llliilpl«"l"l>>"'''"'''''^'''''' 014 077 954 4 # SOME INTERESTING BOSTON EVENTS PRINTED FOR THE STATE STREET TRUST COMPANY BOSTON, MASS. h 73 .37 .38 Copyright, 1916, BY THE State Street Trust Company / Compiled, arranged and printed by direction of Walton Advertising & Printing Co. Boston, Mass. ©C!,A418987 FEB 24 1916 FOREWORD It has been the aim of the State Street Trust Company to select for this the tenth pamphlet in its series, historical events associated with Massachusetts, particularly Boston, and at the same time to choose events of a varied nature in order to interest as many readers as possible. Certain of the better known subjects have been purposely omitted, as it was thought that a selection of somewhat less known, though perhaps equally important, events would prove of greater interest. For assistance in preparing the present pamphlet the Trust Com- pany desires to give credit first of all to the officers of this Company; then to the late Governor, Curtis Guild, for valuable suggestions as to the subject-matter; also to Mr. Samuel Morison for other sugges- tions; to Mr. Otto Fleischner, of the Boston Public Library, for valu- able assistance in the selection of reference books; to Mr. C. K. Bolton, of the Boston Athenaeum, and Mr. Charles F. Read, of the Bostonian Society; to Mr. P. K. Foley and Mr. C. E. Goodspeed for assistance covering certain pictures and references. For assistance on specific subjects the Company wishes to thank Mr. Louis A. Cook for help in connection with the account of the first settlement in Boston Harbour; Prof. A. Lawrence Lowell, of Harvard College, Mr. William C. Lane, of the Harvard College Library, and Mr. Roger Pierce, for information furnished in regard to "Fair Harvard"; Dr. J. Collins Warren and Mr. C. K. Bolton for their assistance in obtaining certain facts in connection with the Old North Church; Mr. Charles H. Taylor, Jr., Miss Clara Parker, of the Nantucket Athenaeum, Miss Anne W\ Bodfish, Secretary of the Nantucket Historical Society, Mr. George H. Tripp, Librarian of the New Bedford Library, and Mr. William Rotch for information con- cerning Mr. Rotch's Counting House in Nantucket; Mr. C. H. W. Foster, Mr. W. S. Crane, and Mr. William Sumner Appleton for suggestions in regard to the Province House; Mr. F. H. Curtiss, of the Boston Federal Reserve Bank, for books and information furnished in regard to the United States Branch Banks; Mr. Eric Pape and Dr. Robert T. Moffatt for information and photographs furnished concerning the frigate Constitution. Mr. J. Paulding Meade, of Boston, Mr. Charles W. Noyes, of New York, and Mr. Ricker, of Islesboro, Maine, for assistance concerning the Penobscot FOREWORD Expedition; Mr. Henry M. Faxon, of Quincy, Mr. Harold J. Coolidge, and Mr. J. S. Lawrence for their help in connection with the history of the Granite Railway Company; Dr. J. Collins Warren and Dr. Washburn, of the Massachusetts General Hospital, for suggestions and assistance concerning the first ether operation; Mr. Thomas A. Watson, Mr. Philip L. Spalding, President of the New England Telephone and Telegraph Company, and Mr. George W. Dennison, Vice-President of the American Telephone and Telegraph Com- pany, for valuable help given in the preparation of the account of the first telephone message, and Mr. S. H. Levangia, Manager of the New Palace Theatre, for his kindness in allowing photographs to be taken; Mr. J. T. Wheelwright for information concerning the Boston Common; Hon. Louis A. Frothingham, Mr. Thomas E. Pedrick, Sergeant at Arms at the State House, and his secretary. Miss Ellen M. Burrill, for information and help in connection with the Return of the Flags, also Mr. Edward Simmons for permission to use a photo- graph of this painting; Duffield & Co. for permission to reproduce illustrations; and Mr. Edwin F. Rice, of the Boston Public Library, for help in connection with the story of Dickens' Walking Match. The State Street Trust Company in pre- senting to you this, the tenth of its series of pamphlets i wishes to express its thanks for the appreciation which has been shown of the former issues, and trusts that this number, entitled ^^Some Interesting Boston Events,''^ will be found equally enjoyable. This Company would like to call atten- tion to the fact that during the coming summer it will have completed the twenty-fifth year of its existence, and with its abundant re- sources, the experience of its officers and staff, a number of whom have been with the Com- pany for many years, and its policy of remaining independent of outside control, it should be entitled to the careful consider- ation of those persons desiring to establish relations of a banking or fiduciary nature. Both offices are equipped with the most modern Safe Deposit Vaults, and the Branch Office also maintains a thoroughly modern Storage Vault for the safe-keeping of silver and other valuables, MAIN OFFICE BACK BAY BRANCH J5 State Street ijo Massachusetts Avenue {Corner Boyiston Street) TABLE OF CONTENTS PAGE The First Permanent Settlement in Boston Harbour 7 Rev. William Blackstone, the First Settler of Boston, riding on his Brindled Bull 8 Some of the Early Punishments 10 The Beacon 14 Mrs. Sherman's Pig 16 Some Early Rules of Harvard College 17 Governor Winthrop treats with LaTour and the Subsequent Arrival of D'Aulnay 20 Some Interesting Events on Boston Common 21 The First Newspaper in America 26 Captain Kidd arrested and jailed in Boston 27 Benjamin Franklin delivers Newspapers in Boston 29 Some Interesting Events in Connection with Christ Church, or "Old North Church" 31 Woodbridge-Phillips Duel on the Common 33 Massachusetts issues Lottery Tickets to help rebuild Faneuil Hall ... 34 Liberty Tree 36 Signing of the Charter Papers of the Boston Tea Party Vessels in the Rotch Whaling Office, Nantucket 37 General Warren climbs through the Window of the Old South Church to deliver his Famous "Massacre" Speech 39 The Last Ball in the Province House, with Some Interesting Information in Regard to the House 41 "Frog" Dinner given to the Officers of the French Fleet 44 The Penobscot Expedition — Paul Revere a Lieutenant 45 Dr. John Jeffries of Boston — the First American to fly over the English Channel 47 The First United States Bank in Boston 49 Launching of the "Constitution" 51 Lafayette lays the Corner-stone of Bunker Hill Monument 54 The Granite Railway Company — the First Railroad in America ... 56 Mayor Theodore Lyman protects William Lloyd Garrison from the Mob, 59 The First Ether Operation 61 The "Jamestown" Expedition to Ireland 65 Colonel Robert G. Shaw leads his Negro Regiment to the War .... 67 Return of the Flags to the State House 68 Dickens' International Walking Match 72 First Telephone Message in Boston 74 AN ENGLISH CARICATURE ENTITLED "BOSTONIANS IN DISTRESS," NOVEMBER 19, 1774. The Yankees are shown as prisoners in a cage on Liberty Tree and are being fed with codfish. The print is dated 1774. It may be seen on the walls of the State Street Trust Company. Some Interesting Boston Events THE FIRST PERMANENT SETTLEMENT IN BOSTON HARBOUR TO Sir Ferdinando Gorges and his son Robert belongs the credit for the estabhshment in 16*23 of the first enduring settlement in Boston Harbour, at \Yessagusset, now Weymouth, at a point on Philiijjs Creek, above the present Fore River Bridge. The Norsemen ventured near our coast over six hundred years before; the Cabots from Spain, backed by the English, had explored our New England ports; Captain John Smith had actually entered Boston Harbour and made a map, and Myles Standish visited the Indian camps along the Mystic River. Even as late as 1622 an expedition sent out by Thomas Weston had established a trading post at Wessagusset, which was abandoned in a short time. Ferdinando Gorges, who was a great friend of Sir Walter Raleigh and enjoyed the confidence of King James to such a degree that that monarch appointed him Governor of Plymouth, England, had for years dreamed of a colony in the new world. His ambition was to establish a principality of a permanent character. For sixteen years he struggled and pleaded his cause before King and courtiers and made fruitless attempts at starting settlements on the Maine Coast. He had been given the title "Lord of Maine." When, in 1623, his son Robert returned from the Venetian wars he felt that the opportunity for favorable action had arrived, and accordingly the first meeting of the "Council of New England" — which had been granted a patent by the Crown in 1620 and was composed of forty persons — was held at Greenwich, England, on June 29. Among those attending the meeting were the Duke of Buckingham, the Duke of Richmond and a number of other notable peers. The territory covered by the patent lay on the northeast side of Boston Bay with a sea front of ten straight miles, including all the islands within a league of the shore, and extending thirty miles into the interior. As a result of this meeting an expedition set out in the midsummer of 1623 under the leadership of Robert Gorges as Governor General. It was made up of mechanics, farmers and traders, as well as gentle- men and divines. A landing was made in September at Wessagusset, where use was made of the block house and other buildings erected by Weston the year before. Robert Gorges, who was not a strong character, but a man of a somewhat vainglorious disposition, involved himself in quarrels wnth his neighbors, especially his predecessor, W^eston, whom he proposed to punish for various trading misdemeanors. He even caused Weston's arrest and detention as a prisoner until the spring of the following year. The winter was a terrible surprise in its rigor. As Adams says: "They had come to enjoy the pleasures of the wilder- [ 7 ] SOME INTERESTING BOSTON EVENTS ness. Locked in a desert of ice and snow, — inhabiting a log hut on the edge of a salt marsh, with a howling, unexplored forest behind and around them, — well might they, with the mercury at zero, ask themselves 'Where was that moderate temper of the air, where those silent streams of a calm sea' which Smith had pictured? Young men accustomed to the soft winter climate of Devon were exposed to the blasts of Greenland. Where, too, was the 'fouling and fishing?' The waters were covered with ice and the woods were impassable with snow. So Robert Gorges got through the long winter as best he could, heartily wishing himself back again in the Venetian service, or even the dreary tedium of Plymouth." In the early spring word came from Sir Ferdinando Gorges that there were no further funds available for the colony, and inasmuch, to quote Bradford, as Gorges had not found "the state of things hear to answer his qualitie and condition" he was only too ready to give up his share in the expedition and return to England, after, as Bradford again says, "having scarcely saluted the cuntrie in his governmente." The settlement, however, was never abandoned. An amusing story, about the authenticity of which there may be some question, is told in connection with the early days of this colony. The settlers had stolen a good deal of corn from the Indians, and one of them was at last caught. The Indians demanded that he should be executed, but were willing to allow the whites to act as his execu- tioner. Strong men were not very plentiful in the settlement, so, after thinking matters over, the colonists concluded that it would be a pity to kill one of the best men they had when they could take an old and impotent member of the colony. They therefore decided to take off the clothes of the man who committed the robbery and put them on another, "to let this sick person be hung in the other's steade." By persuasion they got the innocent man "bound fast in jest and then hung him up hard by in good earnest." An old poem commemorates this incident in the following words : — "Resolved to spare him; yet to do The Indian Hogun Moghan too Impartial justice, in his stead did Hang an old Weaver that was bed-rid." REV. WILLIAM BLACKSTONE, THE FIRST SETTLER OF BOSTON, RIDING ON HIS BRINDLED BULL "Old Shawmut's pioneer The Parson on his brindled Bull." Oliver Wendell Holmes. It is rather difficult to imagine the Rev. Mr. Blackstone galloping by moonlight along the sands of a cove, which is now part of Charles Street, on his mouse-colored bull; nevertheless such is the picture which Motley gives of him in his "Merry Mount." The first settler of Boston, William Blaxton (now spelled Blackstone), often alluded to as the Hermit of Shawmut, is supposed to have brought this bull from England and to have trained him to the saddle. During his rides he was wont to distribute "Blackstone" apples or [ 8 ] SOME INTERESTING BOSTON EVENTS "sweetings" to both children and grown-ups. His orchard, situated on a part of the Common near what is now Louis])urg Scpiare, was the first one to cultiv^ate tliis fruit in New Enghmd. Bhickstone, a man of mucli culture and many eccentricities, had come over either with Robert Gorges in lO'-iS or with Captain \\'ollas- ton in 16'25, and about the latter year he took u|) his lonely abode on Shawmut peninsula. He lived in a hut near an excellent spring on that part of Beacon Hill which overlooked the Charles River, a point later known as Blackstone Point, and now corresponding to the corner of Beacon and Spruce Streets. He is described as being "a solitary, bookish recluse, about thirty-five years of age, somewhat above middle Blackstone's house, near Beacon and Walnut Streets, at the foot of Beacon Hill height, slender in form, wnth a pale, thoughtful face, wearing a con- fused, dark-colored, 'canonical coate,' with broad rimmed hat strung with shells like an ancient palmer, and slouched back from his pensive brow, around which his prematurely gray hair fell in heavy curls far down his neck. He had a wallet at his side, a hammer in his girdle, a long staff in his hand." Blackstone came to New England for peace and quiet and stead- fastly refused to embroil himself in the religious controversies of the time, so much so that Cotton Mather in his "Magnalia" wrote of him, "he would never join himself to any of our churches, giving as his reason, 'I came from England because I did not like the Lord Bishops; I can't join with you because I would not be under the Lord Brethren.'" On the whole, however, he dwelt in amity with these intolerant religionists. [ 9 ] SOME INTERESTING BOSTON EVENTS He was not long to remain undisturbed, for in 1630 when Governor Winthrop and his followers moved from Charlestown — really follow- ing a generous invitation from Blackstone himself — we find the hermit saying, "I looked to have dwelt with my orchards, and my books, and my young fawn, and my bull, in undisturbed solitude. Was there not room enough for all of ye? Could ye not leave the hermit in his corner?" In 1634 Blackstone sold forty-four of his fifty acres to Governor Winthrop for £30, the money being raised by a tax levied on the inhabitants. He retained his house and remaining six acres for himself. This six acre lot was later owned by Copley, the painter. The forty-four acres purchased by Governor Winthrop were laid out for a training field, which is now our Common. In 1635 the place became too crowded for the parson, so he moved to a farm at Rehoboth, in Rhode Island. It is generally admitted to-day that he, and not Roger Williams, was the first white inhabitant of Rhode Island. In his new home he cultivated his seven hundred acre estate, and rode about on his bull, preaching the gospel occasion- ally. He was married by Governor Endicott in Boston in 1635 to Mistress Sarah, widow of John Stevenson, with whom he lived many years in happiness. Finally, on May 26, 1675, he died at the ripe age of eighty. Roger Williams, his neighbor, records his death as follows: "About a fortnight since your old acquaintance, Mr. Black- stone, departed this life in the fourscore year of his life; four days before his death he had a great pain in his breast and back, and bowels, afterward he said he was well, had no paines and should live, but he grew fainter and yielded his breath without a groan." His library comprised one hundred and sixty volumes, and ten manuscripts which were valued in the inventory of his estate at six pence each, or five shillings for the lot. Within one month of his death King Philip's War broke out, and up in smoke went his library, with these ten precious paper volumes which undoubtedly contained the written records of the beginnings of Boston. Among the reminders of Blackstone to-day, inasmuch as they bear his name, are the river, the valley, a town in Massachusetts and a busy street in Boston. He was certainly a singular character and was fittingly described by his namesake. Sir William Blackstone, the English lawyer, who said, — "As by some tyrant's stern command, A wretch forsakes his native land. In foreign climes condemned to roam, An endless exile from his home." SOME OF THE EARLY PUNISHMENTS It was customary in the early days of the Colony to punish people by degrading them in public by exposure in stocks, bilboes, the pillory, the brank or the ducking stool, rather than by imprisonment or fines, and the usual places for such punishment were in the market squares or in front of the meeting-houses. The bilboes, which were often used in Boston to "punyssche trans- [ 10 ] SOME INTERESTING BOSTON EVENTS THE BILBOES. gressours ageynste ye Kinges Maiesties lawes," consisted of a long, heavy iron bar with two sliding shackles, like handcuffs, for the legs. This bar was fastened to the top of a post, and the offender had to lie on his back on the ground with his feet in the air. The instrument derived its name from Bilboa where it was be- lieved many were made and shipped on the Spanish Armada to shackle the English prisoners wdien captured! The earliest record we have in Boston of the bilboes was in IGS^ when the entry says that "James Woodward shall be sett in the bilbowes for being drunk at the Newetowne," now Cambridge. The fol- lowing year Thomas Dexter was likewise punished for "prophane saying dam ye come." Thomas Morton of Merry Mount was also sentenced to be "clapt into the bilbowes." In 1639 Edward Palmer, a Boston carpenter, made a pair of stocks, and, as most people know, he was the first person to be placed in them, "for his extortion in taking £l, 13/ Id. for the plank and woodwork." He was " censured to bee sett an houre in the stocks." On many occasions did they per- form service in the colony, being chiefly used to take care of drunkards who couldn't handle their legs properly. Each town was obliged to have its stocks, and in 1639 Dedham was fined for not having a pair. The most interesting and ignoble of all the instruments of punish- ment w^as the ducking stool, which was used especially as a cure for scolding women, "chyderers" and wife beaters; also it was used to punish brew'ers of bad beer and bakers of poor bread; it was also supposed to stop all quarrelling between married couples, after they had been ducked several times while tied back to back. The culprit was plunged in as often as the sentence directed, and it has been re- lated how quickly a bath, especially in cold water, would change a person's point of view. A few lines from a poem entitled "The Ducking Stool" are amusing: — "If noisy dames should once begin To drive the house with horrid din. Away, you cry, you'll grace the stool; We'll teach you how your tongue to rule. Down in the deep the stool descends. But here, at first, we miss our ends; She mounts again and rages more Than ever vixen did before. If so, my friend, pray let her take A second turn into the lake, And, rather than your patience lose. Thrice and again repeat the dose, No brawling wives, no furious wenches. No fire so hot but water quenches." [ 11 ] SOME INTERESTING BOSTON EVENTS Massachusetts had no "ducking stool" until fifty years or so after the first settlement, when we find that Governor Bellingham had a law passed that "persons convicted of rayling or scolding shalbe gagged or sett in a ducking stoole and dipt over head and cares three times in some convenient place of fresh or salt water." John Dunton, who wrote about Boston in 1686, said that "Scolds they gag and set them at their own doors . . . for all comers and goers to gaze at, . . . to cure the noise that is in many Women's heads." The pillory, or "stretch-neck" as it is often called, was much used in Massachu- setts until 1803, and it was a very common occurrence to see the helpless culprits ex- posed to the jeers of the passers-by, who often added to their insults by throwing rotten eggs and even garbage. The whipping post "for fools' backs" was the punishment inflicted for lying, swearing, perjury, drunkenness, selling rum to the Indians, "for repeated sleeping on the Lord's Day," and slander. A sentence was usually forty stripes, and often the Court decreed that the offender should be whipped in two cities, usually some dis- tance apart, so that at the second whipping the culprit's back would have stiffened and would therefore hurt the more. The most con- spicuous whipping post was on State Street, then King Street; there was also one on Queen Street, as well as on the Common. A customary form of punishment in the Colony was to tie round the offender's neck a placard upon which was marked the initial de- scriptive of the crime, such as "B" for uttering blasphemous words, "V" for viciousness, "R" for rogue, "D" for drunkenness, etc. The culprit was also often exhibited to public view in a cage, in the stocks, in the pillory, or on the gallows. The brank, or gossip's bridle, was used in a mild form in Massachu- setts, being