Title: The Loyalists of Massachusetts and the Other Side of the American Revolution
Author: James Henry Stark
Release date: March 31, 2012 [eBook #39316]
Language: English
Credits: Produced by Andrew Wainwright, Jonathan Ingram and the
Online Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net
(This file was produced from images generously made
available by The Internet Archive/Canadian Libraries)
"History makes men wise."—Bacon.
W. B. CLARKE CO.
26 Tremont Street
Boston
COPYRIGHTED 1907
BY
JAMES H. STARK
To
The Memory of the Loyalists
of
The Massachusetts Bay
WHOSE FAITHFUL SERVICES AND MEMORIES ARE NOW FORGOTTEN
BY THE NATION THEY SO WELL SERVED, THIS
WORK IS DEDICATED BY THE
AUTHOR
| INTRODUCTION | 5 |
| CHAPTER I | |
| THE FIRST CHARTER | 7 |
| CHAPTER II | |
| THE SECOND CHARTER | 16 |
| CHAPTER III | |
| CAUSES THAT LED TO THE AMERICAN REVOLUTION | 27 |
| CHAPTER IV | |
| BOSTON MOBS AND THE COMMENCEMENT OF THE REVOLUTION | 40 |
| CHAPTER V | |
| THE LOYALISTS OF MASSACHUSETTS | 54 |
| CHAPTER VI | |
| THE REVOLUTIONIST | 68 |
| CHAPTER VII | |
| INDIANS IN THE REVOLUTION | 88 |
| CHAPTER VIII | |
| THE EXPULSION OF THE LOYALISTS AND THE SETTLEMENT OF CANADA | 93 |
| CHAPTER IX | |
| THE WAR OF 1812 AND THE ATTEMPTED CONQUEST OF CANADA | 98 |
| CHAPTER X | |
| THE CIVIL WAR AND THE PART TAKEN BY GREAT BRITAIN IN SAME | 107 |
| CHAPTER XI | |
| RECONCILIATION. THE DISMEMBERED EMPIRE REUNITED IN BONDS OF FRIENDSHIP. "BLOOD IS THICKER THAN WATER." | 113 |
| PART II | |
| BIOGRAPHICAL SKETCHES OF THE LOYALISTS OF MASS. | 122 |
| THE ADDRESS OF THE MERCHANTS AND OTHERS OF BOSTON TO GOVERNOR HUTCHINSON | 123 |
| ADDRESS OF THE BARRISTERS AND ATTORNEYS OF MASSACHUSETTS TO GOVERNOR HUTCHINSON | 125 |
| ADDRESS OF THE INHABITANTS OF MARBLEHEAD TO GOVERNOR HUTCHINSON | 127 |
| ADDRESS TO GOVERNOR HUTCHINSON FROM HIS FELLOW TOWNSMEN IN THE TOWN OF MILTON | 128 |
| ADDRESS PRESENTED TO GOVERNOR GAGE ON HIS ARRIVAL AT SALEM | 131 |
| ADDRESS TO GOVERNOR GAGE ON HIS DEPARTURE | 132 |
| LIST OF INHABITANTS OF BOSTON WHO REMOVED TO HALIFAX WITH THE ARMY MARCH, 1776 | 133 |
| MANDAMUS COUNSELLORS | 136 |
| THE BANISHMENT ACT OF MASSACHUSETTS | 137 |
| THE WORCESTER RESOLUTION RELATING TO THE ABSENTEES AND REFUGEES | 141 |
| THE CONFISCATION ACT | 141 |
| CONSPIRACY ACT | 141 |
| ABSENTEES ACT | 143 |
| BIOGRAPHIES | |
| THOMAS HUTCHINSON | 145 |
| LIST OF GOV. HUTCHINSON'S CONFISCATED ESTATES IN SUFFOLK COUNTY | 174 |
| THOMAS HUTCHINSON, SON OF THE GOVERNOR | 175 |
| ELISHA HUTCHINSON | 177 |
| FOSTER HUTCHINSON | 177 |
| ELIAKIM HUTCHINSON | 178 |
| LIST OF ELIAKIM HUTCHINSON'S CONFISCATED ESTATES IN SUFFOLK COUNTY | 180 |
| ANDREW OLIVER—LIEUT. GOVERNOR | 181 |
| THOMAS OLIVER | 183 |
| PETER OLIVER—CHIEF JUSTICE | 188 |
| SIR FRANCIS BERNARD | 191 |
| SIR WILLIAM PEPPERRELL | 205 |
| JOHN SINGLETON COPLEY AND HIS SON LORD LYNDHURST | 216 |
| KING HOOPER OF MARBLEHEAD | 221 |
| WILLIAM BOWES | 224 |
| CONFISCATED ESTATES OF WILLIAM BOWES IN SUFFOLK COUNTY | 225 |
| GENERAL TIMOTHY RUGGLES | 225 |
