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By His Excellency, the Hon. Thomas Gage, Esq

Thomas Gage, By His Excellency, the Hon. Thomas Gage, Esq…. [Boston: Margaret Draper, 1775]. Broadside.

From the Thomas Gage Papers, American Series.

Page 1 of Thomas Gage, By His Excellency, the Hon. Thomas Gage, Esq… [Boston: Margaret Draper, 1775]. Printed Proclamation
By His EXCELLENCY, / The Hon. THOMAS GAGE, ESQ. / Governor, and Commander in Chief, in and over his Majesty’s Province of MASSACHUSETTS- / BAY, and Vice-Admiral of the same. / A PROCLAMATION.

WHEREAS the infatuated Multitudes, who have long suffered themselves to be conducted by certain well known Incendiaries and / Traitors, in a fatal Progression of Crimes, against the constitutional Authority of the State, have at length proceeded to avowed Rebel- / lion ; and the good Effects which were expected to arise from the Patience and Lenity of the King’s Government, have been often / frustrated, and are now rendered hopeless, by the Influence of the same evil Counsels ; it only remains for those who are entrusted with supreme / Rule, as well for the Punishment of the guilty, as the Protection of the well-affected, to prove they do not bear the Sword in vain.

The Infringements which have been committed upon the most sacred Rights of the Crown and People of Great-Britain, are too many to enu- / merate on one Side, and are too atrocious to be palliated on the other. All unprejudiced People who have been Witnesses of the late Trans- / actions, in this and the neighboring Provinces, will find upon a transient Review, Marks of Premeditation and Conspiracy that would justify the / fullness of Chastisement : And even those who are least acquainted with Facts, cannot fail to receive a just Impression of their Enormity, in Pro- / portion as they discover the Arts and Assiduity by which they have been falsified or concealed. The Authors of the present unnatural Revolt / never daring to trust their Cause or their Actions, to the Judgment of an impartial Public, or even to the dispassionate Reflection of their Follow- / ers, have uniformly placed their chief Confidence in the Suppression of Truth : And while indefatigable and shameless Pains have been taken
to obstruct every Appeal to the real Interest of the People of America ; the grossest Forgeries, Calumnies and Absurdities that ever insulted hu- / man Understanding, have been imposed upon their Credulity. The Press, that distinguished Appendage of public Liberty, and when fairly / and impartially employed it’s best Support, has been invariably prostituted to the most contrary Purposes : The animated Language of anci- / ent and virtuous Times, calculated to vindicate and promote the just Rights, and Interest of Mankind, have been applied to countenance the / most abandoned Violation of those sacred Blessings ; and not only from the flagitious Prints, but from the popular Harrangues of the Times, / Men have been taught to depend upon Activity in Treason, for the Security of their Persons, and Properties ; ‘till, to compleat the horrid Profa- / nation of Terms, and of Ideas, the Name of GOD, has been introduced in the Pulpits to excite and justify Devastation and Massacre.

The Minds of Men having been thus gradually prepared for the worst Extremities, a / Number of armed Persons, to the amount of many / Thousands assembled on the 19th of April last, and from behind Walls, and lurking Holes, attacked a Detachment of the King’s Troops who / not expecting so consummate an Act of Phrenzy, unprepared for Vengeance, and willing to decline it, made use of their Arms only in their / own Defence. Since that period the Rebels, deriving Confidence from Impunity, have added Insult to Outrage ; have repeatedly fired upon the / King’s Ships and Subjects, with Cannon and small Arms, have possessed the Roads, and other Communications by which the Town of Boston was / supplied with Provisions ; and with a preposterous Parade of Military Arrangement, they affect to hold the Army besieged ; while Part of their / Body make daily indiscriminate Invasions upon private Property, and with a Wantonness of Cruelty ever incident to lawless Tu- / mult, carry Depredation and Distress wherever they turn their Steps. The Actions of the 19th of April are of such Notoriety, as must / baffle all attempts to contradict them, and the Flames of Buildings and other Property from the Islands, and adjacent Country, for some Weeks / past, spread a melancholly Confirmation of the subsequent Assertions.

In this Exigency of complicated Calamities, I avail myself of the last Effort within the / Bounds of my Duty, to spare the Effusion of Blood ; / to offer, and I do hereby in his Majesty’s Name, offer and promise, his most gracious Pardon to all Persons who shall forthwith lay down their Arms / and return to the Duties of peaceable Subjects, excepting only from the Benefit of such Pardon, Samuel Adams and John Hancock, whose Of- / fences are of too flagitious a Nature to admit of any other Consideration than that of condign Punishment.

And to the End that no Person within the Limits of this proffered Mercy, may plead / Ignorance of the Consequences of refusing it, I by these / Presents proclaim not only the Persons above-named and excepted, but also all their Adherents, Associates, and Abettors, meaning to compre- / hend in those Terms, all and every Person, and Persons of what Class, Denomination or Description soever, who have appeared in Arms against / the King’s Government, and shall not lay down the same as afore-mentioned ; and likewise all such as shall so take Arms after the Date / hereof, or who shall in any-wise protect and conceal such Offenders, or assist them with Money, Provision, Cattle, Arms, Ammunition, Carriages, / or any other Necessary for Subsistence or Offence ; or shall hold secret Correspondence with them by Letter, Message, Signal, or otherwise, to / be Rebels and Traitors, and as such to be treated.

AND WHEREAS, during the Continuance of the present unnatural Rebellion, Justice cannot be administered by the common Law of the Land, / the Course whereof, has, for a long Time past, been violently impeded, and wholly interrupted ; from whence results a Necessity for using and ex- / ercising the Law Martial ; I have therefore thought fit, by the Authority vested in me, by the Royal Charter to this Province, to publish, and / I do hereby publish, proclaim and order the Use and Exercise of the Law Martial, within and throughout this Province, for so long Time as the / present unhappy Occasion shall necessarily require ; whereof all Persons are hereby required to take Notice, and govern themselves, as well to / maintain Order and Regularity among the peaceable Inhabitants of the Province, as to resist, encounter and subdue the Rebels and Traitors / above-described by such as shall be called upon for those Purposes.

To these inevitable, but I trust salutary Measures, it is a far more pleasing Part of my Duty, to add the Assurances of Protection and Support, / to all who in so trying a Crisis, shall manifest their Allegiance to the King, and Affection to the Parent State. So that such Persons as may / have been intimidated to quit their Habitations in the Course of this Alarm, may return to their respective Callings and Professions ; and / stand distinct and separate from the Parricides of the Constitution, till GOD in his Mercy shall restore to his Creatures, in this distracted Land, / that System of Happiness from which they have been seduced, the Religion of Peace, and Liberty founded upon Law.

GIVEN at Boston, this Twelfth Day of June, in the Fifteenth Year of the Reign of His Majesty GEORGE the Third, / by the Grace of GOD, of Great-Britain, France and Ireland, KING, Defender of the Faith, &c. Annoque Domini, 1775.

By His Excellency’s Command, THO’S GAGE.

THO’S FLUCKER, Secr’y.

GOD Save the KING.