called a cleft stick, and there are numerous cases men- tioned of persons having been subjected to this punishment for "swear- inge or railinge." Public penance was another form of punishment, the guilty person, wrapped in white, being obliged to sit on a stool "in the middle alley" of the meeting-house to make public acknowl- edgment of some small crime against the strict laws of the day. Burglary and some other crimes were punished in all the colonies by branding. The wooden horse was a punishment reserved especially for soldiers, and on one occasion we find Paul Revere as presiding officer ordering a Continental soldier to "ride the Wooden Horse for a quarter of an hower with a musket on each foot." In Governor Winthrop's day delinquent soldiers were sentenced to carry pieces of turf to the Fort, while others were chained to a wheelbarrow and made to work. A de- [ 12 ] SOME INTERESTING BOSTON EVENTS serter at the time of the battle of Bunker Hill was tied on a horse with his face towards the horse's tail and led around the camp. During the Civil War another soldier was condemned to get inside a barrel, which was then tied to his neck so that he could walk around without its touching the ground. The laws in regard to Quakers are too numerous to enumerate. One of the laws passed in Massachusetts in 1657 was as follows: "A Quaker, if male, for the first offense shall have one of his eares cutt off; for the second offense have his other eare cutt off; a woman shalbe severely whipt; for the third offense, they, he or she, shall have their tongues bored through with a hot iron." There were also some other very curious punishments. Often an offender was ordered to sit on the gallows or to walk around the town with a rope around his neck. In Boston a man was once fined and imprisoned for en- deavoring to spread the smallpox. In 1652 another was fined for excess of apparel "in bootes, rebonds, gould and silver lace." In Salem, in Governor Endicott's time, a Puritan was penalized for wearing too long hair, — long hair being considered at this time "bushes of vanity." Kissing in the street was an offence punishable by a fine or whipping, and it is related that a husband who had just returned from a long voyage happened to meet his wife in the street and kissed her. He was discovered, and when fined was so angry that he swore he would never kiss her again. There was a Bostonian who purchased a horse from a countryman and gave in exchange a note payable on the "Day of the Resurrection." The amount of the fine is not mentioned. One of the Plymouth Laws of 1638 forbade a man from proposing marriage before obtaining consent of one of the parents. The penalty for counterfeiting bills was very severe, and the Continental bills all bore this inscription: "To counterfeit this bill is Death." Another curious punishment of the very early days was to call a man by his first name instead of "Mr." In 1643 a Salem man called Scott was whipped "for repeated sleeping in meeting on the Lord's Day, and for striking the person who waked him." In 1786 four convicts were ordered to the Castle to make nails. A notice in one of the Boston papers gave a list of the heads of families who would have to spend Christmas in jail on account of debt, giving after each the amount owed. A postscript at the bottom asks, "Who among the opulent is willing to restore a father to his family and Christmas Fire Side.^" Sometimes debtors were allowed the "Limits of the jail," or in other words, they couldn't go more than a specified distance away. At one time it was believed there was a Tread-Mill at the Massachusetts State Prison at Charlestown. There was a law in 1639 that no ladies' garments "shall be made with short sleeves whereby the nakedness of the arm may be discovered in the wearing thereby." Another curious record, a few years later, shows us that Robert Saltonstall was fined 5s. for presenting his petition "on so small and bad a piece of paper." [ 13 ] SOME INTERESTING BOSTON EVENTS THE BEACON The Beacon was erected under an order of the General Court in 1635 on one of Boston's three hills, which was called by the early settlers "Tramount," as it was composed of a group of three small hills. The elevation, or mountain as it was called, was used as a lookout, and the name was changed to Centry or Sentry Hill, and when the Beacon was set up it was known by its present name of Beacon Hill. Its object was "to give notice to the country of any danger, and that there shalbe a ward of one person kept there from the first of April to the last of September, and that upon the disco v'ry of any danger the beacon shalbe fired, an allarum given, as also messengers presently sent by that towne where the danger is discov'ed, to all other townes within their jurisdiccon." The Beacon was intended to give warning of attacks by foreign countries by sea, or by Indians on land. There was, however, little trouble with the aborigines in Boston, and one writer states that it is more than likely that the settlers annoyed the Indians as much as the Indians did the settlers. The Indians freciuently complained that their crops were injured by cows belonging to the English. The Beacon, however, was made use of on several occasions. In 1689, at the time of the uprising against Governor Andros, a flag was hauled up on the pole as a signal to the soldiers at Charlestown that the controversy was soon to be ended, the Governor having agreed to surrender. Some years later, in 1768, an English officer arrived from Halifax, and the people quite naturally thought that his visit signified the arrival of more troops. They, therefore, placed a tar barrel in the pot on the Beacon to be lit when the King's ships arrived. Governor Barnard believed this to be an insult to his military capacity, and his Council ordered the Selectmen to remove the barrel, but they refused to act. The Governor, therefore, ordered Sheriff Greenleaf to take it down, which he succeeded in doing stealthily during dinner time. The battles of Lexington and Concord, the burning of Charles- town, and the battle of Bunker Hill were watched by the friends of both sides, who were huddled together on the six rods of land at the summit of the hill. The hill upon which the Beacon was erected was sixty feet higher than it is now and was situated inside of the present State House grounds and almost directly in line with Park Street (then called Centry Street), which was laid out in 1640. Temple Street ran over the summit from the westerly side. The Beacon was reached by wooden steps and, on nearing the top, by steps dug in the ground. The boys of the South End and North End of the town used to battle for the supremacy of the hill-top, and another favorite pastime for the younger generation was to bat a ball up and down the hill, which was more difficult than it looked, owing to the steepness of the hill. Cows were pastured part of the way up the incline. The Beacon was a tall pole, with cross sticks to be used in its ascent, and projecting from one side near the top it had an iron crane supporting an iron pot, for the reception of tar or some other combus- tible. It was replaced in 1768 "without the consent" of Governor [ 14 ] SOME INTERESTING BOSTON EVENTS Barnard, taken down by General Howe in 1775 and another pole set up the following year nearly in the centre of the British fort which had been built on the top of the hill. This beacon was blown down by a storm in 1789, and in the following year a monument was erected by a number of the inhabitants from the design of Charles Bulfinch, then a Selectman of the town, "to commemorate the train of events which led to the xVmerican Revolution and finally secured Liberty and Independence to the United States." It was a plain Doric column about sixty feet high, surmounted by a large eagle, the effigy of which is now over the President's chair in the Senate Chamber. This was the first public monument erected to commemorate the The Monument on Beacon Hill, from Bowdoin Place, showing the Thurston house as it ap- peared in 1811. At one time the hill was so steep in front of this house that it was necessary to hoist up all the wood and provisions. From an old print in the collection of the State Street Trust Company. events of our Revolution. Several things contributed to its fate. To begin with, Thomas Hodson, in 1764, dug out so much of the hill belonging to him that there was danger that the structure would tumble down; then, in 1795, the building of the new State House by Governor Hancock necessitated encroachment on another part of it. A few years later the Mill-Pond Corporation obtained from the town the right to use still more gravel, and, in 1811, the town sold the land on which the monument stood to John Hancock and Samuel Spear. The hill was then completely removed and used as filling, and the column was destroyed, much to the disgust of most of the inhabitants, who wished to keep this old relic intact. The four slate tablets containing the inscriptions of the events connected with our Revolutionary War, from the Stamp Act, in 1765, to the inaugural of Washington as President, in 1789, were preserved in [ 15 ] SOME INTERESTING BOSTON EVENTS the State House. When the Bunker Hill Monument Association in 1899 presented to the Commonwealth an exact duplicate of the original column, these tablets were built into the monument, which stands on the same spot where stood its predecessor, opposite the end of Ashburton Place, only about sixty feet lower. The Committee of the Association originally consisted of William W. Wheildon, Robert C. Winthrop, F. W. Lincoln, Jr., Winslow Lewis and J. Huntington Wolcott. There were only a few houses on Beacon Street in the early days, and the following anecdote shows clearly this fact. Mrs. Dr. John Joy was an invalid, and upon consultation with a physician he suggested that she move out of town "to Beacon Street," and she was frequently asked how she happened to go so far away. There is a piece of poetry which speaks of the Beacon and which is quite interesting in view of the fact that not long after the words appeared the monument was erected to immortalize the victory of the Yankees. The lines are: — "As for their King, John Hancock And Adams, if they're taken, Their heads for signs shall hang up high Upon that hill call'd Beacon." Robert Turner, a shoemaker, was the first owner of Beacon Hill, and later on it came into the possession of the Hancocks, who sold to the town the land upon which the State House now stands. MRS. SHERMAN'S PIG Although of seemingly small importance Mrs. Sherman's lost sow has come down in history, owing to the fact that the many lawsuits to which she gave rise finally resulted in changing part of the con- stitution of the Colony. Governor Winthrop records in his journal: "There fell out a great business upon a very small occasion. Around 1636 there was a stray sow in Boston, which was brought to Captain Keayne; he had it cried divers times and divers came to see it but none made claim to it for near a year. He kept it in his yard with a sow of his own." Finally Keayne, who, it will be remembered, left in his will a fund to assist the town in building the Old State House, killed his own pig. Soon afterwards Mrs. Sherman called, declared that the live pig was not hers, and accused Keayne of having killed her animal. The case was brought before the Elders, and Keayne was acquitted. Mrs. Sherman then carried the case to court, her friend, George Story, a merchant of London, acting as her attorney. The Captain was again cleared, and the jury awarded him $3 for costs, and he in turn sued his two accusers, recovering $20 from each one. This trivial matter now assumed the aspect of a political ques- tion between the aristocratic and democratic classes and occupied a prominent place in court for a year. Story again brought suit, but there was a disagreement among the magistrates and deputies, espe- cially as regards the " Negative Vote." Magistrate Richard Saltonstall took part in the trial and sided with the people. The final result was [ 16 ] SOME INTERESTING BOSTON EVENTS that in 1644 the "Assistants" or Magistrates of the Company and the Deputies, now called respectively Senators and Rej)rescn(atives, were divided into two co-ordinate branches, and each body could veto the proceedings of the other. A public speaker not long ago remarked that "Mrs. Sherman's pig was the origin of the present Senate" and that " he hoped the members of it would not disgrace their progenitor." Robert Iveayne, besides being the chief donor of the State House, was also Captain of the Ancient and Honorable Artillery Company. He lived on the south corner of Washington and State Streets. SOME EARLY RULES OF HARVARD COLLEGE Some of Harvard's old regulations would not please very much the undergraduate or the graduate of to-day. President Dunster's rules, which were printed in Latin, were formulated in 1642 and continued in force until about 1734. No student was admitted until he was able to read, write and speak Latin perfectly, and he must also have an excellent knowledge of Greek, and during his college course he was never allowed to use his mother tongue except in certain public exer- cises of oratory. As Harvard was primarily a Ministers' college, every one had to read the Scriptures twice a day and was obliged to attend Chapel also twice a day, at six o'clock in the morning during the summer months, and half an hour before sunrise in the winter, and again in the evening. No scholar could buy, sell or exchange anything over six pence in value without permission of his parents, guardians, or tutors, and he received severe admonition if he were absent from prayers or lectures even once during the week. Another curious rule was that "every scholar shall be called by his surname only, till he be invested with his first degree, except he be a fellow commoner or knight's eldest son, or of superior nobility." Li order to receive his first degree a student had to be able to translate the Old and New Testaments into Latin, and all his acts must have re- ceived the approbation of the overseers. Tobacco was not allowed except by permission of the President, with consent of the parent or guardian, "and then in a sober and private manner." It was also voted that every student must be in his room by nine o'clock under penalty of a fine, and no one could go to Boston except by special permission without being subject to a five dollar penalty. In 1656 the President and Fellows were empowered "to punish all misdemeanours — either by fine, or whipping in the hall openly, as the nature of the offense shall require, not exceeding ten shillings, or ten stripes for one offense." The flogging often took place in public, but this practice was abolished in 1734. Here are some of the early fines. Absence from prayers, 'id.; absence from public worship, 9d., and tardiness 3d. ; neglecting to repeat the sermon, 9d. ; leaving town without permission, not over 2s. 6d.; going out of college without proper costume, 6d.; frequenting taverns, not over Is. 6d.; playing cards or any game for money was a finable offence, as was opening doors by picklocks. Fines were also levied for keeping guns, or for using them. This system of penalties proved so annoying to the parents that it was abolished in 1761, and methods of enforcing dis- [ 17 ] SOME INTERESTING BOSTON EVENTS cipline were employed which resemble the present day "probation," "suspension," or "expulsion." There were some "Ancient Customs" that were lived up to even more strictly than the regular laws, and some of them are most inter- esting and amusing. No Freshman was allowed to wear his hat in the college yard, unless it rained, snowed, or hailed, or unless he had both hands full. All Freshmen were obliged to go on any errand for any of the upper classmen at any time ex- cept during study hours, and after nine o'clock in the evening. No student was allowed to call up or down, or to or from, any of the college rooms. Another hard rule on the Freshmen was that they had to furnish bats, balls and footballs for the use of students, to be kept at the "buttery." Towards the end of the eighteenth century candi- dates for admission were examined by the Presi- dent and two of the tutors. All undergraduates had to keep in their rooms and follow their studies, except for half an hour after breakfast, between twelve and two o'clock, and after evening prayers until nine o'clock. The students also had to submit to one public oral examination annually, in the presence of a com- mittee of the Corporation and Overseers, in order " to animate the students in the pursuit of literary merit and fame, and to excite in their breasts a noble spirit of emulation." Those tests must have been even more nerve racking than the present three hour written examinations. No one was allowed to go beyond the yard without his coat, cloak or gown, and hat, nor could he go into any tavern in Cambridge without leave of the President or one of the tutors, unless he were accompanied by his father or guardian. No undergraduate could go gunning, fishing or skating over deep water without permis- sion, nor could he attend any stage plays either as actor or spectator. [ 18 ] '■iH^ .^... --^^^P^, Reproduction of a photograph of the Rev. Samuel Gil- nian from a picture in " Fair Harvard " room. A memorial in the form of a tower room has been erected in the Unita- rian church of Charleston in his memory. SOME INTERESTING BOSTON EVENTS A costume was prescribed for all undergraduates which consisted of a "coat of blue gray, with waistcoat and breeches of the same colour, or of a black, a nankeen, or an olive colour." The coats of the Fresh- men had to have plain buttonholes, and the cuffs could not have any buttons on them. The Sophomores were allowed the privilege of having buttons on their cuffs. The coats of the Juniors had "cheap frogs to the button holes, except the button holes of the cuffs," and the Seniors could have "frogs" on all their buttonholes. The buttons ROOM IN WHICH "FAIR HARVARD" WAS WRITTEN IN 1836. This room is in the old Fay House, now occupied by Radcliffe College, Cambridge. Rev. Samuel Oilman, the author of the poem, was born in Gloucester, and when he came from his parish in Charleston, South Carolina, to visit his brother-in-law. Judge Fay, who then lived in this house, to attend the 200th anniversary of the founding of Harvard College, he wrote "Fair Harvard" to commemorate the event. This room is in the northwest corner of the second story. In this house at one time lived Edward Everett. While it was owned by Judge Fay, Longfellow, Oliver Wendell Holmes, Story the sculptor, James Russell Lowell, and other famous men were guests of his here. of all the classes had to be nearly the same colour as the coats. No garment made of silk was permitted, nor gold or silver lace, cord or edging upon hats or clothes. Another rule provided that "the tables shall be covered with clean cloths twice a week, or oftener, if judged necessary by the President and Tutors." Commencement took place on the third Wednesday in July, and Cambridge in the early days was never so deserted during the summer as it is now. In the early eighteen hundreds Commencement Day was a State holiday, all the banks and offices in Boston being closed. The dining-room, which used to be in University Hall, was the largest in New England, accommodating two hundred persons. It [ 19] SOME INTERESTING BOSTON EVENTS gained great celebrity on account of its ability to take care of so many students. The food that wasn't eaten or that couldn't be eaten was shared by a number of pigs, whose sties were near the rear of the building. The charge for board at "Commons" was $1.75 a week, and it couldn't be expected that meat could be served at every meal. The students, therefore, frequently saved some of their meat and with a fork jammed it against the under side of the table to help out at breakfast the following morning. Board at private houses or at some of the professors' residences was three dollars, and if a stu- dent received a high mark or an honor from the tutor with whom he was boarding his other jealous classmates attributed it to undue influence. In the early days the tuition charges were frequently paid in live stock, grain, or groceries. GOVERNOR WINTHROP TREATS WITH LaTOUR AND THE SUBSEQUENT ARRIVAL OF D'AULNAY John Winthrop had just been chosen Governor for the fourth time when Charles LaTour, one of the leaders of the French Colony of Acadia, visited Boston with the object of securing the help of the Massachusetts Colony in fighting his rival, D'Aulnay, who had his headquarters at Port Royal, New Brunswick, near LaTour's Fort, which was situated in the centre of the present city of St. John. The Frenchman's arrival in Boston, in June, 1643, astonished the inhabitants as he sailed past the fort and dropped anchor before the townspeople realized what was happening. The soldiers had just been ordered to leave the fort a short time before, and LaTour could easily have captured the two ships-of-war in the harbour and then made trouble for the Bostonians. • This fort, which was on Castle Island, was at once strengthened and manned. On his way in he chanced to meet a Mrs. Gibbons in a rowboat, and one of the sailors with LaTour recognized her and followed her to Governors Island, the home of the Winthrops. The Governor was there at the time, and he escorted LaTour to Boston, where he was given a splendid re- ception. The Frenchman showed his papers from the King of France and further won the Governor's confidence by attending