A website from the Massachusetts Historical Society; founded 1791.

Robert Treat Paine Papers, Volume 3

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From Joseph Greenleaf
Greenleaf, Joseph RTP
Boston Sept. 13th. 1774. Dear Sr.,

I recd. yrs. of 22d. ultimo1 & have Sent it to your wife. We hear almost every week from Taunton, your family are all well, the agitations occasioned by the new counceller in Taunton rather diverts than Surprises our friends there.2

General Gage continues to fortifying the south ent’rence of the town. I fear if he doth not desist he will get himself into trouble.3 The spirits of the people want calming, tis difficult to keep the country back, they are making the greatest millitary preparations & we could soon muster a very formidable army; & was it not that the congress is setting we should soon have an example of American prowess. We expect great things from your councils, I hope we shall not be too impatient. The Town by their selectmen, & a committee from this county, have had several conferences with Gage as you will see by the papers4 & the intelligence by Mr. Revere,5 by whome I did intend to have wrote to you. I intend this by Dr. Loring6 who sets out tomorrow morning.

Any services that I am capable to do your family in your absence I shall chearfully do as I have informed sister. I wish you & all the members of the congress, wisdom as angels of God, your task is arduous, & requires more than human sagacity. May you be the means of restoring freedom to America & a happy lasting Union between her and Great Britton, that we may be happy in our future connections till the luminarys of heaven are all extinct.

We are in tolerable health, my wife & children Joyn in wishing you health & a happy return to yr. family & friends. I am Dr. Sr. yr. affectionate brother,

Jos: Greenleaf

RC ; addressed: “For Robert Treat Paine Esqr. In Philadelphia favr. Dr. Loring”; endorsed.

1.

Not located.

2.

Daniel Leonard (1740–1829), appointed a mandamus councilor by Governor Gage on Aug. 15, was one of the few to take the oath. Later that month, a mob threatened his home in Taunton to attempt to force him to resign, but Leonard moved into Boston and remained there until the evacuation ( Sibley’s Harvard Graduates , 14:643–644).

2 3.

The punitive closing of Boston Harbor by means of the Boston Port Bill, supported by the arrival of additional troops throughout June and July 1775, provided the primary basis of the growing tensions in town. General Gage added further fears by fortifying Boston Neck, the sole land access, although he assured the citizens that his moves were only “to protect his Majesty’s Subjects and his Majesty’s Troops in this Town; and that he had no Intention of any Thing hostile against the Inhabitants” (Massachusetts Gazette and the Boston Weekly News-Letter, Sept. 8, 1774). The best treatment of the occupation and resultant siege remains Richard Frothingham, History of the Siege of Boston (4th ed.; Boston, 1873).

4.

Joseph Greenleaf had been appointed a part of Boston’s original committee of correspondence in 1772 and served that body throughout this period. On these activities, see Richard D. Brown, Revolutionary Politics in Massachusetts: The Boston Committee of Correspondence and the Towns, 1772–1774 (Cambridge, Mass., 1970). The Massachusetts Gazette and Boston Weekly News-Letter of Sept. 8, 1774, carries stories of Gage’s dismissal of John Hancock as captain of the Company of Cadets, the selectmen’s protest about the fortification of Boston Neck, and a further protest from the grand jurors of the county over abrogation of rights under the Charter.

5.

Paul Revere (1735–1819), the Boston silversmith, often rode expresses to Philadelphia during the Continental Congress.

6.

Probably Benjamin Loring (1754–1787) of Boston, a 1772 Harvard graduate. Loring is said to have studied medicine with Dr. Benjamin Rush in Philadelphia, but by 1775 he had joined the British army as a surgeon’s mate. He later purchased a surgeon’s commission and served until 1783. Loring died in London ( Sibley’s Harvard Graduates 18:129–131).