| THE FANEUIL FAMILY OF BOSTON | 229 |
| THE COFFIN FAMILY OF BOSTON. ADMIRAL SIR ISAAC COFFIN SIR THOMAS ASTON COFFIN ADMIRAL FROMAN H. COFFIN GENERAL JOHN COFFIN | 233 |
| CONFISCATED ESTATES OF JOHN COFFIN IN SUFFOLK COUNTY | 246 |
| JUDGE SAMUEL CURWEN | 246 |
| JAMES MURRAY | 254 |
| SIR BENJAMIN THOMPSON—COUNT RUMFORD | 261 |
| COL. RICHARD SALTONSTALL | 272 |
| REV. MATHER BYLES | 275 |
| THE HALLOWELL FAMILY OF BOSTON | 281 |
| CONFISCATED ESTATES OF BENJAMIN HALLOWELL IN SUFFOLK COUNTY | 284 |
| THE VASSALLS | 285 |
| CONFISCATED ESTATES OF JOHN VASSALL IN SUFFOLK COUNTY | 290 |
| GENERAL ISAAC ROYALL | 290 |
| GENERAL WILLIAM BRATTLE | 294 |
| CONFISCATED ESTATE OF WILLIAM BRATTLE IN BOSTON | 297 |
| JOSEPH THOMPSON | 297 |
| COLONEL JOHN ERVING | 298 |
| CONFISCATED ESTATES BELONGING TO COL. JOHN ERVING | 299 |
| MAJOR GENERAL SIR DAVID OCTHERLONY | 299 |
| JUDGE AUCHMUTY'S FAMILY | 301 |
| CONFISCATED ESTATES OF ROBERT AUCHMUTY | 305 |
| COLONEL ADINO PADDOCK | 305 |
| CONFISCATED ESTATES OF ADINO PADDOCK IN SUFFOLK COUNTY | 308 |
| THEOPHILUS LILLIE | 308 |
| CONFISCATED ESTATES IN SUFFOLK COUNTY BELONGING TO THEOPHILUS LILLIE | 313 |
| DR. SYLVESTER GARDINER | 313 |
| CONFISCATED ESTATES IN SUFFOLK COUNTY BELONGING TO SYLVESTER GARDINER | 317 |
| RICHARD KING | 317 |
| CHARLES PAXTON | 318 |
| JOSEPH HARRISON | 319 |
| CAPTAIN MARTIN GAY | 321 |
| CONFISCATED ESTATES IN SUFFOLK COUNTY BELONGING TO MARTIN GAY | 325 |
| DANIEL LEONARD | 325 |
| JUDGE GEORGE LEONARD | 332 |
| COLONEL GEORGE LEONARD | 333 |
| HARRISON GRAY—RECEIVER GENERAL OF MASSACHUSETTS | 334 |
| CONFISCATED ESTATES IN SUFFOLK COUNTY BELONGING TO HARRISON GRAY | 337 |
| REV. WILLIAM WALTER, RECTOR OF TRINITY CHURCH | 338 |
| CONFISCATED ESTATES IN SUFFOLK COUNTY BELONGING TO REV. WILLIAM WALTER | 342 |
| THOMAS AMORY | 343 |
| REV. HENRY CANER | 346 |
| CONFISCATED ESTATES IN SUFFOLK COUNTY BELONGING TO REV. HENRY CANER | 349 |
| FREDERICK WILLIAM GEYER | 350 |
| CONFISCATED ESTATES IN SUFFOLK COUNTY BELONGING TO FREDERICK WILLIAM GEYER | 351 |
| THE APTHORP FAMILY OF BOSTON | 351 |
| CONFISCATED ESTATES IN SUFFOLK COUNTY BELONGING TO CHARLES WARD APTHORP | 354 |
| THE GOLDTHWAITE FAMILY OF BOSTON | 355 |
| CONFISCATED ESTATES IN SUFFOLK COUNTY BELONGING TO JOSEPH GOLDTHWAIT | 361 |
| JOHN HOWE | 361 |
| SAMUEL QUINCY, SOLICITOR GENERAL | 364 |
| COLONEL JOHN MURRAY | 376 |
| JUDGE JAMES PUTNAM, ATTORNEY GENERAL OF MASSACHUSETTS BAY | 378 |
| JUDGE TIMOTHY PAINE | 382 |
| DR. WILLIAM PAINE | 385 |
| JOHN CHANDLER | 388 |
| JOHN GORE | 392 |
| JOHN JEFFRIES | 394 |
| THOMAS BRINLEY | 395 |
| CONFISCATED ESTATES IN SUFFOLK COUNTY BELONGING TO THOMAS BRINLEY | 397 |
| REV. JOHN WISWELL | 398 |
| HENRY BARNES | 399 |
| THOMAS FLUCKER, SECRETARY OF MASSACHUSETTS BAY | 402 |
| MARGARET DRAPER | 404 |
| CONFISCATED ESTATES IN SUFFOLK COUNTY BELONGING TO MARGARET DRAPER | 405 |
| RICHARD CLARKE | 405 |
| PETER JOHONNOT | 409 |
| CONFISCATED ESTATES IN SUFFOLK COUNTY BELONGING TO PETER JOHONNOT | 411 |
| JOHN JOY | 411 |
