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Collection Data
- Description
- Joseph Hawley (1723-1788) of Northampton, Massachusetts, a lawyer, legislator and militia officer, was one of the foremost political leaders of the American revolutionary movement in Massachusetts. The Joseph Hawley papers, dating 1653 to 1804, comprise letters to and from Joseph Hawley and letters and documents relating to him or to his family dealing with public and private affairs, especially the colonial wars and the American Revolution, including papers of the Northampton Committee of Correspondence, 1653-1804 and undated; Joseph Hawley’s writings on religious, legal and political topics, circa 1740s-1783; and sermon notes 1724-1750 and undated, the earlier notes probably taken by Joseph Hawley's father, and by Joseph Hawley, including his own bible commentaries. Also present are Hawley's brief legal notes on a dispute between a Mr. French and Joseph Allen of Deerfield, [1750], and two undated texts in Latin, possibly from Hawley's student days.
- Names
- Hawley, Joseph, 1723-1788 (Creator)
- Bollan, William, d. 1776 (Correspondent)
- Clarke, Joseph O., 1749-1850 (Correspondent)
- Cushing, Thomas, 1725-1788 (Correspondent)
- Hawley, Elisha, 1726-1755 (Correspondent)
- Schuyler, Philip John, 1733-1804 (Correspondent)
- Strong, Caleb, 1745-1819 (Correspondent)
- Trowbridge, Edmund, 1709-1793 (Correspondent)
- Dates / Origin
- Date Created: 1653 - 1804
- Library locations
- Manuscripts and Archives Division
- Shelf locator: MssCol 1360
- Topics
- Hawley family
- Stoddard family
- Williams family
- Great Britain. Stamp Act (1765)
- Massachusetts. Constitutional Convention (1779-1780)
- Congregational churches -- Clergy
- Crown Point Expedition, N.Y., 1755
- Sermons, American -- 18th century
- Berkshire County (Mass.) -- History
- Connecticut River Valley -- History
- Hampshire County (Mass.) -- History
- Massachusetts -- History -- Colonial period, ca. 1600-1775
- Massachusetts -- Politics and government -- 1775-1783
- Massachusetts -- Politics and government -- To 1775
- Massachusetts -- Religion -- 18th century
- Northampton (Mass.) -- History
- United States -- History -- Colonial period, ca. 1600-1775
- United States -- History -- French and Indian War, 1754-1763 -- Personal narratives
- United States -- History -- King George's War, 1744-1748
- United States -- History -- Revolution, 1775-1783
- United States -- History -- Revolution, 1775-1783 -- Committees of correspondence
- United States -- History -- Revolution, 1775-1783 -- Prisoners and prisons
- Clergy
- Lawyers
- Legislators
- Soldiers
- Statesmen
- military records
- Genres
- Manuscripts
- Cadastral maps
- Diaries
- military commissions
- Documents
- Correspondence
- Notes
- Biographical/historical: Joseph Hawley (1723-1788) of Northampton, Massachusetts, a lawyer, legislator and militia officer, was one of the foremost political leaders of the American revolutionary movement in Massachusetts.
Joseph Hawley and his brother Elisha (1726-1755) were the only children of prominent Northampton residents Joseph Hawley II (1682-1735) and Rebekah Stoddard (d. 1766), the daughter of Reverend Solomon Stoddard (1643-1729). Stoddard, a popular minister who held the pulpit of the First Congregational Church for sixty years, was succeeded by his grandson, Reverend Jonathan Edwards (1703-1758), a noted American theologian and first cousin to Joseph and Elisha. Through his sermons and ministry, Edwards led his congregation in an early manifestation of the First Great Awakening in 1734-1735. Joseph Hawley II, in great distress over the perceived depth of his own sinfulness, committed suicide in 1735, which Edwards publicly attributed to the work of Satan and the Hawley family’s history of mental illness, described as melancholy.
