J. L. BELL is a Massachusetts writer who specializes in (among other things) the start of the American Revolution in and around Boston. He is particularly interested in the experiences of children in 1765-75. He has published scholarly papers and popular articles for both children and adults. He was consultant for an episode of History Detectives, and contributed to a display at Minute Man National Historic Park.

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Saturday, December 16, 2023

“I went contentedly home & finishd my tea”

One of my favorite accounts of the Boston Tea Party comes from the merchant John Andrews.

He cultivated a sense of detached irony in his letters. So much so that he can come across as barely able to rouse himself and find out what was going on.

Andrews wrote this letter on 18 Dec 1773, more than a day after the event, so he had a chance to digest it and polish his observations.

This extract picks up Andrews’s account as ship-owner Francis Rotch has returned from Milton with the not-unexpected news that Gov. Thomas Hutchinson wouldn’t let the Dartmouth carry its load of tea back to London.
upon readg it, such prodigious shouts were made, that induced me, while drinkg tea at home to go out, & know the cause of it, the [Old South Meeting] house was so crowded could get no further than ye porch, where I found ye moderator [Samuel Phillips Savage], was just declaring the meetg to be dissolvd, which causd another general Shout, outdoors & in, of three cheers; what wth that, & the consequent noise of breaking up the meetng, you’d tho’t the inhabitants of the infernal regions had broke loose.

for my part, I went contentedly home & finishd my tea, but was soon informd what was going forward, but still not crediting it without ocular demonstration, I went & was satisfied–

they mustered I’m told upon Fort hill, to the number of about 200 & proceeded, 2 by 2 to Griffins wharfe, where [the ships captained by James] Hall, [James] Bruce and [Hezekiah] Coffin lay, each with 114 Chests of the ill-fated article on board, the two former with only that article, but ye lattr arriv’d at ye wfe only ye day before, was freighted with a large quantity of other goods, which they took the greatest care not to injure in the least, and before nine O Clock in ye eveng, every Chest, from on board the 3 vessells, was knocked to pieces and Flung over ye sides–

they say the actors were Indians from Naragansett, whether they were, or not, to a transient observer they appeard as Such, being cloathd in Blankets, wth their heads muffled & copper colord countenances, being each arm’d with a hatchet or axe or po [pair of] pistols, nor was their dialect different from what I conceive those geniueses to speak, as their jargon was uninteligible to all but themselves–

not the least insult was offerd to any person, save one Capt [Charles] Conner, a letter of horses in this place, not many years since immergd from dear Ireland who had ript ye lining of his coat & waistcoat under the arms, and watchg his oppoty had nearly filld ’em wth tea, but being detected, was handled pretty roughly, they not only Stript him of his cloaths, but gave him a coat of mud, wth a severe bruising into the bargain, & nothing but their utter aversion to make any disturbance prevented his being tard & featherd.
Conner was also mentioned (though not by name) in the Whig newspapers and in the Rev. Samuel Cooper’s report to Benjamin Franklin. Boston’s political leaders really wanted people to know the men who destroyed the tea (whoever they might be) were acting on principle and not for private gain.

(The depiction of the Tea Party above comes courtesy of the Boston Athenaeum, where I’m typing these words. It was engraved in 1856 by John Andrew, who I don’t think was any relation to the merchant.)

3 comments:

steenkinbadgers said...

Which brings me to my question: did the Tea Party participants intentionally disguise themselves as Indians, or was this merely what observers inferred them to be? They disguised their faces with- soot or ash? They wore blankets and greatcoats, covered their heads, but not with feathers and other native headdress? It's confusing and a large national myth seems to rest upon this.

J. L. Bell said...

Some of the people who destroyed the tea definitely disguised themselves, concealing their faces with soot, lamp black, and/or paint. Others didn’t. In addition, there are multiple early descriptions of some in that group whooping.

Almost immediately witnesses wrote about the party being disguised as Indians—not just as having painted or blackened faces but impersonating Indians in some way. So something about the disguises read as “Indian” to those observers. In addition, the Whig press quickly adopted that identification, suggesting they were ready for it.

I’m looking for clues about what an “Indian” disguise would be in 1773 Boston. What war paint or other face decoration had Bostonians seen Natives wear, either in eastern Massachusetts or elsewhere during war or trading journeys? Were blankets, as some early witnesses mentioned, enough, or was other clothing involved?

Was John Andrews’s remark about the tea destroyers’ unintelligible language just tongue-in-cheek, or did some of the party actually speak in an imitation Indian tongue, as George R. T. Hewes described many years later? (I think that’s unlikely, given the need to communicate with many people who had not been prepared for the event.)

I don’t recall seeing feathers mentioned in early verbal sources. They appear in pictures before the end of the century, but was that visual detail simply a way to label a figure in a print as “Indian”?

Finally, there’s the question of whether the men destroying the tea wanted to communicate some additional message through the Indian disguises, such as being American, noble savages, or the like. I’m skeptical about that idea. The Whigs didn’t drive home that point in their newspapers as I presume they’d do; instead, they wrote about the “Natives” in dismissive or demeaning language.

J. L. Bell said...

Today our American culture generally agrees that darkening one’s skin to impersonate someone of another race, even out of admiration or to lampoon the practice, is wrong.

One result is that this year’s 250th-anniversary Tea Party reenactment had people with soot and paint on their faces, but no feathers or other undeniably “Indian” decorations, as in past years.

Ironically, that might be closer to what the Bostonians of 1773 saw and interpreted as “Indian.”