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b. Dec. 16, 1761.  311Sarah, b. June 1, 1765.  312Ruth, b. Dec. 30, 1766.  313Jonathan Tufts m. Elizabeth----, and had--  313-314Jonathan, b. May 6, 1764.  315Eleazer, b. Sept. 28, 1767.  316Charles, b. May 3, 1770.  317Amos, b. Dec. 12, 1784.  318Isaac Tufts m. Martha----, and had--  318-319Martha, b. Apr. 20, 1770.  320Isaac, b. Dec. 14, 1771.  321Lydia Hall, b. Aug. 28, 1773.  322Seth, b. Sept. 14, 1774.  323Lydia Hall, b. July 9, 1778.  324Moses Tufts m. Phebe Thompson, May 7, 1767, and had--  324-325Moses, b. June 8, 1771.  326Catharine, b. July 17, 1775.  327Rhoda, d. Sept. 14, 1773.  328Jacob Tufts m. Ruth Binford, May 27, 1790, and had--  328-329Jacob, b. Mar. 5, 1791.  330Andrew, b. Feb. 21, 1794.  331Esther, b. Sept. 7, 1796.  332Thomas, b. Sept. 29, 1799.  333Benjamin Tufts m. Elizabeth----, and had--  333-334Elizabeth, b. Feb. 21, 1780.  335Benjamin Tufts, jun., m. Hannah Turner, May 17, 1796, and had--  335-336Benjamin, b. Apr
of Liberty had been dissolved; and all efforts to keep up its glorious spirit, were subor dinated to loyalty. Isaac Sears, John Lamb, and others to Nicholas Ray, New-York, 10 Oct. 1766. A few individuals Andrew Oliver to Thomas Whately, 7 May, 1767, in Letters, &c., 19. at Boston, Chap. XXVII.} 1766. Oct. having celebrated the anniversary of the outbreak against the Stamp Act, care was taken to report, how healths had been drunk to Otis, the American Hampden, who first proposed the Congrient may obtain from an intriguing patron, was sent over as the representative of the colonial Crown Officers Candidus, in Boston Gazette, 9 Sept. 1771., with special authority to appear as the friend of Oliver Compare Oliver to Whately, 7 May, 1767. and of Hutchinson. Hutchinson to R. Jackson, introducing Paxton; date not given, but evidently of Oct. 1766. We are drawing near the measures which compelled the insurrection of the colonies; but all the stars in their courses were har
er a smooth exterior, concealed the heart of a savage. The Lieutenant Governor of South Carolina was a man of sense; but his moderation was soon to draw upon him a rebuke. Sir James Wright, in Georgia, and Carlton, in Quebec, were strenuous supporters of power. The attention of the British Government and of Parliament was drawn chiefly towards Massachusetts, where Bernard, Bernard to Shelburne, 6 May, 1767. Hutchinson, Chap XXIX.} 1767. April. and Oliver, Oliver to T. Whately, 7 May, 1767. with perseverance equalled only by their duplicity, sought to increase their emoluments, to free themselves from their dependence on the people for a necessary support, and to consolidate their authority by the presence of a small standing army. The opinions of Hutchinson were of peculiar importance, for while he assented to Bernard's views, and was forming relations with Israel Mauduit and Whately, and through them with Jenkinson, Grenville and Wedderburn, his plausible letters to Rich