church with him on Sunday. The visitors were granted shore leave provided they landed in small companies "that our women might not be affrighted by them," and they then paraded on the Common with the State militia. One amusing incident happened while the Frenchmen were on land; one of them saw a drunkard in the stocks and immediately went up to him and let him out, only to find himself in the stocks' in short order. LaTour suggested that Governor Winthrop should grant him authority to hire four vessels to act as his escort back to his fort. The Governor granted this request, although many people in the Colony opposed his decision. The ships put to sea on July 14. Although it was agreed that LaTour should not compel his little fleet to fight, nevertheless his sudden and warlike appearance frightened D'Aulnay into retreat. LaTour found thirty volunteers, and they attacked his rival, capturing one of his ships. LaTour's wife persuaded him to make a second visit to Boston and [ 20 ] SOME INTERESTING BOSTON EVENTS implore aid, and in his absence the garrison was attacked by D'Aulnay, and all the survivors, who made a gallant defence, were taken prisoners, Madame LaTour among them. Three weeks later she died. D'Aulnay then sent three messengers to Massachusetts to demand reparation for having rendered assistance to his enemy and asked an indemnity of £8,000. The magistrates of the Colony insisted that they only permitted LaTour to hire the ships. During their visit the messengers were shown such attention and were treated with so much ceremony that this large demand was finally reduced by agreement to "a small present in satisfaction." Some one remarked at the time that "the Government had to look as if it could pay it if it had to." A treaty was signed, and Governor Winthrop presented the Frenchmen with a sedan chair, which had just been given to him, and which the Governor declared was of no value to him! A salute of five guns from Boston, three from Charlestown and five from Castle Island sent them home quite contented and forgetful of the £8,000 demand. Several years later D'Aulnay was drowned while canoeing near Port Royal, leaving his wife to fight his old rival Charles LaTour. The latter through treachery soon captured her fort and compelled her to marry him in order to protect herself and her eight children. LaTour died much in debt and owing large sums of money to his friends in this Colony. This controversy is also interesting as it showed very clearly that Massachusetts even at this early date took the attitude of an abso- lutely independent government in dealing with foreign powers. SOME INTERESTING EVENTS ON BOSTON COMMON The Common is owned by the people of Boston. On the day of General Sheridan's funeral, in 1888, the Mayor of Boston granted a permit to a battery of the State Militia to fire a salute on the Common. A gentleman was driving his buggy along Charles Street, and his horse became frightened by the noise and ran away, throwing out the driver and seriously injuring him. He then brought suit against the City, alleging it to be the owner of the Common, but Judge Holmes decided that the City couldn't be held liable for the reason that it had only a "technical" title and merely held the Common for the public benefit. The people have made many uses of their property. Dr. Hale relates that the Common was used in the beginning of the nineteenth century, as a pasture for cows, as a playground for children, as a place for beating carpets, and as a training ground for the militia. In 1822 housekeepers had to give up beating their carpets, because a law was passed prohibiting it. The repeal of the privilege brought forth an amusing newspaper article entitled "The Last Shake." In the early days the Common was the chief place for executions, and many unfortunates were presumably hanged from the branches of the "Old Elm" for murder, witchcraft, Quakerism, and even theft; but in 1812 executions on the Common were abolished. Indians and pirates have been hanged and shot, soldiers have been killed for deser- tion, and, during Governor Hancock's administration, a woman called Rachell Whall was strung up for stealing a bonnet worth seventy-five [ 21 ] SOME INTERESTING BOSTON EVENTS cents. Some years previous another woman was hanged for murder. The first execution for witchcraft in Boston was that of Margaret Jones, who was accused of possessing imps. Mary Parsons was hanged a few years later, and then Mrs. Ann Hibl)ins, who was supposed to be a sister of Governor Belhngham, shared the same fate. It is beheved her husband lost so much money that she became ugly and quarrelsome, causing her neighbors to accuse her of witchcraft. Many Quakers, including women, have met their death bravely under the "Old Elm," a graft of which is now growing near the Frog Pond. The last Quaker victim was a woman called Goody Glover, who was accused of bewitching the four children of John Goodwin. There were many interesting rules restricting the use of the Com- mon. People were not allowed to walk or ride a horse here on Sunday, no matter how warm the weather might be, but both were permitted on week days. After 1822 horseback riding and driving were not allowed without a permit from the Mayor and aldermen. There was also a law to prevent Sunday bathing at the foot of the Common, which brought out the following verses in the Centinel: — "In superstitious days, 'tis said, Hens laid two eggs on Monday, Because a hen would lose her head That laid an egg on Sunday, "Now our wise rulers and the law Say none shall wash on Sunday; So Boston folks must dirty go, And wash them twice on Monday," Skating, of course, was likewise forbidden on the Sabbath, and for many years smoking in the street was also prohibited at any time. Cows were allowed to graze on the Common as recently as within eighty-six years, and there is still a restriction on one of the lots of land on Mt. Vernon Street, which obliges the owner of the property on the opposite side of this street always to keep a passageway to a pasturage near the Common of suitable size to admit a cow. Only one such animal could be grazed by one person, a man being chosen especially to "keep the cowes which goe on the Common," for a fee of 25. 6d. per head. With a little imagination we can see Benjamin Franklin driving his father's cow home from here every night. Cows were often a menace to people walking or riding, and one fatal acci- dent happened in 1661, when General Humphrey Atherton, on his way home after reviewing his troops, ran into a cow with such force that he was thrown from his horse and killed. The Common has always been used as a parade ground and place for celebrations of all kinds, besides being the site of one of the British fortifications during the siege of Boston. According to Dr. Edward Everett Hale the circles made on the Common by the British tents could be traced in the grass while he was a boy, and the trenches dug by the English soldiers were still used with great joy by the boys of his time when playing soldier. It is related that the Redcoats used to race their horses on the Common on Sundays and that they played "Yankee Doodle" outside the church doors during services, both to [ 23 ] SOME INTERESTING BOSTON EVENTS the disgust of the inhabitants. It is also recorded that Dorothy Quincy used to complain that the morning exercises of Earl Percy's troops interrupted her beauty sleep. While the British were in their encampment here, several floating batteries crept along the shore of the Common and fired upon the enemy, doing considerable damage; and it was from this same shore that the English troops embarked for Lexington the evening before the battle. It was also near here where we read that Colonel Thomas H. Perkins and others used to go snipe shooting. While the English occupied the Common many a Bostonian probably found that his cow had "gone dry" when he came to milk her; there is an anecdote, however, which shows that at least one cow got even with the Britishers. She ran into a stack of bayonets, one of which penetrated her body sufficiently to enable her to run away with it. The boys had their famous coast along Park Street, until one day General Gage's soldiers destroyed their slides, thereby causing a great protest to be made. The General asked them if their fathers had been teaching them rebellion, but at the same time he evidently admired their "love of liberty" and ordered that their sport should not be interfered with again. Some years later wooden bridges for pedes- trians were erected over the slides to prevent accidents. During the Civil W^ar the headquarters of the Recruiting Commit- tee were on Flagstaff Hill on the Common, and many speeches were made urging men to enlist. On one occasion one young fellow de- clared that he would enlist even if he were a "paralyzed corpse," which remark brought forth loud cheers and many recruits. In 1862 a Great War Meeting and Parade were held on the Common, speeches being made by Governor Andrew, Edward Everett, Robert C. Winthrop and others. Many celebrations have been held here, but they are too numerous to receive more than a brief mention. The "Repeal of the Stamp Act" caused Captain Paddock's Artillery to roar out a salute, fol- lowed by fireworks and illuminations; Cornwallis' surrender was celebrated by a huge bonfire, and a few years later Peace was pro- claimed by cannon and fireworks; also the Bunker Hill procession, in which Lafayette participated, described elsewhere, had its starting place here. On these grounds, too, met the Great Whig Convention presided over by Daniel Webster, and the Grand Mass Washingtonian Convention of May, 1844. Another event was the Cochituate Water Celebration around the Frog Pond while Josiah Quincy was Mayor, when, as the last lines of Hon. Robert S. Rantoul's poem reads, "Boston claims her destined bride, the fair Cochituate, as Quincy turns the water, in eighteen forty-eight." The Frog Pond was also called "Crescent Pond" or "Quincy Lake." In 1851 a three days' Grand Railroad Jubilee, which included a parade and dinner, was held to commemorate the opening of com- munication between Boston and Canada, and some years later the Prince of Wales was entertained with a military review. When General Lee's army surrendered bells pealed, steam engines screeched through the streets, and cannon again boomed. The parade at the time of the Centennial Anniversary of the Battle of Bunker Hill was [ 24 ] SOME INTERESTING BOSTON EVENTS also formed here. It was in 1877 that the Army and Navy Monu- ment on Flagstaff Hill was dedicated, and we must not forget the Fourth of July celebrations that have taken place; nor must we omit several Indian war dances, the last of which took place in 1837, which caused about 70,000 to assemble to watch the antics. The Indians left the city in open barouches, sitting all over the vehicles and wielding their war weapons. We should also record several Temper- ance parades, one of which in 1844 was composed of the boys and girls of Boston, usually referred to as the "Cold Water Army," which marched to the Frog Pond and gave "three cheers for Cold Water." Many people signed the pledge on this occasion. Here also many military organizations were wont to drill, including the oldest order in the United States, the Ancient and Honorable Artillery Company. The Rev. George W'hitefield visited Boston in 1740, and as the churches couldn't accommodate the number of people who wanted to hear him, he decided to preach on Boston Common. Twenty thousand persons heard his farewell sermon, among whom was Benjamin Franklin, who determined he wouldn't give a cent when it should be time to take up the collection. The preacher was so convincing and so eloquent that Franklin ended by handing over every cent he had with him. A negro on the Common mistook some one for Whitefield, and, falling on the ground and rolling over, exclaimed, "Oh, Massa Whitefield!" He learned his mistake, and as he hurriedly rose to his feet, said, " Oh, den I'se gone dirtied myself all for nothin'." A unique event connected with the Common was the spinning com- petition in the year 1720, which was held daily in the open air before throngs of spectators, the women of the town, rich and poor, vying with each other in their speed in handling their newly imported machines. The fad continued for some time, and a Spinning School was built. It is a curious thing that the Irish-Scotch spinners who introduced these spinning-wheels also taught us the value of the potato, which had been hitherto almost unknown. On part of the Common a rich harvest of hay was often reaped, and on one occasion we read that Deacon Sullivan hired a well-known bell-crier to go round to the different schools and lead the children over to the pasturage to "enjoy the new mown hay." During the rav- ages of smallpox the Common was also a convenient place on which to air the clothes of the victims, there evidently being no Board of Health in Boston at that time. About sixty years ago an announce- ment appeared in the papers that a cave had been discovered, which drew a large number of people who paid a small entrance fee to see the new curiosity. After a short time some one in the crowd remem- bered that it was April 1. The Common has always been a recreation ground, and many famous football and baseball games have here been fought out. Mr. James D'Wolf Lovett's book, entitled "Old Boston Boys," gives a vivid idea of the sports on the Common fifty or so years ago. The Latin School team had many games with the Dixwell School, and the famous Lowell Baseball Club, organized by Mr. John A. Lowell, fought it out with the Trimountains, Bowdoins, Olympics, Rocking- [ 25 ] SOME INTERESTING BOSTON EVENTS hams, Athletics, Harvards, Elm Trees and Hancocks. In these games the runner had to be hit by the ball to be put out, stakes were used as bases, and foul balls were considered as hits. Sometimes as many as seventy or eighty runs were scored. The older men in Boston to-day remember with delight the home run "hit" made by Thomas Nelson, which soared over Flagstaff Hill towards West Street. One legend describes this ball as having rolled down West Street and then bounced on board a horse-car, which took it out to the Norfolk House. In the year 1869 probably for the first time baseball influenced a Mayor's election. The Common was ploughed up, and the ball players, fearing they would be permanently deprived of its use, entered politics and helped to elect a Mayor and aldermen who would be favorably disposed to the use of the Common as a playground. The "Baseball" ticket, with a red baseball printed at the top, won, and Mayor Shurtleff was elected. Coasting was popular in these days, and the sleds were almost as well known among the younger generation as race horses and yachts; the "Comet," owned by Dr. Frank Wells, the "Eagle," belonging to James Lovett, "Multum in Parvo," the property of Francis Peabody, and the "Tuscaloosa," handled by Horatio G. Curtis, being a few of the "race horses" of the day. "Old Boston Boys" also tells of an amusing incident that happened on one of the Beacon Hill coasts. A colored washerwoman of large propor- tions with her basket on her head was caught by a sled and deposited astride the coaster, who continued down the hill faster than ever. During the whole length of the slide she cuffed the frightened boy over the ears for having upset her. The Circus used to pitch its tent on the Public Garden, and the great drawing card with the Boston boys was the announcement that at a certain hour the elephants would bathe in the Frog Pond. A great feat of skill was to vault the high iron picket fence when the policeman was not looking and thereby gain admittance without charge on the day of some celebration. Many of the older generation who went to Mr. Sullivan's school in the basement of Park Street Church remember with sorrow the old blind cigar man who stood near the corner of Park and Tremont Streets and sold what he called "cinnamon" cigars, warranted harm- less and suitable for beginners; but, as they were made of real tobacco and merely dipped in cinnamon, the effect was not as advertised. Almost every boy "ran" with his particular engine and endeavored to have his "tub" win in the "playouts" on the Common, his Captain shouting to him meanwhile to "shake it out of her," or "just one foot further, if you love me!", or other appropriate remarks. When one of the loyal firemen died his last request was to cut off his ears and bury them under the engine house, so that he could hear the old machine rattle as she rolled out. THE FIRST NEWSPAPER IN AMERICA The first newspaper printed in America, entitled Puhlick Occurrences, Both Forreign and Domestick, appeared in Boston on September 25, 1690. It was a sheet of four pages, seven inches by eleven, with two [ 26 ] SOME INTERESTING BOSTON EVENTS columns on a page, and was printed "By R. Pierce for Benjamin Harris, at the London Coffee House, 1G90." The editor announced that it was issued in order "that tlie people may better understand public affairs, that important occurrences shall not be forgotten," and in order "that something may be done towards the Curing, or at least the Charming of that Spirit of Lying, which prevails among us." The introductory paragraph reads, "It is designed that the countrey shall be furnished once a month (or if any Glut of occurrences happen oftener) with an Account of such considerable things as have arrived unto our Notice." It then went on to say that the editor would " take pains to get a faithful relation of things and hopes observers will communicate of such matters as fall under their notice." And, further, the publisher proposes to correct false reports, and to expose the "First Raiser" of them, and he also adds that he thinks "none will dislike this Proposal, but such as intend to be guilty of so villianous a Crime." Mention is made of the Indians of Plymouth; of the fact that two children of Chelmsford had been stolen by the Indians; of the three hundred and thirty deaths in Boston from smallpox; of a fire near the South Meeting House; and of the murder of the crew of a vessel near Penobscot by Indians and French. There is also an account of Governor Winthrop's expedition to Canada, and other interesting news. Only one issue of the paper appeared. The authorities ordered Puhlick Occurrences discontinued, as they believed it contained "reflections of a very high nature," and the Court, in 1662, forbade "any thing in print without license being first obtained from those appointed by the government to grant the same." The people were not yet ready for a free press. Only one copy of this paper has ever been discovered, and it is now in the Colonial State Paper Office, in London. Dr. Samuel A. Green some years ago took a copy of it, which may be seen in the Massa- chusetts Historical Society rooms. Many of the papers issued since this time are not any better than was this "First Newspaper." The first regular newspaper was The Boston News Letter, which appeared in April, 1704, and which gives the history of the town for the next seventy years. It was issued by John Campbell, who was Postmaster of Boston, and printed by Bartholomew Green in a build- ing on Washington Street near the east corner of Avon Street. CAPTAIN KIDD ARRESTED AND JAILED IN BOSTON Lord Bellamont in London, before his departure for America to become Governor of the New York and the New England Colonies, commissioned Captain Kidd, at the suggestion of Robert Livingston, a New York merchant, to destroy piracy along the American coast. Captain Kidd was undoubtedly himself a pirate, although he had once been an officer in the British navy and later had commanded one of Livingston's merchant ships. He was a Scotchman. It is quite apparent that Lord Bellamont made this selection with the old adage in mind, "Set a rogue to catch a rogue." The pirate captain sailed in his Adventure Galley in December of the year 1697 wutli instructions to cruise only against the King's [ 27 ] SOME INTERESTING BOSTON EVENTS enemies. Instead of suppressing piracy, however, he captured the Qiiedah Merchant, belonging to the Great Mogul, and on his return to Long Island sent word to Bellamont, who was now in Boston, that he would be glad to come on and explain his actions. He arrived in Boston with his wife and maid ser- vant in June, 1699, on his sloop the Antonia, and put up at Camp- bell's, which was the most luxu- rious hotel in Boston at this time. Governor Bellamont himself having stayed there a short time before. On his arrival he was examined before the Council in the Old State House, but his explanations were so unsatisfactory that he was ar- rested on July 7 and jailed in the Old Prison on Court Street, where the new wing of the City Hall now stands, the same prison which confined the witchcraft victims. Captain Kidd suggested to Lord Bellamont that he should go back while still a prisoner to his capt- ured treasure ship and that he and Bellamont should divide the $300,000 of valuables which the Captain said were on board. The Governor's connection with Captain Kidd was already none too credit- able, and it was fortunate indeed for him that he turned down the offer. The hillsides of Southern Rhode Island and the waters of the Hudson River have been searched, but nothing has been discovered of Kidd's treasures except an old chest which was found on Gardiner's Island, just off the end of Long Island, where Captain Kidd landed in 1699. Lord Bellamont sent commissioners to dig up these buried treasures, and an inventory was made of the