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Shays' Rebellion Collection, 1786-1787
Contents List

About this collection

Folder Contents
   
1 "A List of Towns ... in the Commonwealth of Massachusetts AD 1786"
  Petitions of Massachusetts Towns and Counties
2 Acton - Fitchburg
3 Grafton - Hubbardston
4 Lee - Norton
5 Oakham - Royalston
6 Shirley - Swanzey
7 Taunton - Worcester County
8 "Grievances mentioned in the Various Petitions ..."
9 Massachusetts Legislature Committee Reports
  Military Papers, 1786 - 1788
10 1786
11 1787 - 1788
12 Major Tay's Orderly Book and Diary, 1787 January - February
  "General Lincoln's Order-Book, 1787 ..." [typescript]
13 pp. 1 - 13
14 pp. 14 - 29
15 index
  "Letters in the Commissary Department of the Massachusetts Army during Shays' Rebellion 1787" [typescript]
16 t.p.; pp. 1 - 14
17 pp. 15 - 30
18 pp. 31 - 45
19 pp. 46 - 60
20 pp. 61 - 74
21 pp. 75 - 91
22 pp. 92 - 103
23 index
   
   
  Papers re: Arrests and Trials of Insurgents
   
24 Moses Aldrich, Jr., of Uxbridge, Mass.
25 Silvanus Billings, of Northborough, Mass.
26 Paul Boynton and Brinsly Lord, of Winchendon, Mass.
27 Aaron Broad, of Holden, Mass.
28 Dr. Isaac Chenery, of Holden, Mass.
29 Reuben Cunningham, of Spencer, Mass.
30 Caleb Curtiss, of Charlton, Mass.
31 Robert Furbush, of Rutland, Mass.
32 Nijah Griffith, of Hadley, Mass., also Reuben Cunningham & Timothy Green
33 Joel Grout, of Gerry, Mass.
34 Moses Hamilton, of New Braintree, Mass.
35 Abijah Livermore, of Spencer, Mass.
36 Samuel Richardson, of Leicester, Mass.
37 Asa Robinson, of Dudley, Mass.
38 Job Shattuck, of Groton, Mass.
39 Elijah Southgate, of Leominster, Mass.
40 Asa Sprague, of Spencer, Mass.
41 Francis Willson, of Holden, Mass.
42 John Winch, of Holden, Mass.
  Miscellaneous Documents, 1786 - 1915
43 1786 - 1787, January 24
44 1787, January 25 - May 10
45 1787, June 11 - 1915
46 "Rumors from the Country," c. Dec. 1786
47 Miscellaneous Papers (references to other sources)
   
   
Octavo  
Volume  
   
1 George Richards Minot, The History of the Insurrection in Massachusetts in the Year 1786 ... [manuscript]
   
2 Col. Benjamin Lincoln, Order Book [photostat]
   

About this collection

Following the American Revolution, the country found itself in a severe economic depression; the effects of which were keenly felt by the farmers of Western Massachusetts. Unable to pay their debts, including overdue taxes, small property holders found themselves in court; some were imprisoned for debt and many had property seized.

Shays' Rebellion began with farmers seeking from the Massachusetts General Court tax and judicial reform, as well as the issuance of paper money. The legislature, however, opposed most of these positions. Frustrated by the situation and their inability to change it peacefully and within the framework of the law, farmers, in August 1786, took up arms and converged on the Court of Common Pleas in Northampton, Mass., in an attempt to keep the court from sitting (thus preventing further trials and imprisonment of debtors). On August 29th, the insurgents were successful and other, similar groups stormed the courts at Concord, Great Barrington, Taunton, and Worcester, Mass.

From September 25th to 28th, a group of armed insurgents lead by Capt. Daniel Shays (1747-1825), a veteran of the Revolution, occupied the Courthouse at Springfield, Mass., preventing the State Judicial Court from sitting. An assault on their next target, the Federal Arsenal in Springfield, on 25 January 1787 was defeated and the insurgents fled, but were soon captured. In February 1787 the rebellion collapsed. Many of the insurgents were pardoned at once, though two were hanged for treason. This collection contains disparate materials all pertaining in some respect to Shays' Rebellion. The bulk of the collection consists of a bound photostat copy (138 p.) and a typescript copy of General Benjamin Lincoln's orders as the commander of the forces to suppress the rebellion. Both the photostat and typescript copies appear to have been made from the same original and there is evidence that this original was formerly in the possession of the Berkshire Athenaeum in Pittsfield, Mass., then sold to William Randolph Hearst, Esq. The typescript copy is indexed. Both include letters of the Commissary Department of the Massachusetts Army, most of which are signed by James Prince and Joseph Ruggles. The orders date from 19 January to 18 March 1787 , and the letters date from 22 January to 22 October 1787 (with one letter dated 31 March 1788). There are also disbound sections of an orderly book attributed to one Major Tay. This is a daily account of his activities from 18 January to 14 February 1787 and a record of General Lincoln's orders from 20 January to 13 February 1787 (16 p.).

Also included in the collection is what appears to be a manuscript copy of George Richards Minot's The History of the Insurrection in Massachusetts in the Year 1786 ..., published in Worcester in 1788 by Isaiah Thomas. With Minot's emendations, it is approximately two hundred forty-five pages and may be the copy Thomas used to set the type for the book. During this period many of the towns in Massachusetts petitioned the General Court and the Governor for a "redress of grievances." The majority of the petitions in the collection include the following complaints: 1) the General Court should not sit in Boston but in a country town near the center of the state, 2) there must be more currency in circulation, 3) taxes are extravagant, 4) salaries of public officials are too high, 5) debtors should not be jailed.

There is one folder of documents relating to the arrests and trials of insurgents and another folder of miscellaneous military returns, orders, etc. The remainder of the collection consists of various items including a letter to Isaiah Thomas concerning the capture of Job Shattuck; a copy of a letter from Ethan Allen to the Massachusetts government expressing alarm that insurgents are seeking refuge in Vermont and offering to cooperate with Massachusetts in securing peace; a resolution of the Massachusetts General Court, 25 June 1787, pertaining to the pursuit of insurgents across state lines and the position of the government toward the insurgents; and a document thought to be from Major William Pynchon entitled "Rumours from the Country," describing conditions in Massachusetts.


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