged in 
1846, was reported by the directors for public institutions to be over- 
crowded at times, and to be lacking in many of the conveniences which 
medical experts deemed essential to the proper care of the insane. The 
Mayor, while recognizing the need of some improvements in the accom- 
modations furnished to the city's patients, was strongly opposed to the 
erection of a hospital on the exposed headland at Winthrop, and was op- 
posed to the erection, on any site, of a building projected on the magnifi- 
cent plans which had received the approval of the city council. He vetoed 
the orders, and saved the city from building and maintaining a very ex- 
pensive institution which it was clearly the duty of the State to provide, 
and which the State did provide some ten years later. 

Among the notable events of this year was the annexatfon of the city of 
Roxbury to Boston. The subject had long been under consideration. 
Commissioners appointed by the governments of the two cities in 1866 to 
confer upon the subject reported early in 1867 in favor of the project, and 
on June I the Legislature passed an act, to take effect upon its acceptance 
by a majority of the voters in the two cities, providing that all the territory 
then comprised within the limits of Roxbury, with the inhabitants and es- 
tates therein, should be annexed to and made a part of the city of Boston 
and the county of Suffolk, and should be subject to the same municipal 
regulations, obligations, and liabilities, and entitled to the same immunities 
in all respects as Boston. On the second Monday in September the inhab- 
itants of the two cities voted to accept the act, 1 and on the first Monday 
in January following Roxbury became a part of Boston, constituting the 
thirteenth, fourteenth, and fifteenth wards. 

Roxbury at the time of its annexation contained about thirty thousand a 
inhabitants, and real and personal property valued for purposes of taxation 
at $26,55 1.700. Most of the wealthy residents had their places of business 
in Boston ; and the controlling argument for annexation in this case, and in 
the case of other municipal corporations subsequently annexed, was that 
many men doing business in Boston were forced by its limited area to live 

1 Bostpn: yeas, 4,633; nays, 1,059. Roxbury: s Twenty-eight thousand four hundred nd 
yeas, i,Sjj; n.iys 5.)^. [Si.- Mr. Drake's chapter twenty-six, by the census of 1865 
in the present volume. Er>.| 



276 THE MEMORIAL HISTORY OF BOSTON. 

outside of the city, and to lose the privilege of voting on questions of local 
government where they had the larger interest. Another argument in favor 
of the union, and one which had some influence probably, was that the 
relations between the two municipalities had recently become much more 
intimate through the occupation of the territory reclaimed from the sea on 
both sides of the narrow neck of land which had formerly united them by 
only a very slender tie. 

The municipal election held on Dec. 9, 1867, resulted in the choice of 
Dr. Nathaniel Bradstreet Shurtleff, the Democratic candidate, for mayor, 
who received about five hundred more votes than Mr. Xorcross. Dr. Shurt- 
leff 1 had long sought the office of mayor, but not, it may be said, from 
any unworthy motives. He had spent a great deal of time in the study of 
the early institutions of the New England colonies, and had a very intimate 
and peculiar knowledge of Boston, its history, its traditions, its govern- 
ment, and its people. To be the chief magistrate of the town he knew 
so well, and for which he had the love that an antiquary feels for the sub- 
ject of his studies, seemed to him a very great distinction. His fellow- 
citizens, recognizing his sincerity of purpose, kept him in the office for 
three terms, although he lacked the more important qualifications for a 
good executive. The constitution of his mind was so peculiar that long 
contact with men and affairs failed to give him any real knowledge of hu- 
man character, or of the proper methods of government. He took con- 
siderable pride in the fact that he was the first mayor of Boston who had 
always belonged to the Democratic party; and it appears that he is the 
only mayor of Boston, up to the present day, who can claim that distinction. 
Mr. Wightman, Mr. Gaston, Mr. Cobb, and Mr. Prince, who belonged to 
the Democratic party at the time of their election, had formerly been mem- 
bers of the Whig party. But it cannot be said that Dr. Shurtleff used the 
office to further the interests of any political organization. He gave so 
little satisfaction to his party associates that they opposed his re-election for 
a third term, and he was taken up and elected by the Citizens, who saw in 
the Democratic opposition an element dangerous to good government. 

His administration was marked by considerable activity on the part of 
the city government, especially in the matter of widening and extending 
streets in the business portion of the city. In 1868 Atlantic Avenue was 
laid out across the docks between Fort Point Channel and the East Boston 
Ferry ways, covering almost exactly the site of the ancient " barricade," 2 
which connected the north battery with the south battery, or Sconce. The 
cost of this improvement amounted to nearly two and a half million dol- 
lars. In 1869 Broadway, the main thoroughfare through South Boston, was 
extended across Fort Point Channel to Albany Street, at an expense of 

1 He was born in Boston on June 29, 1810, is printed in the Mass. Hist. Soc. Proc., Decem- 
and graduated at Elarvard College in 1831. A ber, 1874, p. 389. 
brief memoir of Dr. Shurtleff, by C. C. Smith, 2 [See Vol. II., p. 502. ED.] 



BOSTON r\I)ER THE MAYOKv 277 

nearly a million dollars ; and Federal Street, which had long been the 
principal thoroughfare from the old portion of the city to South Boston, 
was widened at an expense of about half a million dollars. These im- 
provements were made nenssary by the rapid growth of South Boston. 
During the ten years between 1860 and 1870, the population of that division 
of the city had increased more than fifty per cent, and the taxable value 
of property had more than doubled. 

A similar development had been going on in East Boston during the 
same period. For many years there had been great dissatisfaction with the 
accommodations furnished by the corporations which operated the ferries 
between East Boston and the city proper. The People's Ferry Company, 
chartered in 1853, conveyed all its property, except its boats and franc h 
to the city in 1859. The interest on the amount paid for the property was 
in the nature of a subsidy to the company; but owing to the bad location 
of the ferry landings, and to bad management on the part of the directors, 
the ferry did not pay its running expenses, and in 1864 the boats were with- 
drawn and sold, and the city took possession of the ferry-ways, which it had 
purchased in 1859. The East Boston Ferry Company was chartered in 1852, 
and, having obtained possession of the ferry landings most convenient for 
public travel, was enabled to do a business which gave it a small return on 
the capital invested. But the people of East Boston were unwilling that 
any corporation should make money out of the highway which, as they 
said, they were obliged to use in going from their homes to pay their taxes 
at the City Hall. The large amount of money expended for bridges to 
South Boston was used as an argument in favor of establishing a free 
bridge or free ferries to East Boston. In 1868 the Legislature chartered 
a company to build a bridge over tidewater between the ferry landings; 
but the United States authorities interposed to prevent the project from 
being carried out, as a bridge would have obstructed the passage of war 
vessels to and from the Navy Yard at Charlestown. In 1869 the city en- 
tered into a contract with the East Boston Ferry Company to purchase its 
franchise and property for the sum of $275,000; and on April i, 1870, the 
city government took possession of the ferry, and has since operated it 
through the agency of a board of directors elected by the city council. 
The tolls are fixed by the board of aldermen, at a rate which pays a little 
more than the actual running expenses. 