articles that were found, which is said to be in the pos- session of the Gardiner family who now own the island. It was now a question what to do with the pirate, as it was discovered that the laws of the Province were insufficient to execute criminals guilty of piracy. Two other brigands had escaped from this same prison, and Governor Bellamont more than once wished his prisoners were safely lodged in Newgate jail. An English frigate, the Advice, took Captain Kidd back to England, arriving in April, 1700. He was imprisoned for a long time, was tried for both murder and piracy and then hanged. He died hard. The rope broke the first time, but the second attempt proved successful. He committed the murder at sea, [ 28 ] CAPTAIN KIDD HANGING IN CHAINS. From an old print in " The Pirates Own Book or Authentic Narratives of the Lives, Exploits and Executions of the Most Cele- brated Sea Robbers." " My Lord, it is a very hard sentence," said Kidd, when asked wiiy sentence should not be passed against him. "For my part, I am the most innocent jDerson of them all, only I have been sworn against by perjured persons." He was executed on Execution Dock, England, and hung up in chains some distance down the river. SOME INTERESTING BOSTON EVENTS the victim being his gunner, whom he killed by striking with a water bucket. The pirates' song supposed to have been written by Benjamin Franklin is worth quoting. Ned Teach was another well-known rover of the seas. "Then each man to his gun For the work must be done. With cutlass, sword, or pistol; And when we no longer can strike a blow. Then fire the magazine, boys, and up we go. It is better to swim in the sea below Than to hang in the air, and to feed the crow, Said Jolly Ned Teach of Bristol." r i V K A 11 (; II I! K Y K 1) f T JE E 1! Keys to jail on Queen Street in which Captain Kidd was imprisoned. Now in the possession of the Bostonian Society. BENJAMIN FRANKLIN DELIVERS NEWSPAPERS IN BOSTON There is something very romantic and attractive in thinking of Benjamin Franklin early in his teens setting the type of his brother James' A^ew England Courant, printing the sheets from the old press now in the Bostonian Society rooms, and then carrying the papers through the streets to the houses of his customers. He was born on January 17, 1706, in a small house on Milk Street, where the family resided for a few years until they moved to the corner of Hanover and Union Streets. He was the most amusing member of the family. Once when he was w^atching his father, Josiah, prepare the winter's supply of salt fish, young Franklin suggested that he would save a lot of time if he said grace over the whole cask at once. His father was by trade a soap-boiler and tallow-chandler, and when his son had studied at the Latin School a few years he took him home at the age of ten to assist him in his own business. He showed so little interest in making soap and candles that his father decided to apprentice him as a printer to his elder son, James. Here Benjamin found more opportunity to read, the first literature that came to his notice being "Pilgrim's Progress" and the Spectator. It was not long before he wrote anonymous articles and shoved them surreptitiously under the door of the printing room, and to his great joy they were printed. [ 29 ] SOME INTERESTING BOSTON EVENTS Had James realized that they were from the pen of his brother they would probably have found their way into the scrap basket, as the two agreed none too well in business. The Mathers didn't at all approve of the Courant; it spoke too freely, and so the Assembly imprisoned James Franklin. In the mean time Benjamin had full charge of the management. When the elder brother had served his term he was discharged but ordered not to print his paper unless it were first supervised by the Secretary of the Province. It was then determined that the New England Courant should be issued under Benjamin's name, and this plan was carried out for Bronze tablet on statue of Benjamin Franklin, Boston City Hall Courtyard. about three years, the imprint reading, "Boston, printed and sold by Benjamin Franklin, in Queen Street, where advertisements are taken in." The building that was used as his first shop later became a bookstore, and was ornamented with a head of Franklin for many years, until it was torn down. Over the ofiice was the Long Room Club, where Adams, Hancock, Otis, Warren, Church, Quincy, Dawes, Paul Revere and others laid their plans for resisting the British. The animosity between the two brothers increased, and Benjamin soon gave up his position and looked for another one in some of the other printing houses in Boston. His brother had, however, gone to these same ofiices and prevented his getting any employment, and in October, 1723, he left the city in disgust. Had he been able to find some occupation, Boston might have been able to claim him during his whole life, instead of for only his first seventeen years. [ 30 ] SOME INTERESTING BOSTON EVENTS The town of Franklin, Mass., was named after him, and books to the value of £'i5 were given by Benjamin Franklin to be added to its library. SOME INTERESTING EVENTS IN CONNECTION WITH CHRIST CHURCH, OR "OLD NORTH CHURCH" The Old North Church on Salem Street is the oldest church in Boston standing on its original ground, and was the second Episcopal Church erected in the town. For many years its tall spire served as a landmark for vessels entering the harbour. As a boy Governor Phips dreamed that he would some day become rich and live on Salem Street, which was then called Green Lane, and later his dream came true. The North End was practically an island at one time and was reached by a bridge where Hanover and Blackstone Streets now meet. In the early days religious services were held in the Old State House. Christ Church is chiefly noted for its connection with the Revolu- tion and Paul Revere, yet there is much more history which, though less well known, is nevertheless most interesting and instructive. The corner-stone was laid in 1723 by the Rev. Samuel Myles, then rector of King's Chapel, who pronounced the following words: "May the gates of Hell never prevail against it." It was opened for divine service on December 29 of the same year by the first rector, the Rev. Timothy Cutler, who had a most unusual career. He was Doctor of Divinity of both Oxford and Cambridge universities, also was a graduate of Harvard in 1701 and then became President of Yale College in 1719. His home was on Salem Street. Dr. Cutler in a letter at this time stated that there were thirty-two "Negro and Indian slaves" in his parish. In the early days a fine was imposed upon any member who "does not appear within two hours after the time appointed for a meeting." A most interesting Bible was presented to the Church by King George II. in 1733. It is called the "Vinegar Bible," on account of a curious error which appears on one of the pages, the word "Vinegar" being printed in place of the word "Vineyard," in the chapter of St. Luke which refers to "The Parable of the Vineyard." Some of the Prayer Books have paper pasted over "King and Royal Family," and the words "President of the United States" written over it. The Church also owns a Communion Service, several pieces of which were given by King George II., and may be seen at the Museum of Fine Arts. At one time part of this Communion set was pledged to the creditors of the Church. A chime of eight bells, each bearing a different inscription, was placed in the steeple in 1744, having been made in a famous foundry in England. On bell "3" is written, "We are the first ring of bells cast for the British Empire in North America." For some years there was a guild of bell ringers composed of Paul Revere, John Dyer, Josiah Flagg, E. Ballard, Jonathan Law, Jonathan Brown, Jr., and Joseph Snelling. Captain Gruchy, a member of the Church and commander of the [31 ] SOME INTERESTING BOSTON EVENTS Privateer Queen of Hungary, presented to the church the four small statues in front of the organ, which were captured from a French vessel during the French and Indian war in 1746. They were doubt- less intended for a Catholic cathedral on the St. Lawrence River, but instead found their way to a Protestant church in Boston. It is said that General Gage watched the burning of Charlestown and the Battle of Bunker Hill from Christ Church steeple. In this battle Major Pitcairn was killed by a bullet fired by a negro soldier from Salem, and his remains were buried in the tomb beneath the church. About this time Lieutenant Shea, who died of fever, was also buried here. Some years later Major Pitcairn's friends in Eng- land sent for his body, and it is believed that through some curious mistake the remains of Lieutenant Shea were shipped in its place,, so that the tablet in Westminster Abbey possibly marks the last resting place of Shea, who had a very commonplace end, instead of marking the remains of the hero whose bravery its inscription com- memorates. Samuel Nicholson, First Commander of the Constihdiony was also buried here. Rev. Mather Byles was pastor from 1768 to 1775. His father, who was pastor of King's Chapel, was the celebrated wit of the town and was always cracking jokes. There are some good stories of his in "Deahngs with the Dead." In 1777 he was arrested as a Tory, placed under guard and ordered sent to England in forty days. He was discovered one morning pacing before his door with a musket on his shoulder, and one of his neighbors asked the cause. "You see," said the Doctor, "I begged the sentinel to let me go for some milk for my family, but he would not suffer me to stir. I reasoned the matter with him; and he has gone himself, to get it for me, on condi- tion that I keep guard in his absence." He frequently referred to his keeper as his "Observe-a-tory." He was also intimate with General Knox, who after the evacuation marched through Boston at the head of his artillery. Byles yelled out to him, "I never saw an ox fatter in my life." General Knox, who was quite stout, did not at all ap- preciate the remark. In front of Dr. Byles' house there was a mire, and he often tried to get the selectmen to fill it in. One morning two of the board happened to drive too near the bog, and their carriage sank in. Dr. Byles walked by them as they were trying to extricate themselves and politely remarked, "I am delighted, gentlemen, to see you stirring in this matter, at last." Another time a man with a toothache met the Doctor and asked him where he could have it drawn. The Doctor gave him a name and street number. On going to the address the occupant of the house answered him, "This is a poor joke for Dr. Byles, I am not a dentist, but a portrait painter — it will give you little comfort, my friend, to have me draw your tooth." Dr. Byles had sent him to Copley. Another time, when the Rev. Mr. Prince for some reason did not keep an engagement to preach. Dr. Byles rose and preached from the text, "Put not your trust in princes." It is recorded that once some one got the better of the Doctor. He was devoted at one time to a lady who finally married a Quincy. He met her one day and asked her how she happened to choose Quincy [ 32 ] SOME INTERESTING BOSTON EVENTS instead of Byles. She replied, "If there had been anything worse than biles Job would have been afflicted by them." Rev. William Montague, who was Rector from 1786 to 1792, and who lived in Dedham, Mass., was the person to whom a man called Savage gave the ball which killed Warren, although the identity of the bullet has sometimes been questioned. Dr. J. Collins Warren believes that the bullet was buried with the body. In the Old South Church there is a photograph of the skull of General Warren, which shows a large bullet wound in the head. He was supposed to have been shot while climbing over a stone wall. In 1815 a bust of George Washington was presented to the church, and is believed to be the first memorial erected to him in a public place. Lafayette said it was the best likeness of Washington that he had ever seen. It has never been definitely determined who hung the lanterns in the belfry on that memorable 18th of April, the highest authorities being at variance between Robert Newman, the Sexton, and Captain John Pulling, Jr., a close friend of Paul Revere. It is certain that both had much to do with displaying the warning. Newman was discovered in bed and arrested, but nothing could be proved against him. Captain Pulling certainly acted as if he were guilty, for, dis- guised as a laborer, he made his way by sea to Cohasset, where he and his wife remained in hiding for some time. His wife was a Hingham woman named Sarah Thaxter. Each year the lanterns are hung in the belfry by one of the descendants of Paul Revere. On the next to the last anniversary the little boy who was carrying them fell and broke one, but it was soon repaired. To the Rt. Rev. William Lawrence, the present Rector, is chiefly due the preservation of the building, which was reopened on Sunday, December 29, 1912. WOODBRIDGE-PHILLIPS DUEL ON THE COMMON The duel between Benjamin Woodbridge and Henry Phillips was the first in Boston which resulted in the death of one of the partici- pants. Both of these men were merchants of the town and highly respected citizens, and the aft'air cjuite naturally caused much excite- ment. The origin of their quarrel, which started on the evening of July 3, 1728, at the Royal Exchange Tavern on King Street, has always been a mystery, though it must have been of a serious nature. They repaired at once to the Common, which had already witnessed several duels in times gone by, and settled their controversy near the old Powder House Hill and not far from the water where Charles Street now lies. Phillips ran his sword completely through the body of Woodbridge, who was not discovered until early the following morn- ing. There were no seconds. The survivor became much alarmed when he realized that he had probably killed his adversary, and as he walked across the Common he met Robert Handy of the White Horse Tavern and begged him to go back and get a surgeon for the wounded man. Handy, however, concluded that it would be safer for him to return to his Inn. Governor Dummer immediately issued [ 33 ] SOME INTERESTING BOSTON EVENTS a proclamation commanding all persons in the Province to endeavor to capture Phillips and bring him to justice, and hand-bills were placed upon all the town pumps and chief corners of the town, ac- cording to the custom of the day. Phillips, however, eluded his pursuers, with the aid of his brother Gillam and Peter Faneuil, whose sister married this same Gillam. He was concealed for a short time in the house of Colonel Estis Hatch and was then rowed from Gibbs Wharf in Fort Hill, in Captain John Winslow's boat, to the British man-of-w^ar Sheerness which was lying near Castle Island. OflScers endeavored to find this ship, and others from the cupola of the old Town House scanned the harbour in vain. The Sheerness had already departed for Rochelle, France, with her unhappy exile, who died the following year in distress over the deed he had committed. His mother went over to comfort him, but arrived after his death. Governor Burnett succeeded Governor Dummer about a month after the duel, and, with eighty-seven other prominent citizens, signed a petition for Phillips, certifying as to his honorable character and asking for his pardon for what was then a charge of murder. Woodbridge's body was taken to the house of his partner, Jonathan Sewall, and his funeral was attended by the Commander-in-Chief, several of the Council, and many of the townspeople. He was buried in the Granary Burying Ground. A sermon with this duel as the text was delivered a few days later by Dr. Joseph Sewell, of the Old South Church. Phillips was only twenty-two years of age, and his victim was only a few years older. A law was passed soon after to prevent duelling, which provided that, even if no injuries were inflicted, any person convicted of en- gaging in a duel should "be carried publicly in a cart to the gallows, with a rope about his neck, and set on the gallows an hour, then to be imprisoned twelve months without bail." Any one who was killed should be denied Christian burial and must be buried " near the usual place of execution with a stake drove through the body." The sur- vivor was considered a murderer and must be executed and buried in a similar manner. MASSACHUSETTS ISSUES LOTTERY TICKETS TO HELP REBUILD FANEUIL HALL This cut, which is taken from an original lottery ticket to be seen in the banking rooms of the State Street Trust Company, shows one of the six thousand tickets sold under the auspices of the Massachu- setts legislature in 1762 to help rebuild Faneuil Hall, which was de- stroyed by fire the year before. A special committee, consisting of Thomas Cushing, Samuel Hewes, John Scollay, Benjamin Austin, Samuel Sewall, S. P. Savage and Ezekiel Lewis, was appointed to act as Managers of the lottery, and subscribers could get their numbers from the Board or from the firm of Green & Russell in Queen Street. The tickets were sold for $2 apiece, which brought in $12,000, but as there were 1,486 prizes amounting to $10,800 there was only a net profit of $1,200 to pay to the contractor. There was one prize of $1,000 and one of $500, all the others being of smaller amounts, [ 34 ] SOME INTERESTING BOSTON EVENTS ranging down to $4'. The oontnictor made many complaints about the slowness of payment, and a committee was chosen to decide the dispute. Although Governor Hancock signed tiie original of which this cut is a copy, he tlid not sign all of the issue, and later on he exerted his influence against this scheme of raising money, which encouraged gambling and at the same time produced such meagre results. Faneuil Hall was occupied for a town meeting again in March, 1764. Lotteries were regarded almost in the light of investments and were authorized by the State authorities. It was thought as respect- able to sell tickets as to sell Bibles, and the two have been seen classed together in the same advertisement. Without doubt lotteries were .■^L' U' 6*S ;-.:^ I^ OS TiJN, ^prlL 1767. l:h FaneLul-^U?.\\ LOTTERY, Numbtr EIGHT, r /|i5 Tdis Ticket [No./^/?
^Q^FJNEUIL■YiA\', fubjca to no Dcduaiqn; -^
Picture of original lottery ticket to rebuild Faneuil Hall. In the collection of the State Street
Trust Company.
a means of raising money (which could not otherwise at that time be
procured) for churches, colleges, roads, bridges, ferries, wharves, etc.
Advertisements were common, and often the figure of Fortune blind-
folded and balancing herself upon a wheel was used, or men angling for
prizes. Notices often spoke of the lottery as a "speedy cure for a
broken fortune." One of the most important public lotteries was held
by Harvard University to build Stoughton Hall and, later on, Hol-
worthy; in 1774 the Province held one to replenish the treasury.
Charlestown also had a large one, as did Dartmouth College; there was
also one to pave Boston Neck, to make Gloucester Road, to improve
Plymouth Beach, and for the benefit of a paper mill in Milton.
There were likewise many private lotteries, some of which were man-
aged dishonestly, the drawn tickets often being sold a second time.
The lottery originated in Florence in 1530, and was first instituted
in England in 1507, when the first drawing took place at the west
door of St. Paul's.
General Lincoln of Massachusetts had a law passed in 1833 pro-
hibiting the sale of tickets in this State.
[ 35 ]
SOME INTERESTING BOSTON EVENTS
LIBERTY TREE
"Of high renown, here grew the tree.
The Elm so dear to Liberty;
Your sires, beneath its sacred shade,
To Freedom early homage paid.
This day with fihal awe surround
Its root, that sanctifies the ground.
And by your fathers' spirits swear.
The rights they left you'll not impair."
Judge Dawes.
Hundreds of people daily hurry past the corner of Essex and
Washington Streets and pass the spot where, exactly a century and
a half ago, stood an old elm tree from the branches of which dangled
the effigy of Andrew Oliver. Oliver was Secretary of the Province
and personified to the people the Stamp Act, — the thing the colonists
hated most in the world. This elm, which played such an important
part in the early history of the Colony, came to be known as Liberty
Tree. A freestone bas-relief now marks the spot where it once stood;
thereon is the following inscription: —
Liberty 1765
Law and Order
Sons of Liberty 1766
Independence of their Country 1776.
The effigy of Oliver, discovered swinging from the largest branch
of the tree, created wild excitement.
"Take it down," Governor Hutchinson commanded the sheriff.
"I don't dare to, sir," retorted that dignitary.
Local revolution was in the air — ^and the sheriff undoubtedly
wanted to keep clear of the tar pot and a nice warm coat of many
feathers.
The day that Oliver's effigy hung, along with a boot, with the devil
peeping out of it, might have been a holiday judging by the excitement
that reigned throughout the town. The boot was intended as a pun
upon the name of Lord Bute, Prime Minister of England. Business
was practically suspended. Crowds came from miles around. All
day long the figures dangled from the tree. When day closed the
effigies were removed — a procession solemnly formed, followed by
thousands of all sorts and conditions; the effigies were placed on a
bier, and the procession marched solemnly to the Town House. From
there it moved to the supposed office of the Stamp Master. On it
went to Fort Hill, where the effigies were burned in full sight of Mr.
