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Patriots Page 63

by A. J. Langguth


  “. . . without hesitation he shall have it”: John Adams, Diary, III, 293.

  delegates call on Hutchinson: Wells, 1, 323.

  “Both regiments or none!”: Ibid.

  guilty of high treason: Bailyn, Ordeal, 159.

  “I can do nothing further.”: Zobel, 207.

  Hutchinson’s knees trembling: Warren and Adams, 1, 9.

  Hutchinson sees proof of plot: Bailyn, Ordeal, 161.

  “And take the troops with you.”: Zobel, 209.

  common grave: Kidder, 30.

  “. . . tyrants not one mile away?”: Ibid., 215.

  no excuse for delay: Samuel Adams, II, 18.

  “Sam Adams’s two regiments”: Beach, 196.

  Revere’s engraving: Forbes, 154–55.

  “God send thee a good deliverance.”: Zobel, 239.

  never convict Preston: Ibid., 245.

  “. . . harken to your evidence”: John Adams, Legal, I, 123.

  “. . . we must conform to the times.”: Kidder, 20.

  Jack’s testimony: Zobel, 258.

  Preston didn’t thank Adams: Forbes, 170.

  Quincy background: Ibid., 157–58.

  Samuel Adams on servant and master: Samuel Adams, II, 132.

  Carr’s testimony: Forbes, 160; Zobel, 286.

  Samuel Adams on Carr’s reliability: Forbes, 160.

  John Adams on mob: Zobel, 292.

  three brawlers at the ropeworks: Lemisch, 485.

  “. . . guilty of manslaughter.”: Wemms, 207–9.

  benefit of clergy: Burleigh, 95n.

  Montgomery confessed: Mayo, 33.

  “. . . a little more significant”: Hosmer, 192.

  patriots accused of plunder: Samuel Adams, II, 15–16.

  Samuel Adams on red cloak: Ibid., 124.

  Hutchinson accepts the governorship: Bailyn, Ordeal, 167.

  TEA: 1771–73

  “. . . Cursed be the day I was born.”: Miller, Adams, 219.

  Abigail Adams burst into tears: John Adams, Diary, III, 294.

  “Never in more misery . . .”: Ibid., II, 6.

  Samuel Adams letter to Hancock: Samuel Adams, II, 9.

  “. . . hope to see a good effect.”: Frothingham, Warren, 102.

  Hancock and cadets: Fowler, 136.

  promote Hancock to Council: Bailyn, Ordeal, 178.

  Hutchinson warns against Adams’ cunning: Fowler, 141; Wells, II, 12.

  tried where goods were confiscated: Bartlett, 7.

  hanged as pirates: Staples, 5.

  aboard the Gaspee: Bartlett, 15–24.

  Dudingston refuses to testify: Ibid., 25.

  Hutchinson’s response: Bailyn, Ordeal, 194; Wells, II, 14.

  burning five times as serious: K. G. Davis, 6.

  “. . . wash her hands in innocence.”: Wells, II, 16.

  Dudingston sends gold buckle: Bartlett, 24–45.

  “. . . make themselves ridiculous.”: Wells, II, 2.

  Adams-Warren exchange: Warren and Adams, I, 14, Dec. 9, 1772; Frothingham, Warren, 212.

  towns’ endorsements: Wells, II, 3.

  Adams didn’t believe letters useful: Ibid., 318.

  tyrants tremble: Bailyn, Ordeal, 240.

  Hancock swore: Miller, Adams, 280.

  Franklin on ruse: Bailyn, Ordeal, 24on.

  Adams as “Novanglus”: Ibid., 243.

  “. . . cries from the ground.”: Ibid., 249.

  Hutchinson on King David: Ibid., 251.

  Adams on Hancock’s tea: John Adams, Diary, II, 5.

  bribes for customs officers: Schlesinger, “Uprising,” 62.

  legal tea cost less: Ibid., 63.