On June 22, 1869, the inhabitants of Dorchester and Boston voted to 
accept an act of the Legislature uniting the two corporations ; ' and on the 
first Monday in January following the ancient town, which received its 
name in the same order of the court of assistants that gave Boston its name 
and its corporate existence, became the sixteenth ward of the city. The 
State census of 1865 gave Dorchester a population of ten thousand seven 
hundred and seven; and the national census of 1870 gave the same terri- 

1 Vote of Boston : yeas, 3,420 ; nays, 565. Barrows' chapter on " Dorchester in the Last 
Dorchester: yeas, 9^ Mr. Hundred Years," in the present volume. F.n.| 



278 THE MEMORIAL HISTORY OF BOSTON. 

tory a population of twelve thousand two hundred and fifty-nine. The old 
town organization was maintained in all its strength and purity up to the 
time of the union with the city. Most of the inhabitants belonged to the 
well-to-do class, who had an interest alike in their native town and in 
the city to which they resorted for business. The valuation of the real and 
personal property in Dorchester for purposes of taxation in 1869 amounted 
to $20,315,700. 

The valuation of property in the whole city on May i, 1870, amounted 
to $584,089,400, an increase of $307,228,400 during the previous decade, 
or 1 10.96 per cent. The total funded debt of the city at that date amounted 
to $18,687,350.91. The total tax levy made on May i, 1870, amounted to 
$8,636,862, an increase of $6,106,862 since 1860; and the rate of taxation 
had risen during the same period from $8.99 to $13.65 on $1,000. The 
ninth census of the United States, taken on June I, 1870, gave the city a 
population of 250,526, divided as follows: native males, 79,599; native fe- 
males, 82,941 ; foreign males, 40,318; foreign females, 47,668 

By an act of the Legislature of 1870 an important amendment was made 
to the city charter. All the powers formerly vested in the board of alder- 
men, in relation to laying out, altering, or discontinuing streets or ways in 
the city, were transferred to a board of street commissioners, consisting of 
three persons, elected by the qualified voters of the city for a term of three 
years, one to be elected each year. By subsequent enactments the powers 
of the board have been somewhat curtailed. Where the estimated ex- 
pense of the street improvement exceeds $10,000, the concurrence of the 
city council is necessary to make the action of the commissioners binding; 
and by a two-thirds vote of the members of each branch, the city council 
may require the commissioners to lay out, alter, or discontinue any street. 
The power to abate taxes was also transferred from the aldermen to the 
commission. The establishment of this board was the beginning of some 
important changes in the organization of the city government. In the 
original organization the aldermen took the place of the selectmen, con- 
stituting the executive board of the government, of which the mayor was 
the chief officer. They also formed one branch of a council which took 
the place of the town-meeting. The legislative and executive powers of the 
corporation were therefore united in the same body. This was well enough 
in a city of small size, with a homogeneous population; but in 1870 Bos- 
ton had ceased to be a small city, and there was not that readiness on the 
part of the substantial men in the community to serve the city gratuitously 
which had been shown at an earlier day, when the service was less arduous, 
and when it was felt to be more of a neighborly office. The aldermen who 
happened to be in office, however, at the time any change was proposed 
by which their powers or duties would be curtailed, generally put them- 
selves in opposition to it ; and it was only when the departments which 
they administered were found unequal to any emergency, that they gave 
way to the popular demand for the transfer of their more important exec- 



BOSTON r.NDKK Till: MAYORS. 279 

utivc powers to persons specially selected for the purpose, and compensated 
for their services. These changes, and the influences by which they were 
brought about, will be descrilx <! when I come to deal with the administra- 
tions under which they occurred. 

The charter election on Dec. 12, 1870, resulted in the choice of William 
Gaston, 1 the Democratic and Citizens' candidate, for mayor, who received 
three thousand more votes than his Republican competitor, Mr. Georg< 
Carpenter. An able lawyer, and a man of high character, Mr. Gaston had 
the respect of all classes in the community ; but he lacked that essential 
requisite fora good executive, determination. He made up his mind 
with great difficulty, and it required a painful effort for him to act on any 
new or important question. He held the office of mayor for two years, 
and would have been re-elected for a third term had not an emergency 
arisen calling for a more energetic chief magistrate. 

The most important act of the city government during his administra- 
tion was the adoption of an ordinance to establish a new board of health. 
The city charter vested in the city council ample powers for the preserva- 
tion of the public health, and authorized them to constitute either branch, 
or any committee of their number, or any other persons appointed for the 
purpose, a board of health for all or for particular purposes. For many 
years the aldermen had constituted the board of health, and the chief 
executive officer of the health department was elected annually by the city 
council. In cases of emergency, such as the prevalence of contagious or 
infectious diseases, the aldermen were aided by a board of consulting 
physicians, who were also elected by the city council, and who, like the 
aldermen, received no compensation for their services. As the city in- 
creased in size many important questions affecting the public health were 
constantly arising, questions which the aldermen were not competent to 
deal with ; but they were slow to recognize their incompctency, and were 
quick to take offence at the advice tendered by their medical assistants. 
As a consequence, the leading physicians refused to serve in a position 
where they had no power to carry out the measures which they recom- 
mended ; and the aldermen soon found themselves losing the respect 
and confidence of the community. In the year 1871 a joint committee 
appointed to investigate certain complaints relating to the sale of unwhole- 
some meat found that there were no proper restrictions upon the intro- 
duction of bad meat into the city markets, and that the health of the 
inhabitants was endangered by the want of an efficient board of health. In 

1 Mr. Gaston was the descendant of a Hu- the common council of that city five years (1849- 
gucnot family that came to this country in the 53), and its president two years (1852-53) ; was 
lii>t half of the eighteenth century; and was city solicitor five years (1856-60), and mayor two 
born in South Killingly, Conn., on Oct. 3, 1820. years (1861-62). He had formerly been a mem- 
He was .graduated at I'.rown I'ni'.tiMtv. I'rnvi- ber of the Whig party, but the Antislavcry agi- 
dcnce, R. I., in 1840, and began the practice of tation had carried him. with many of his eminent 
law in Roxbury in 1846. He was a member of >( the bar, into the Democratic ranks 



280 THE MEMORIAL HISTORY OF BOSTON. 

his address to the city council, at the beginning of 1872, Mr. Gaston urged 
the passage of an ordinance to establish an independent board; and his 
recommendation was enforced later in the year by the neglect of the alder- 
men to take any effective measures to check the small-pox, which prevailed 
to an alarming extent. The aldermen were unable to withstand the force of 
public opinion, and on December 2 an ordinance was passed authorizing 
the mayor to appoint, with the approval of the city council, three persons 
to constitute the board of health, to serve for a term of three years each. 
As a sort of compromise, the duty of cleaning the streets and cesspools, 
and collecting offal and ashes, the work in which a considerable number 
of laborers were employed, was placed under the charge of a joint com- 
mittee of the city council. The appointment of a superintendent of health, 
a city physician, and a port physician, was given to the new board, but the 
exercise of this power was subject to the approval of the mayor. Mr. 
Gaston failed to make any appointments on the board before retiring from 
office, and the duty of carrying the ordinance into effect devolved upon his 
successor. 