Oliver's house. The Sons of Liberty, later on, compelled Oliver to
make a public resignation before Richard Dana, Justice of the Peace,
beneath the Liberty Tree; no other place would satisfy them.
Other figures of those favoring the Stamp Act and other English
regulations appeared on the branches of Liberty Tree, including those
of Charles Paxton, a revenue collector, and Benjamin Hallo well,
Comptroller of Customs. Then a tablet was fixed, — a copper plate
bearing the inscription in gold letters, "The Tree of Liberty, August
14, 1765." The spot became the meeting place of the Sons of Liberty
[ 36 ]
SOME INTERESTING BOSTON EVENTS
and continued to be until the colonists were driven out of Boston
by the siege. The date February 14, 1766, was set on it by the Sons
of Liberty, and by their order the old tree was pruned. The repeal
of the Stamp Act was also celebrated with illuminations on the tree
and on the Common. The ground about the tree became known as
Liberty Hall, and in August, 1767, a flagstaff was erected which
extended through the liighest branches of the tree; when a flag was
hoisted from this staft", it was a signal for the Sons of Liberty to gather
for an important conference.
The admiration of Bostonians for their Liberty Tree is shown
by the will of a man called Philip Billis, who left a considerable for-
tune to two friends on condition that they would bury his body
beneath the shadow of its branches.
The British entertained as great a contempt for the tree as
they did for the colonists. When poor Ditson was tarred and
feathered he was compelled to parade in front of Liberty Tree.
At length so great an eye-sore was the famous landmark that during
the last week in August, 1775, a party led by Job Williams destroyed
it. "Armed with axes," says the Essex Gazette of 1775, "they made
a furious attack upon it. x\fter a long spell of laughing and grinning,
sweating, swearing and foaming, wuth malice diabolical, they cut
dow^n the tree because it bore the name of Liberty." One of the
British party, during the attack, lost his life by falling from one of
the highest branches to the pavement. The tree had been planted one
hundred and nineteen years, in 1646, and the Pemberton Manuscript
states that it bore the first fruits of liberty in America. Long after the
Revolution the place where it had stood for so long was called Liberty
Stump. On it was erected a pole which served for many years as
a guide-post, which having decayed was replaced by a second pole
just after the arrival of General Lafayette as a guest of the nation in
1824. As the General's carriage stopped in front of the famous spot
he was much affected. A pleasing incident occurred there. A
young girl, with a red, white and blue sash across her shoulders, came
down the steps of the Lafayette Hotel oj^posite, bearing on a silver
salver two goblets and a bottle of old wine from France. Lafayette
drank the wine she gave him with great gallantry. Later, in speak-
ing of the Tree, he said, "The world should never forget where once
stood the Liberty Tree, so famous in your annals."
SIGNING OF THE CHARTER PAPERS OF THE BOSTON TEA
PARTY VESSELS IN THE ROTCH WHALING OFFICE,
NANTUCKET
The Charter Papers of the three ships that brought the tea into
Boston Harbour in 1773 were made out and signed in the whaling
office of William Rotch, which still exists as a Club at the foot of old
cobble-stoned Main Street in Nantucket. Rotch sailed for London
in the early part of the year in a ship commanded by Alexander
Coffin, and while there he made a contract with the East India Com-
pany to take a cargo of tea to Boston in three of the ships belonging
ito his firm. Two of the vessels were "whalers," one being the
[ 37 ]
SOME INTERESTING BOSTON EVENTS
Dartmouth of New Bedford, commanded by Captain James Hall,
and the other the Beaver, captained by Hezekiah Coffin of Nantucket;
the third was the Eleanor.
It was this same Rotch who, after the Revolutionary War, moved
his family and other Nantucket whalemen to Dunkirk, and from there
carried on the pursuit of whaling, being the first ship-owner who ever
sent a whaleship into the Pacific Ocean. On the occasion of a French
victory, during his residence in Dunkirk, all the inhabitants lighted
bonfires on their lawns, and any one who didn't do so was held under
suspicion. Rotch was a Quaker, and it was contrary to his belief
The Rotch WhaUng Office, now the Pacific Club, at the foot of Main Street, Nantucket,
old whale weathervane can be seen above the building.
The
to celebrate in this manner. It was necessary therefore to seek the
protection of the authorities in Dunkirk, who placed a representative
on the lawn of all the Quaker residences to explain the reason why
it was impossible for them to join in the celebrations. Rotch re-
turned to America, but his son Benjamin and daughter-in-law never
came back. She was so ill on the voyage over that her doctor advised
her never to attempt the return journey, and she remained abroad all
her life.
The old brick counting house shown in the picture above was built
in lll'l by William Rotch & Sons, who occupied it until 1795, when
they moved to New Bedford. The old building has an exceedingly
interesting history. Many a whaleship has been started from here
on her long voyage to report years later her success or failure; and,
finally, when the industry died out in 1861, seven of the captains
[ 38 ]
SOME INTERESTING BOSTON EVENTS
organized the Pacific Club, which was composed of retired whaling
veterans, using the lower floor of the building for Club rooms. The
last captain died in 1913 at the age of ninety, l)ut the original twenty-
four memberships are to-day possessions that are highly prized by
the descendants of the old whaling families of the Island. There are
also forty-four "annual" members, twenty of whom are summer
visitors. The ship prints on the walls would excite the envy of all
collectors, and it is a pity that the old stove in the centre of the room
cannot repeat the whaling yarns that have been told around it. In
the picture can be seen the whale weathervane rising from a platform
so common in the Nantucket houses, which is built on the roof to
enable the families to detect the home-coming of their ships.
The Tea Party was productive of several amusing incidents. All
of the contents of the three hundred and forty-two chests of tea did
not float down the harbour with the tide. When Thomas Melville,
one of the "Mohawk Band," returned home his wife collected some
of the tea from his shoes and preserved it in a bottle. It is believed
that this possession was handed down to Samuel Shaw, son of Judge
Shaw, and it is doubtless in existence to-day, the property of a member
of the family. Several persons were detected in the act of stealing
tea. One of the "Indians" filled his pockets and even the lining of
his clothes, but was soon detected. Some one grabbed him by his
coat, which came off, enabling the wearer to escape, but not without
having to run the gauntlet of the crowd on the wharf, each one of
whom gave him a kick. His coat was nailed to the whipping-post
in Charlestown, the place of his residence, with the name of the owner
labelled upon it in large letters.
It is only natural that Bostonians should take a deep interest in
this old building, which serves to link together by its history the town
of Nantucket and our city.
GENERAL WARREN CLIMBS THROUGH THE WINDOW OF
THE OLD SOUTH CHURCH TO DELIVER HIS FAMOUS
"MASSACRE" SPEECH
Warren raised himself, a Tory writer has said, from a barelegged
boy to be a major-general. As a boy, he was manly, fearless and
independent, which characteristics he still possessed as he grew into
manhood. He was so determined to commemorate in a fitting way
the Boston Massacre that he climbed in the window of the Old South
Church, there being no other way of reaching the pulpit, and there
delivered his address before an audience of townspeople and a com-
pany of armed officers of the king's army. There's a story told of his
college days at Harvard. Several of his class in the course of a frolic
tried to exclude him by shutting themselves in a chamber and bar-
ring the door so tightly that he could not force it. Wan-en, bent on
joining them, saw that their window was open, and that a spout was
near it which reached from the roof to the ground. He went to the
top of the house, walked to the spout, slid by it to the open window,
and threw himself into the room. At that instant the spout fell.
He quietly remarked that it had served his purpose. He then en-
[ 39 ] •
SOME INTERESTING BOSTON EVENTS
tered into the sport of his classmates. "A spectator of this feat and
narrow escape," says Knapp, "related this fact to me in the college
yard, nearly half a century afterwards, and the impression it made
on his mind was so strong that he seemed to feel the same emotions
as though it happened an hour before."
Warren was a writer as well as an orator. He was thirty-five
years old when he delivered his oration on the anniversary of the
Boston Massacre. It was in 1775, and the town was occupied by
hostile troops. It had been given out that it would be at the price
of life to any man to speak of the massacre, as there was unrest and
clashing on every hand, and the parties concerned were on the verge
of war. In the midst of such conditions, at his own suggestion, War-
ren was appointed orator. The anniversary fell on Sunday. It
was to be celebrated on Monday, and early in the day carriages and
people began to arrive in Boston. The Old South was crowded. The
pulpit was draped in black. On the platform were the chief leaders
of the colonists, — Samuel Adams, John Hancock, and the rest. It
was observed that the aisles were crowded with British officers,
thereupon Samuel Adams courteously asked the occupants of the
front pews to move that the officers might be seated. Some forty,
in uniform, filled the pews and the pulpit stairs. The audience was
uneasy. There was a stir among the crowd outside, and Warren
drove up in a chaise and went directly to the house opposite the
church, where he put on his black robe. To avoid the crowd he went
around to the rear of the church, gathered his robe about him, climbed
a ladder and entered the church through the window back of the pulpit.
The silence that followed his appearance in the pulpit was oppressive.
"His speech," says Frothingham, "imbued with the spirit of a
high chivalry and faith, resounds with the clash of arms. The
speeches in which prominent actors in Grecian and Roman story
develop their policy or promote their objects, not words actually
spoken, but what the relator thought fitting to have been spoken,
were regarded as valuable delineations of the temper of these times.
But here were the words of an earnest and representative man, ut-
tered on the eve of a great war, and in the presence of a military
power whom he was soon to meet in the field."
For the sake of the cause, it has been said, Warren dared to speak
what some scarce dared to think.
Some of the officers groaned when the Old South audience ap-
plauded — though as a whole they remained quiet until the close of
the oration. Captain Chapman of the Welsh Fusileers, seated near
the pulpit, held up a handful of bullets in the course of the oration,
and Warren, observing the action, dropped his white handkerchief
over the officer's open palms and then continued his fiery remarks.
Later, when the town's representatives moved that the thanks of
the town be presented to the orator for the oration, the British
officers pounded on the floor with their canes, some hissed, others
cried "Fie! Fie!" — the latter, being understood for a cry of fire,
caused some panic. Even then, the king's representatives did not
succeed in breaking up the meeting. The 47th Regiment happened
to pass the church at the time, and the commander ordered the
[ 40 ]
SOME INTERESTING BOSTON EVENTS
drums to beat in order to drown the voice of the orator. It was
learned afterwards that a plot had been arranged to seize Adams,
Hancock and Warren. It had been planned that an ensign was to
give the signal by throwing an egg at the orator, but luckily he fell
on the way to the meeting, dislocating his knee and breaking the egg,
thereby spoiling the scheme.
"The xA.ssembly," says Samuel Adams, "was irritated to the
greatest degree, and confusion ensued. They, however, did not gain
their end, which was apparently to break up the meeting, for order
was soon restored. It was provoking enough to the whole corps that
while there were many troops stationed here, there should yet be
one for the purpose of delivering an oration, to commemorate a
massacre perpetrated by soldiers and to show the danger of standing
armies."
"The scene was sublime," Samuel L. Knapp says. "There was
in this appeal to Britain — in this description of suffering, dying,
horrors — a calm and high-souled defiance which must have chilled
the blood of every sensible foe. Such another hour has seldom hap-
pened in the history of man, and is not surpassed in the records of
nations. The thunders of Demosthenes rolled in the distance at
Philip and his host; and Tully poured the fiercest torrent of invective
when Catiline was at a distance, and his dagger no longer feared, but
Warren's speech was made to proud oppressors resting on their arms,
whose errand it was to overawe, and whose business it was to fight."
THE LAST BALL IN THE PROVINCE HOUSE, WITH SOME
INTERESTING INFORMATION IN REGARD TO THE
HOUSE
Sir William Howe, the last Royal Governor of the Colonies, gave a
ball at Province House on February 22, 1776, during the latter part
of the siege of Boston. It was attended by the officers of the British
army and the Royal Tories of the Province, and every one appeared
masked and in some kind of masquerade costume. It was Sir
William's idea to have some kind of festivity in order to hide the
distress and general gloom caused by the siege. Nathaniel Hawthorne
gives us a description, which, although full of romance and legend,
nevertheless is an excellent picture of Boston at this time. The
chief interest was centred on a group of persons who were dressed
up most ridiculously in old regimental costumes which looked as
if they might have been worn at the siege of Louisburg, or in some
of the old wars. One person represented George Washington, others
Gates, Lee, Putnam and other officers of the American army.
They looked more like scarecrows than anything else. There was
an interview between these skeleton warriors and the British Com-
mander-in-chief, which was received with great applause. It is related
that while tlie party was in progress there went by a parade with
muffled drums, the trumpets giving forth a wailing sound which
was evidently intended to worry Sir William and make him realize
that troubles were near at hand. He went out of the house and
ordered it to disperse. The Puritan Governors P^ndicott, Winthrop»
[ 41 ]
PROVINCE HOUSE AS IT IS TO-DAY.
The wall on the right of fire-escape is the original east end of the Province House,
impossible to get a better view, on account of the narrow passageway.
SOME INTERESTING BOSTON EVENTS
Vane, Dudley, Haynes, Bellingham and Leverett were then seen
walking down the staircase. Lord Percy believed that there might
be some kind of a plot, but his host persuaded him that it was only
a jest and a very stupid one at that. Old Governor Bradstreet
then appeared, followed by Governors Andros, Phips, the Earl of
Bellamont, Governors Belcher, Dudley, Burnet and Shute. Sir
^Yilliam Howe and his guests watched the pageant with anger, con-
tempt and fear. Governors Shirley, Pownall, Bernard and Hutchin-
son were also represented. Last of all appeared the figure of Governor
Howe about to leave the Province House. The figure walked to
the door, clenched his hands, stamped his foot and uttered a curse as
he gave up his home after his defeat. It is said that not long after
this he actually used these same gestures when as the last Royal
Governor he left the Province House never to return. While the
ball was in progress it is reported that there was a roar of artillery
which announced that Washington had captured another entrench-
ment at Dorchester Heights. Captain Joliffe, a Whig, who happened
to be present, asked Sir William if he realized the significance of the
pageant, and was warned by his host "to take care of his gray head
and that it had stood too long on a traitor's shoulders." JoliflFe
replied that the Empire of Britain in this Ancient Province was
about to give its last gasp that night. The festival soon broke up.
The names of the actors of that night have never been found out,
but have gone down in history together with the Indians who scattered
the boxes of tea in Boston Harbour. There is a legend that on the
anniversary night of the defeat of the British, the ghosts of the
ancient governors of Massachusetts glide through the doorway of
Province House.
When the Governor left he handed over the key to old Esther
Dudley, his housekeeper, who, it is related, stayed for many years
in the old house and was still faithful to the King. It is said that
many of the old Tories of Boston used to meet here and drink some
of the old wine that was still left. It has even been rejjorted that
she used to illuminate the house every year on the anniversary
of the King's birthday and that she often climbed to the cupola
in search of a British fleet or a procession of Redcoats, which
she always thought would come and recapture the Colony. The
people, however, felt quite difl'erently, for they often would say,
"When the golden Indian on the Province House shall shoot his
arrow, and the cock on the Old South steeple shall crow, then look
for the Royal Governor again." This was a by-word in the town.
The land of the Province House, the original plan of which can be
seen in the office of C. H. W. Foster, Esq., was given to the Massa-
chusetts General Hospital in 1811, the same year it was incorporated.
The Trustees of the Hospital in 1817 leased the property for ninety-
nine years to David Greenough, who changed over the front of the
building into stores and leased them. Later the building was turned
into a tavern and then into a hall for negro minstrels, until it was
almost destroyed by fire in 18G4. The house is now used as part
of the Old South Theatre, which has its entrance on Washington
Street almost opposite the Old South Church. The photograph on
[ 43 1
SOME INTERESTING BOSTON EVENTS
page 42 gives a view of the northeast wall, now one side of the theatre^
which is practically as it has been for several generations. It is
well worth a visit and may be found by going up School Street,
then along Province Street, turning down the first alleyway before
coming to Province Court, which is extremely narrow. The old wall
is at the end of the passageway on the right. This end of the old
house consists of a huge exterior chimney, which is "stepped," or
smaller at the top than at the bottom. There is only one like it in
all New England. The entire front wall towards Washington Street
^then Marlborough Street — is still standing, but is more difficult to
find on account of the extension erected by the theatre. Of the
other two sides, scarcely any part exists to-day.
The Indian which stood on the cupola is now in the possession of the
Massachusetts Historical Society. The porch once stood in front of
the "Poore" farm, at Indian Hill, West Newbury, now owned by the
family of F. S. Moseley, Esq. The interior panelling from one of the
rooms of Province House, said to have been the Council Chamber, is
now in one of the rooms at Indian Hill.
"FROG" DINNER GIVEN TO THE OFFICERS OF THE
FRENCH FLEET
When Admiral d'Estaing and his fleet visited Boston in 1778, they
were most hospitably received, and among the various entertainments
held in their honor was a dinner given by Mr. Nathaniel Tracy of
Cambridge. He had seen some of d'Estaing's sailors hunting frogs
in the Frog Pond, and, believing them to be a national dish, he
had all the swamps of Cambridge searched for enough of these animals
to supply his guests. There was a large tureen at each end of the
table, and from one of these Tracy ladled out soup and a frog for each
guest. The French Consul, M. L'Etombe, fished out his frog,
held it up by its hind legs, exclaiming, "Mon Dieu, une grenouille,"
and then passed it around the table to his friends. The Frenchmen
were greatly surprised at this "delicate attention," and Mr. Tracy
was fully as astonished to find that they did not appreciate his efforts
in the way that he had intended. "What's the matter?" said he.
"Why don't you eat them.'*" "If they knew the confounded trouble
I had to catch them in order to treat them to a dish of their own
country, they would find that, with me at least, it was no joking
matter."
John Hancock, the Governor of Massachusetts, also welcomed
the Frenchmen to his attractive house on Beacon Hill. It was impor-
tant for America while at war with England to encourage the
friendship of the French, with whom a treaty had just been made.
