Description:

BOSTON BROADSHEET REPORTS LEAD-UP TO TEA PARTY
Fine content broadsheet, "Supplement to the Massachusetts-Gazette" (Boston: printed by Richard Draper), May 6, 1773, 2pp. folio, leading with an article on the London publication of the "Boston Pamphlet", written by the Boston Committee of Correspondence, outlining the rights of the American colonists, and indicating how those rights had been violated by the decision of the British government to pay the governor, lieutenant governor, and judges of the Massachusetts colony directly. This measure, the pamphlet argued, was a step away from responsible government, and made the leading officials of the colony less dependent on the electorate. The article presented here reprints the sympathetic editor''s preface which accompanied the pamphlet''s publication in London, in part: "All Accounts of the Discontent so general in our Colonies, have of late Years been industriously smothered, and concealed here; it seeming to suit the Views of the American Minister to have it understood, that by his great Abilities all Faction was subdued, all Opposition suppressed, and the whole Country quieted. - That the true State of Affairs there may be known, and the true Causes of that Discontent well understood, the following Piece (not the Production of a Private Writer, but the unanimous Act of a large American City) lately printed in New England, is republished here. This Nation, and the other Nations of Europe, may thereby learn with more Certainty the Grounds of a Differentiation, that possibly may, sooner or later, have Consequences interesting to them all ... he disposition to a good understanding was so prevalent, that possibly they might soon have relaxed in the Article of Tea also. But the System of Commissioners of Customs, Officers without end, with fleets and armies ... [and] their acting with much Indiscretion and Rashness, giving great unnecessary Trouble and Obstruction ... kept the People in a constant State of Irritation...". These tensions would culminate on Dec. 16, 1773, when the Sons of Liberty destroyed a shipment of East India Company tea, in what was known as the "Boston Tea Party". Moderate soiling and damp staining throughout, ragged left edge with small tears mended with cello tape, else very good.

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December 10, 2016 11:00 AM EST
Wilmington, DE, US

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