In the year 1871 the supply of water from Lake Cochituate was found 
to be insufficient for the growing wants of the city, and a competent en- 
gineer was appointed to make an examination of all sources of supply 
within fifty miles of Boston. This examination resulted in an application 
to the Legislature the following year for authority to take water from Sud- 
bury River and Farm Pond. The authority was granted, and a temporary 
connection was immediately made between Sudbury River and Lake Cochit- 
uate, which furnished an adequate supply during the summer of 1872 ; but 
this connection could not be made permanent without interfering with the. 
privileges of the mill-owners along the line of the river; and it became a 
serious question for the government to consider, whether the need for an 
additional supply of pure water was so imperative as to justify the very 
heavy expense which would be involved by taking all the waters of the 
river, within or above Framingham, as authorized by the act of the Legis- 
lature. During the unusually dry season of 1874, a temporary connection 
was made with the Mystic water works, which supplied Charlestown ; but 
it was soon found that the connection could not be maintained without de- 
priving Charlestown and its dependents of an adequate supply; and on 
Jan. 2, 1875, orders were passed authorizing the Cochituate water board, 
as the agent of the city, to take the waters of Sudbury River and Farm 
Pond and conduct them by a separate conduit to Chestnut Hill Reservoir, a 
distance of eighty-three thousand nine hundred and twelve feet. The city 
is now receiving from this source a supply equal to twenty million gallons 
daily, which can be doubled by the construction of additional storage 
basins. The cost of the additional supply has already amounted to over 
$5,000,000; and the entire cost of the Cochituate and Sudbury works on 
April 30, 1880, amounted to $16,341,908.25. The cost of constructing the 
Mystic works amounted at that date to $1,614,648. The average daily 



HUSTON UNIJKR THE MAYORS. 281 

consumption of water during the year 1879 amounted to 34,579,370 gal- 
lons, of which 8,883,470 were drawn from Mystic Lake, and 25,695,900 
from Cochituate Lake and Sudbury River. 

In 1871 the Legislature established a new department in the city govern- 
ment, known as the Department for the Survey and Inspection of Buildings. 
The chief officer is appointed by the mayor, with the approval of the city 
council, for a term of three years; and the assistant inspectors and clerk are 
appointed by the chief officer with the approval of the mayor. The depart- 
ment had been organized but a few months when the great fire of 1872 
occurred, and at the extra session of the Legislature which followed, the 
provisions of the building law were greatly modified with a view to prevent 
the use of combustible materials in the construction of buildings within 
certain limits to be prescribed from time to time by the city council. 

A description of the great fire does not fall within the scope of this 
chapter, therefore I shall refer to it only so far as may be necessary to show 
the effect it had upon the city government. There was a good deal of 
dissatisfaction with the management of the fire department during the fire, 
and this dissatisfaction subsequently found expression in the defeat of the 
Mayor when nominated for another term, and in the reorganization of the 
department. It is natural that the people should hold the chief executive 
of the government largely responsible for the efficiency of the executive 
departments under him, although by the letter of the law he may have little 
or no control over them. Mayor Quincy (the senior) was quick to see that 
if anything went wrong in any department of the government (the mayor's 
duties were then partly legislative and partly executive) he would be held 
accountable, and he felt that the people were right in holding him account- 
able. Therefore he made the " glittering generalities " concerning the 
powers of the executive "blazing ubiquities." By the charter of 1854 
the powers of the mayor especially in the matter of controlling legislation 
were somewhat curtailed ; but still there is enough in the general powers 
given him as the chief executive officer of the corporation, and in the in- 
junction " to be vigilant and active at all times in causing the laws for the 
government of the city to be duly executed and put in force," to justify the 
people in looking to him for such prompt and energetic action as the emer- 
gency may call for. Mr. Gaston failed to make his paramount authority as 
chief executive felt, not only in the case of the great fire, but in the meas- 
ures taken to check the terrible disease from which, for want of suitable 
sanitary precautions, many lives were sacrificed during the last months of 
his administration. While, therefore, his general policy in the management 
of the city affairs was approved by all classes, the lack of energy shown in 
these two instances raised a strong opposition to his retention in office; and 
at the election on Dec. 10, 1872, Henry Lillie Pierce, 1 who was nominated 

1 Mr. Pierce, the descendant of an English his native town and in the academy at Milton, 
family that settled in Watertown in 1638, was and the academy and normal school at Bridge- 
born in StOMghton, M:iss., AMU. He wali-r. Although at lively engaged in I""- 
received his education in the public school* of since the twenty-fifth yr.ir of his .ige, he has 
VOL. III. 36. 



282 THE MEMORIAL HISTORY OF BOSTON. 

by the Republicans on a non-partisan platform, received a plurality of 
seventy-nine votes. 

Mr. Pierce brought to the mayor's office not only good business principles 
and an intimate knowledge of municipal affairs, but an ability for dealing 
with public questions very rare among men not specially trained for office. 
In his inaugural address he recommended the reorganization of the fire and 
health departments, and the revision of the city charter. He did not con- 
tent himself merely with recommending these measures which he thought 
essential to the good government of the city ; he had that sense of respon- 
sibility in seeing them carried out which is the chief requisite of a good 
executive. Within ten days after taking office he organized a new board of 
health, and took effective measures to check the loathsome disease from 
which the people were dying at the rate of about fifty a week. The re- 
organization of the fire department met with strong opposition. The move- 
ment was made to appear as a sort of reflection on the conduct of the 
members during the great fire. Now the firemen had behaved on that 
occasion with characteristic spirit and bravery, but for want of an intelli- 
gent head their efforts were badly" directed. Many of them, however, did 
not appreciate this, and they made the cause of their chief their own. Had 
it not been for another serious fire on May 30, 1873, which went far to de- 
stroy the public confidence in the management of the department, it is 
hardly probable that the Mayor's recommendation could have been carried 
out. It required no additional legislation on the part of the State to enable 
the city council to place the department under a paid commission, and 
on October 24 an ordinance was passed giving the mayor authority to ap- 
point, with the approval of the city council, three fire commissioners, to 
hold office for three years each. The duty of extinguishing fires and pro- 
tecting life and property in case of fire, was intrusted to these commission- 
ers; and to enable them to perform their duty in the most efficient manner, 
they were authorized to appoint all other officers and members of the 
department and fix their compensation. The Mayor lost no time in carry- 
ing the ordinance into effect, and a considerable reduction in the rates of 
insurance soon testified to the efficiency of the new organization. 

