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Robert Treat Paine Papers, Volume 4

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Indictment

6 November 1781

From Nathaniel Freeman

19 November 1781
From Joseph Greenleaf
Greenleaf, Joseph RTP
Boston Saturday morning Novr. 18th. 1781 Sr.,

I recd. your letter Yesterday Just before sunset. This morning at 10 O’Clock the sessions sits, when I must attend, as I have a report to make there, being one of a comttee. for that purpose. Immediately after court, I must attend upon a tryal at my own office. At your request I have sent by Fredk. Reed, five counterfeit Bills which I took from Dr. Peter Emmerson of Townsend on the 12th. July 1780, he did not utter them, or offer them to any body, that I know of, I Suspected him by his company, & order’d him to be search’d for Counterfeit money, & found the above upon him; I then folded them, Inclos’d them & wrote upon them as you see & have had them in my possession every since. I now seal them & send them, I know no more of the matter, and cannot possibly attend in person for the reasons aforemention’d. Mr. Edes is an evidence agt. Tufton & first took him, Mr. Green is an evidence agt. Sampson & Emmerson & took the bills from both. They come volunarily as Witnesses and I hope you will see their expences paid.1

180

Mr. Edes will be the bearer of this.

I am &c. Joseph Greenleaf

RC ; addressed: “Honl. Robt. T. Paine Esqr. Cambridge”; endorsed.

1.

No charges were brought against Emerson or Sampson, but Thomas Sackville Tufton, a trader of Groton, was indicted on three separate counts of uttering false currency (Supreme Judicial Court Minute Books, Middlesex County, Dec. 1782. Massachusetts Judicial Archives, Boston, Mass.). The case was continued to the Apr. 1783 session at Concord, but Tufton did not appear and was declared an outlaw. The public notice to that effect was published by Sheriff Loammi Baldwin in the Independent Chronicle, Feb. 13, 1783. The case was not continued in subsequent courts, but Tufton was still listed as a resident of Groton when his estate was probated in 1788.