The exhibit includes materials from what the website calls “the Society’s enormous archive of Quincy family papers, letters, diaries, drawings, artifacts, and paintings that document eight generations of this extraordinary family,” an unusual number of whom were named Josiah Quincy.
This one (1744-1775) was a young lawyer among the Boston Whigs. He defended Ebenezer Richardson on murder charges, and helped to defend Capt. Thomas Preston and his soldiers after the Boston Massacre, thus providing a clear exemplar of the modern dictum that all accused deserve a professional legal defense. Outside the courtroom, Quincy wrote strident newspaper essays, though at times he called for curbing public demonstrations.
Some authors credit Quincy with this statement, which appeared in his 1774 “Observations on the Boston Port-Bill”:
It is much easier to restrain liberty from running into licentiousness than power from swelling into tyranny and oppression.However, he put quotation marks around that sentence, having taken it from a Parliamentary committee report in 1735.
The M.H.S. exhibit is open to the public on Monday through Saturday, 1 to 4 P.M.
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