Thomas Newell’s Secret Notes
As discussed yesterday, Thomas Newell wrote several lines in his 1773–74 diary in cipher.
Since one of those lines coincides with Newell joining the effort to keep the East India Company tea from landing, one might hope the secret words would have political significance.
Barring that, they could be juicy personal gossip. Better than the weather reports that comprise the great majority of entries in this diary.
But no, these ciphered lines turn out to be far less juicy than other things Newell wrote about openly: political brouhahas, a duel between British military officers, the suicide of a British sailor.
Of eleven lines in cipher, four were Newell admitting to not going to a meetinghouse on a Sunday. Four times in two years!
Three expressed Newell’s worry for a woman named Hannah, who was suffering ill health:
Two entries were about attending social events that would be standard for a young man of his class:
Why would Thomas Newell feel the need to keep that information from posterity? Well, he probably didn’t care about us. In this period a diary was less private than we now expect, so Newell’s uncle Timothy or his father or his friends might have expected to be able to read it.
I suspect that Thomas Newell kept these little personal notes private because they were about his own personal life and not the weather or public events.
TOMORROW: Cannon.
Since one of those lines coincides with Newell joining the effort to keep the East India Company tea from landing, one might hope the secret words would have political significance.
Barring that, they could be juicy personal gossip. Better than the weather reports that comprise the great majority of entries in this diary.
But no, these ciphered lines turn out to be far less juicy than other things Newell wrote about openly: political brouhahas, a duel between British military officers, the suicide of a British sailor.
Of eleven lines in cipher, four were Newell admitting to not going to a meetinghouse on a Sunday. Four times in two years!
Three expressed Newell’s worry for a woman named Hannah, who was suffering ill health:
- 10 Oct 1773, Sunday: “Staid at home this day upon account of my dear Hannah being unwell with a breaking out on her hands and legs.”
- 28 December: “My dear Hannah very unwell; out of her head most of this evening.”
- 13 Mar 1774: “My Hannah [not in cipher:] went to meeting, after many months’ illness.”
Two entries were about attending social events that would be standard for a young man of his class:
- 17 July 1773: “I went to Commencement” at Harvard College, an annual public festival.
- 28 October, after a concert at Faneuil Hall by Josiah Flagg: “For the first time my uncle gave me a ticket.”
- 2 Jan 1774: “Yesterday being New Year’s Day, my father gave me a new shirt, for which I was greatly obliged to him.”
Why would Thomas Newell feel the need to keep that information from posterity? Well, he probably didn’t care about us. In this period a diary was less private than we now expect, so Newell’s uncle Timothy or his father or his friends might have expected to be able to read it.
I suspect that Thomas Newell kept these little personal notes private because they were about his own personal life and not the weather or public events.
TOMORROW: Cannon.
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