  East India Co. second to Bank of England: Fowler, 154.

  Hutchinson’s sons licensed: Bailyn, Ordeal, 259. 175

  “. . . sake of gain.”: Dickinson, Writings, I, 459.

  first shipment from China: Labaree, Tea Party, 4.

  rheumatism and nervous fevers: Schlesinger, “Uprising,” 78.

  “. . . shall not be landed”: Frothingham, Warren, 240.

  Faneuil threatened: Francis Drake, xxix.

  “. . . trifling subject.”: Frothingham, Warren, 247.

  Dartmouth arrives: Goss, 1, 120.

  “. . . stares you in the face.”: Newell, 217.

  Hutchinson on Adams: Frothingham, Warren, 258.

  “that the tea should be returned . . .”: “Minutes of the Tea Meetings,” 10–11.

  watch committee appointed: Ibid., 11.

  “. . . representative of majesty?”: Bailyn, Ordeal, 261.

  Hutchinson’s response: Francis Drake, liv.

  “The ship must go . . .”: Ibid., lv.

  Hutchinson’s research: Labaree, Tea Party, 139.

  towns advised to appoint inspectors: Francis Drake, lix.

  Meeting agreed to extension: Ibid., lxvi.

  “A mob! A mob!”: Labaree, Tea Party, 141.

  “. . . to save the country.”: Goss, I, 127; Wells, II, 122.

  “Boston harbor a teapot tonight!”: Francis Drake, lxiv.

  “. . . do what is right in his own eyes.”: Forbes, 189.

  Edes and Mohawks: Francis Drake, lxxviii.

  Hewes: Thatcher, 61–112.

  Rhode Island crew: Maier, Resistance, 7.

  “The path is wide enough . . .”: Francis Drake, lxxx.

  “What a cup of tea . . .”: Ibid., lxxxii.

  onlookers underfoot: Labaree, Tea Party, 145.

  tea falling back on deck: Francis Drake, lxxxviii.

  “You had better make your will first!”: Thatcher, Hewes, 183.

  Montagu-Pitts exchange: Ibid., 185.

  “Well, George . . .”: Ibid., 187.

  wife more tea-drinker: Forbes, 192.

  “a little saltwater tea”: Ibid., 191–92.

  Sessions left town: Francis Drake, lxxx.

  Mackintosh: Anderson, 60–64.

  Hancock’s undisclosed interest: Hancock, 178n.

  “We are in perfect jubilee . . .”: Goss, I, 131.

  New York pact: Jensen, Founding, 446.

  “There is a dignity, a majesty . . .”: John Adams, Diary, II, 86.

  “Rally, Mohawks!”: Goss, I, 128.

  Dartmouth not informed: Labaree, Tea Party, 174.

  “. . . wild pretensions”: Channing, III, 133.

  Philadelphia throng: Wells, II, 129.

  “. . . bungling politician.”: Ibid., 43n.

  Hillsborough and Franklin: Bailyn, Ordeal, 232; Fennelly, 363.

  Dartmouth and Franklin: Bailyn, Ordeal, 254.

  “. . . a hundred grievances . . .”: Morison and Commager, 159.

  Wedderburn in Edinburgh: Mumby, 314.

  Wedderburn’s attack: Van Doren, Franklin, 469.

  Whatley sues Franklin: Bailyn, Ordeal, 257.

  Franklin on prison: Mumby, 317–18.

  PORT ACT: 1774

  Gage in London: George III, Correspondence with North, 164.

  Gage’s dull conversation: Miller, Origins, 398.

  Gage resembled Adams: Samuel Drake, 243.

  Gage had recommended troops for two years: Nichols, 140–44.

  Boston would be destroyed: Labaree, Tea Party, 183.

  Debate in Parliament: Bancroft, VI, 514; Channing, III, 135.

  colonies more a burden: Becker, Eve, 208.

  Gibbon on Port Act: Channing, III, 135.

  George III jeered: Bancroft, VI, 514.