The recommendation for a revision of the city charter was also strongly 
opposed, on the ground that it looked to a centralization of power; but the 
mayor was finally aathorized to appoint a commission to consider the sub- 
ject. Benjamin R. Curtis, the eminent jurist, accepted the position of chair- 
man, but he died before the work was entirely completed ; and his place 
was filled by George Tyler Bigelow, formerly Chief-Justice of the Supreme 

always taken a deep interest in public affairs. Legislature for four years (1860-62, 1866); and 

The pro-slavery course of the Democratic party, on the annexation of Dorchester to Boston he 

to which he originally belonged, led him in 1848 was chosen to represent that part of the city 

to join in the organization of the Free Soil party, (where he had long been a resident) in the board 

and afterward to become an active member of of aldermen during the two years ending 1870- 

the Republican party. He was a member of the 71. 



BOSTON UNDER THE MAYORS. 283 

Court. In their report, submitted at the beginning of the year 1875, the 
commissioners said : 

" The lapse of half a century since the adoption of the first charter has wrought 
great ( han-cs in tin- i ity and in its municipal affairs. Its population in 1822 was only 
a little more than forty thousand. It now contains upward of three hundred and 
forty thousand. Its territory at that time embraced an area of about two thousand 
acres ; now it includes more than twenty-one thousand five hundred acres. Its valu- 
ation in 1822 amounted only to about forty-two million ; in 1874 it rose to upward of 
eight hundred million. The change has not l>een merely in the extent of its territory, 
the number of its inhabitants, and the amount of its taxable property. The character 
of its population has greatly changed. Instead of a small, compact community, the 
leading citi/ens of which were well known to each odier, it has become a large me- 
tropolis, with a population spread over a large extent of territory, divided into numer- 
ous villages, widely separated, having but few interests in common, and the inhabitants 
of which are but little known to each other. With these changes have come their 
natural consequences. Many institutions, public works, and organizations have grown 
up or been established, such as the public exigencies require, and which have added 
largely to the duties of the public officers of the city, essentially changed their char- 
acter, and rendered their administration more difficult and complicated. ... It would 
seem to be clear that duties so numerous and important cannot be properly superin- 
tended and managed by persons who render gratuitous services only, or who are 
chosen to office not for their experience in the duties which they may be called to 
perform, or their peculiar fitness and skill in the work of the different departments 
which they may have in charge." 

The draft of a new charter, which the commissioners submitted with their 
report, provided that the mayor and the members of the city council should 
bold office for three years; that the city council should have entire control 
over all appropriations of the public money and the purposes for which it is 
expended ; that the heads of the several executive departments should be 
appointed by the mayor with the approval of the city council ; and that the 
school committee should be reduced to two members from each ward. 
Some of the recommendations made by the commissioners have since been 
carried out, but the report as a whole never received the approval of the 
city council. 

Among other important matters which engaged the attention of the city 
government during the year 1873 were the street improvements within the 
district covered by the great fire of the previous year. The cost of these 
improvements amounted to over five million dollars. The old streets were 
so narrow and crooked that it was at first proposed to lay out the territory 
on an entirely new plan; but it was found on examination that the city 
could not give a good title to the land included in the old streets, and the 
improvement was, therefore, restricted to the widening and straightening of 
the old ways. 

The city council of this year also passed an order requesting the tru- 
of the Public Library to open the reading-room connected with that institu- 



284 THE MEMORIAL HISTORY OF BOSTON. 

tion on certain hours every Sunday. Similar orders, passed in 1865 and 
1872, had been vetoed by the mayors then in office, partly on the ground 
that the law officer of the city was of the opinion that the opening would be 
a violation of the statute relating to the observance of the Lord's Day, and 
partly on the ground that it was contrary to public policy. Mr. Pierce was 
heartily in favor of the measure ; and with his approval it was carried into 
effect, and its wisdom has hardly been questioned since. 

The boundaries of the city were considerably enlarged this year by the 
annexation of Charlestown, West Roxbury, and Brighton. 1 At the election 
in November, 1873, Mr. Pierce was chosen a member of the National 
House of Representatives to fill a vacancy in the third Congressional district, 
caused by the death of Mr. William Whiting. In order to take his seat in 
the House on the first Monday in December, he resigned the office of 
mayor; and in accordance with the provisions of the charter the duties 
were performed for the remainder of the year by Leonard R. Cutter, chair- 
man of the board of aldermen. 

At the municipal election in December Samuel Crocker Cobb 2 was 
chosen mayor for the ensuing year by a nearly unanimous vote. For the 
office of chief executive he was singularly well fitted, not only by experi- 
ence in municipal affairs, but by a disposition in which great energy and 
courage were joined to high-bred courtesy and genial frankness. Although 
not specially identified with any political party, his sympathies, after the 
dissolution of the Whig party to which he originally belonged, were gen- 
erally with the Democratic party on national questions. He was a firm 
believer, however, in a non-partisan administration of local affairs; and so 
well did he act up to his convictions in that matter, that the Citizens 
elected him for three successive terms, the last time against the united 
opposition of the two leading political parties. During these three years 
(1874-76) a great many important measures were acted upon by the city 
government. 

In his inaugural address the Mayor recommended the establishment of 
several public parks in different sections of the city, easily accessible to 

1 Charlestown at this time contained about century. The paternal ancestor, Henry Cobb, 
30,000 inhabitants, and covered an area of 586 emigrated to the Plymouth Colony as early as 
square acres. Brighton contained about 5,000 1629, and settled at Barnstable, where he died in 
inhabitants, and covered an area of 2,277 square 1679, leaving seven sons. He was fitted for col- 
acres. West Roxbury numbered about 9,000, lege at the Bristol Academy in Taunton, but came 
and its territory embraced an area of 7,848 to Boston at the early age of sixteen, and engaged 
square acres. By the census of 1870 the popu- in the foreign shipping business, which he was fol- 
iation of Charlestown was 28,323; of Brighton, lowing at the time he entered the mayor's office. 
4,967 ; of West Roxbury, 8,683. f See tne chap- He served as a member of the Roxbury board of 
ters on "Charlestown," " Roxbury," and " Brigh- aldermen in 1861-62 ; and after the annexation of 
ton," in the present volume. En.] that city in 1867 he was chosen as its first repre- 

' 2 He was born in Taunton, Mass., on May sentative in the Boston board of aldermen. He 

22, 1826, and was the descendant of an English also served as a member of the board of direc- 

family of good condition that settled in that tors for public institutions from 1869 to the close 

town during the latter half of the seventeenth of the year 1873. 



