Old Boston Days & Ways. Mary Caroline Crawford

Old Boston Days & Ways - Mary Caroline Crawford


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      Old Boston Days & Ways

       From The Dawn Of The Revolution Until The Town Became A City

      MARY CAROLINE CRAWFORD

      

      

       Old Boston Days & Ways, Mary C. Crawford

       Jazzybee Verlag Jürgen Beck

       86450 Altenmünster, Loschberg 9

       Deutschland

      

       ISBN: 9783849651510

      

       www.jazzybee-verlag.de

       [email protected]

      

      

      

      

      

      CONTENTS:

       FOREWORD... 1

       CHAPTER I. THE MASTER OF THE PUPPETS. 3

       CHAPTER II. THE CHALLENGE TO THE CROWN.. 9

       CHAPTER III. TWO ENGLISH CHAMPIONS OF THE DAWNING REPUBLIC 16

       CHAPTER IV. WHEN EARL PERCY LIVED OPPOSITE THE COMMON 20

       CHAPTER V. THE SPRIGHTLY CHRONICLES OF JOHN ANDREWS 31

       CHAPTER VI. THE MESSENGER OF THE REVOLUTION.. 48

       CHAPTER VII. WHEN FANEUIL HALL WAS A PLAYHOUSE.. 62

       CHAPTER VIII. A PAINTER OF FAIR WOMEN... 83

       CHAPTER IX. JOHN HANCOCK AND HIS DOROTHY.. 94

       CHAPTER X. THE MAN OF THE TOWN MEETING.. 110

       CHAPTER XI. IN THE REIGN OF A REPUBLICAN "KING". 118

       CHAPTER XII. AN EIGHTEENTH CENTURY AERONAUT.. 131

       CHAPTER XIII. THE BEGINNINGS OF LITERATURE AND MUSIC.. 137

       CHAPTER XIV. SOME FAMOUS FRENCH VISITORS TO THE TOWN 149

       CHAPTER XV. TWO HEROES OF PEACE.. 168

       CHAPTER XVI. SOCIAL LIFE IN THE TRANSITION PERIOD... 178

       CHAPTER XVII. EARLY BOSTON THEATRES AND THEIR STARS. 185

      FOREWORD

      Almost of necessity a town is a different thing, and has a social life quite distinct, from a city. On its political side it is endowed with color and individuality, from the very fact that its humblest inhabitant may, at town meeting, raise his voice to oppose the motion of the richest and most renowned man in the community. And, on the social side, it possesses a simplicity of interests, a delightful neighborliness, and a quality of charming intimacy which may never be claimed by a city.

      So, in this book, — which takes up where my "St. Botolph's Town" dropped it, the story of Boston's share in the struggle for independence, — I have stopped just short of the time when we blossomed into a municipality and indulged in a mayor and aldermen.

      The end of Boston's life as a town seemed to me really the end of an era and I thought I could paint a better picture of life and manners here, during the period which followed the Revolution, if I did not venture far into the history of the nineteenth century.

      Besides, the niche that I have endeavored to fill in this book has been curiously vacant heretofore. No single volume happens to have covered intensively, so to speak, that very interesting formative period when the peculiar genius of Boston was beginning to find itself in art, in politics, and in civic life. Characteristically, I have passed lightly over the politics and have dealt with the personal rather than with the technical side of the arts. I am so incorrigibly of the opinion that the people of a period are its history!

      My warm thanks are due to the Houghton Mifflin Company for their courtesy in permitting the quotations credited to Mr. James K. Hosmer's "Life of Samuel Adams," and to Mr. Harold Murdock's "Earl Percy's Dinner Table"; thanks I give also to Mr. Howard W. Spurr for his kindness in allowing extracts from Goss's "Life of Paul Revere," to Mr. Charles Knowles Bolton, of the Boston Athenaeum, for his personal helpfulness and for his generous permission to draw upon the rich illustrative material in the possession of the library, to Mr. Louis A. Holman, to Mrs. James A. Garland, who has helped me greatly in the Tudor data and pictures, to Mr. William Sumner Appleton, who has cooperated to the end that the lovely portrait of Mrs. Richard Derby might appear in the book, to Mr. William B. Clarke, for his service in connection with Revere's lantern-hanger, and to the New England Magazine, whose publishers have kindly placed at my disposal a wealth of rare information about old Boston.

      The works which have been consulted in the preparation of this volume are many more than could be named here, and credit to them is, for the most part, given in the text. But my debt to the invaluable "Memorial History of Boston" is so great that I must acknowledge it here as well as there. I heartily thank also the many custodians and collectors who have helped me in my browsings among those contemporary newspapers and documents, without which no history of this period could be written, but for which, lacking the kindly aid of specialists, one would so often search libraries and bookshops in vain. m. c. c.

      Charlestown, Massachusetts, 1909.

      CHAPTER I. THE MASTER OF THE PUPPETS

      AN interesting essay might be written on the Scape-goats of History and in such a work a prominent place should be given to Thomas Hutchinson, lieutenant-governor of Massachusetts in 1760 and throughout the most trying period, — from the point of view of a King's man, — in the whole history of the colonies. Hutchinson was not at all a bad sort of person. He was honest, sincere, devoted, and he did faithfully his duty as he saw it. His error was simply that which is being made all around us to-day by men high in authority — as he was: distrust of the common people. Of course it is true, as James K. Hosmer has tersely said, that "Hutchinson ought to have known how to choose better, sprung as he was from the best New England strain and nurtured from his cradle in the atmosphere of freedom." But Hutchinson was the type of man who could not see beyond his own dooryard. And in that dooryard some very unpleasant things had happened to him and


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