The Dorothy Q. of our present interest
is not the little maiden of Holmes’s charming
poem
“Grandmother’s
mother; her age I guess,
Thirteen summers, or something
less;
Girlish bust, but womanly
air;
Smooth, square forehead with
uprolled hair,
Lips that lover has never
kissed;
Taper fingers and slender
wrist;
Hanging sleeves of stiff brocade;
So they painted the little
maid.
On her hand a parrot green
Sits unmoving and broods serene.”
but her niece, the Dorothy Q. whom
John Hancock loved, and was visiting at Lexington,
when Paul Revere warned him of the redcoats’
approach. This Dorothy happened to be staying
just then with the Reverend Jonas Clark, under the
protection of Madam Lydia Hancock, the governor’s
aunt. And it was to meet her, his fiancee, that
Hancock went, on the eve of the 19th of April, to
the house made famous by his visit.
One imaginative writer has sketched
for us the notable group gathered that April night
about the time-honoured hearthstone in the modest
Lexington parsonage: “The last rays of the
setting sun have left the dampness of the meadows
to gather about the home; and each guest and family
occupant has gladly taken seats within the house, while
Mrs. Jonas Clark has closed the shutters, added a
new forelog, and fanned the embers to a cheerful flame.
The young couple whom Madam Hancock has studiously
brought together exchange sympathetic glances as they
take part in the conversation. The hours wear
away, and the candles are snuffed again and again.
Then the guests retire, not, to be sure, without apprehensions
of approaching trouble, but with little thought that
the king’s strong arm of military authority is
already extended toward their very roof."
Early the next morning, as we know,
the lovers were forced to part in great haste.
And for a time John Hancock and his companion, Samuel
Adams, remained in seclusion, that they might not be
seized by General Gage, who was bent on their arrest,
and intended to have them sent to England for trial.
The first word we are able to find
concerning Hancock’s whereabouts during the
interim between his escape from Lexington, and his
arrival at the Continental Congress, appointed to
convene at Philadelphia, May 10, 1775, is contained
in a long letter to Miss Quincy. This letter,
which gives a rather elaborate account of the dangers
and triumphs of the patriot’s journey, concludes:
“Pray let me hear from you by every Post.
God bless you, my dear girl, and believe me most Sincerely,
Yours most Affectionately, John Hancock.”
A month later, June 10, 1775, we find
the charming Dorothy Q., now the guest at Fairfield,
Connecticut, of Thaddeus Burr, receiving this letter
from her lover:
“MY DEAR DOLLY: I
am almost prevail’d on to think that my letters
to my Aunt & you are not read, for I cannot obtain
a reply, I have ask’d million questions & not
an answer to one, I beg’d you to let me know
what things my Aunt wanted & you and many other matters
I wanted to know but not one word in answer.
I Really Take it extreme unkind, pray, my dear, use
not so much Ceremony & Reservedness, why can’t
you use freedom in writing, be not afraid of me, I
want long Letters. I am glad the little things
I sent you were agreeable. Why did you not write
me of the top of the Umbrella. I am sorry it
was spoiled, but I will send you another by my Express
which will go in a few days. How did my Aunt like
her gown, & let me know if the Stockings suited her;
she had better send a pattern shoe & stocking, I warrant
I will suit her.... I Beg, my dear Dolly, you
will write me often and long Letters, I will forgive
the past if you will mend in future. Do ask my
Aunt to make me up and send me a Watch String, and
do you make up another and send me, I wear them out
fast. I want some little thing of your doing.
Remember me to all my Friends with you, as if named.
I am Call’d upon and must obey.
“I have sent you by Doctor Church
in a paper Box Directed to you, the following things,
for your acceptance, & which I do insist you wear,
if you do not I shall think the Donor is the objection:
2 pair white silk } which stockings
4 pair white thread } I think will fit
you
1 pair black satin } Shoes, the other,
1 pair Calem Co. } Shall be sent
when done.
1 very pretty light hat 1 neat airy
summer Cloak 2 caps 1 Fann
“I wish these may please you,
I shall be gratified if they do, pray write me, I
will attend to all your Commands.
“Adieu, my dear Girl, and believe
me with great Esteem & affection,
“Yours
without reserve,
“JOHN
HANCOCK."
