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Correspondence of Thomas Hutchinson Volume 5
Correspondence of Thomas Hutchinson Volume 5
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€49.99
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A01=Thomas Hutchinson
american revolution
Author_Thomas Hutchinson
boston governors
boston history
boston tea party
Category=NHK
colonial boston
colonial massachusetts
eq_bestseller
eq_history
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
massachusetts history
Product details
- ISBN 9798986789408
- Dimensions: 178 x 254mm
- Publication Date: 15 May 2023
- Publisher: Colonial Society of Massachusetts
- Publication City/Country: US
- Product Form: Hardback
Volume Five covers the last years of Hutchinson’s governorship. The proliferation of committees of correspondence throughout the province in late 1772 prompted Hutchinson to make a major speech at the opening of the General Court in January 1773, laying out his understanding of the relationship between the colonies and Parliament. The speech prompted a series of rejoinders and counter rejoinders that dragged on throughout the winter. No sooner had the matter died down, then Samuel Adams announced he had in his possession “letters of an extraordinary nature” written by Hutchinson and others who sought to undermine the liberties of the citizens of Massachusetts. When eventually published, the letters, which appeared to have been stolen from the files of a highly-placed English official after his death, did not support the wild rumors Adams and others had promulgated, yet the damage was done and the legislature petitioned the crown for his removal. Hutchinson asked for leave to go to England to defend himself, but before permission arrived, news of the Tea Act reached Boston, precipitating a new controversy. Hutchinson’s refusal to allow the tea to be returned to England led directly to the Boston Tea Party and, in turn, to the passage of Coercive Acts by Parliament. Hutchinson felt powerless before the storm of controversy he had aroused and left Massachusetts on June 1, 1774, ostensibly to report on American affairs in London, but, in reality never, to return.
John W. Tyler is editor of publications for the Colonial Society of Massachusetts. He is the author of Smugglers & Patriots: Boston Merchants and the Advent of the American Revolution (1986) and related articles on the political and economic history of Revolutionary Boston. Margaret A. Hogan is an independent scholar and editorial consultant. She was previously the managing editor of the Adams Papers editorial project at the Massachusetts Historical Society and lead editor for the Adams Family Correspondence series.
Correspondence of Thomas Hutchinson Volume 5
€49.99
