First Citizen

Benjamin Franklin and the Hutchinson letters?

Ben Franklin earned the title of “The First American” or “First Citizen” for his early and indefatigable campaign for colonial unity.

Initially, as an author and spokesman in London for several colonies he became one of the first United States Ambassadors to France.

Franklin laid a foundation in defining the American ethos -a marriage of the practical values thrift, hard work, education, community spirit, self-governing institutions, and opposition to authoritarianism – both political and religious, combined with the scientific and tolerant values of the Enlightenment.

In the words of historian Henry Steele Commager,

“In a Franklin could be merged the virtues of Puritanism without its defects, the illumination of the Enlightenment without its heat.”

However, Franklin was also America’s first whistle blower.

Ben Franklin’s London House 36 Craven St
Here’s the story of how the tensions between the Britain and America were made even worse by Franklin’s good intentions.

It’s how Benjamin Franklin, within the course of a single hour, turned from being a well-meaning arbitrator into a rebel with a cause.
Franklin leaked secret documents to help  ease growing international tensions, but his good intentions backfired , and his gamble edged America and its Mother Country even closer to war.

There had hardly been any American abroad who loved all things British as Benjamin Franklin.

By 1772 as an agent for four American colonial assemblies, Franklin had already lived at his Craven Street address in London for 15 years.

Arguably one of the most famous men in the world, Doctor Franklin had made his mark in the world as a printer, scientist, author, inventor, and diplomat.

Many of Franklin’s personal possessions are on display in this setting of his Market Street home in Philadelphia. (Photo Credit: Heinz History Center)

As deputy post-master general of the Royal Post in the American colonies, Franklin had improved the speed and reliability of the mail service remarkably.

The Royal Society of London made Ben Franklin the first non-Brit to be awarded their highest gold achievement award, the Copley Medal.

The British liked Ben, and Ben liked the British.

But like most concerned British Americans, Franklin had also watched from afar, the slow disintegration of cordial relations between Great Britain and America.

Since the time of the Stamp Act of 1765, the landing of British redcoats in Boston  1768, and the “Boston Massacre” in 1770.

 

 

Franklin, fretted about the growing tinderbox epicenter of the conflict – the colony of Massachusetts, and its ongoing struggle between the Massachusetts Assembly and Great Britain,  over Parliamentary authority.

On the Whig side, Boston housed numerous and colorful Sons of Liberty rabble rousers like Samuel Adams, John Hancock, and Dr. Joseph Warren.

But there seemed to be only one Tory culprit in Massachusetts who single-handedly symbolized the restrictive measures of the British government – Governor Thomas Hutchinson.

 

 

 

Gov. Thomas Hutchinson or “Tommy, skin and bones,” as he was fondly called, was seen as being aided by his brother-in-law Lieutenant Governor Andrew Oliver in depriving the rights of all British citizens who lived in Massachusetts.

Burning the images of Hutchinson and Oliver in effigy was nearly getting to be commonplace by the enraged Bostonians. Franklin read of each of these accounts in London newspapers and worried.

Franklin had known Tom Hutchinson and in one of history’s many ironies.

Franklin and Hutchinson once worked together as a team.

The Albany Plan of Union was a plan to create a unified government for the Thirteen Colonies, at the Albany Congress on July 10, 1754 in Albany, New York.

It was Hutchinson “who had once been Franklin’s friend when they had put together the Albany Plan for colonial union in 1754.”

But by 1772, those togetherness days were long gone and the specter of an armed conflict between two brotherly bands of people seemed to be growing.

Then Benjamin Franklin saw the opportunity to discretely pass along some secret British government documents to a small group of influential leaders in Boston.

The aim was to show those prominent people that the instigation of the bad feelings against Americans didn’t stem from Parliamentary ministers, but the main troublemaker had been right in their Bostonian midst.

It turned out, Franklin discovered, that Gov. Hutchinson had been feeding bad advice to key British officials all along.

So on December 2, 1772, Franklin secretly sent a packet of letters to Thomas Cushing, speaker of the Massachusetts Assembly. Six of the incriminating letters had been written by Hutchinson to British ministers some years earlier.

1750 painting of Thomas Hutchinson

Ben’s letter to Cushing said, “there has lately fallen into my Hands Part of a Correspondence, that i have reason to believe laid the foundation of most if not all our present Grievances.”

