
''The Bostonians Paying the
Excise-Man'', 1774
British propaganda print referring to Malcolm's tarring and feathering. The men also poured hot
tea down Malcolm's
throat as can be seen. Note the noose hanging on the
Liberty Tree, and the
Stamp Act posted upside-down
'John Malcolm', a
Bostonian who worked for the British
customs service, was the victim of one of the most publicized
tarring and feathering incidents during the unrest leading up to the
American Revolutionary War. Malcolm was known as a hard-line
Loyalist, a staunch supporter of royal authority. As a Loyalist, he often faced abuse and provocation from Boston's
Patriots, the critics of British authority. One such verbal confrontation with Patriot shoemaker
George Hewes thrust Malcolm into the spotlight. Hewes had often provoked Malcolm by “hooting at him in the streets.†On January 25, 1774, according to the account in the ''
Massachusetts Gazette '', Hewes saw Malcolm threatening to strike a boy with his cane. When Hewes intervened to stop Malcolm, the two began insulting each other, after which Malcolm struck Hewes hard on the forehead with the cane. After receiving treatment from the well-known Patriot doctor,
Joseph Warren, Hewes went to a magistrate’s office to get a warrant for John Malcolm’s arrest.
That night, a mob seized Malcolm in his house and dragged him into
King Street, where, over the objections of Hewes, he was covered with tar and feathers. They then took him to the
Liberty Tree, where they first threatened to hang him and then threatened cut off his ears if he did not apologize for his behavior and renounce his customs commission. Malcolm relented and was sent home. The event was reported in newspapers on both sides of the Atlantic.
References
Young, Alfred F., The Shoemaker and the Tea Party: Memory and the American Revolution (Boston:Beacon Press, 1999).