  “. . . submit or triumph.”: Becker, Eve, 208.

  Merchants and North: Labaree, Tea Party, 193.

  another load of tea dumped: Bailyn, Ordeal, 270.

  Tory bills affecting Boston: Labaree, Tea Party, 195–96.

  Barré opposition: Ibid., 200.

  Gage could restore privileges: Mumby, 342.

  Gage’s reception in Boston: Leonard Larabee, 125.

  Hancock delivers Adams’ speech: Wells, II, 138.

  Hutchinson prepares to leave: Bailyn, Ordeal, 264–65.

  Oli
ver’s death: Ibid., 269.

  men overheard at funeral: Mumby, 329.

  Hutchinson’s tributes: Bailyn, Ordeal, 273.

  Adams’ disparagement: Miller, Adams, 301.

  Hutchinsons seasick: Bailyn, Ordeal, 274.

  Hutchinson’s interview with George III: Hutchinson, “Interview,” 326ff.

  Hutchinson hissed: Fowler, 173.

  hangmen with Port Act: Fiske, “Eve,” 359.

  Samuel Adams’ response to Port Act: Wells, II, 147.

  Adams solicited food: Ibid., 181.

  Committees pledged support: Ibid., 159.

  Adams reassured about break: Mumby, 319.

  Adams and Tories in House: Wells, II, 173–78.

  Gage and Boston strengths: Forbes, 213; Tourtellot, 86.

  farmers and fishermen send food: Fiske, “Eve,” 359.

  committee should be annihilated: Wells, II, 182.

  Adams’ fable: Ibid., 184.

  Gage to Dartmouth: Ibid., 186.

  “A guinea never glistened . . .”: Umbreit, 176–77.

  Fenton’s bribe: Wells, II, 195.

  “Tell General Gage . . .”: Fiske, “Eve,” 366.

  “United we stand . . .”: Meade, 311.

  A Summary View . . .: Jefferson, Jefferson, ed. Peterson, 105–22.

  tobacco exports to stop: Meade, 312.

  “. . . I know George will.”: Ibid., 315.

  CONGRESS: 1774–75

  Samuel Adams’ wardrobe: Wells, II, 208.

  coach and four: Boston Gazette, Aug. 15, 1774.

  John Adams’ reflections: John Adams, Diary, II, 100.

  watermelon: Ibid., 101.

  brick buildings: Ibid., 104.

  sumptuous breakfast: Ibid., 105.

  logic to avalanche: Ibid., 107.

  “. . . and talk away.”: Ibid., 109.

  Samuel Adams dangerous: Wells, II, 219.

  John Adams cold: John Adams, Diary, II, 115n.

  Lynch on Washington: Ibid., 117; III, 308.

  “We have not men fit for the times. . . .”: Ibid., II, 97.

  Randolph admired: Meade, 318.

  Henry’s reputation: John Adams, Diary, II, 113.

  Silas Deane wrote home: Burnett, Letters, I, 4.

  first vote: John Adams, Diary, II, 122.

  Thomson seemed to faint: Meade, 322.

  John Adams on quibbling: Ibid., 319.

  “. . . difficulty and distress.”: Ibid., 323.

  “. . . not a Virginian but an American.”: John Adams, Diary, II, 125.

  no man could speak twice: Burnett, Letters, I, 13.

  Duché praying: John and Abigail Adams, 76.

  “Power results from the real property . . .”: Burnett, Letters, I, 22.

  made Adams blush: John and Abigail Adams, 71.

  John Adams eating: Ibid., 78.

  Galloway’s plan: Miller, Adams, 322.

  Henry’s objection: Burnett, Letters, I, 53.

  Galloway fears mob: Miller, Adams, 323.

  Washington writes home: Burnett, Letters, I, 54n.

  Galloway on Samuel Adams: Ibid., 55.

  John Adams’ complaint: John and Abigail Adams, 78.