He asked that the contents not be made public.There was a particular phrase in one of those letters that created the sound bite heard ‘round the world.Hutchinson was speaking of his fellow colonials when he wrote, “There must be an abridgment of what are called English liberties.”

Of course, once Cushing showed Samuel and John Adams the confidential discourse, every word of the inflammatory letters were fully printed in the Boston papers.The identity of Benjamin Franklin, as the source of the letters, however, was a closely guarded secret on both sides of the Atlantic.

The  Americans were predictably outraged by Hutchinson’s words and by mid-1773 King George III received a petition from the Massachusetts Assembly to have Hutchinson and Oliver removed from their governmental positions.

Because the petition was not one of criminal accusation but rather of a strongly worded request to the British Board of Trade, His Majesty referred the petition over to his advisory board, the Privy Council.

But through the last half of 1773, the London newspapers were having a field day speculating the identity of the British government mole – the guilty person who leaked the letters.

The accusations became so heated that in December 1773, William Whately (brother of the deceased owner of the letters) and John Temple (a Boston friend of Franklin) fought a duel over each one’s claim that the other was the mole.

Whately was slightly wounded and it was decided as soon as Whately healed, they would duel again!

Finally, Franklin decided to end this nonsense and ‘fess up in a December 25, 1773 editorial in the London Chronicle.

In it, he took full responsibility as the person who had received the letters.

Ben made the case that the letters “were written by public officers to persons in public stations, on public affairs” and stated  “Their tendency was to incense the Mother Country against her Colonies and, by the steps recommended, to widen the breach”.

The official backlash against Benjamin Franklin was just starting to be heard in the first days of the New Year, 1774.

Which is why Franklin was surprised that on Saturday, January 8, he received a summons to appear before the Privy Council’s “Lords for the Committee of Counsel for Plantation Affairs”on the following Tuesday.

The reason, one assumed, was for Franklin as a colonial agent to defend the Massachusetts petition to remove Hutchinson and Oliver.

It was Tuesday, January 11, 1774 and Franklin arrived at the Whitehall chamber of the Privy Council to debate the merits of the petition.

Once arrived, however, Franklin was met with the reason the room was called the Cockpit.

During the reign of King Henry VIII, bloody cockfighting matches were staged in the room.

Instead of hearing Franklin’s petition defense, the Solicitor General of the Lord North ministry, Alexander Wedderburn, “a nasty and ambitious prosecutor,”  laid into Franklin with an attack.

They accused Franklin of illegally receiving and disclosing private correspondence.

Franklin was totally shocked.

It was almost like he was being accused of being a spy!

Taken aback at the quick change in purpose for the gathering, Franklin said in polite sarcasm that he had misinterpreted the reason he had been summoned to the Privy Council and asked for a lawyer.

The Privy Council agreed he should have representation and set the next meeting date for three weeks – January 29, 1774.

It was a case of really bad timing, with Parliamentary feelings already in an uproar about Dr. Franklin being “an incendiary” agent, on January 19, 1774 the British ship Hayley sailed in from Boston carrying some very important news.

The news headline broke across the front page of The St. James’s Chronicle just three days later announcing what would later be known as the Boston Tea Party!

Not good. The ministers decided to make an example of Benjamin Franklin – and of all rebellious provincials – in the Privy Council.

It was Saturday, January 29, 1774.

The Privy Council was packed to the rafters “and in all probability was pre-concerted,” Franklin would later write.

One of Franklin’s friends in London wrote an account for the Pennsylvania Gazette saying they seemed “ready to crucify him,” likening Franklin’s call to the Privy Council as “Bull-baiting.

Prime Minister Lord North arrived late and found the room so crowded even he had to stand for the spectacle.

The petition for the removal of Hutchinson and Oliver was read out loud.

Franklin had lawyered up for this appointment; in fact hiring two lawyers, with his lead attorney being John Dunning.

Unfortunately ,that day Dunning was sick as a dog as Franklin later wrote, “Mr. Dunning, having disorder on his lungs that weakened his voice exceedingly … Being very ill … his voice was so feeble, as to be scarcely audible.

What little I heard was very well said, but appeared to have little effect.”What Dunning had to say in response to the petition mattered little because Wedderburn had his marching orders – to destroy the character of Benjamin Franklin.

So it began.

