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Volume 4: Index: Index 23[about this page]

 
View the Front matter View the Account (mansucript), 1773, Joshua Pico's account Index  

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    H

  • Hutchinson , Govr. much
    blamed for delivering the Castle to the Re-
    gular
    Troops: queries propounded to him
    on that subject, &c,
    47.
  • - - - his Speech to the Genr.
    Court, will let them set in Boston, if they
    wont deny the kings Right to remove them
    by instructions, &c, &c, and purposes the
    erection of new Courts, &c.
    59.
  • - - - he has done more real
    hurt to new England, than can be easily
    imagined.
    61.
  • - - - his Speech to the General
    Court when he dissolved them: insists that
    the King has a right to keep the Court
    where he thinks proper.
    69.
  • - - - Comments on the above
    Speech: his political character set in an ill
    light.
    71,72,73.
  • - - - his Speech to the General
    Court on the opening of it at the Election.
    88.
  • - - - his reply to the message of
    the House: tells them he will remove the
    Court if he can, consistent with his duty
    to the King, &c.
    90.
  • - - - his message to the House,
    desires them to explain something in their
    message, &c,
    92.
  • - - - his reply to the message
    of the House: tells them that he will
    not remove the Court to Boston, while they
    dispute the Kings Right, &c.
    Ibid.
  • - - - censured for his conduct re-
    lative
    to his removal of the Court to Bos-
    ton
    .
    92,93,96,97,179.
  • - - - his character as a politician.
    Ibid.
  • - - - on his independancy.
    97.
  • - - - his reply to the message of
    the House about his pay from the King:
    acknowledges he pays him, &c,
    Ibid.
  • See Up.

    H

  • Hutchinson Governor, censured;
    said not to have even an instruction to keep the
    Court at Cambridge.
    100,104.
  • - - - he will be the ruin of
    the Country.
    108.
  • - - - his message to the House,
    demands a copy of their resolves, respecting his
    pay from the Crown.
    112.
  • - - - not such a Governor as the
    People consented to, if independant.
    Ib.
  • - - - his message to the House: de-
    sires
    them to repair the Province House, &c,
    116.
  • - - - his message to the House, in
    answer to their resolves respecting the having
    his pay from the Crown: Justifies it, and
    defines the Charter, &c.
    Ibid.
  • - - - very disinterested, &c, instances
    of it; an Irony.
    121.
  • - - - holds doctrines treasonable to
    the State,
    124,125,132,135,140,159.
  • - - - his Speech commented on,

    119,128,132,135,136,140,159.
  • - - - a smart epistle to him, enu-
    merating
    our grievances, tells him the people,
    will recur to the law of Nature.
    156.
  • - - - the chief promoter of the
    Judge's independancy.
    Ibid.
  • - - - stigmatized in England, called
    a Tool, &c,
    164.
  • - - - a Tyrant.
    170.
  • - - - a petition that he may
    meet with the same fate, that Charles the 1st
    did.
    Ibid.
  • - - - a message to him from the
    Town of Boston, on the independancy of
    the Judges.
    175.
  • - - - his reply to the message, de-
    clines
    informing them.
    176.
  • - - - a petition to him from the
    Town of Boston, on the same subject.
    Ibid.
  • - - - his reply to the petition of
    the Town of Boston: tells them he cannot
    comply with their request to let the Court meet,
    and prorogues it further.
    177.
  • - - - his Speech to the General
    Assembly, asserts that the Parliament have a
    supreme right over us.
    213.
  • See Over.

    Sequence Number 25 of 1364; Volume 4 of 4.

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