| RICHARD LECHMERE | 413 |
| CONFISCATED ESTATES IN SUFFOLK COUNTY BELONGING TO RICHARD LECHMERE | 414 |
| EZEKIEL LEWIS | 414 |
| BENJAMIN CLARK | 415 |
| LADY AGNES FRANKLAND | 417 |
| COLONEL DAVID PHIPS | 418 |
| THE DUNBAR FAMILY OF HINGHAM | 421 |
| EBENEZER RICHARDSON | 422 |
| COMMODORE JOSHUA LORING | 423 |
| CONFISCATED ESTATES IN SUFFOLK COUNTY BELONGING TO JOSHUA LORING | 426 |
| ROBERT WINTHROP | 426 |
| NATHANIEL HATCH | 429 |
| CONFISCATED ESTATES IN SUFFOLK COUNTY BELONGING TO NATHANIEL HATCH | 430 |
| CHRISTOPHER HATCH | 430 |
| WARD CHIPMAN | 431 |
| GOVERNOR EDWARD WINSLOW | 433 |
| CONFISCATED ESTATES IN SUFFOLK COUNTY BELONGING TO ISAAC WINSLOW | 439 |
| SIR ROGER HALE SHEAFFE, BARONET | 439 |
| JONATHAN SAYWARD | 443 |
| DEBLOIS FAMILY | 445 |
| CONFISCATED ESTATES IN SUFFOLK COUNTY BELONGING TO GILBERT DEBLOIS | 446 |
| LYDE FAMILY | 447 |
| CONFISCATED ESTATES IN SUFFOLK COUNTY BELONGING TO EDWARD LYDE | 447 |
| JAMES BOUTINEAU | 448 |
| CONFISCATED ESTATES IN SUFFOLK COUNTY BELONGING TO JAMES BOUTINEAU | 449 |
| COL. WILLIAM BROWNE | 449 |
| ARCHIBALD CUNNINGHAM | 451 |
| CAPTAIN JOHN MALCOMB | 451 |
| THE RUSSELL FAMILY OF CHARLESTOWN | 452 |
| EZEKIEL RUSSELL | 453 |
| JONATHAN SEWALL | 454 |
| CONFISCATED ESTATES IN SUFFOLK COUNTY BELONGING TO SAMUEL SEWALL | 457 |
| THOMAS ROBIE | 457 |
| BENJAMIN MARSTON | 459 |
| HON. BENJAMIN LYNDE, CHIEF JUSTICE OF MASSACHUSETTS | 462 |
| PAGAN FAMILY | 464 |
| THE WYER FAMILY OF CHARLESTOWN | 465 |
| JEREMIAH POTE | 467 |
| EBENEZER CUTLER | 468 |
| APPENDIX | |
| THE TRUE STORY CONCERNING THE KILLING OF THE TWO SOLDIERS AT CONCORD BRIDGE, APRIL 19, 1775. THE FIRST BRITISH SOLDIER KILLED IN THE REVOLUTIONARY WAR | 471 |
| THE ENGAGEMENT AT THE NORTH BRIDGE IN CONCORD WHERE THE TWO SOLDIERS WERE KILLED | 476 |
| PAUL REVERE, THE SCOUT OF THE REVOLUTION | 477 |
| WILLIAM FRANKLIN, SON OF BENJAMIN FRANKLIN | 481 |
| THE ROYAL COAT OF ARMS | 482 |
| JUDGE MELLEN CHAMBERLAIN'S OPINION OF COLONEL THOMAS GOLDTHWAITE | 483 |
| NOTE ON PELHAM'S MAP OF BOSTON | 483 |
| NOTE ON GOV. JOHN WINTHROP | 483 |
| LIST OF LOYALISTS WHOSE NAMES OR BIOGRAPHIES ARE NOT FOUND IN THIS WORK | 484 |
| PELHAM'S MAP OF BOSTON IN POCKET IN THE BACK COVER. |
The author wishes to acknowledge the great assistance he has received from the New England Historic Genealogical Society, of which he has been a member for twenty-eight years,—whose library consisting of biographies and genealogies is the most complete in America. Other authorities consulted, have been the "Royalist" records in the original manuscript preserved in the archives of the State of Massachusetts, the Record Commissioners' Reports of the City of Boston, the Proceedings of the Massachusetts Historical Society, and the numerous town histories, and ancient records published in recent years, to the most important of which he has acknowledged his obligations in the reference given, and also to the Boston Athenaeum for the use of their paintings and engravings, in making copies of same.