  Elizabeth Adams on Tories: Samuel Adams, Papers, Box 2, Sept. 12, 1774, Bancroft Collection.

  Dr. Benjamin Church wrote: Ibid., Sept. 29, 1774.

  Suffolk Resolves: Miller, Adams, 324.

  Henry and John Adams: John Adams, Diary, II, 151; Meade, 333.

  Gage discredited: Shy, Toward Lexington, 411.

  farmers march to Boston: Channing, III, 155–56.

  troops dissatisfied with Gage: Tourtellot, 86.

  troops caught in market: John Andrews, Letters, Aug. 20, 1774.

  cannon as signal: Ibid., Jan. 4, 1775.

  “. . . wish to make it your own.”: Mumby, 373.

  Burke’s argument: Fiske, “Eve,” 363.

  “We shall be forced . . .”: Pitt, Correspondence, IV, 379.

  Never! said Montagu: Lecky, 190.

  Dartmouth’s orders: Mumby, 376.

  Lydia Hancock and Dorothy Quincy: Fowler, 177.

  “. . . plunder the effects!”: Boston Evening Post, Sept. 19, 1774.

  Warren’s oration: Wells, II, 278–80.

  D’Bernicre and Brown’s mission: D’Bernicre, Instructions, 5–6.

  Hancock and British: Hancock, 191.

  Corps disbanded: Ibid., 185.

  Lydia Hancock leaves: Ibid., 182.

  complaint about chambermaid: Fowler, 168.

  Dorcas Griffith: Tourtellot, 62; Fowler, 169.

  Sally Jackson: Forbes, 73.

  Dorothy Quincy: Woodbury, 81.

  Jefferson on Henry’s nerve: George Morgan, 185.

  Henry’s speech: Ibid., 191–95.

  LEXINGTON: 1775

  Isaiah Thomas: Forbes, 236.

  “. . . die up to my knees in blood.”: Tudor, 466.

  Revere remarries: Farrington, 10.

  “. . . the bumpkins pronounce it easier.”: Forbes, 11.

  Revere advertises teeth: Dallas, 20.

  Revere didn’t powder hair: Forbes, 85.

  Concord hides cannon: Ibid., 237–38.

  Gage sends six hundred: Murdock, “British,” 71n.

  Smith’s spying mission: Forbes, 233.

  answer, “Patrol.”: Mackenzie, I, 18.

  matron informs Church: Forbes, 242.

  “You are the third person . . .”: Ibid.

  “The people here are a set . . .”: Murdock, Nineteenth, 18.

  “Why, the cannon at Concord.”: Forbes, 243.

  Robert Newman: Ibid., 244–45.

  flannel still warm: Ibid., 246.

  William Dawes: Tourtellot, 93.

  Revere’s ride to Lexington: Revere, Own Story and Three Accounts.

  Revere at parsonage: Farrington, 42–43.

  British uniforms: Ketchum, Decisive, 123.

  British throw away rations: Murdock, “British,” 73.

  Lexington Minute Men: Tourtellot, 129–30.

  men vote to disband: Ibid., 21–29.

  “. . . that hill called Beacon.”: Samuel Drake, 340.

  chaise prepared: Revere, Own Story, 19.

  Hancock-Quincy exchange: Woodbury, 68; Forbes, 255.

  Revere captured: Revere, Three Accounts.

  Minute Men reassembled: Narrative, 9.

  “If I had my musket . . .”: Tourtellot, III.

  Revere and trunk: Forbes, 256–57.

  Pitcairn had no intention: Tourtellot, 127.

  “Disperse, ye villains . . .”: Narrative, 6; Murdock, Nineteenth, 27.

  “. . . Form and surround them.”: Tourtellot, 131.

  Samuel Adams hears gunfire: Warren and Adams, 54.

  “. . . glorious morning for America.”: Wells, II, 294.

  “Do you know where a drummer is?”: Tourtellot, 137.