BOSTON UNDER THE MAYORS. 285 

the people. The subject of enlarging the public grounds had already 
received some attention. In 1869 the General Court passed an act pro- 
viding for the appointment of a mixed commission, part by the State and 
part by the city authorities, with power to take lands and " lay out one or 
more public parks in or near the city of Boston." The act was not to take 
ri'Urt unless accepted by two-thirds of the inhabitants of Boston, who might 
exercise the right of voting on the question ; and failing to receive the re- 
quisite number of affirmative votes, it became void. In accordance with the 
Mayor's recommendation a new application was made to the Legislature; 
and in 1875 an act was passed authorizing the mayor, with the approval of 
the city council, to appoint three park commissioners, with power to take 
lands, lay out public parks, and make rules for their government. The 
operations of the commissioners were restricted, however, by a provision in 
the act that no expenditures could be made by them, and no obligations 
entered into beyond the appropriations of money made from time to time 
by the city council. This act was duly accepted by the citizens on June 9, 
1875, and the commissioners were appointed in the following month. Be- 
yond preparing plans and estimates no action was taken by the commission- 
ers until 1877, when, with the approval of the city council, they purchased 
one hundred and six acres of flats on the westerly side of the Back Bay, at 
the average price of ten cents per square foot. The assessments which 
they were authorized to levy on the adjoining lands, on account of their in- 
creased value from the establishment of the park, have made the net cost of 
the property to the city only about thirty thousand dollars. The commis- 
sioners have since recommended, and the city council has now under con- 
sideration, the purchase of a large tract of land in West Roxbury, the 
purchase of certain lands and flats at City Point, in South Boston, and the 
acquisition from the State of a strip of flats on Charles River, in the rear of 
Beacon Street and Charles Street, for an ornamental embankment and 
driveway. Connected to some extent with the park improvement, as a 
sanitary measure, was the plan for an intercepting sewerage system prepared 
by an able commission appointed by the Mayor in 1875. The plan was 
adopted in 1877, and an appropriation of $3,713,000 was made to carry it 
out. It involved the construction of about thirteen miles of intercepting 
sewers, the establishment of pumping works at Old Harbor Point, and a 
tunnel, under Dorchester Bay, to the outlet in deep water beyond Moon 
Island. The work has not yet (1880) been completed. 

To carry on the important work of procuring an additional supply of 
water from Sudbury River, to which reference has already been made, the 
Mayor ur^ed the appointment of a paid commission, organized on the same 
basis as tin- health and fire boards; and on the petition of the city coun- 
cil the Legislature of 1875 passed an act authorizing the appointment of 
such a commission, to be known as the Boston Water Board. The board 
was organized in the following year, and all the powers conferred by the 
statutes of the Commonwealth, in relation to supplying the city with water. 



286 THE MEMORIAL HISTORY OF BOSTON. 

were delegated to it; but in the exercise of its powers the board is subject 
to the supervision of the city council. 

In his first address the Mayor referred to the inability both of the State 
and the city police to execute the law prohibiting the sale of intoxicating 
liquors, and stated that he would " use all legal means to carry into effect 
a law which should have for its object the regulation and restraint of the 
liquor traffic." In the following year the Legislature passed a license law, 
and its execution in the city of Boston was given to a board of three li- 
cense commissioners, appointed by the mayor and confirmed by the city 
council. 

By an act of the Legislature passed in 1874 the mayor was authorized to 
appoint, subject to the approval of the board of aldermen, three persons 
to constitute a board of registrars of voters. Previous to that time the 
preparation of the voting lists had devolved upon the city clerk. There 
was much dissatisfaction with the manner in which the ward officers per- 
formed their duties of receiving, counting, and returning votes. The city 
charter provided for the annual election of a warden, clerk, and six inspec- 
tors, by the qualified voters in each ward. These offices were filled in many 
instances by persons who were barely able to read and write, and who were 
utterly incapable of properly performing the duties. The aldermen con- 
stituted the returning board for the city ; and being called upon after every 
election to recount more or less of the votes, the grossest errors were often 
discovered in the ward returns. In 1876 the mayor was authorized, with 
the approval of the aldermen, to appoint three of the six inspectors of elec- 
tions in each ward. By putting the responsibility for the selection upon 
the mayor, and increasing the term of office to three years, it was expected 
that an honest and intelligent discharge of the duties would be secured ; 
but the reform did not go far enough ; interested parties still controlled a 
majority of the ward officers. In 1878, therefore, on the petition of the city 
council, the Legislature passed an act authorizing the board of assessors 
of taxes to divide each ward of the city into voting precincts, containing 
as nearly as practicable five hundred registered voters ; and, in addition to 
a warden and clerk elected by the inhabitants of the precinct, the mayor, 
with the approval of the aldermen, was authorized to appoint two inspec- 
tors, representing different political parties. Under this system it is com- 
paratively easy to detect errors or frauds either in the registration of voters 
or in the returns of elections. 

In 1875 the Legislature passed an important act to regulate and limit 
municipal indebtedness. It provided that cities and towns in this Common- 
wealth should not become indebted to an amount, exclusive of loans for 
water supply, exceeding in the aggregate three per centum on the valuation 
of their taxable property ; but in any city or town where the indebtedness 
amounted, at the time the act was passed, to two per centum on its valua- 
tion, permission was given to increase the debt to the extent of an additional 
one per centum. At the time the act took effect this city was indebted 



BOSTON UNDER THE MAYORS. 287 

more than two per centum on its valuation (about two and three fifths), and 
was therefore authorized to increase the debt one per centum on its valua- 
tion of May i, 1875, namely, $793,961,895. Any debts contracted for other 
purposes than constructing general sewers and supplying the inhabitants 
with pure water are made payable within a period not exceeding ten years, 
and the city is required to raise annually by taxation an amount sufficient 
to pay the interest as it accrues, and eight per centum of the principal until 
the sum raised is sufficient to extinguish the debt at maturity. Debts in- 
curred in constructing sewers may be made payable at a period not exceed- 
ing twenty years ; and for supplying water, at a period not exceeding thirty 
years. The Mayor seized the opportunity afforded by the passage of this 
act to urge upon the city council the policy of raising by taxation, annu- 
ally, a sufficient amount of money to pay for all expenses incurred by the 
city, except for the enlargement of the water works. He was able to show 
that, if the government abstained from contracting new loans, the sinking 
funds already established would free the city from all except the water debt 
in eight years; but while the government was ready then, and indeed has 
at all times been ready, to applaud any general proposition looking to the 
reduction or extinction of the debt, its virtuous resolutions have seldom 
stood in the way of any scheme which seemed to meet the popular favor ; 
and it may fairly be presumed that the indebtedness of the city will be kept 
very near the limit authorized by law. 

