I have† concluded to mount my horse to-morrow morning at four, and ride to Wells to hear my old worthy, learned, ingenious friend Hemmenway*, whom I never was yet so happy as to hear. Mr. Winthrop¹ agrees to be my company. Wells is about fifteen miles from this place; from thence we propose to ride after the evening service is over to Saco, i.e., Biddeford, which is about thirty miles from here, which will leave us an easy journey to Falmouth for Monday.
Mr. Winthrop tells me that he has heard the late Governor Hutchinson², while he was Chief Justice, frequently say for seven years together, that Salem was the most proper, convenient, and suitable place in the province for the seat of government; that he frequently complimented the gentlemen of Salem with the happiness and convenience of their situation for the seat of government, and with his prophecies that it would certainly be made such in a course of years. I mentioned this to Judge Trowbridge³, and he told me that he himself remembered to have heard him say so too. And I remember I happened to be with Kent when he carried to Judge Lynde‡ his commission as Chief Justice, and Judge Lynde entertained me for some time with conversation about making Salem the seat of government, and with the probable effects of such a measure; one of which he said would be a translation of a great part of the trade from Boston to Salem. But he said he did not want to have troops in Salem.
Now let any one who knows these anecdotes judge who was the suggester, planner, and promoter of this wrongheaded and iniquitous measure.
Safford, my barber, tells me, that his Minister Lyman is bribed to be a Tory. He says that whenever Deacon Sayward has a vessel arrive, he sends the parson ten gallons of rum, two or three hundred of sugar, ten gallons of wine, a barrel of flour, etc., etc., etc. He says “he thinks that all Toryism grows out of bribery.” I thought the barber’s observation as just and as memorable as Parson Moody’s doctrine “that when men know not what to do, they ought not to do they know not what.”
I write you this tittle-tattle, my dear, in confidence. You must keep these letters to yourself, and communicate them with great caution and reserve. I should advise you to put them up safe and preserve them. They may exhibit to our posterity a kind of picture of the manners, opinions, and principles of these times of perplexity, danger, and distress.
Deacon Sayward said at table this week in my hearing that there was but one point in which he differed in opinion from the late Governor Hutchinson, and that was with regard to the reality of witchcraft and the existence of witches. The Governor, he said, would not allow there was such a thing. The Deacon said he was loath to differ from him in anything; he had so great a regard for him and his opinions, that he was willing to give up almost everything rather than differ with him. But in this he could not see with him.
Such is the cant of this artful, selfish, hypocritical man.
Pray remember me to my dear little babes, whom I long to see running to meet me and climb up upon me under the smiles of their mother.
John Adams
York
2 July 1774
Footnotes:
† – For some reason, John doesn’t seem to begin his letters with the customary, “Dear Abigail”. He just starts off writing! He also very, very rarely signs his name at the end. Previously I had thought I’d add a “Dear” at the beginning and sign his name at the end, just to keep things familiar and clear to modern readers. But I’ve been thinking about this a lot and I’ve finally decided that I won’t add the “Dear” if he didn’t want it there, for whatever reason. So that’s that. I will, however, continue to put “John” at the end, so that I can include the information about where and when he wrote the letter. The few times when he did actually include a signature will be obvious in the forthcoming letters. Of course, I may change my mind and decide to remove that too. We’ll see. Work in progress and all that. ![]()
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* – Moses Hemmenway (1735-1811), a Harvard classmate and friend of John’s. He was minister at Wells, Maine, since 1759.
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¹ – Samuel Winthrop was clerk of the Superior Court of Judicature.
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² – Thomas Hutchinson (1711-1780) had just recently been replaced as the royally appointed governor of Massachusetts. He was horribly unpopular, and as such had become the focus for Whig resentment of British ministerial policies.
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³ – Edmund Trowbridge (1709-1793), a Superior Court Judge who was regarded by fellow lawyers and colleagues for his thorough nature and diligence as a lawyer.
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‡ – Benjamin Kent was a legal colleague of John’s. Judge Benjamin Lynde Jr. (1700-1782) had been appointed Chief Justice of the Massachusetts Superior Court in March 1771, but he resigned the position a year later and was replaced by Peter Oliver.
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