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Robert Treat Paine Papers, Volume 4

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From Samuel P. Savage
Savage, Samuel P. RTP
War Office 10th Aprl. 1778 Sir,

This Board1 having at present before us a Matter of Consequence which requires an immediate decision, are very desirous of Your Opinion thereon, and earnestly request if the business of Govermt. will admit of your coming to Town that you would favor us wt. your Company for an hour; if it will not you will be so good as to let us know it as soon as may be by a line.

We are Sir wt. great Respect Yr. most hble. Servt., Sam Phps. Savage2 Prest. per Order

RC ; addressed: “Hono. R. T. Pain Esqr. Attorney General Roxbury”; endorsed.

31 1.

On Oct. 29, 1776, the Massachusetts House of Representatives established a board of war “to order, & direct the operations of the Forces in the pay of this State, both by Sea, and Land; by giving the Commanders of the Troops, Garrisons, and Vessels of War such orders for their Conduct, & Cruises from time, to time, as they shall think proper such orders to be signed in their Name by the President of said Board, or in his absence, by the member thereof officiating as President pro tempore” (The Acts and Resolves, Public and Private, of the Province of the Massachusetts Bay, 1775–1776 [Boston, 1918], Chapter 455 [1776–1777], 625-626). The initial board consisted of James Bowdoin, George Whitcomb, Joseph Palmer, Henry Bromfield, Samuel P. Savage, James Prescott, Samuel Allyne Otis, Jonathan Jackson, and Jonathan Glover (Journals of the House of Representatives, 52, pt. 2:139).

2.

Samuel Phillips Savage (1718–1797) was a prominent merchant in Boston until 1764 when he and his brother dissolved their firm. The following year, Savage moved to Weston, Mass., where he resided for the remainder of his life. He served as a judge in the Middlesex County courts and as a representative from Weston in the Provincial Congress of 1774. On Oct. 30, 1776, Savage was among nine men appointed to the newly created Board of War and was quickly made president, a position he retained until the board was dissolved at the end of the Revolution (NEHGR 67[1913]:313–314).