Perhaps the most notable event of Mr. Cobb's administration, certainly 
the one which possesses the greatest historical interest, was the celebration 
of the one hundredth anniversary of the Battle of Bunker Hill. On the even- 
ing of June 16, 1875, there was a very remarkable meeting in Music Hall. 
Many of the men who had taken a leading part in the war of the Rebellion 
rebel and patriot; the soldier of the Union and the soldier of the Con- 
federacy met for the first time in peace and with a common object, the 
commemoration of the most important of the series of events which re- 
sulted in the creation of an independent nation. The Mayor's address of 
welcome was admirably adapted to the spirit of the meeting, and met with 
a very cordial response from the city's guests. On the following day there 
was a great procession, composed of various military and civic bodies, and 
an oration on the site of the historic battleground by Charles Devens, Jr., 
at that time a justice of the Supreme Court of the Commonwealth. 

Mr. Cobb was succeeded in the mayor's office by Frederick Octavius 
Prince, 1 who was elected in December, 1876. He was the candidate of the 
Democratic party; and partly through the influence of the national elec- 
tion held the month previous, and partly through his own personal popu- 
larity, he received about five thousand more votes than his opponent, 

1 Mr. Prince came of a good family, long in his native city and at Harvard College, and 
resident in Hoston, where he w:i- Knn J.MI iS. subsequently became a member of the Suffolk 
1818. He was graduated at the Latin School Bar. 



288 THE MEMORIAL HISTORY OF BOSTON. 

Nathaniel J. Bradlee, who was not only the candidate of the Republican 
party but of the Citizens' organization. Mr. Prince had held no office in 
the city government previous to his election as mayor, and his knowledge 
of municipal affairs was somewhat limited ; but his readiness and ability as 
a public speaker, and his tact and courtesy as the representative of the city, 
especially on festive occasions, have been accepted as an offset, to some 
extent, for any shortcomings in the business administration of the office. 
Having been elected as the special representative of a party, he found 
some difficulty in making the demands of his supporters agree with the 
best interests of the city; and he did not always succeed in doing so. It 
may be said, however, that he endeavored to carry out the policy of re- 
trenchment inaugurated by his predecessor, and that during the first part of 
his administration his efforts in that direction were measurably successful. 
In 1874 the tax levy had reached the enormous sum of $12,000,000. The 
panic of 1873 had proved most disastrous to the owners of real estate, 
especially to a large class of speculators in the lands recently annexed to 
the city. The policy pursued by the local assessors of maintaining a high 
valuation of real property created much dissatisfaction, and there was a 
general demand not only for a reduction of valuations, but for a reduction of 
expenses. In response to this demand the city's expenses were reduced in 
1875 and 1876 to the extent of $2,775,098 ; and the valuation of real estate 
was- reduced in 1876 from $558,000,000 to $526,000,000. In 1877 a further 
reduction of over half a million dollars was made in the tax levy, without 
detriment to the public service, and the real estate valuation was reduced 
to $481,000,000; but the spirit of economy which prevailed at the begin- 
ning of this year did not continue to the end. An order was passed by 
the city council to run the East Boston ferries at the city's expense ; and 
although the Mayo.r was informed by the city solicitor that the order was 
illegal, he gave it his approval. The opponents of the measure went to the 
supreme court, and obtained a writ of mandamus directing the city to con- 
tinue to collect the tolls established by the board of aldermen. The ap- 
propriations for carrying out the plan for improved sewerage ($3,7i3> ooo )> 
for erecting a new building for the English High and Latin schools ($350,- 
ooo), and for a Back Bay park ($450,000), measures initiated by previous 
city governments, met with general approval. 

When the time came for selecting candidates for the next city govern- 
ment, the dissatisfaction with Mr. Prince's administration found expression 
in a petition, signed by some twenty-five hundred tax-paying citizens 
" representing all parties and all classes," asking Mr. Henry L. Pierce, 
who had retired from Congress at the end of four years' service, to allow 
his name to be used as the Citizens' candidate for mayor. The call was 
too imperative to be disregarded ; and Mr. Pierce stood as the candidate of 
the Citizens and also of the Republicans. Mr. Prince was renominated by 
the Democrats. There was a very bitter contest, which resulted in the 



BOSTON UNDER THK MAYuRS. 289 

election of Mr. Pierce by a majority of about two thousand three hundred 
votes. 

( )n taking office Mr. Pierce made an address to the city government, 
which was highly commended by the representatives of all parties. Refer- 
ring to some of the schemes which had been devised for improving our 
local government by a limitation of the suffrage, or by transferring the 
more important duties to commissions appointed by the State authori- 
ties, he said : - 

"While I am fully sensible of the defects in our present system of municipal 
administration, I cannot help regarding with distrust any scheme for curing them by 
a radical change of the New England system under which we have grown up, and 
which, notwithstanding its defects, has thus far produced better results than any other 
system that has been tried in this country. ... It is hardly probable that a con- 
dition of things can arise in any city in New England where those who have an in- 
terest in maintaining order will be outnumbered by those who hope for some personal 
benefit by creating disorder ; therefore, if those who have interests at stake will bestir 
themselves to protect their interests, and there is no safety in any scheme which can 
be devised unless they do so, they can better accomplish their purpose by outvoting 
their opponents than by undertaking to deprive them of privileges they now possess. 
In a recent argument in favor of extending household suffrage to the counties in Eng- 
land, Mr. Gladstone says the franchise is an educational power. The possession of it 
quickens the intelligence, and tends to bind the nation together. It is more impor- 
tant to have an alert, well-taught, and satisfied people than a theoretically good legis- 
lative machine." 

The most important act of Mr. Pierce's second administration was the 
reorganization of the police department. The regular police force at this 
time consisted of seven hundred and fifteen men. They were appointed by 
the mayor with the approval of the aldermen, and held office during good 
behavior. The powers of the mayor, the aldermen, and the chief of police 
were not clearly defined, and in consequence the discipline of the depart- 
ment was very lax. Mayor Cobb, in his address to the city council of 1876, 
had strongly urged the appointment of a commission to administer the 
department ; but the Democrats were at that time united in their opposi- 
tion to the creation of any more " three-headed commissions," and there 
were some prominent Republicans who doubted the expediency of giving 
any more power to the mayor. While the feeling against commissions in 
general was not much changed during the two following years, the growing 
inefficiency of the police department was so clearly seen that when Mayor 
Pierce pointed out the improvements which had been made in the fire and 
health departments by putting them tinder commissions, and declared his 
belief that a like improvement would follow the appointment of a commis- 
sion to have charge of the police department and the execution of the laws 
in relation to the sale of intoxicating liquors, public opinion forced the city 
council to give its sanction to the measure. An act was obtained from the 
Legislature authorizing the mayor, with the approval of the city council, to 
VOL. m. 37. 



2 go 



THE MEMORIAL HISTORY OF BOSTON. 



appoint three commissioners to serve for a term of three years each. The 
appointments of the mayor were readily confirmed, and the commissioners 
organized on July 8, 1878. 