He also wishes to acknowledge the assistance rendered him by his daughter, Mildred Manton Stark, in preparing many of the biographies, also the assistance rendered by Mr. Thomas F. O'Malley, who prepared the very copious index to this work, which will, he thinks be appreciated by all historical students who may have occasion to use same.
| Thomas Hutchinson's Portrait, Opposite the title page. | |||
| James H. Stark, Portrait, | Opposite | Page | 7. |
| Landing of the Commissioners at Boston, 1664, | " | " | 13. |
| Randolph threatened, | " | " | 15. |
| Proclaiming King William and Queen Mary, | " | " | 17. |
| Killing and scalping Father Rasle at Norridgewock, | " | " | 32. |
| Reading the Stamp Act in King street, opposite the State House, | " | " | 37. |
| Andrew Oliver, Stamp Collector attacked by the Mob, | " | " | 41. |
| Bostonians paying the Exciseman or Tarring and Feathering, | " | " | 49. |
| Colonel Mifflin's Interview with the Caughnawaga Indians, | " | " | 89. |
| Cartoon illustrating Franklin's diabolical Scalp story, | " | " | 91. |
| Burning of Newark, Canada, by United States Troops, | " | " | 103. |
| Burning of Jay in Effigy, | " | " | 105. |
| Map, Boundary line between Maine and New Brunswick, | " | " | 115. |
| Governor Hutchinson's House Destroyed by the Mob, | Page | 155. | |
| Benjamin Franklin Before the Privy Council, | Opposite | Page | 165. |
| Views from Governor Hutchinson's Field, | Page | 168. | |
| Governor Hutchinson's House on Milton Hill, | " | 170. | |
| Inland View from Governor Hutchinson's House, | Page | 171. | |
| Andrew Oliver, portrait, | Opposite | Page | 181. |
| Andrew Oliver Mansion, Washington street, Dorchester, | " | " | 183. |
| Thomas Oliver and John Vassall Mansion, Dorchester, | " | " | 185. |
| Revolutionists Marching to Cambridge, | " | " | 187. |
| Sir Francis Bernard, Portrait, | " | " | 191. |
| Province House, | " | " | 195. |
| Pepperell House, | " | " | 210. |
| Reception of the American Loyalists in England, | Page | 214. | |
| Arrest of William Franklin by order of Congress, | Opposite | Page | 215. |
| John Singleton Copley, Portrait, | " | " | 218. |
| Lord Lyndhurst, Lord High Chancellor of England, Portrait, | " | " | 221. |
| King Hooper Mansion, Danvers, | " | " | 223. |
| Admiral Sir Isaac Coffin, Portrait, | " | " | 239. |
| Curwin House, Salem, | Page | 247. | |
| Samuel Curwin, Portrait, | Opposite | Page | 253. |
| Country Residence of James Smith, Brush Hill, Milton, | Page | 256. | |
| Birthplace of Benjamin Thompson, North Woburn, | " | 261. | |
| Sir Benjamin Thompson, Portrait, | Opposite | Page | 267. |
| Rev. Mather Byles, D. D., Portrait, | " | " | 277. |
| The Old Vassall House, Cambridge, | " | " | 285. |
| Colonel John Vassall's Mansion, Cambridge, | " | " | 289. |
| General Isaac Royall's Mansion, Medford, | " | " | 293. |
| Major General Sir David Ochterlony, Portrait, | " | " | 299. |
| British Troops preventing the destruction of New York, | " | " | 303. |
| Landing a Bishop, Cartoon, | " | " | 341. |
| Rev. Henry Caner, Portrait, | " | " | 349. |
| Leonard Vassall and Frederick W. Geyer Mansion, | " | " | 351. |
| Bishop's Palace, Residence of Rev. East Apthorp, | " | " | 353. |
| Samuel Quincy, Portrait, | " | " | 369. |
| Dr. John Jeffries, Portrait, | " | " | 395. |
| Clark-Frankland House, | " | " | 417. |
| Sir Roger Hale Sheaffe, Baronet, Portrait, | " | " | 439. |
| The Engagement at the North Bridge in Concord, | " | " | 471. |
| Monument to Commemorate the Skirmish at Concord Bridge, | " | " | 475. |
| Pursuit and Capture of Paul Revere, | " | " | 479. |
| Pelham Map of Boston, In the envelop of the back cover. |
At the dedication of the monument erected on Dorchester Heights to commemorate the evacuation of Boston by the British, the oration was delivered by that Nestor of the United States Senate, Senator Hoar.
