Benjamin Franklin Papers
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https://founders.archives.gov/documents/Franklin/01-12-02-0165

To Benjamin Franklin from David Hall, 14 October 1765

From David Hall

Letterbook copy: American Philosophical Society

Philadelphia October 14th. 1765

Dear Sir

Since my last to you of September 6.3 I am favoured with Two Letters of yours by the July and August Packets,4 for which am much obliged. I know you have been an useful and publick spirited Member of Society, for a Number of Years past, and am sorry to find, that many, who, some Years ago, seemed to have the greatest Regard for you, are now become your bitter Enemies.5

I am obliged to you (as I have wrote before) with respect to your Advice relating to the Stamp Law. I did not design to drop the Paper, without making Trial, after the Act took Place,6 but only expressed my Fears of most of our Customers leaving off, and which I am still the more convinced I was right in, the nearer the Time approaches of the Act’s Commencing. But, if the Law should not be put in Execution for the Want of an Officer, as you will see there is a probability of by the last Paper,7 we shall still be at a Loss to know what to do, after the First of November, when it should commence. For if we should go on without the Stamps, and the Penalties which are very high, can be put in Force against us, we may do more in a Quarter of an Hour, than would ruin us for the rest of our Lives; and if we cannot proceed without them, there must be a Stand of Course, as in all likelihood, there will be no Person to act, and how to manage, I shall be much at a Loss.

We Printers of News Papers here, Dutch and English,8 have been proposing to take the Advice of the ablest Council, how far we may, or may not, be safe in carrying on our Papers without the Stamps, which is the only Method, we think, we can take, tho’ we imagine they will not Advise us to proceed, the Risk being so great; and if they should give it as their Advice that we should not go on, we must, of Consequence, stop, till the Act becomes general, or that we hear further from England; so that whether the Law takes Place or not, the Confusion that Things will be in for some time, must be very great, and truly distressing.9

To shew you that my Fears were not groundless, with respect to our Customers leaving off taking the Gazette, I am sorry Now to tell you, that we have already lost at least 500 of them, since the Resolves of the House of Commons were published relating to that Law; and if so many have dropt before, what may we not expect after the First of November?

Saturday last, in the Afternoon, your Directions for returning the Double Demy came to Hand,1 and on Monday Morning I applied to Captain Friend to take it on board; but he had then engaged as much Freight as would fill him; so that he could not take it, and of Course it must lie till another Opportunity Offers, which will not be before the first of November at soonest, And how our Collector may proceed then, as to clearing out Vessels without Stamp Papers, I cannot say.2 Your Family are all well, as well as mine.

Trade in general very dull here, and of Course a great Scarcity of Money.

The Gentlemen met at New York, from the different Colonies to remonstrate to the King and Parliament, I understand entered on Business last Monday, but have not yet heard what is done.3 Nothing new here, but what you will see in the Papers. I am, Dear Sir, Yours most Affectionately,

D. H

per Carolina Captain Friend

to London

To Benjamin Franklin Esq.

(Copy)

Sent by the Tryphena, Captain Smith, to Liverpool4

[Note numbering follows the Franklin Papers source.]

3Above, pp. 255–9.

4Possibly BF’s letter of June 8 and almost certainly his of August 9; see above, pp. 170–2, 233–4.

5Hall’s phraseology here seems a little stiff; perhaps the junior partner of the firm of Franklin & Hall entertained privately some feelings of relief that his business association with so controversial a figure as BF was to terminate in a few months. Their personal relations remained cordial.

6BF had repeatedly urged Hall not to discontinue the Gazette when the Stamp Act took effect.

7Pa. Gaz., Oct. 10, 1765, had printed Hughes’s pledge not to try to enforce the Stamp Act until it should be “put into Execution generally in the neighbouring Colonies.”

8Hall of Pa. Gaz., William Bradford of Pa. Jour., Henrich Miller of Der Wochentliche Philadelphische Staatsbote, and possibly Christoph Saur of Germantown, who changed the title of his paper from Pensylvanische Berichte to Die Germantowner Zeitung sometime between June 17, 1762, and Aug. 7, 1766. Clarence S. Brigham, History and Bibliography of American Newspapers 1690–1820 (Worcester, Mass., 1947), II, 850, 851, 933, 927, 962.

9Hall met his problem thus: In the Oct. 31, 1765, issue of the Gazette (no. 1923) he printed a black-banded notice that the publishers had “thought it expedient to stop awhile” to deliberate on the methods to pursue in consequence of “the most UNCONSTITUTIONAL Act that ever these Colonies could have imagined.” A week later, November 7, he issued a one-page news sheet without an identifying imprint and headed merely “No Stamped Paper to be had.” On the 14th he issued a four-page paper, again without imprint, headed “Remarkable Occurrences.” The usual heading of the Gazette reappeared on the issue of November 21. Its number, 1926, was a tacit admission that the two interim publications were in fact issues of the newspaper. Hall continued, however, to omit the customary imprint lines at the bottom of the fourth page until the issue of Feb. 6, 1766, when, following the dissolution of the partnership of Franklin and Hall, his own name appeared alone as the printer of the paper.

1No letter with explicit instructions on this matter has been found; on August 9 BF had told Hall simply that the paper would have to be returned.

2On May 1, 1766, Hall wrote BF that he had shipped the paper on the Philadelphia Packet. APS. The clearance of this vessel was reported in Pa. Gaz. and Pa. Jour., Dec. 12, 1765.

3Pa. Gaz. and Pa. Jour., Oct. 17, 1765, reported that the Stamp Act Congress had met at New York on Monday, the 7th, “and had entered upon Business. The most important that ever came under Consideration in America.” The proceedings of the Congress are printed in Hezekiah Niles, Principles and Acts of the Revolution in America (Baltimore, 1822), pp. 451–61; (reprinted, N.Y., Chicago, New Orleans, 1876), pp. 155–69.

4Pa. Gaz., Oct. 17, 1765, reported the clearance of the ship Carolina, Capt. J. Friend, for London, and the issue of the 31st reported that of the brig Tryphena, Capt. J. Smith, for Liverpool.

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