For “near an hour” Alexander Wedderburn unleashed a torrent of verbal hell upon “a public messenger”as Franklin indignantly described himself standing in the Cockpit.

The Cockpit

He seemed shocked that no one, not a single one of the 36 lords present called for the solicitor general to return back to the original reason the hearing was scheduled.

Instead, “they seemed to enjoy highly the entertainment, and frequently burst out in loud applauses.”

 

In Wedderburn’s stinging tirade, he employed the witty use of double entendre – a device of the time establishing the witty orator as learned, and oh so clever.

Wedderburn snidely assaulted, “a certain doctor” as a “man of letters”and then (using Dr. Franklin’s fame for electrical experiments) switched on phrases such as, “Letters might certainly be conveyed, without any Electrical Shock,”.

“They have, it is true, given a shock to their friends; but our Correspondent knows of no conductor that will convey a shock to themselves,” “against the Transmitter of certain letters to America … the whole Fire seemed to have been extracted from his Frame…”and on and on it went.

Wedderburn’s voice bellowed while he was “Pounding the council table until (according to Jeremy Bentham) it ‘groaned under the assault.’  Furthermore, Wedderburn continued, “Hutchinson had been the victim of Franklin’s unscrupulous schemes to incite rebellion.

And Franklin, Wedderburn suggested, schemed in this manner primarily in order to have himself made governor.”

 

                                                                                      Benjamin Franklin at the Court of St. James; Image depicts the session of the Privy Council in which Franklin is harangued for his role in the Hutchinson Letters Affair in 1774. Franklin leaves England not long after, committed to American independence. Source: Library of Congress
Benjamin Franklin at the Court of St. James; Image depicts the session of the Privy Council in which Franklin is harangued for his role in the Hutchinson Letters Affair in 1774. Franklin leaves England not long after, committed to American independence. Source: Library of Congress

Benjamin Franklin stood right there, motionless for the full hour, taking Wedderburn’s abuse along with the howls and laughter of the spectators.

Edward Bancroft noted, “The Doctor was dressed in a full suit of spotted Manchester velvet, and stood conspicuously erect, without the smallest movement of any part of his body.”

Finally, Wedderburn went quiet and called Franklin as a witness. The Privy Council official proceedings recorded, “N. B. Dr. Franklin being present, remained silent.

But declared by his counsel, that he did not choose to be examined.”

At the same hearing and not surprisingly, the Privy Council also found the petition to remove Hutchinson and Oliver invalid.

But they wouldn’t just state a simple rejection.

Since Wedderburn had fired up the Lords, the official reason of why the petition was rejected read: “… that the said petition is founded upon Resolutions, formed upon False and Erroneous allegations, and that the same is groundless, Vexatious and Scandalous and calculated only for the Seditious Purpose of keeping up a Spirit of Clamour and Discontent in the said Province.

Oh, and it wasn’t over quite yet.

The following day, Franklin received his pink slip as American postmaster-general.

The letter of Franklin’s London friend, printed in the Pennsylvania Gazette on April 20, 1774, also added “It was with great Reluctance, I am told, that the Postmasters-General dismissed him from his Office.

They knew his long and faithful Services in that Department, but the Orders they received from the Ministry were so positive, that they could not refuse obeying them .…”The letter ended with the foreboding sentence, “Fleets and Troops are talked of, to be sent to America .…

Dr. Franklin left England, a fully-converted rebel to The Cause.

He never looked back nor second guessed his feelings which seemed to have changed completely during that one hour verbal beating he took in the Privy Council.

Ben Franklin and his son William

When Ben’s (illegitimate) son, William, was arrested during the War of Independence for being the Crown-loving Royal Governor of New Jersey, Benjamin refused to try to get him released and they basically stayed estranged for the rest of their lives.

During the peace treaty talks in Paris in 1782-83, Franklin played hard ball regarding his firm “no amnesty or compensation” stand against Loyalists who had fled the colonies.

The peace treaty ending the American Revolutionary War was signed on September 3, 1783.

Benjamin Franklin was there of course and was one of the signers for the newly-recognized United States of America.

“Friends noticed he wore the same Manchester velvet suit that he had worn the day he had been abused by Wedderburn before the Privy Council.

They asked him why.

Franklin smiled and said, ‘To give it a little revenge’

source:Journal of the American Revolution

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