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Robert Treat Paine Papers, Volume 1

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To Eunice Paine

23 November 1754

To Richard Cranch

11 December 1754
To Thomas Paine
RTP Paine, Thomas
Boston Decr. 10th 1754 Honored Sir,

I Recd. yrs.1 per Capts. Triffery & Gay; In the last of which you complain of our neglecting to write by Capt. Nickols, the Reason of which was that abt. the same Time Capt. Homer sail'd by wm. we wrote largely.2 I am very certain that I put all the Keys into the Doctor's Chest, & the Key of the Globe case must needs be there. You left wth. me no papers but those of Ralph Morgan's relating to Cato, & the Deed of the Still house, which I got Recorded.3 I purpose to send this by Capt. Jones who will sail suddenly, by wm. Mr. Greenleaf will send you sundry things you wrote for. Since I wrote you my last I have been down to226Falmouth in order to see if there were any bread for a Lawyer. After a great deal of consultation I am determin'd to follow that practice, And inasmuch as the County of York will probably be soon divided, & Falmouth made a shire Town,4 I thought it must needs be a good place to settle in. I met with considerable Encouragment there, but I find it as expensive living as at Boston, & If I can contrive any way down there to support my self while I am persuing my studies & getting into practice, I doubt not I shall get ahead. There is but one Lawyer in that County & he lives at York;5 & if a new County be Created there must be some Lawyers & I don't doubt with diligent application to my studies I shall be qualified by that Time there being no Law books there to be borrow'd I must necessarily be at a great charge in buying; however hope my Practice will soon pay for it. With regard to mentaining my self at first, I purpose to take a small Schooll, & I can make some profit by keeping some few things to sell, & perhaps get some writing. I shall soon see if there be a prospect of much Law Business. The Gentlemen there tell me there is & encourage me considerably. I don't purpose to get behind hand, if I dont get forward by the scheme.6

I returnd yesterday Morning from Falmouth, & abt. 9 oClock I went on board Capt. Jones to see abt. shipping yr. things, & I unluckily sprained my Ancle in such a manner as obliged me to ride home, and I am now confind to my Room but hope for a speedy Recovery. This will hinder my prosecuting this scheme immediately. However being confin'd I study the closer, & have good opportunity of consulting in difficult points; I should be glad to live somewhere, that I might consult a Lawyer, but if I cant I must apply my self the closer; I remember to have heard you speak of some Land you have there. If you would write me word the circumstances of it possibly it may be recovered. I hope you are well & in agreable Circumstances. Yesterday Capt. Bruce arrived in whom came sundry officers for our Regiments here viz. Shirley's & Pepperell's & an Agent to transact the Military Business & also Orders for all half pay officers to return to Duty.7 I have not been out & so cant recite many perticulars, perhaps shall be able to inform you more by the next opportunity. Pray Sr. write me your opinion of the above recited Scheme of Living, & if you can make any amendments or propose any thing better should be glad to know yr. opinion.

I subscribe my self yr. much Obliged and Dubtifull son,

ROBERT-TREAT PAINE 227

RC ; addressed: "To Mr. Thomas Paine Mercht. Hallifax Per favr. Capt. Jones"; endorsed.

1.

Not located.

2.

The bill of lading for this shipment aboard the schooner Providence, John Homer, master, is in R. T. Paine Papers. Dated Nov. 7, 1754, it mentions three chests "&* on pair Iron Dogges."

3.

This reference is probably to the lease of Cato's services to Ralph Morgan, a Boston gentleman. The still-house was a half interest in a Boston distillery which Eunice Paine purchased from her brother-in-law, Joseph Greenleaf, on Sept. 23, 1754. She sold this back to him on Jan. 29, 1761 (Suffolk Deeds, 84:237, 96:136). See also, Thomas Paine to His Children, Halifax, June 26, 1756.

4.

Cumberland County was not erected until 1761 when Falmouth (now Portland) was made the shire town.

5.

Noah Emery (1699–1761) was Kings Attorney for the Province of Maine and actually resided at Kittery (James Deane Hopkins, "Members of the Bar of the County of Cumberland, State of Maine, from the Year 1700 to the Year 1838," American Quarterly Register 12[1840]: 274–284).

6.

RTP did not follow this course of action. Instead he went to Lancaster on Jan. 31, 1755, to live with his cousin Capt. Abijah Willard (1722–1789) and study for the law. Willard (a brother of Col, Samuel, Abel, and Levi Willard) commanded a company at Louisbourg in 1745 and another in the Nova Scotia campaign of 1755. He was appointed a mandamus councillor, but was forced to resign the position and became a commissary in the Britsh army. As a loyalist Willard later settled in Lancaster, New Brunswick, where he became a member of the Council of that province (Lorenzo Sabine, Biographical Sketches of Loyalists of the American Revolution, 2 vols. [Boston, 1864], 2:429–430; Willard, Willard Genealogy, 58–59).

7.

These orders together with a list of the officers are printed in The Boston Weekly News-Letter, Dec. 5, 1754.