Governor Hancock was much disturbed at the prospect of entertain-
ing such distinguished guests, and in a letter to Henry Quincy begged
him to help find suitable food for them. Admiral d'Estaing asked
if he might bring his three hundred officers with him. There wasn't
food enough for all, but Mrs. Hancock rose to the occasion and sent
her servants to the Common to milk any cows they could find.
The owners of the animals were more amused than displeased and
[ 44 ]
SOME INTERESTING BOSTON EVENTS
made no protest. The French Admiral invited the Governor's
wife to dine on board his flagship, and she got even with him by
bringing with her all the women she could get together. While at
dinner she was requested to pull a cord, which was the signal to dis-
charge all the guns of the squadron in her honor.
Admiral d'Estaing was later one of the victims of the guillotine in
the French Revolution.
THE PENOBSCOT EXPEDITION— PAUL REVERE
A LIEUTENANT
For several reasons this expedition is of interest to the people of
Boston and Massachusetts. Brigadier-General Solomon Lovell of
Weymouth was Commander-in-Chief, Peleg Wadsworth, Adjutant-
General of Massachusetts, was second in command, and Paul Revere
was Lieutenant-Colonel in command of a train of artillery. Also the
attack was directed against Bagaduce, now part of Castine, which is
near the Penobscot River and within a few hours' sail of Camden,
Islesboro, Isle au Haut, Belfast and Nortli Haven, where many resi-
dents of this State have their summer homes. General Lovell's
diary, found in 1879 and published in 1881 by the Weymouth His-
torical Society, gives a most accurate account of this expedition, which
at the time of sailing from Boston, July 19, 1779, seemed to be most
formidable, but which turned out actually to be a most unfortunate
undertaking. Solomon Lovell had served as Colonel of one of the
Massachusetts regiments at Dorchester Heights in 1776; he was re-
lated to James Lovell Little and Luther Little, both of Boston.
Though the expedition was a failure, it was through no fault of
General Lovell's, who showed himself throughout to be an honest,
brave and competent officer.
In June, 1779, a British force under General McLean took possession
of a peninsula on Penobscot Bay, now part of Castine, in order to
prevent the ships of Boston, Newburyport, Salem and Marblehead
from making this Maine seaport their base in their raids upon British
commerce. The British troops then built a fort two hundred and
fifty feet square, called Fort George, on the high ground of the
peninsula. Its outline is still standing, and the remains of the
dungeon are clearly visible. The interior to-day furnishes a con-
venient practice field for the Castine Baseball Club, and the earth-
works afford excellent bunkers for the Castine Golf Club.
The news of the occupation of Castine by the enemy caused con-
sternation among the Eastern Colonies, and orders were issued by
the General Court to fit out an expedition to dispossess the English
of their newly acquired territory. The Board of War was ordered to
ec^uip the Warren and the Providence and other vessels, to muster
l,'-200 militia and 100 artillery, and to collect ammunition, provisions
and supplies of all kinds. The fleet of nineteen ships, under the
command of Dudley Saltonstall, of New London, was probably the
strongest naval force furnished by New England during the Revolution.
The cost was £1,739,174 lis. 4>d. and proved to be a large burden on
the Colony.
[ 45 ]
SOME INTERESTING BOSTON EVENTS
The expedition arrived oflF the Fox Islands on the 24th of July, and
on the 26th the marines attacked one of the enemy's positions with
success, capturing their flag. General Lovell then decided that a
combined land and naval attack should be made, but Commodore
Saltonstall believed for some reason that this would not be a prudent
move. Therefore, on the 28th, General Lovell determined to carry
out his land attack alone. He was completely successful, his soldiers
scaling the precipitous bluffs and capturing a position on the plateau
above. The ascent of this cliff in the face of veteran troops was re-
garded as one of the most brilliant exploits of the entire war. While
General Lovell's troops were encamped near Fort George one of
his men, while going beyond the lines for a pail of water, was twice
fired upon by sixty or more English soldiers, and much to their astonish-
ment the New Englander didn't receive a scratch. The Commodore
still would not agree to push forward with his fleet until General
Lovell began his attack on Fort George, therefore the latter determined
to push forward against the fort and to rely upon the fleet to back
him up. As the ships were weighing anchor a fleet of British rein-
forcements was seen approaching, whereupon the Massachusetts
troops immediately had to retreat and embark on their transports.
Again Commodore Saltonstall would not attack, but set sail for the
Bagaduce River, at the head of the harbour of Castine. There
was nothing now for the soldiers to do except to escape to shore,
leaving their transports to run aground or to be captured by the
enemy. General Lovell endeavored to collect his forces but without
avail, and after much suffering and hardship he and his men found
their way back to Boston in small detachments. Captain Wadsworth
some time later was captured by the British in his home at Thomaston,
and was imprisoned in a jail in Castine, from which he made a miracu-
lous escape.
The American ships-of-war sailed into the Bagaduce trap and were
all captured or burned. A hostile fleet of seven sail had beaten and
destroyed the entire fleet of nineteen vessels. The defeat was a
disgraceful one. Paul Revere left his ordnance brig and went ashore
at Fort Pownal. This ship, with all the artillery and ammunition,
was deserted, but made her way alone up the river for several miles,
where she was finally burned. About twenty-five of the English
soldiers died of smallpox a few years later and were buried on Lasell's
Island, which is about half-way between Rockland and Islesboro. It
is said that their graves can still be seen.
The failure of the expedition depleted the treasury of the Province
and caused such excitement that the General Court appointed a
committee to examine into and report the causes of failure. This
committee consisted of Generals Michael Farley and Jonathan
Titcomb, Colonel Moses Little, Major Samuel Osgood, James Prescott,
Generals x\rtemas Ward and Timothy Danielson, Hon. W'illiam
Sever and Francis Dana. Artemas Ward was the chairman. General
Lovell was entirely exonerated, the blame being placed on the failure
of the fleet to advance in conjunction with the land forces. Paul
Revere was somewhat censured for his conduct, a somewhat extraor-
dinary happening, as he was usually very efficient in his undertakings.
[ 46 ]
SOME INTERESTING BOSTON EVENTS
Besides being a soldier he was a goldsmith, coppersmith, operated
the first powder mill in the Province, took part in the Tea Party,
was an engraver, owned a bell foundry at the North End and a
manufacturing company for copper bolts, etc., at Canton, Mass.,
and was also President of the Mechanics Charitable Association.
It is not generally known that he as well as many others at this
time also practised dentistry in conjunction with other trades, as
shown by the following notices which appeared in Boston on July
19, 1770:—
Paul Revere takes this method of returning his most sincere thanks to the
gentlemen and ladies who liave employed him in the care of their teeth. He
would now inform them and all others, who are so unfortunate as to lose
their teeth by accident or otherwise, that he still continues the business of
a dentist and flatters himself that from the experience he has had these two
years (in which time he has fixt some hundreds of teeth) that he can fix them
as well as any Surgeon Dentist who ever came from London. He fixes them
in such a manner that they are not only an ornament but of real use in speak-
ing and eating; he cleanses the teeth and will wait on any gentleman or lady
at their lodgings. He may be spoke with at his shop opposite Dr. Clark's
at the North End, where the gold and silver-smith business is carried on in
all its branches.
Whereas many persons are so unfortunate as to lose their fore-teeth by
accident and otherwise, to their great detriment, not only in looks but speak-
ing, both in public and private; — this is to inform all such that they may
have them replaced with false ones that look as well as the natural and answer
the end of speaking to all intents. By Paul Revere, Goldsmith, near the
head of Dr. Clark's wharf, Boston.
All persons who have had false teeth fixed by Mr. John Baker, Surgeon
Dentist, and they have got loose (as they will in time) may have them fastened
by the above who learnt the method of fixing them from Mr. Baker.
It is interesting to know that Castine has been owned at different
times by five nations, Dutch, Indians, French, English and Americans,
and several sea fights have taken place between this harbour and the
Island of Islesboro directly opposite. In 1813 the English cut a canal
across the mainland from the Bagaduce River to Wadsworth Cove to
enable their ships to escape should they ever be suddenly attacked.
The remains of this canal can still be seen.
DR. JOHN JEFFRIES OF BOSTON— THE FIRST AMERICAN
TO FLY OVER THE ENGLISH CHANNEL
To-day, when the air-craft is so much talked about, it is interesting
and instructive to recall the unique experience of Dr. Jeffries, who,
on January 7, 1785, flew across the English Channel in a balloon
with a Frenchman named Frangois Blanchard. The only condition
upon which Blanchard would take him was that if it were necessary
to lighten the balloon his guest should jump overboard, and there
were several times on the trip across when Dr. Jeffries must have had
his agreement most unpleasantly brought to mind. Even when they
were making preparations to start, Blanchard put on a girdle to in-
crease his weight so that he would have an excuse not to take the
Bostonian with him, which wasn't very fair, as Dr. Jeffries had paid
[47 ]
SOME INTERESTING BOSTON EVENTS
The column erected by public authority to
commemorate the event, and placed in the Forest
of Guisnes, on the spot where Dr. Jeffries and
Mr. Blanchard alighted after their aerial voyage
from England into France on the 7th of January,
1785. From a print in the Bostonian Society
rooms.
all Blanchard's expenses so far and
had also guaranteed the cost of the
trip.
The cliffs of Dover were black
with people as the balloon and its
two occupants sailed away toward
France. Soon after starting they
had to throw out ballast, then Dr.
Jeffries' pamphlets, next their bis-
cuits, apples, etc., then the orna-
ments of the car, and even the
only bottle they had with them
(the contents of which have never
been disclosed!). Finally, as they
neared the French coast, the bal-
loon again descended so rapidly
that they began to throw over the
clothes they were wearing, one
article of apparel after another,
and when finally Dr. Jeffries caught
hold of the topmost branch of one
of the trees on the shore of the
Continent and arrested the progress of the balloon, it was necessary
for them both to search for an entirely new supply of clothing. The
landing was made near the place where Henry the Eighth, King of
England, and Francis the First, King of France, held their famous
interview on a plain known afterwards as "The Field of Cloth of
Gold," which was between Ardres and Guisnes, near Calais. The
voyage consumed about three hours. A monument with a balloon-like
ball on its apex was later erected
upon this spot in commemoration
of their wonderful trip, and Blan-
chard received a gift of money
from the King. The Doctor read
a paper describing his voyage be-
fore the Royal Society of London
in January, 1786.
A preliminary trial took place
from London to Kent, and Dr.
Jeffries was obliged to give his pilot
one hundred guineas before he was
allowed to go as a passenger. The
place of ascent was near Grosvenor
Square, the Prince of Wales, the
Duchess of Devonshire and others
of the nobility being present.
For some curious reason Blan-
chard had a grievance against
Dr. Jeffries, and when he came to
Philadelphia eight years later he
publicly insulted the Doctor by
Dr. John Jeffries in the balloon. From a print
in the Bostonian Society rooms.
[ 48 ]
SOME INTERESTING BOSTON EVENTS
placing on the door of his carriage a picture of Jeffries in the balloon
holding a bottle of brandy to his mouth. A motto underneath inti-
mated that he was obliged to resort to this "Dutch courage" to enable
him to undergo the ordeal of the dangerous trip.
Dr. Jeffries was born in Boston in 1745 and was a most interesting
character. During the Revolution his sympathies were always with
the British. General Joseph Warren, the day before the Battle of
Bunker Hill, implored him to "come over on the right side," and,
on the next day, it was Dr. Jeffries who found and identified the body
of General Warren while he was attending to his duties as surgeon
in the King's army. He accompanied the English troops to Halifax
after the evacuation of Boston, went to London in 1780 and returned
to Boston in 1789, when he delivered the first public lecture on
anatomy ever given in New England. His hobby, however, was
always ballooning. Dr. Jeffries was very popular, especially with the
old ladies of Boston, who usually called him "Dr. Jeffers." He was
a consulting physician, and Dr. Samuel A. Green said that if "he were
seen entering a sick man's door it was very likely to mean nothing
more nor less than a 'nunc dimittis.' " He died in Boston in 1819.
THE FIRST UNITED STATES BANK IN BOSTON
Alexander Hamilton, first Secretary of the Treasury, conceived
the idea of a government bank as early as 1779. His belief was that
such an institution would help to support public credit and that it
would also enable the richer men to co-operate with the Government.
The bill for its establishment was signed by Washington on February
25, 1791, and three branches opened in January of the following year
at Boston, Baltimore and New York, the head office being of course
in Philadelphia. Five more were added later on in the following
cities: Norfolk, Charleston, Savannah, New Orleans and Washington.
The Boston Branch was the third in size, with a capital of $700,000.
The total capital of the Bank was $10,000,000, the Government sub-
scribing $2,000,000 of this amount. The first President of the parent
Bank was Thomas W illing, and he received the large salary of $3,000.
The first head of the Boston Branch was Thomas Russell, and the
cashier was Peter Roe Dalton. George Cabot, a close friend of Alex-
ander Hamilton, became President of the Boston Branch in 1810.
The parent institution had twenty-five directors and each branch
nine. Among some of the earliest of the Boston directors we find
the names of Joseph Barrell, John Codman, Caleb Davis, Christopher
Gore, John C. Jones, John Lowell, Theodore Lyman, J. Mason, Jr.,
Joseph Russell, Jr., David Sears, Israel Thorndike and William
Wetmore.
Within four years after the opening of the United States Bank the
Government had to borrow two-thirds of its total capital, and Presi-
dent W^illing was placed in the embarrassing situation of being
obliged to ask to have this loan reduced. Accordingly, in 1797 the
Government had to sell its shares, which netted a huge profit of
$671,860 on the original investment. Most of this stock was sold
abroad at $145 per share, and the purchasers later on suffered severe
[ 49 ]
SOME INTERESTING BOSTON EVENTS
losses. In 1811 the Bank's charter expired. There then ensued 'a
party dispute, and as the Democrats had an assured majority in
Congress, it was a foregone conclusion that the fate of the Bank was
sealed. Gallatin favored a renewal of the charter, but many were
opposed to this plan, owing to the fact that such a large amount of
stock had been sold in Europe, and it was feared that this would mean
sending money abroad. The vote in the Senate was a tie, 17 to 17, and
Vice-President Clinton, an enemy of Gallatin's, cast the deciding vote,
and the First Bank of the United States perished on March 14, 1811.
The Bank liquidated at 109, the stock having sold in 1802 at $153 a
share. It was brought out in the debates in Congress that the Boston
Branch was conducted with "correctness, integrity and impartiality."
1^///. // ////^y- //^///.> /,w//y, ,,///, ///X
///A DKl-HI'-. 1)1' Dl.Sr l)l>T A>'1> 13KI1K41T ///.'?/
ll„ Uli.r- l^t t.v ,„.- ••„ *,,,,^tiirc.. .f He pn»i!.,i.! ..„J I '
-r^...
^■■///rjyi//yM';f^^ /:
Certificate of unredeemed stock of the Second United States Bank. Photographed through the
kindness of Mr. F. H. Curtiss of the Federal Reserve Bank of Boston.
The deposits just before closing amounted to only $7,800,000, Boston
having $1,500,000. The largest Government deposit at any time
was $5,500,000, which would seem small to-day; the largest in Boston
was $1,173,000 in 1806. United States deposits drew no interest.
The Bank from the income point of view was most successful, paying
an average of 8{| per cent, to its shareholders. The first location
was on the site of the present Brazer Building; later, on the site
of the present Exchange Building, and finally on Congress Street, near
State Street.
Some of the early rules of the Bank are most interesting. One
by-law provided that the rate on loans should never be below 5 per
cent, nor over 6 per cent. There were only two days a week when
discounts could be submitted, and the Bank had two days to decide
on loans. No borrower could obtain money for over sixty days, and
in most of the few banks existing at this time no one could borrow
over $5,000, and every loan had to be paid at maturity.
[ 50 ]
SOME INTERESTING BOSTON EVENTS
The Second United States Bank was started in 1817 and dissolved
in 1836, chiefly owing to the fact tliat President Jackson withdrew
all the government deposits in 1833. The capital was $35,000,000,
of which tlie Government subscribed $7,000,000. The Boston Branch
endeavored to purchase the Old State House, but finally erected a
fine building on the present site of the Merchants Bank. The pillars
furnished such desirable roosting places for pigeons that the President
had wooden cats placed where the pigeons were accustomed to perch.
They were at first frightened away, but later could be seen roosting
even on the cats themselves.
LAUNCHING OF THE "CONSTITUTION"
"Come all ye Yankee heroes, come listen to my song,
I'll tell you of a bloody fight before that it be long,
It was of the Constitution, from Boston she set sail,
To cruise along the coast, my boys, our rights for to maintain."
After two unsuccessful attempts Old Ironsides, the "Pride of the
American Navy," was launched on October !21, 1797. Only a few
people were present. On the first previous attempt she slid only eight
feet down the ways and disappomted hundreds of spectators who lined
the shore of Noddle's Island, now East Boston. The second attempt
was also a failure, and the Constitution was considered an "ill-fated
ship." At half past twelve on that cold October day she glided grace-
fully upon the water. Captain Nicholson, her commander, breaking
over her bows a bottle of choice Madeira from the cellar of the Hon.
Thomas Russell, one of Boston's leading merchants. The launching
took place at Edmund Hart's shipyard, now known as Constitution
Wharf, on Atlantic Avenue. An incident occurred just before the
launching that aroused Commodore Nicholson's wrath. He gave
notice that he himself wished to hoist the flag, but while he was at
lunch two workmen, Samuel Bentley and Isaac Harris, raised the
Stars and Stripes. Harris atoned for his mistake by climbing some
years after to the roof of the Old South Church and putting out a
serious fire that threatened its destruction.
The Constitution was designed by Joshua Humphreys, of Philadel-
phia, and was constructed under the guidance of Colonel George Clag-
horne, of New Bedford. Her length was 175 feet, and she carried 400
men. Her cost was $30'-2,718.84. She was distinctly a Boston ship.
John T. Morgan, a Boston shipwright, chose the wood; Paul Revere
furnished the copper bolts and spikes for $3,8*20.33, by a process known
only to him; and Ephraim Thayer, whose shop was in the South End,
made the gun carriages. The same Isaac Harris, just mentioned, made
her new masts in 18l!2. Her sails were made in the Old Granary,
which stood on the site of Park Street Church, her anchors were made
at Hanover, Mass., and the duck for the sails was manufactured by a
company which stood on the corner of Tremont and Boylston Streets.