After graduating from Yale College in 1742, Joseph Hawley studied theology for a period of time. During King George’s War (1744-1748) he served as chaplain with a Massachusetts regiment sent to Canada in 1745 with other New England forces to seize the French fortress of Louisbourg. His brother Elisha rose in the ranks of the Massachusetts militia, eventually commanding the frontier outpost of Fort Massachusetts. During the French and Indian War, Captain Elisha Hawley was mortally wounded at the Battle of Lake George on September 8, 1755. Joseph Hawley attained the rank of major in the Hampshire County militia, overseeing enlistments, supplies and local defense, and he remained involved in military affairs throughout his career.
During the 1740s, Joseph Hawley came into personal and religious conflict with Jonathan Edwards. Hawley had become an adherent of Arminianism, which he would reject later in life. Edwards became increasingly alienated from his congregation, stemming from his public chastisement of local youths in 1744 for reading books deemed immoral, and his changing doctrinal views on criteria for full membership in the church. Edwards was dismissed in 1750, although he briefly continued to preach on a supply basis, and an attempt was made by his supporters to install him as minister of a new congregation of his supporters in Northampton. Joseph Hawley played a leading role in his removal. Hawley would eventually apologize to Edwards for his personal behavior concerning the dismissal, and again after Edwards’ death in a letter to Reverend Hall of Sutton in 1760, published in the press. Also during this time, Martha Root identified Elisha Hawley as the father of her twin children. In 1748 he paid a civil settlement to support the surviving child and was excommunicated by the First Church. In 1749 Joseph Hawley represented his absent brother at a council of ministers, which recommended his return to the church upon confession of sin, without requiring him to marry Martha Root.
After his return home from Louisbourg in 1745, Hawley studied law in Suffield and began practicing law in Northampton in or by 1749, becoming a justice of the peace in that year. He was made a barrister in 1762, enabling him to plead before the Massachusetts Superior Court. In 1752 Hawley married Mercy Lyman (1729-1806). Having no children of their own, they adopted Mercy’s nephew Joseph Clarke, who worked in partnership with Hawley and assisted him in family, business and public affairs. Noted law clerks included Levi Lincoln (1749-1820) and Caleb Strong (1745-1819), both prominent American statesmen.
Hawley soon became a leading figure in the legal, civic, political and military affairs of western Massachusetts. Hawley held many important positions in the Town of Northampton, including Town Clerk (1751-1760), and for many years, Town selectman from 1747 and moderator of Town meetings from 1759. Beginning in 1751, he was elected by the Town of Northampton to serve in the House of Representatives at Boston, which, with the Council, formed the General Court, the governing body of Massachusetts. The governor, lieutenant-governor and secretary were Crown appointments. He served continuously from 1766 until the General Court was finally prorogued in June 1774, in the Massachusetts Provincial Congress, 1774-1775, and then in sessions of the resumed General Court in 1775 and 1776. Hawley was vice president of the Provincial Congress in 1775.
Joseph Hawley had opposed the Stamp Act with other radical whigs, and in 1766 he appealed the conviction of a Stamp Act rioter, Seth Warren of Berkshire County, before the Superior Court. Hawley’s arguments in court and letters to the Boston Evening Post in 1767 concerning the “Berkshire Affair” resulted in Hawley’s temporary disbarment at the direction of Chief Justice Thomas Hutchinson.
Serving on important committees during the 1760s and 1770s, he worked closely with Samuel Adams, James Otis, Jr., Thomas Cushing, John Hancock, John Adams and others in directing the statements and defense of American colonial rights, and was an early proponent of independence and military preparedness. In 1774 he was chosen to represent Massachusetts at the Continental Congress, but declined in favor of John Adams. Also in that year he became chairman of Northampton’s Committee of Correspondence, later the Committee of Correspondence, Inspection and Safety, a position he held through part of 1776.
Throughout his adulthood Hawley suffered intermittently from mental and physical breakdowns. He left his legislative seat in late 1776 for those reasons, although he continued to play an active role in public affairs when his health permitted, notably in 1779-1780, at the time of the Massachusetts Constitutional Convention. He was largely responsible for directing and drafting Northampton’s response to the draft Constitution submitted to the towns for approval. He found the new constitution to be especially flawed in its property requirements for suffrage, and also for imposing a religious test oath for office holders. He declined to serve as state senator, refusing to take the oath.