It is interesting to know that while
Miss Quincy was a guest in Fairfield, Aaron Burr,
the nephew of her host, came to the house, and that
his magnetic influence soon had an effect upon the
beautiful young lady. But watchful Aunt Lydia
prevented the charmer from thwarting the Hancock family
plans, and on the 28th day of the following August
there was a great wedding at Fairfield. John
Hancock, president of the Continental Congress, and
Miss Dorothy Quincy were joined in marriage in style
befitting the family situations.
The noted couple went at once to Philadelphia,
where the patriot lived at intervals during the remainder
of the session. Mrs. Hancock seems to have been
much of the time in Boston, however, and occasionally,
in the course of the next few years, we catch delightful
glimpses through her husband’s letters of his
great affection for her, and for their little one.
Under date of Philadelphia, March
10, 1777, we read: “I shall make out as
well as I can, but I assure you, my Dear Soul, I long
to have you here, & I know you will be as expeditious
as you can in coming. When I part from you again
it must be a very extraordinary occasion. I have
sent everywhere to get a gold or silver rattle for
the child with a coral to send, but cannot get one.
I will have one if possible on your coming. I
have sent a sash for her & two little papers of pins
for you. If you do not want them you can give
them away.
“... May every blessing
of an Indulgent Providence attend you. I most
sincerely wish you a good journey & hope I shall soon
have the happiness of seeing you with the utmost affection
and Love. My dear Dolly, I am yours forever,
“JOHN
HANCOCK.”
After two years and a half of enforced
absence, the President of the Continental Congress
returned home to that beautiful house on Beacon Street,
which was unfortunately destroyed in 1863, to make
room for a more modern building. Here the united
couple lived very happily with their two children,
Lydia and Washington.
Judging by descriptions that have
come down to us, and by the World’s Fair reproduction
of the Hancock House, their mansion must have been
a very sumptuous one. It was built of stone,
after the manner favoured by Bostonians who could
afford it, with massive walls, and a balcony projecting
over the entrance door, upon which a large second-story
window opened. Braintree stone ornamented the
corners and window-places, and the tiled roof was
surrounded by a balustrade. From the roof, dormer
windows provided a beautiful view of the surrounding
country. The grounds were enclosed by a low stone
wall, on which was placed a light wooden fence.
The house itself was a little distance back from the
street, and the approach was by means of a dozen stone
steps and a carefully paved walk.
At the right of the entrance was a
reception-room of spacious dimensions, provided with
furniture of bird’s-eye maple, covered with
rich damask. Out of this opened the dining-room,
sixty feet in length, in which Hancock was wont to
entertain. Opposite was a smaller apartment,
the usual dining-room of the family. Next adjoining
were the china-room and offices, while behind were
to be found the coach-house and barn of the estate.
The family drawing-room, its lofty
walls covered with crimson paper, was at the left
of the entrance. The upper and lower halls of
the house were hung with pictures of game and with
hunting scenes. The furniture, wall-papers and
draperies throughout the house had been imported from
England by Thomas Hancock, and expressed the height
of luxury for that day. Passing through the hall,
a flight of steps led to a small summer-house in the
garden, near Mount Vernon Street, and here the grounds
were laid out in ornamental box-bordered beds like
those still to be seen in the beautiful Washington
home on the Potomac. A highly interesting corner
of the garden was that given over to the group of
mulberry-trees, which had been imported from England
by Thomas Hancock, the uncle of John, he being, with
others of his time, immensely interested in the culture
of the silkworm.
Of this beautiful home Dorothy Quincy
showed herself well fitted to be mistress, and through
her native grace and dignity admirably performed her
part at the reception of D’Estaing, Lafayette,
Washington, Brissot, Lords Stanley and Wortley, and
other noted guests.
On October 8, 1793, Hancock died,
at the age of fifty-six years. The last recorded
letter penned in his letter volume was to Captain James
Scott, his lifelong friend. And it was to this
Captain Scott that our Dorothy Q. gave her hand in
a second marriage three years later. She outlived
her second husband many years, residing at the end
of her life on Federal Street in Boston. When
turned of seventy she had a lithe, handsome figure,
a pair of laughing eyes, and fine yellow ringlets in
which scarcely a gray hair could be seen. And
although for the second time a widow, she was as sprightly
as a girl of sixteen. In her advanced years,
Madam Scott received another call from Lafayette, and
those who witnessed the hearty interview say that
the once youthful chevalier and the unrivalled belle
met as if only a summer had passed since their social
intercourse during the perils of the Revolution.