Boston was not only the city of her birth, but the home to which she
returned after many of her triumphs. In 1812 Commodore Hull
brought her into Boston Harbour after his wonderful escape from the
[ 51 ]
SOME INTERESTING BOSTON EVENTS
British squadron, then later she came in after the fight with the
Guerriere; and still again Commodore Bainbridge brought her home
after having captured the Java. Commodore Macdonough com-
manded her when she sailed from Boston in 1826. No ship ever saw
so much action or had such a romantic history. Her glorious career is
chiefly responsible for the downfall of England's naval supremacy
at this time. Before the war of 1812 Great Britain had boasted that
"Others may use the ocean as their road,
Only the English make it their abode."
The "Constitution" and other American ships-of-war bombarding Tripoli. From an old print.
In the early part of April of 1814, the Constitution was chased into
Marblehead by the Montague, and it was reported that three frigates
were in pursuit. The New England Guards marched to her defence,
but discovered when they were almost there that they had forgotten
every bit of ammunition. One of the company was Abbott Lawrence,
afterwards our Minister to England, who hurried out to join his
troops in his pumps, which he finally contrived to exchange with a
countryman for a pair of brogans and with the loss of five dollars.
The Constitution was hauled out in the new dry-docks in 1833
and launched again in June of the next year, having been thoroughly
overhauled by Josiah Barker, whose shipyard occupied the site of
the present Navy Yard. In this yard there is one of the famous
umbrellas that was used to warp the frigate away from Broke's
squadron, in July, 1812. At this time occurred the affair of the
figurehead. An image of President Andrew Jackson had been
[ 52]
SOME INTERESTING BOSTON EVENTS
placed on the bow, and this action caused much dissatisfaction, as
the President had become very unpopular. On the 3rd of July
Captain Samuel Dewey performed the daring feat of sawing off the
head, and upon his return to shore he and his friends celebrated the
event. The author of the deed remained undiscovered for some
time, but finally he took the head to Dickinson, then Secretary of
the Navy, saying that he wished to return it to the Government.
The morning after the strange disappearance of the figurehead
young Dewey was missing. His mother suspected that her son
knew who was responsible, so she went down to the back yard and
FRIGATE "CONSTITUTION" PETITION.
Taken three-quarters of an hour before Congress convened. The only petition which was ever
placed on the floor of the House in the whole history of the United States. Congressman McCall
presented it.
licked the sole of one of his boots which was hanging on the line.
It tasted of salt, which confirmed her suspicions. The Constihdion
sailed with a piece of canvas painted to represent the American
Flag over the beheaded image. At New York a new head was put
on and this time with a copper bolt.
The Constitution has often been represented on the stage, and one
of the most exciting scenes showed the Guerriere s mast going over-
board and Commodore Hull repeating his famous remark, "Hurrah,
my boys, we've made a brig of her, next time we'll make her a sloop."
In 190G Mr. Eric Pape was instrumental in having a petition signed
which was presented to Congress and which saved the Constitution
from being taken out to sea and used as a target, as had been suggested.
This petition, a picture of which we show in the cut above, was
[ 53 J
SOME INTERESTING BOSTON EVENTS
signed by the Governor and almost all the living ex-Governors of the
Commonwealth, by seventy Mayors and ex-Mayors, by twenty-
five survivors of the crew, by twelve of Bainbridge's grandchildren
and by many of the descendants of Stewart and Hull; also one of
the signatures on the petition was that of Mrs. Susan L. Clarke, of
Boston, who was almost ninety years old at the time, and who was
a daughter of the fifer of the Constitution in all of her three great battles.
The paper was also signed by thirty thousand other citizens of this
Commonwealth. The petition was divided into three parts, one of
which was open for public signatures at City Hall, one at the old
State House, and the third at the Branch Office of the State Street
Trust Company. It measured one hundred and seventy feet long, and
the names are signed nine and ten abreast.
The wonderful verses of Oliver Wendell Holmes are also responsible
to a large extent for her preservation: —
*'0h, better that her shattered hulk
Should sink beneath the wave;
Her thunders shook the mighty deep,
And there should be her grave.
Nail to the mast her holy flag,
Set every threadbare sail.
And give her to the God of storms.
The lightning and the gale."
It is with pride that Boston people will look back and remem-
ber that to Massachusetts and especially to Boston belongs the credit
of having saved Old Ironsides.
LAFAYETTE LAYS THE CORNER-STONE OF BUNKER HILL
MONUMENT
Lafayette, at the age of sixty-seven, journeyed almost five thou-
sand miles through sixteen Republics in less than four months in order
to lay the corner-stone of Bunker Hill Monument at the celebra-
tion commemorating the fiftieth anniversary of the battle of Bunker
Hill. Few persons believed that he would really come over here,
and when he appeared at the State House on the 16th of June, in the
year 1825, the people of New England were almost wild with de-
light. He was met by Governor Lincoln, the Senate, House of Repre-
sentatives and City officials, and in reply to the addresses of welcome,
he said that Bunker Hill had been the pole-star upon which his
eyes had been fixed. While here he stayed at the house of Senator
Lloyd in Pemberton Square.
The procession, which was in charge of General Lyman, was headed
by two hundred officers and soldiers of the Revolution, followed by
forty veterans who had taken part in the fight at Bunker Hill.
Many of them wore the same cartridge boxes they used fifty years
before, and one old soldier carried the same drum that he had with
him in the battle. Before the procession started Mayor Quincy,
who was master of ceremonies, had the honor of introducing the
survivors of the great battle to Lafayette, and the ceremony must
have been pathetic and impressive. He was drawn in the parade
[ 54 ]
SOME INTERESTING BOSTON EVENTS
by six wliite horses. The head of the procession reached the monu-
ment before the rear had left the Common. The pyramid which
had been built on the hill had been removed, and from one of the
timbers a cane had been turned out, which was presented, suitably
inscribed, to the man who at the age of nineteen volunteered his
services and risked his life to help make America free.
Lafayette then laid the corner-stone according to Masonic regula-
tions. The addresses were made in a huge amphitheatre on the
northeast side of the hill, Lafayette occupying a seat on the front
part of the platform, with the survivors of the l)attle just behind him.
He himself was the last surviving Major General of the American
Revolutionary Army. Dr. Dexter, who had been in the battle,
offered the prayer, and Daniel Webster was the orator of the day.
When he had finished his speech some one in the audience was intro-
duced to him. He said he couldn't believe he really was Daniel
Webster, the wonderful orator, because he understood every word he
said. A banquet was held immediately after the addresses, and Lafay-
ette proposed his well-known toast, which is especially interesting in
view of the frightful condition in which Europe finds herself to-day.
His words were: "Bunker Hill, and that holy resistance to oppression,
which has already enfranchised the American hemisphere. The anni-
versary toast at the jubilee of the next half century will be, to Europe
freed." Mr. Thomas Upham, now living at 33*2 Commonwealth Ave-
nue, was present when the corner-stone was laid ninety-one years ago.
Daniel Webster later held a large reception for Lafayette, and in order
to accommodate his many guests he cut a door into the adjoining house
belonging to Israel Thorndike. The General also attended a recep-
tion at the house of Mr. R. C. Derby, and he was there introduced
to a lady with whom he had danced a minuet forty-seven years before.
Dr. Bowditch describes how he determined to watch the procession
from the steps of a house, and to his surprise found himself running
along beside Lafayette's carriage yelling at the top of his voice. It was
on Lafayette's visit the year before, in 1824, that he agreed to return to
take part in the Bunker Hill celebration. As he passed the residence
of the late John Hancock, Mayor Quincy turned to Lafayette and
said that the widow of his deceased friend was sitting in the window
opposite the carriage. He immediately turned and placed his hand
on his heart, whereupon she burst into tears and said, "I have lived
long enough." The words in the arch which was placed over Wash-
ington Street expressed the deep feeling of love and veneration in
which Lafayette was held by all Americans. The last two lines of
the inscription were, —
"We bow not the neck, and we bend not the knee;
But our hearts, Lafayette, we surrender to thee."
He also visited Governor Brooks at Medford. An arch over the
meeting-house had on it the following: —
"General Lafayette, Welcome to our Hills and Brooks."
Lafayette said good-bye to Boston for the last time on June 22,
1825, to go on a tour of Maine, New Hampshire and Vermont. As
he left Mayor Quincy at the State line he kissed him. In describing
[ 55 ]
SOME INTERESTING BOSTON EVENTS
the parting to one of his friends of the fairer sex, she repHed, "If
Lafayette had kissed me, I would never have washed my face again."
The French refused to allow his American friends to erect a statue
of him in Paris, but later the Government of France presented to New
York his statue which now stands in Central Park. Lafayette died
in 1834. This country should never forget that France emptied her
arsenals and impoverished herself to help America.
THE GRANITE RAILWAY COMPANY— THE FIRST
RAILROAD IN AMERICA
The Granite Railway was the first railroad built in America. The
road was about three and one-half miles in length and ran from "fur-
nace lot" and several of the quarries in Quincy through East Milton
to a wharf which was built at an expense of $30,000 at the elbow
in the Neponset River not far from Granite Bridge. This old wharf
is still in existence and is used now by boys for swimming. The origin
of the road is interesting. In 1824 Joshua Torrey of Quincy began to
build a canal to save part of the long cartage for granite, and in the
following year some enterprising citizens formed the Quincy Canal Cor-
poration, which enabled small sloops to approach within a mile of the
quarries in Quincy. Both of these enterprises, however, ended in
failure. About this same time Gridley Bryant, a noted engineer in
Boston, purchased, with Dr. John C. Warren, a stone quarry in
Quincy, since called the Bunker Hill Quarry. Bryant and Colonel
Thomas H. Perkins had heard of the possibility of the building of the
Manchester and Liverpool Railroad in England and conceived the idea
of starting the Granite Railway for the purpose of procuring large
quantities of the excellent granite for the construction of Bunker
Hill Monument. In spite of a great deal of opposition in the Legis-
lature the Charter for the Granite Railway Company was obtained
in March, 1826, the incorporators being Colonel Perkins, William
Sullivan, Amos Lawrence, David Moody, Gridley Bryant, the builder
of the road, and Solomon Willard, the architect of the monument.
Many of the members of the Legislature quite naturally questioned
the incorporators of the enterprise as to what they knew about rail-
roads, wondering, at the same time, whether it was right to empower
a corporation to purchase people's land for a project about which so
little was known. It may be interesting to know that Amos Lawrence
bought a quarry in Gloucester, believing that it might assist in build-
ing the monument, in which he was much interested. There were,
however, no facilities for transporting this granite, and this property
was handed down through several generations of the family, until
last year when it was sold by the executors of the estate of Amory
A. Lawrence. The first cars passed over the Granite Railway Com-
pany's Road on October 7, 1826, the train of several cars being drawn
by horses. The gradual descent from Quincy to the water made it a
simple matter to transport the granite, and the horses were easily
able to drag the empty cars back. The road was operated by
horse-power for forty years, then remained idle for a short time, and
in 1871 was purchased by the Old Colony Railroad. The spur track
[ 56 ]
SOME INTERESTING BOSTON EVENTS
from the wharf to the Granite Branch was operated by oxen as
late as 1899, when the Old Colony Railroad sent its first engine as far
as the quarry.
The road was constructed in the following manner: Its gauge
was five feet, and stone sleepers were placed about eight feet apart.
Upon these sleepers wooden rails six inches wide and twelve inches
high were placed. Iron plates three inches wide and one-fourth of an
inch thick were fastened with spikes to these rails. At all public
crossings stone rails were used, upon which the iron plates were firmly
bolted to the stone. In the course of a few years the wooden rails began
to decay, and stone rails were substituted, the original sleepers being
r
K
- h -)
■:/■: .s -v, K
• ^'"r-;, ■ •-■
■ Vt. ;^
4.
Map showing location of the Granite Railway from Quinpy Quarries to Neponset River,
an original print in the possession of the Qiiiney Historical Society.
From
used. On account of its construction the upkeep of the road for a
good many years was less than ten dollars a year. Parts of the old
road are still to be seen, and passing southerly over the route of the
first railroad in America is seen one of the old railroad frogs and a
section of the superstructure now standing at Squantum Street, East
Milton, on the line of the Granite Branch of the New York, New Haven
& Hartford Railroad. This frog and old stone rail were exhibited at
the Chicago Fair. The capital of the enterprise was originally $100,000,
which was later increased to $'-250,000. The cost was about $60,000
per mile. In 1846 permission was given to the road to cross Granite
Bridge and join a branch railroad about to be constructed from jNIilton
village to the Old Colony Railroad, to be called the Dorchester &
Milton Branch Railroad. The company was also authorized to
construct branches not over one and one-half miles in length which
[ 57 ]
SOME INTERESTING BOSTON EVENTS
must be placed within half a mile of the quarry. Passengers were
also allowed to be carried. The Company started solely as a railroad
proposition, then purchased its own quarry in Quincy, and later
another one in Concord, N.H. The contract to supply stones to the
Bunker Hill Monument specified a charge of 50c. per ton for carrying
the stone from the quarry to the wharf at Milton and an additional
sum of 40c. for each ton conveyed from there to Charlestown. The
railroad purchased the vessel Robin Hood in order to carry out the
latter part of this contract.
Every share of stock was bought up by Colonel Perkins, and when
he died in 1854 his holdings were sold to several individuals who con-
tinued to work the quarries with great profit until 1864 when the
stock again changed hands. In 1870 the officers and directors were:
President, John S. Tyler; Vice-President, John C. Pratt; Treasurer,
» -'>
i
Train of cars on the Granite Railway, anil Railway Hotel. From an original print in the
possession of the Quincy Historical Society.
George Lewis; the Directors being Benjamin Bradley, John Felt Os-
good, William B. Sewall, John D. Parker, and the Treasurer, George
Lewis. Mr. Henry E. Sheldon, who only recently died in East Milton,
was the General Manager from 1876 to 1898.
Some of the later directors of the Company were Harold J. Coolidge,
W. S. Patten, and Dr. John A. Lamson. Luther S. Anderson, of
Quincy, assumed the management of the Company in April, 1899, and
in 1907 he was appointed treasurer, which office, together with that
of manager, he held until his death in September, 1914. Many im-
portant changes in the plant were made during his term of office, so
that, at his death, it was accounted the most valuable quarry property
in Quincy. Under the present officers the same progressive methods
are being pursued. At this time Henry M. Faxon, of Quincy, is
president and treasurer; Charles E. Morey, of Boston, vice-president;
Stillman P. Williams, Henry H. Kimball, and Alva Morrison, directors.
Quincy granite was, and is, well known, and many important build-
ings have been built of this material, including the old Boston Custom
[ 58 ]
SOME INTERESTING BOSTON EVENTS
House, the old Tremont House, the old Astor House in New York,
Boston City Hall, the old Horticultural Hall, the old Equitable Life
Assurance Society Building in New York, as well as several buildings
belonging to prominent insurance companies in Hartford, Conn.,
and also the New Orleans Custom House. Before 1800 the quarries
were ^^'orked very little.
MAYOR THEODORE LYMAN PROTECTS WILLIAM LLOYD
GARRISON FROM THE MOB
William Lloyd Garrison would undoubtedly have been ducked in
the "Frog Pond," and might have lost his life, had not Theodore
Lyman, who was Mayor of Boston at the time, held a mob at bay
long enough to enable the great anti-slavery agitator to escape.
A meeting of the Female Anti-Slavery Society was arranged for
October ^1, 1835, at the office of the Liberator, which was Garrison's
newspaper. It was believed that George Thompson, a Scotch aboli-
tionist, was going to speak, and on the morning of the day of the
meeting anonymous handbills were distributed announcing that the
"infamous foreigner" intended to "hold forth," and calling upon
the citizens to "snake him out." A purse of one hundred dollars was
offered to the man "who would first lay violent hands on Thompson,
so that he may be brought to the tar-kettle before dark." Mayor
Lyman therefore sent a messenger to Mr. Garrison to find out whether
the objectionable Thompson was going to put in an appearance, and
learning that he was not even in Boston he consequently took no
unusual precautions to prevent disturbance. There was, however, a
large crowd in front of the Liberator office, and only about thirty
women were able to force their way into the hall.
The Mayor was soon told that it looked as if there would be a riot,
and he therefore went to the lecture room with more constables.
Thousands of people in the street cried for "Thompson! Thompson!"
The ^layor promptly assured them that he was not even in Boston,
and begged them to disperse, but their vengeance turned on Garrison,
with shouts of "We must have Garrison! Out with him! Lynch
him!" The Mayor with a few police officers held the staircase and
kept the mob back. He then went upstairs and induced the women
to leave the hall, and the next step he took was to persuade Garrison
to escape by the rear passage of the building. While the sign of the
Society was being torn down and destroyed. Garrison got out of the
rear window onto a shed from which he entered a carpenter's shop
in hopes of being able to get into Wilson's Lane. Unfortunately he
was discovered by the crowd and had to hide in a corner behind a
pile of boards. Several of the rioters again found him and dragged
him to a window with the intention of hurling him to the ground.
Some one relented, however, and suggested that they "shouldn't kill
him outright." A rope was tied around his body, and he was lowered
down a ladder into the hands of the angry mob. A friendly voice
yelled, "He shan't be hurt! He is an American!" which seemed
somewhat to calm the crowd, who dragged him in his shirt sleeves
through Wilson's Lane into State Street, in the rear of City Hall,
[ 59 ]
SOME INTERESTING BOSTON EVENTS
then the Old State House, shouting, "To the Common! To the
Frog Pond with him!" Garrison was rescued and taken by the Mayor
and the City authorities into the City's rooms in the Old State House,
where he was supplied with new pantaloons, coat, stock, cap, etc.
Here Mayor Lyman again defied the crowd, declaring that the Law must
be maintained, and furthermore that he would lay down his life on
the spot to preserve order. He then made an address to the people
outside. After careful deliberation it was decided that the only
safe place for Garrison was the jail, and therefore with his consent
he was considered a rioter and ordered by Sheriff Parkman to the
Leverett Street jail. The rioters followed the carriage, but the driver
had a good pair of horses and a long whip which enabled him to elude
his pursuers, who tried to hold on to the horses and the wheels of
the carriage, and even tried to cut the traces and reins and to pull
Garrison out of the window. The Mayor ran on foot and arrived
just before the hack. It was said that Garrison thoroughly appreciated
this happy contrivance, meaning the prison, and in a public meeting he
jokingly said that he was never so glad to get into a jail in his life.