  “What’s that?”: Forbes, 258.

  hiding valuables: Fowler, 185

  fine salmon: Revere, Own Story, 19–20.

  Adams and Hancock in wood: Hancock, 194.

  salt pork and potatoes: Woodbury, 67.

  Marine sealed orders: Tourtellot, 182–83.

  “War’s begun . . .”: Allan, 33.

  Buttrick leads march: Tourtellot, 152.

  “. . . let us die here.”: Murdock, “British,” 78.

  “This is the price of blood.”: Tourtellot, 157.

  Pitcairn hopes to stir blood: Forbes, 260.

  Description of Brown Bess: Ketchum, Decisive, 125.

  Guns used for duck hunting: Mackenzie, I, 27.

  Joseph Palmer: Forbes, 261.

  “. . . I shall call you a coward.”: Tourtellot, 219.

  head split with tomahawk: Murdock, “British,” 88, 93.

  Deacon Haynes killed: Tourtellot, 219.

  infantrymen panting: Wells, II, 295.

  British shot any man: Tourtellot, 196.

  skulking like dastards: Waitt, 96.

  “King Hancock fo
rever!”: Mackenzie, I, 21.

  “Old Put”: Forbes, 261.

  London Chronicle: Waitt, 94–95.

  George Ill’s ultimatum: Channing, III, 159–60.

  ARNOLD: 1775

  Benedict’s teachers remembered: Decker, 11.

  stole birds, strewed glass: Sparks, 5–6.

  Arnold deserted: Sellers, 14.

  Arnold’s trade: Boylan, 36.

  Hannah Arnold’s suitor: Decker, 21.

  Arnold’s duel: Sellers, 6.

  Peter Boole: Boylan, 39.

  Arnold’s disease: Ibid., 37.

  “None but Almighty God . . .”: Arnold, 36.

  Arnold commissioned: Ibid., 38.

  “Carillon”: Jellison, 106.

  “noisy”: De Puy, 79n.

  “Huzzah for the Green Mountains!”: Ibid., 159.

  “Come out, you old rat!”: Tourtellot, 251.

  “. . . what—what—does this mean?”: Forbes, 278.

  Boys spat at Arnold’s feet: Boylan, 43.

  Stores at Fort Ti: Arnold, 40.

  “Boston must be entered . . .”: Hancock, 197.

  Dolly Quincy knew whom to blame: Woodbury, 91.

  “in short, no person . . .”: Hancock, 198–99.

  Adams objected to men pulling carriage: Wells, II, 30–31.

  Massachusetts paid for Adams’ clothes: Ibid.

  Franklin slept in chair: John Adams, Works, I, 663–64.

  Congress told Allen to inventory British artillery: Boylan, 45–46.

  “Johnny, you will be hanged . . .”: Ibid., 316.

  “What is the reason . . .”: Miller, Adams, 339–40.

  “one of the grandest revolutions . . .”: Ibid., 340.

  “a great fortune and piddling genius . . .”: John Adams, Diary, II, 174n.

  “. . . first politician in the world.”: Wells, II, 304.

  “We will show Britain . . .”: Hancock, 201.

  Adams confessed knew nothing of military: Miller, Adams, 346.

  three parties at Congress: John Adams, Diary, III, 321.

  Adams nominates Washington: Ibid., 323.

  BUNKER HILL: 1775

  “. . . soon find elbow room.”: Ketchum, Decisive, 2.

  “an impotent general . . .”: Ibid., 25.

  choice of Breed’s Hill: Fleming, 349.

  narrow entrance on north side: Ketchum, Decisive, 111.

  ditch might protect them: Coffin, 12.

  knapsacks loaded down: Lecky, 204.

  “. . . gates of hell”: Ketchum, Decisive, 127.

  Not one came back: Coffin, 16.

  Stark’s men prepare: Ibid., 18.

  “carcasses”: Fleming, 240.

  “Remember, gentlemen . . .”: Clark, Diary.

 

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