In the final years of the war, Hawley was greatly concerned with the impact of the failing economy on social stability and the success of the revolutionary cause, reflected in rising poverty and in the difficulties people had in meeting their debts, among them former soldiers who had not yet been paid for their military service. In the spring of 1782 he helped calm unrest when Samuel Ely and his supporters attempted to break up court in Northampton, a precursor to the events of Shay’s Rebellion. The year 1783 marked the end of Joseph Hawley’s service as town selectman and his active involvement in public affairs. He retired to a private life, cared for by Mercy Hawley until his death on March 10, 1788.
- Content: The Joseph Hawley papers, dating 1653 to 1804, comprise letters to and from Joseph Hawley and letters and documents relating to him or to his family dealing with public and private affairs, especially the colonial wars and the American Revolution, including papers of the Northampton Committee of Correspondence, 1653-1804 and undated; Joseph Hawley’s writings on religious, legal and political topics, circa 1740s-1783; and sermon notes 1724-1750 and undated, the earlier notes probably taken by Joseph Hawley's father, and by Joseph Hawley, including his own bible commentaries. Also present are Hawley's brief legal notes on a dispute between a Mr. French and Joseph Allen of Deerfield, [1750], and two und ated texts in Latin, possibly from Hawley's student days.
Letters and documents dating 1653 (Old Style) through the 1750s consist largely of correspondence between or to Joseph Hawley and Elisha Hawley regarding personal, family and military matters, including Elisha’s affair with Martha Root, religious and church matters, and defense of the Massachusetts frontier. Notable items pertaining to Elisha Hawley include his copy of the covenant of the people of Northampton, 1741/2, with his comment and signature, 1747; his manuscript plan of a town plot near Fort Massachusetts (1750 September), his brief journal during the Crown Point expedition, 1755, and his letter to Joseph the day of his fatal wounding, 1755 September 8. Other correspondents on military matters include Ephraim Williams Sr., Ephraim Williams Jr., and Philip Schuyler (1747/8 February). Also present are two drafts of Joseph Hawley’s letter apologizing to Martha Root dated 1750 August 8. A few items dating prior to the 1740s relate to land and other transactions, notably a petition from Springfield setters to establish a plantation at present day Northampton dated the 6th day of the 3rd month 1653 (Old Style). Notable items concerning Jonathan Edwards’s ministry at Northampton include an unsigned letter from Jonathan Edwards to the Town Precinct meeting concerning his salary, 1744 November 6, his letter to Joseph Hawley of 1754 November 18 giving his opinion on Hawley’s role in his dismissal, and Hawley’s response of 1755 [January] 21. Samuel Hopkins’ letter of 1761 March 21 to Hawley regarding Hawley’s published letter to Reverend Hall about the Edwards affair, and Hawley’s response to Hopkins April 1 are also pertinent. Additional items are found in undated materials, circa 1740s-circa 1781.
Letters written by Hawley to his wife Mercy at Northampton while attending to legal or government affairs concern the state of his health, personal matters, and general political events as they relate to his plans to return home. There are also a few letters from Joseph Hawley to their nephew and adopted son, Joseph Clarke, regarding family and local matters. Hawley’s intermittent periods of mental and physical illness are glimpsed in references he makes in letters to his friends and relatives, and in letters to him expressing concern and good wishes, such as that from Nathan Birdsey (1767 February 18) and James Sullivan (1777 February 19).
Hawley’s activities at the colonial General Court, Provincial Congress and the resumed General Court are not well represented. Items reflecting his influence and prestige during the Revolutionary era include colonial agent William Bollan’s 1771 account of his work in London, sent to Hawley by Judge Edmund Trowbridge; letters from Thomas Cushing advising him of political developments; and the Congressional appointment of Hawley as Commissioner of Indian Affairs for the Northern Department, 1775 July 13. Although Hawley continued to serve in the General Court in 1776, much of his time from late February 1775 was spent in Northampton, chairing its Committee of Correspondence, Inspection and Safety. Many letters and documents from 1775 through 1779 are directed to or sent by the Committee, either to Hawley as Chairman, or his elected successors, including Joseph Clarke. These concern measures taken against loyalists and, notably, documents relating to British naval prisoners of war and American suspects sent to Northampton by George Washington and the General Court. These include signed paroles and protests against conditions at the Northampton goal, some signed by Royal Navy officer Henry Edwin [Edwyn] Stanhope (1754-1814), and letters from American officers concerning the prisoners, such as Horatio Gates, and local militia officer Seth Pomeroy. Additional items are found in undated materials. Letters from the communities of Sunderland (1778) and Chesterfield (1779) to the Committee express the need for a constitutional convention.