A further reduction of nearly $900,000 was made in the tax levy of this 
year; so that, although the assessors made a reduction of seventeen million 
dollars in the valuation of property, the rate of taxation was reduced from 
$13.10 to $12.80 on a thousand. 

At the end of the year Mr. Pierce declined a re-election ; and Mr. Fred- 
erick O. Prince was again brought forward as the candidate of the Demo- 
crats. His opponent was Colonel Charles R. Codman, who was the nominee 
of the Citizens and Republicans. The feeling that Mr. Prince had been 
rather hardly pressed in the preceding election led to a sort of reaction in 
his favor, which returned him to office with a plurality of about seven hun- 
dred votes. There was a marked improvement in his administration during 
his second term, so that he had the partial endorsement of a Citizens' nomi- 
nation for a third term, and was elected by a majority of about two thousand 
six hundred votes over Mr. Solomon B. Stebbins, the Republican candidate. 
During these last two years (1879-80), the time of the government has 
been occupied mainly in carrying out the important measures previously 




AUTOCRAPHS OK THE MAYORS. 



BOSTON UNDKR THK MAYORS. 



2 9 I 




AUTOGRAPHS OF THE MAYORS. 

adopted, the improvement of the sewerage system, the construction of a 
park on the Back Bay, the enlargement of the water works, the construction 
of sewers in the Mystic valley to preserve the purity of the water supplied 
from that source, and the erection of a costly building for the English High 
and Latin schools. The most important among the new projects now (1880) 
under consideration are the establishment of public parks in West Roxbury, 
at South Boston Point, and on the banks of Charles River ; and the erection 
of a new county court house, and public library building. 1 On Sept. 17, 
1880, the city government celebrated the two hundred and fiftieth anniver- 
sary of the settlement of Boston. A bronze statue of John Winthrop, 2 which 



' For the last named purpose the General 
Court of 1880 granted to the city, free of rent, a 
parcel of land containing about thirty-three thou- 
sand square feet, situated on the southerly cor- 
ner of Dartmouth and Boylston streets; the only 
condition-. K-ing that the erection thereon of a 
library building should be begun within three 
years, and that the library should be open, under 
reasonable regulations, to all llu-iiti/rn- of the 
Commonwealth. [Sec the chapter on " Libraries " 
in Vol. IV. ED.] 



1 A hcliotype of this statue is given in Vol. I. 
Jonathan Phillips, who died in July, 1860, be- 
queathed to the city of Boston $20,000 " as a trust 
fund, the income of which shall be annually ex- 
pended to adorn and embellish the streets and 
public places of the city." On the recommenda- 
tion of Mayor Cobb in 1875, the aldermen voted 
to use a portion of the income from the fund to 
erect a statue of Josiah Quincy. The order was 
given to Mr. Thomas Ball, and the statue was 
placed in front of the city hall, as a companion 



292 



THE MEMORIAL HISTORY OF BOSTON. 



had been erected in Scollay Square, was unveiled in the morning. Then 
followed commemorative services in the Old South Church, where the Mayor 
delivered an address of some length on the character and services of Win- 
throp ; l and later in the day there was a great procession, the largest, it was 
said, that ever walked the streets of Boston. 

And here the sketch of Boston " under the mayors " comes to an end. 
During the fifty-nine years that the city government has been established 
the population of Boston has increased from about 45,000 to 362,535; 
more than eight fold. About 215,000 persons live within the area covered 
by the first city charter; and 147,500 persons live on the territory which 
has been annexed since 1867. The current expenses of the city in 1822 
amounted to $249,000; in 1880 the appropriations for current expenses, in- 
cluding interest on the city debt, amounted to $10,190,387, a forty-fold 
increase. The valuation of property for purposes of taxation amounted in 
1823 to $44,896,800; in 1880, to $639,462,495, an increase of about four- 
teen-fold. The highest valuation of taxable property, $798,755,050, and the 
largest tax levy, $12,045,902, were in 1874, the second year after the great 
fire, which destroyed about seventy-five million dollars worth of property. 

Of the twenty- three persons who have held the office of mayor of Boston, 
thirteen were born in the city ; all of them were born in New England ; . 
eleven were graduates of Harvard College, and three were graduates of 
other colleges. Some of them have been men of distinction ; most of them 
have been men of ability ; no one of them has retired from office with any 
stain resting upon his character. The city has been fortunate in the charac- 
ter of the men who have served her, both in the legislative and executive 
departments of the government. The high standard of official integrity 
which has been maintained is largely due to the efforts of those citizens who 
have associated from time to time to resist the introduction of national party 
politics into the management of the city business. They have for many 
years held the balance of power between the two great political parties, and 
they have kept the leaders of both in wholesome fear of the consequences 
of making appointments to office for party purposes, or of using the city's 
money to promote party interests. 




piece to the Franklin statue, and unveiled Oct. Robert D. Smith, Esq., City Document, 103, 1880. 

ii, 1879. See Mayor Prince's address, City Docu- A portion of the income from this fund was also 

in mt, 1 1 5, 1879. In 1879 the aldermen contracted used to beautify the lot of land at the junction of 

for copies in bronze of the two representative Columbus Avenue and Pleasant Street, on which 

statues of Massachusetts in the capitol at Wash- there is the group emblematical of Emancipa- 

ington, Samuel Adams, by Miss Anne Whitney, tion, presented to the city in 1879, by Mr. Moses 

and John Winthrop, by Richard S.Grcenough, Kimball. See City Document 1 26, 1879. 
the expense of making them to be charged to the ' See City Document, 1880, containing a full 

income from the Phillips Fund. The statue of account of the celebration, prepared by Mr. 

Adams was unveiled July 4, iSSo. See oration by William H. Lee. 



CHAPTER III. 

BOSTON AND THE COMMONWEALTH UNDER THE CITY 

CHARTER. 

BY HIS EXCELLENCY JOHN D. LONG, LL.D-, 

Gmtrttor of Ifauackutlttt. 