At this time Boston really had no police, only about thirty night
watchmen and six day watchmen. It can be readily seen what a
difficult task the Mayor had in quelling the riot without bloodshed.
A gallows had been erected in front of Garrison's door, and it was
therefore thought advisable to guard his house that night.
THE FIRST ETHER OPERATION
The "Death of Pain," so called by Dr. Weir Mitchell, took place
on October 16, 1846, when the first public operation was performed
with the aid of ether. The credit for this discovery, which was the
greatest gift of American medicine to mankind, belongs chiefly to
Dr. W. T. G. Morton, though others doubtless deserve some credit.
Dr. Crawford W. Long of Georgia holds the honor of making the
first trial of ether inhalation in surgical operations; and Dr. Horace
Wells, a dentist of Hartford, and once a partner of Dr. Morton, a
few years later administered gas while extracting teeth. Dr. Wells
at one time journeyed to Boston to exhibit his discovery, but the
result was such a failure that the poor dentist returned to Hartford
and died suddenly while experimenting with chloroform.
Dr. Morton's life is most varied and interesting. He was born
near Worcester in 1819, but, being obliged to leave school early in
life, he moved to Boston, where he entered a publishing house. His
partners duped him, and he then determined to study dentistry in
Baltimore. Previous to his discovery patients w^ere given brandy,
laudanum, and even opium in some cases. Occasionally mesmerism
was tried with doubtful results. Usually, however, surgeons relied
upon their own strength to hold down the patient, often using pulleys
to set the limb. Dr. Morton at once realized the relief that the
application of ether would be to dentistry, and he gave his whole
time to the study of medicine and different gases at the Massachusetts
General Hospital. He soon established a "tooth mill" to manu-
facture artificial teeth, and this plant was supposed to "supply teeth
[ 61 ]
SOME INTERESTING BOSTON EVENTS
which would rival those of the freshest country beauties." He gave up
a lucrative business and valuable clients, such as William Ropes,
Alexander H. Ladd, of Portsmouth, Andrew Robeson, Mrs. Charles
T. Jackson, and others, to further his investigation. His first experi-
ment was upon his dog, and was so successful that he jocosely told his
friend, Dr. Hayden, and his lawyer, R. H. Dana, Jr., that soon he
should have his "patients come in at one door, having all their teeth
extracted without pain, and then, going into the next room, have a full
set put in." A short time later while again etherizing his dog the
animal struck his ether bottle and broke it. Morton placed his
handkerchief over the broken bottle and then holding it to his nostrils
Room in Massachusetts General Hospital arranged as it was when the first ether operation was
performed. It is in this room that the anniversary exercises are held each year.
soon became unconscious. He was so encouraged that he then began
to hunt around the wharves for a person who would submit to a test,
but he discovered that while they would gladly render themselves un-
conscious with bad rum, they could not be bribed to take ether. His
next step was to use gas in extracting a tooth for Eben H. Frost, at his
office at No. 19 Tremont Row, now Tremont Street, opposite the old
Museum, on September 30, 1846. This experiment was so successful
that he asked permission of Dr. John C. Warren, then senior surgeon at
the Massachusetts General Hospital, to administer his ether there.
Dr. Warren had a patient named Gilbert Abbott who was suffering
from tumor of the jaw, and he allowed Dr. Morton to etherize him.
The operation was performed on October 16, 1846, and was entirely
successful. Dr. Morton was unavoidably detained and arrived
[ 62 ]
SOME INTERESTING BOSTON EVENTS
at the hospital just as Dr. Warren was about to perform the operation
without ether, the hitter thinking Dr. Morton did not dare make the
experiment. Dr. Warren's first words when the operation was over
were, "Gentlemen, this is no humbug."
The discovery was then disclosed to the world, through Dr. Warren's
efforts and the assistance rendered to Dr. Morton by the hospital.
Dr. Warren wrote, "A new era has opened on the operating sur-
geon," and Dr. Oliver Wendell Holmes in a lecture said in part, "The
fierce extremity of suffering has been steeped in the waters of forget-
fulness and the deepest furrow in the knotted brow of agony has been
smoothed forever." Dr. Holmes also coined the word "ansesthesia."
About a week after this successful trial at the hospital, Dr. Charles
T. Jackson, a chemist, demanded a percentage of the profits derived
from the sale of the ether or the patents. Much space could be
devoted to the quarrel between these two doctors and to Dr. Mor-
ton's repeated attempts to get his invention patented. Ether was
used so generally that Dr. Morton finally called himself "the only
person in the world to whom this discovery has so far been a pecuniary
loss." In 1848 the Trustees of the Massachusetts General Hospital
and other citizens presented him, as the true discoverer, with $1,000.
He figured his profits due to the discovery at $1,600 and his expenses
at $187,561. During his controversy with Dr. Jackson, some one
suggested that the only way of settling the dispute would be to have
a duel between the two belligerents with ether bottles, and he who
remained conscious the longer should be declared the winner. Several
times a bill very nearly went through Congress carrying an appro-
priation of $100,000. Dr. Morton spent the latter years of his life
on his farm in Wellesley, which he called "Etherton," the Wellesley
Public Library being to-day on part of his place. He died of apoplexy
while driving in Central Park, New York, and although he died a poor
and unsuccessful man, never does a day go by without his discovery
bringing joy to suffering humanity. Exercises are held at the Massa-
chusetts General Hospital every year on the 16th of October to com-
memorate this discovery.
A monument, the gift of Thomas Lee of Boston, in the Public
Garden near the head of Marlboro Street, was erected to the dis-
coverer of ether, and the inscription reads as follows: —
To COMMEMORATE
the discovery
that the inhaling of ether
causes insensibility to pain.
First proved to the world
AT THE Massachusetts General Hospital
October 16, 1846.
It has often been asked why Dr. Morton's name wasn't on the
monument. It certainly should be. Dr. Holmes said that the in-
scription should read to "Either."
[ 63 ]
SOME INTERESTING BOSTON EVENTS
THE "JAMESTOWN" EXPEDITION TO IRELAND
New England came promptly to the assistance of famine-stricken
Ireland in 1847, and by generous contributions was able partially to
repay that country's kindness in sending food in 1676 to our starving
Puritans in Massachusetts. A mass meeting was held in Faneuil
Hall, where Edward Everett made a speech wliich was largely respon-
sible for arousing the interest of New England in this enterprise. It
was Everett's father who was usually known as "Boston's Yard Stick";
he was so learned and stood so high in the esteem of Bostonians that
all other citizens were measured by and compared with his standard.
Soon after this meeting a petition signed by prominent men was sent
to Congress asking for the loan of a vessel, and although this country
was at war with Mexico, nevertheless the United States man-of-
war Jamestown was offered by the Government free of expense,
Robert C. Winthrop, our representative in Washington, being largely
responsible for procuring the ship. The Constitution was at one time
considered. The Boston Relief Committee was composed of Josiah
Quincy, Jr., mayor of the city, P. T. Jackson, Thomas Lee, David
Henshaw, J. K. Mills, G. W. Crockett, and J. Ingersoll Bowditch,
who acted as treasurer of the fund. The command of the Jamestown
was intrusted to Captain Robert Bennet Forbes, and it was the first
time that a civilian had ever been chosen to command a United
States ship-of-war. He used to say that he "was born to eat bad
pudding off the Cape of Good Hope." He first went to sea in 1817
at the age of thirteen years, with a Bible, a Bowditch navigator, a
"ditty bag," and a box of gingersnaps, which the cabin boy stole the
first night out. The Jamestown was prepared for sea by Commodore
F. A. Parker at the Charlestown Navy Yard, and curiously enough the
loading of the supplies was begun on St. Patrick's day. The La-
borer's Aid Society, composed of poor Irishmen, offered their services
free in placing the provisions on board, and in a few days 800 tons
or about 8,000 barrels of grain, meal, etc., were stored in the hold.
Massachusetts furnished $115,000 worth of food, of which Boston's
share was $52,000, while other New England States gave $36,000.
The ship put to sea on the 28th of March, the tug boat R.B.F., with
the Relief Committee and other friends on board, escorting down
the harbour the "Ship of Peace" as she was called on this trip. She
arrived at Cork on April 12, having made the voyage in the extraor-
dinarily quick time of fifteen days, only one tack having been made
on the entire voyage. There was much enthusiasm as the Jamestown
and her valuable cargo moved up the harbour, a band on shore in
the mean while playing "Yankee Doodle." The chairman of the
reception committee of Cork said in his address that "a thousand
lips pale with woe, and a thousand tongues half paralyzed with hunger,
uttered the feeble exclamation, 'God Bless America.'" During the
evening bonfires blazed from every hill, and most of the houses were
illuminated from top to bottom. William Rathbone, a well-known
Liverpool merchant, came over to Ireland to superintend the dis-
tribution of the cargo. The gratitude of the Irish people was un-
bounded, and the dinners and receptions given to the officers of the
[ 65 ]
SOME INTERESTING BOSTON EVENTS
Jamestown were too numerous to mention — Whigs and Tories, Con-
servatives and Repealers, Catholics and Protestants, all paying them
their respects. Many of the children born in Ireland at this time
were called Boston, Forbes or James, the latter an abbreviation, of
course, of Jamestoivn.
One of the foremost of the Relief Committee in Cork was Father
Theobald Mathew, who was one of the best known men in Ireland;
he was of great assistance to the officers of the Jamestown in distrib-
uting the supplies. The citizens of Cork presented to our President a
flag of Irish manufacture, emblazoned with the arms of the United
States, but up to the time of writing its whereabouts had not been dis-
covered. Also a valuable silver tray was given to the captain of the
Jamestown as well as a painting of the ship entering Cork Harbour.
The Government of the United States levied a duty of $75 against
the owner of the platter when it was brought to America. These
mementos now belong to one of the family. A banner was also sent
to the city of Boston. While visiting a Mr. Jeffries near Blarney
Castle, Captain Forbes was presented with a cow, which was shipped
home. She was with calf, and her progeny was known for many years
as the Jamestown breed. The last of this stock died about twelve
years ago at Owls Nest Farm, Framingham, the home of Robert Forbes
Perkins, Esq.
In forty-nine days the Jamestown arrived in Boston, and was turned
over to the Government. While at the dock the New England Relief
Committee attended a lunch on board, and the provisions served
consisted of mutton and poultry which had been stored on board
previous to sailing fifty-one days before.
The Jamestown served as a hospital ship until a few years ago,
when she was condemned as being too old for service. Her wheel,
which was procured through the assistance of Hon. George von L.
Meyer, when Secretary of the Navy, hangs on the wall of the house
of one of the descendants of "Commodore" Forbes.
The Macedonian was sent from New York, as well as several other
ships from Maine. The Pendletons, a sea-faring family, of Islesboro,
Maine, also sent several vessels during the 1847 famine. Great difficulty
was encountered in getting a return cargo, and finally it was decided
to fill the hold with sods, which were placed on some of the farms
in Islesboro. It was discovered some time ago that upon this earth
had grown a large number of real Irish shamrocks, which are still
alive and which serve as a memento of the part that Maine played
during the famine.
The Boston Post wrote at the time the Jamestown was about to
sail, that "this vessel is associated with one of the noblest charities
on record"; and on her arrival the Cork Advertiser spoke of the under-
taking as the "noblest offering that nation ever made to nation." This
expedition was very similar to those undertaken recently by the Bel-
gian relief committee.
[ 66 ]
SOME INTERESTING BOSTON EVENTS
COLONEL ROBERT G. SHAW LEADS HIS NEGRO
REGIMENT TO THE WAR
When Colonel Shaw led his coloured regiment, the 54th, past the
State House before Governor Andrew and then to the steamer at
Battery Wharf, thousands of people turned out to cheer "the fugitive
slave transformed into a soldier by authority of a liberty-loving State,"
as expressed by Mayor Quincy in his address at the dedication of the
Shaw monument. Governor Andrew believed that a negro regiment
ought to be formed and that it would give a good account of itself
— and it did. Many of the states had denied them to be "human
persons," and the southern leaders frequently alluded to them as
"this peculiar kind of property." Colonel Shaw had served as a
private in the 7th Regiment of New York and was a commissioned
officer in the 2nd Regiment Massachusetts Volunteer Infantry when
he received a telegram from Governor Andrew asking him to take
command of the first coloured regiment to be sent to the front. He
rode over with Colonel Charles Morse to the camp of the 1st Massa-
chusetts Cavalry and told his friends Major Higginson and Greely
Curtis of his new commission. He also added that if either of his
two comrades would take his place he would serve under him. Colonel
Shaw joined the regiment at Readville in 1863, was married in May
and sailed for South Carolina the last of the same month. The regi-
ment and its brave leader were given the chance to assault Fort
Wagner on July 18th of the same year. A gallant attack was made,
but the garrison was fully prepared and successfully defended the
position. The coloured troops reached the walls of the fort, and
Colonel Shaw was shot through the heart and killed while actually
standing on the ramparts. His last words from the parapet were,
"Forward, 54th," and then he fell. The battle lasted two hours, and
regiment after regiment was beaten back; the 54th lost two-thirds of
its officers and about half its men. The Confederates buried Colonel
Shaw and his dead negroes in the same trench, which was a fitting end
for this officer, who gave his life to help the Union and the cause
of the negro. General Thomas G. Stevenson, who later in the war also
lost his life, was in command of the field on the night after the assault,
and he ordered all the wounded negro troops brought inside the lines
before the white soldiers, fearing that the former might receive ill
treatment from the Southerners. Colonel Edward Hallowell and
Colonel N. P. Hallowell, who died only recently, were at one time
officers of this same regiment.
The capture of Fort Wagner was practically an impossibility, and,
as was afterwards proved, the attack was unnecessary. This gallant
charge, however, to use the words of Major Henry L. Higginson,
proved that "the negroes had won their places as brave, steady
soldiers," and, as Governor Wolcott said in his address at the unveiling
of the Shaw monument in 1897, it showed "that whatever the colour
of the skin, the blood that flowed in the veins of the coloured man was
red with the lusty hue of manhood and of heroism." The 54th
served throughout the war and was reviewed by Governor Andrew at
the State House steps on its return to Boston.
[ 67 ]
SOME INTERESTING BOSTON EVENTS
The dedication of the St. Gaudens monument opposite the State
House is so recent as to be remembered by ahnost every Bostonian.
The prime mover in building this memorial was Joshua B. Smith,
a fugitive slave, who was in the service of Colonel Shaw's family and
later a well-known caterer in Boston. Edward Atkinson was treas-
urer of the first committee, which was a large one. The second
and most active committee comprised only three men, John M.
Forbes, Henry Lee and Martin P. Kennard. H. H. Richardson was
the architect chosen, and on his death Charles F. McKim took his
place. George von L. Meyer, who was then an alderman of the city,
obtained an appointment for the construction of the terrace and
stone work, Arthur Rotch having suggested the place where the
monument now stands. Addresses were made in Music Hall by
Colonel Francis H. Appleton, who acted as Chief Marshal, Governor
Wolcott, Mayor Quincy, Professor William James, — whose brother
was wounded at Fort Wagner, — Colonel Henry Lee and Booker T.
Washington, who had been given an honorary degree the year before
by Harvard University. Colonel N. P. Hallowell, who commanded
the 55th negro regiment in the war, led the battalion of survivors,
and, as the statue was unveiled, Battery A fired salutes on the Com-
mon, and the New York, Massachusetts and Texas fired their guns in
the harbour. The two features of the parade were the 7th Regiment
of New York, with which Colonel Shaw first went to the front in
1861, and the members of the coloured 54th. The verse of James
Russell Lowell on the monument tells us how Colonel Shaw met his
end.
"Right in the van on the red ramparts' slippery swell
With heart that beat a charge he fell foeward as fits a man;
But the high soul burns on to light men's feet
Where death for noble ends makes dying sweet."
The inscription composed by Charles W. Eliot, as well as Major
Higginson's address in Sanders Theatre, should be read by every
patriotic citizen.
St. Gaudens worked twelve years on this great work, but he must
have been fully repaid for his labors by the words of Colonel Shaw's
mother — "You have immortalized my native city, you have im-
mortalized my dear son, you have immortalized yourself."
RETURN OF THE FLAGS TO THE STATE HOUSE
The return of the colours to the State House on Forefathers' Day,
December 2'2, 1865, two hundred and forty-five years after the anni-
versary of the landing of the Pilgrims, was a most impressive cere-
mony. By an order of the War Department the volunteer regiments
and batteries, when mustered out, deposited their colours with Colonel
Francis N. Clarke, U.S.A., who was chief mustering officer. Major
General Darius N. Couch was the commanding General, with his
headquarters on Boston Common, and the flags were turned over to
him by Colonel Clarke. The colour bearers left their regiments and
batteries as they marched past the State House, and grouped them-
selves on the steps near Governor Andrew, the "War Governor" of
[ 68 ]
so:me interesting boston events
Massacliusetts. The Rev. Samuel K. Lotlirop offered the prayer.
The Governor then received the c()h)urs, which were phiced in Doric
Hall, and in 1900 removed to their present j)osition.s in Memorial
Hall. There are now in the collection .'505 flags of the Civil War, not
counting the twenty-one flags of the volunteer regiments and Naval
Brigade of Massachusetts which had been carried in the Sj)anish
:/i
"The Return of the Battle Flags," from a painting by Edward Simmons, made from a Cop-
ley Print. The painting is on the north side of the Hall of Flags in the State House. Copyright
by Edward Simmons; from a Copley Print, copyright by Curtis & Cameron, and printed by
their kind permission.
War and which are in a case by themselves near the Hall. The
late Governor Guild always took a great interest in Memorial Hall,
which he always referred to, and which is often known, as the
Hall of Flags. It was quite in keeping that he should be the first
Governor to lie in state here. The histories of the flags, if they could
have been told by their standard bearers, would be of great interest,
and would occupy many volumes. There are no captured flags in
the State House.
[ 69 ]
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