Also from this period are various military documents, including a list of militia companies in Northampton from 1777-1779, and charges against militia officers O. Lyman and D. Pomeroy (1779).
Notable letters written by Joseph Hawley to Ephraim Wright 178[2] April 16 and to Caleb Strong, 1782 June 7 and June 24, describe deep unrest in western Massachusetts over the heavy load of debt borne by citizens, especially men who had not yet been paid for their Army service. Materials dating 1787-1804 consist of a letter from the daughter of a loyalist, Sarah Troutbeck, and papers of Joseph Clarke relating to the estates of Joseph Hawley and David Turner.
A few documents relating to town meetings such as warrants and minutes, and local legal proceedings, as well as military commissions for Joseph and Elisha Hawley, are interspersed.
Undated letters and documents, circa 1740s-circa 1781, include letters to and from Joseph Hawley, among them a brief note from Jonathan Edwards; religious writings signed by Joseph Hawley including A Covenant with God; incomplete letters written by Thomas Prince and Thomas Foxcroft to Timothy Dwight following Jonathan Edwards’ dismissal as minister at Northampton; and Elisha Hawley’s report on scouting a route from Northampton to Albany, New York. Items from the Revolutionary War period include a document signed by Joseph Warren listing Parliamentary acts related to a resolve of the Continental Congress; lists of British and other prisoners of war held at Northampton; and a letter from men at Pittsfield, Massachusetts to the Northampton Committee of Correspondence advising of a petition to call a constitutional convention.
Joseph Hawley writings comprise his commonplace book, circa 1740s-circa 1779, a disbound notebook with additional writings consisting of quotations and writings, mainly on religious and legal topics; his nearly complete drafts of letters submitted to the Boston Evening Post in 1767 concerning the legal context of the “Berkshire Affair” during the Stamp Act crisis; Hawley’s drafts of Northampton’s response to the Constitutional Convention, circa 1780 May, and draft of his letter to the Constitutional Convention giving his personal views on flaws in the draft constitution, as submitted to printers Draper and Folsom for publication, dated 1780 June 5. Also, brief legal notes on an arbitration at Deerfield, 1750, an incomplete manuscript in Hawley’s hand of the remonstrance presented to the Council convened at Northampton in May, 1751 regarding Jonathan Edwards; and Hawley’s legal opinion on the tenure of Justices of the Superior Court, incomplete, circa 1773, as well as drafts of an act for the recovery of debt, 1782 and a petition for Northampton regarding the Court of General Sessions, 1783.
Sermon notes, 1724-1750 and undated, on folded and stitched signatures, are in two different hands; only a few are dated. The earlier notes, 1724-circa 1734, were probably taken by Joseph Hawley II, with sermons by ministers Stoddard, Edwards (1731) and Hopkins (1731), and a text preached by Edwards on Second Corinthians 11:14 (sermon given in 1734). Notes taken 1741, 1750 and undated are in the hand of Joseph Hawley and include sermons by Whittlesey (1741 December 6) and Edwards (1750 July 15; with a list inside the fold of tenants and rent amounts). Undated notes include Hawley’s own commentaries on biblical texts.
Texts in Latin are writings on Graeco-Roman history in two notebooks, possibly from Hawley’s student days.
- Funding: Digitization was made possible by a lead gift from The Polonsky Foundation.
- Physical Description
- Extent: .6 linear feet (2 boxes, 1 oversized folder)
- Type of Resource
- Text
- Identifiers
- MSS Unit ID: 1360
- NYPL catalog ID (B-number): b19428401
- Universal Unique Identifier (UUID): 30920be0-e6dc-0132-ee49-58d385a7b928