In describing the government of the colonies at the outbreak of the Revolution, he made the following statement: "The government of England was, in the main, a gentle government, much as our fathers complained of it. Her yoke was easy and her burden was light; our fathers were a hundred times better off in 1775 than were the men of Kent, the vanguard of liberty in England. There was more happiness in Middlesex on the Concord, than there was in Middlesex on the Thames."[1] A few years later Hon. Edward B. Callender, a Republican candidate for mayor of Boston, in his campaign speech said: "I know something about how this city started. It was not made by the rich men or the so-called high-toned men of Boston—they were with the other party, with the king; they were Loyalists. Boston was founded by the ordinary man—by Paul Revere, the coppersmith; Sam Adams, the poor collector of the town of Boston, who did not hand over to the town even the sums he collected as taxes; by John Hancock, the smuggler of rum; by John Adams, the attorney, who naively remarked in his book that after the battle of Lexington they never heard anything about the suits against John Hancock. Those were settled."[2]
These words of our venerable and learned senator and our State Senator Edward B. Callender, seemed strangely unfamiliar to us who had derived our history of the Revolution from the school text-books. These had taught us that the Revolution was due solely to the oppression and tyranny of the British, and that Washington, Franklin, Adams, Hancock, Otis, and the host of other Revolutionary patriots, had in a supreme degree all the virtues ever exhibited by men in their respective spheres, and that the Tories or Loyalists, such as Hutchinson, the Olivers, Saltonstalls, Winslows, Quincys and others, were to be detested and their memory execrated for their abominable and unpatriotic actions.
This led me to inquire and to examine whether there might not be two sides to the controversy which led to the Revolutionary War. I soon found that for more than a century our most gifted writers had almost uniformly suppressed or misrepresented all matter bearing upon one side of the question, and that it would seem to be settled by precedent that this nation could not be trusted with all portions of its own history. But it seemed to me that history should know no concealment. The people have a right to the whole truth, and to the full benefit of unbiased historical teachings, and if, in an honest attempt to discharge a duty to my fellow citizens, I relate on unquestionable authority facts that politic men have intentionally concealed, let no man say that I wantonly expose the errors of the fathers.
In these days we are recognizing more fully than ever the dignity of history, we are realizing that patriotism is not the sole and ultimate object of its study, but the search for truth, and abiding by the truth when found, for "the truth shall make you free" is an axiom that applies here as always.
Much of the ill will towards England which until recently existed in great sections of the American people, and which the mischief-making politician could confidently appeal to, sprung from a false view of what the American Revolution was, and the history of England was, in connection with it. The feeling of jealousy and anger, which was born in the throes of the struggle for independence, we indiscriminately perpetuated by false and superficial school text-books. The influence of false history and of crude one-sided history is enormous. It is a natural and logical step that when our children pass from our schoolroom into active life, feelings so born should die hard and at times become a dangerous factor in the national life, and it is not too much to say that the persistent ill will towards England as compared with the universal kindliness of English feeling towards us, is to be explained by the very different spirit in which the history of the American Revolution is taught in the schools of one country and in those of the other.