T 



HE subject of this chapter has its beginning in the presentation to the 
General Court of the following petition : ' 



" The undersigned, being a Committee authorized and instructed by the Town of 
Boston, most respectfully represent 

" That the present size of the Town renders it impossible any longer to carry into 
effect the principles on which its present government is founded, as this is presumed 
to be exercised by the inhabitants at large, assembled in Town-meeting. There is no 
Hall in the Town capable of containing all the legal voters ; and if such a room ex- 
isted its dimensions would be too extensive to admit of wise conceit or true delibera- 
tion by the citizens. The duty of attending Town-meetings is therefore becoming 
more and more neglected ; and a very small minority of persons now decide upon the 
public concerns of the whole community. The consequences are a want of unity, 
regularity, and responsibility in the management of the prudential affairs of the Town. 
The evils of such a state of things have been hitherto diminished by the intelligence, 
prudence, and integrity of the different Boards that have been separately entrusted 
with the management of various branches of Town affairs, yet no skill nor integrity 
ran supply the deficiencies of the present system, which oblige the Town so frequently 
to trouble the Legislature with applications for minute local regulation. Trusting that 
the Town may continue to partake in the growing prosperity of the Commonwealth 
with which its own is so inseparably and entirely blended, the time must soon arrive 
when the inconveniences and losses incident to an impracticable form of government 
will he greatly and oppressively increased. The experience of actual disadvantages, 
:!KT with a principle of foresight, have convinced a majority of the citizens that 
the present moment of i aim in the public mind is a suitable one to adopt an altera- 
tion which will be not only a present relief, but a preventive remedy for dangerous 
tendencies. As the < itizens of this State, with a view to this case, have recently made 
.in amendment to the Constitution authorizing the erection of city governments, the 

1 [For the proceedings of the town leading to this petition, see Mr. Bugbee's chapter next pre- 

i i-ding. F.[>.] 



294 THE MEMORIAL HISTORY OF BOSTON. 

necessity of some change, it would appear, has become obvious not only to the inhab- 
itants of this Town, but to the majority of the Commonwealth. 

" For the reasons thus briefly stated, we pray your honorable Body to establish a 
City Government for the Town of Boston. 

" BOSTON, January 14, 1822. 

DANIEL MESSINGER. WILLIAM SULLIVAN. 

CHARLES JACKSON. GEORGE DARRICOTT. 

MICHAEL ROULSTON. GERRY FAIRBANKS. 

ISAAC WINSLOW. THOMAS BADGER. 

GEORGE BLAKE. JAMES DALEY. 

LEMUEL SHAW. HENRY FARNAM. 

W. TUDOR. WILLIAM STURGIS. 
LEWIS G. PRAY. 

This paper is endorsed as follows : 

"In House of Representatives, Jan. 15, 1822. Read and Com'd to the Com- 
mittee on Incorporation of Towns, etc. 

" Sent up for concurrence. JOSIAH QUINCY, Spkr. 

" In Senate, January 15, 1822. Read and concurred. JOHN PHILLIPS, Presid't." 

It is a notable fact that President Phillips became the first, and Speaker 
Quincy the second, mayor of the new city, the former filling the office 
one year, and Mr. Quincy five years. Two other presidents of the Senate 
have also been mayors of Boston, one of them, Harrison Gray Otis, pres- 
ident in 1808-10, and mayor in 182931; and the other, Josiah Quincy, 
Jr., president in 1842 and 1844, and mayor in 1846-48. Since then, two 
mayors of Boston have become governors of the Commonwealth, Alex- 
ander H. Rice, mayor in 1856-57, and governor in 1876-78; and William 
Gaston, mayor in 1871-72, and governor in 1875. The roll of the Boston 
Common Council of 1853 contains the names of two men who subsequently 
rose to the chief magistracy of the State, Henry J. Gardner and Alex- 
ander H. Rice. Chief-Justice Bigelow was a member of the Common 
Council from Ward Seven in 1843 ; and the Hon. Joseph A. Pond, president 
of the Senate in 1866-67, ar> d the Hon. Charles R. Train, late attorney- 
general of the Commonwealth, saw service in the same body. Before he 
became mayor, the Hon. Henry L. Pierce was a member of the popular 
branch of the General Court; and the number of those is legion who have 
held under both governments less distinguished but honorable offices. 

The reciprocal relations of Boston and the Commonwealth under the 
city charter, strictly interpreted, are purely official in their character, and 
form a subject of but narrow scope, differing in no principle from those exist- 
ing between the Commonwealth and her other municipalities. Seeking them 
in the city charter itself, we find the inhabitants of Boston made a corporation 
at their own request, and the administration of their fiscal and prudential 
concerns vested in a mayor, a board of aldermen, and a common council. 
All the powers formerly vested in the selectmen, either by statute or by the 
usages, votes, or by-laws of the town, and also the powers of county com- 



BOSTON AND THE COMMONWEALTH. 295 

inissioncrs, are given to the board of aldermen; and the aldermen and 
common council, acting concurrently as the city council, are endowed with 
authority to provide for the assessment and collection of taxes for all pur- 
poses for which towns may raise money, to appoint various executive offi- 
cers, and even to make by-laws and ordinances, with fines fur breach 
thereof. Hut these powers were by no means plenary, and with the increas- 
ingly rapid growth of the city came more and more frequent applications 
for fresh grants. So numerous did these become, that in 1870 the city 
council constituted a joint standing committee on legislative matters, whose 
duty it is to advocate or oppose measures at the State I louse as the city's 
.nterest demands. During the session of the General Court of 1879 some 
thirty matters directly affecting the city of Boston were presented, eight of 
them petitions from the city government, and the average each session for 
the past ten years has been about twenty-five. The legislation respecting 
Boston bridges will serve as an example of how much has been required. 
The Boston South Bridge, now known as the Dover-Street Bridge, was sold 
to the city by the original proprietors (among whom were William Tudor 
and Harrison Gray Otis), under an act of the General Court of 1831 ; and 
another act was passed in 1876, authorizing the widening of the bridge to 
sixty feet. The Federal-Street Bridge was established by a corporation (the 
Boston Free Bridge) created by an act of the General Court under which 
the city purchased the property. The Mount Washington-Avenue Bridge 
was acquired by the city under a similar act. The Broadway Bridge was 
built by the city under chapter 188 of the acts of 1866; the Congress-Street 
Bridge, under chapter 326 of acts of 1868, and nearly, if not quite, all the 
smaller bridges were bought from private proprietors under special laws. 
The Charles-River and Warren bridges were turned over to the cities of 
Boston and Charlestown by chapter 322 of act of 1868 and acts amendatory 
thereof. It was by commissioners appointed under chapter 302 of acts of 
1870 that the expense of maintaining the West-Boston and Craigie's bridges 
was apportioned between Boston and Cambridge ; and the legislature has 
been called upon more than once to decide disputes between Boston and 
Chelsea over the maintenance of the Chelsea bridge. In 1874 acts were 

il granting authority for the building of a bridge by Boston and Cam- - 
bridge, from a point on Beacon Street across the Charles River to Cam- 
bridge, and also a bridge to form part of an avenue from Brattle Square, 
Cambridge, to Market Street, Brighton ; but neither has been constructed. 
The Cochituate water supply, the Boston registration and election laws, and 
hundreds of matters, ranging in moment from the purity of the ballot-box 
to the regulation of street-corner peanut-stands, have been subjects of leg- 
islation, the briefest history of which is too voluminous to attempt within 
these limits. 

The great fire of Nov. 9 and 10, 1872, was the occasion of a special 
session of the General Court, which convened November 19. His Ex- 
cellency Governor Washburn, in his address to the Legislature, said: 



296 THE MEMORIAL HISTORY OF BOSTON. 

" Th