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Domestic News November 1, 1770

The Virginia Gazette

Williamsburg, Virginia

What is this article about?

Extract of a letter from Boston reports unanimous approval of a manufacturing scheme involving weavers, wire drawers, and paper makers, with free passages provided by Mr. Hancock. It also discusses threats of British ships of war and troops, predicting harm to Britain's commerce and growing colonial resentment against perceived tyranny.

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Full Text

Extract of a letter from Boston.

"Our manufacturing scheme was yesterday reported, and met with so universal an approbation that every word and sentiment was received without so much as a syllable's objection. It is so well calculated that it must succeed, for every man who can spare a shilling a year, may be interested in it. Scott has brought even weavers and a wire drawer, and I hear, one or more paper makers. Mr. Hancock generously gave the manufacturers their passages free.

" We are menaced with ships of war and more troops, to be quartered upon us. What great things these terrific measures will produce time will discover; but without pretence to inspiration, I guess, Britain's commerce will soonest and most permanently feel the injury. We still hear of sending for the heads of the faction, of laying our towns in ashes, of subduing our republican spirits, and such puerile bombast ; but alas ! such is our carnal security, that we laugh at the rod in the hands of tyrants, who cannot determine what part of a universally discontented people they dare begin to chastise with it !

"Let them take it for granted, that while ever there continues a general opinion of illtreatment on one hand, there will be an adequate resentment and dissatisfaction on the other. Harsh usage can only increase and confirm a slight aversion into an unbounded detestation. Men born and educated in the perfect sense of their rights and privileges, can never resign them quietly without a bargain of some kind. Nothing of this sort has ever been proposed to the poor Americans. They are to become hewers of wood and drawers of water, barely to divert their kind mother, from a trial of her strength, in crushing them to pieces: Or what is still more provoking, they and their affectionate brethren in Britain and Ireland, are required to bow the knee to a power abhorred and execrated by themselves and ancestors, as long as any trace of Saxon courage can be gleaned from the wastes of antiquity."

What sub-type of article is it?

Politics Economic Military

What keywords are associated?

Boston Manufacturing Scheme British Troops Colonial Resentment Ships Of War Mr Hancock

What entities or persons were involved?

Scott Mr. Hancock

Where did it happen?

Boston

Domestic News Details

Primary Location

Boston

Key Persons

Scott Mr. Hancock

Outcome

manufacturing scheme approved unanimously; threats of ships of war and troops to be quartered.

Event Details

Letter extract describes unanimous approval of a manufacturing scheme reported yesterday, involving weavers, wire drawer, and paper makers brought by Scott, with free passages from Mr. Hancock. It notes menaces of British ships of war and more troops for quartering, speculates on impacts to Britain's commerce, and expresses colonial resentment against perceived ill-treatment and tyranny.

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